Water's Best Friend
Puget Soundkeeper is a team of dedicated staff and community members whose mission is to protect and preserve the waters of Puget Sound. Since 1984, Soundkeeper has worked for the health of our shared waterways. We are on the water weekly, testing water quality and looking for pollution issues. Soundkeeper enforces environmental regulations by using legal tools provided in the Clean Water Act and works with the Puget Sound community – including businesses, nonprofit partners, and individuals – on waterway cleanups, recovery projects and advocacy to better protect our shared waters.
Soundkeeper is proud to be a founding member of the International Waterkeeper Alliance, the largest and fastest growing nonprofit focused solely on clean water. There are over 300 Waterkeeper organizations and affiliates on six continents fighting for communities’ clean water rights. Waterkeepers can be large or small, but every member patrols their waterway and enforces clean water protections when agencies and the federal government fail to do so.
Soundkeeper works on many different issues, but one of our priorities is marine debris. Marine debris includes human-made trash, litter, discarded equipment, and other solid material that enters oceans and waterways, floating out to sea or fouling beaches and shorelines. Ninety percent of marine debris is plastic. Plastic does not break down, it just breaks up into smaller and smaller pieces that build up in the water. Fish, birds and other wildlife eat plastic pieces, thinking they are food.
The plastic problem contiues to grow. By 2050, scientists say 90 percent of marine birds will have eaten plastic, and much of the plastic debris in our environment has pollutants in it that damage water quality. For example, cigarette butts, the most commonly found type of trash on shorelines worldwide, contain hazardous chemicals like formaldehyde, chromium, and propylene glycol.
As the only species that produces plastic, humans are the problem—but we can also be the solution! Stopping marine debris at the source by properly disposing of waste and finding ways to reduce, reuse and recover the amount of trash we produce helps protect our watershed. Cleaning up trash from streets and shorelines before it enters the water is another important step. Soundkeeper is the regional organizer for the Puget Sound portion of the International Coastal Cleanup, which in 2017 removed more than 18 million pounds of trash from shorelines and waterways worldwide.
Working together, we can make sure that our waterways are healthy and thriving for future generations. You can support Soundkeeper’s work by becoming a member or signing up to volunteer at our many cleanups and other events throughout the year! Find more information on how to get involved at pugetsoundkeeper.org.
Kathryn works as Stewardship Manager for Puget
Soundkeeper where she oversees monitoring, cleanup
and restoration projects, and educates residents on the
role they can play in Puget Sound recovery.






