A grain elevator and the rolling hills of the Palouse farmland are shown from the top of Steptoe Butte near Colfax on Oct. 28, 2019. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, file)

A grain elevator and the rolling hills of the Palouse farmland are shown from the top of Steptoe Butte near Colfax on Oct. 28, 2019. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, file)

State buys more Steptoe Butte land to preserve it

Two families from western Washington purchased the property in 2016 to protect it from development.

  • By Wire Service
  • Tuesday, December 21, 2021 2:46pm
  • Northwest

Associated Press

COLFAX, Wash. — The largest remaining area of native Palouse prairie in southeastern Washington state will be preserved thanks to a transaction that moved hundreds of acres of Steptoe Butte into public ownership.

The Moscow-Pullman Daily News reports Kent Bassett, of Bellevue, and Ray and Joan Folwell, of Pullman, sold a 437-acre parcel on the flanks of the butte to the Washington Department of Natural Resources. The transaction has been in the works for more than two years and recently closed.

Bassett and his late wife, Elaine, teamed up with the Folwells to purchase the property in 2016 with the idea of protecting the area rich in native plants from development.

“Our goal in purchasing this and bringing ownership to the state was simply to preserve it as it is, to make it look no different than it was except for perhaps better control of invasive species,” Bassett said. “We are trusting the state will maintain it in perpetuity.”

The top of the butte is a Washington State park but much of its flanks were in private ownership. The newly public parcel wraps around three sides of the conical-shaped butte, giving it three distinct ecosystems — canyon grasslands, Palouse prairie and forest land.

Two years ago, the Washington Recreation and Conservation Office awarded a $1.2 million grant to the Department of Natural Resources to facilitate the purchase.

The department has previously indicated it will manage the parcel as a natural area preserve, a natural resources conservation area or some combination of both. The first is more restrictive, with a focus on research and education. Access is allowed, but activities like hunting are rare. The second would allow more access and be less restrictive, but still have a priority of conserving ecological values.

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