But a new report from the agency she created to accomplish that goal shows that with one month to go, we are nowhere close.

Fifteen years ago, Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire made it the state’s aim to clean up Puget Sound by 2020.

Puget Sound was supposed to be healthy by now.

Almost all the indicators that the Puget Sound Partnership uses to gauge the health of the sound are off the mark.

Those include dozens of measures of pollution, habitat and aquatic life in Washington’s inland sea and the lands that drain into it.

In the new State of the Sound report, partnership executive director Laura Blackmore says Puget Sound is “in grave trouble.”

“Despite a significant investment of energy and resources from federal, tribal, state, and local governments and non-governmental partners, habitat degradation continues to outpace restoration,” she says.

Only 4 of 31 indicators are at or near their target levels for 2020, according to the report.