This study was conducted in conjunction with the Ashland Forest Resiliency Project, a cooperative watershed stewardship project aimed at reducing forest fire fuels in the Ashland Creek Watershed, and sought to provide a baseline of macroinvertebrate-based bioassessment data from which future management decisions and policies can be made within the watershed. Four streams within the Ashland Creek watershed (West Fork Ashland Creek, East Fork Ashland Creek, Reeder Gulch, and an unnamed tributary of West Fork of Ashland Creek (South Section 20)) was sampled by taking eight, composited one square foot Surber net samples of macroinvertebrates from each stream in late October or early November in the three years between 2010 and 2012. Sampled macroinvertebrates were identified to family and/or genus/species level and taxa richness, mayfly/stonefly/caddisfly richnesses, % chironmidae, % dominance, sensitive taxa, sediment sensitive taxa, and % tolerant taxa were determined for each stream. An overall score for stream condition (no/moderate/severe impairment) was then determined using a rubric of metric scores outlined in the Oregon Plan for Salmon and Watersheds Water Quality Monitoring Guidebook. Analysis of each site revealed no impairment in West Fork Ashland Creek, East Fork Ashland Creek, and Reeder Gulch but moderate impairment within South Section 20.