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Friday, April 25, 2008

SCC 4/2008

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4-24-2008: Coastal Conservancy Votes on Crucial Land Purchases at Ventura's Santa Clara River and Bay Area's Mindego Hill, and others
Meeting date: Thursday, April 24, 2008

3. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization to disburse up to $4,500,000 and up to $750,000 of funds from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to The Nature Conservancy for the acquisition of two properties to further implementation of the Santa Clara River Parkway in Ventura County.

4. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization to disburse up to $2,840,275 to seven nonprofit organizations and public agencies for specific projects located in Ballona Creek, Malibu Creek, Dockweiler State Beach, Stone Canyon Creek, Point Vicente, McCarrell's Canyon, the City of Los Angeles, urban lands in the County of Los Angeles, and various state parks in the Santa Monica Mountains to improve coastal water quality, enhance habitat and coastal access within the Santa Monica Bay Watershed to implement the Santa Monica Bay Restoration Plan.

6. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization to disburse up to $175,000 to the City of Laguna Beach, Orange County to acquire the 10.38-acre SBD Property near the Laguna Coast Wilderness Park for habitat preservation, open space protection and public access.

7. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization to disburse up to $120,000 to the Laguna Canyon Foundation for expenses associated with future acquisition of properties near the Laguna Coast Wilderness Park and the Aliso and Wood Canyons Wilderness Park and for restoration of existing trails on recently acquired properties in the City of Laguna Beach.

12. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization to disburse up to $7,500,000 to the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District to acquire the Mindego Hill Property in San Mateo County for habitat preservation, open space protection and public access.

14. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization to disburse up to $575,000 to the Sonoma County Agricultural Preservation and Open Space District to construct 4.25 miles of the Bay Area Ridge Trail and a half mile spur trail overlook, along the ridge on the north slope of Sonoma Mountain stretching west out of Jack London State Historic Park in southwestern Sonoma County.

15. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization to disburse up to $1,000,000 to the Land Trust of Napa County toward acquisition of the Duff Ranch in Napa County.

20. Consideration and possible Conservancy approval of a disposition plan for the sale of the “Parcel 07” property of the Bel Marin Keys Unit V property (APN 171-157-07), Marin County, and authori­zation for the Executive Officer to direct the Depart­ment of General Services to transfer the property in ac­cordance with the disposition plan.

B. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization to disburse up to $242,500 to the City of Brisbane to acquire five parcels within Brisbane Acres, an unrecorded subdivision located on the upper slopes of San Bruno Mountain in the City of Brisbane, San Mateo County.

F. Consideration and possible Conservancy authorization of Redwood Region Audubon Society to accept the Offer to Dedicate an open space easement over fifteen acres of land adjacent to Humboldt Bay in the City of Eureka in Humboldt County.
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In San Clemente, they're saying heck no, we won't grow


Charles Mann

Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times 4/25/2008
Charles Mann, a 26-year San Clemente resident, led a successful effort to block construction of a subdivision sought by his country club.


When Richard Nixon made San Clemente his western White House, the late satirist Art Hoppe described the population as "15,000 conservative Republicans, 2,000 surfers, five poor people [and] roughly the same number of liberal Democrats."

That was in 1972; today the population is 65,000 or so and it's possible they've chased off the last of the poor people and the liberals.

As a matter of politics and philosophy, San Clemente has long been friendly to business, to growth, to builders. Property rights are cherished, and some prominent preservationists have a habit of pointing out -- when they have not been asked -- that they do not consider themselves environmentalists.

So, few in town gave it much thought when a group of activists last year vowed to overturn a City Council vote allowing a golf course to turn a third of its holes into a subdivision of more than 200 homes. To the outside world, it seemed like a parochial dispute. A sizable portion of the 8,423 signatures that were collected to force the issue onto last February's ballot were delivered to City Hall in a plastic laundry basket.

Then, to the surprise of even its most ardent supporters, the effort to block the development succeeded -- overwhelmingly. By a 2-to-1 margin, voters sent an unmistakable message that open space is not for sale to the highest bidder, that San Clemente -- nearing build out 80 years after its founding -- was about to become choosy about its future.

San Clemente's rabble-rousers are not exactly peasants with pitchforks. They're retirees, golfers with notable handicaps, investment advisors -- more like patricians with pitching wedges. But they are piecing together a citizen revolt of their own, in a place that has not been accustomed to that kind of thing in recent years.

The victory at the golf course seemed to open the floodgates, and today, affable little San Clemente is in the grips of a surge in community activism. Citizen groups seem to be forming at every turn -- to oppose big signs that would be strung alongside a proposed outlet mall, to monitor the proposed development of more than 300 seaside homes, to fight plans for fancy retail development atop one of the town's primary beach accesses.

"It was a historic change," said Al Cullen, 72, a retired commercial banker who has owned a home in San Clemente since 1988, and whose wife, Yvonne, began surfing the city's famed T Street break long before that. "No one had ever tried to beat a developer here -- and won."

San Clemente has always been built in fits and starts. Its developer -- a visionary from Wisconsin named Ole Hanson -- was rumored to have gone mad trying to build it, according to "The Heritage of San Clemente," a local history book.

Hanson was correct that people would be drawn to the breathtaking beaches and bluffs; in 1925, 1,000 people stopped by to look into buying lots the first day he pitched his sales tents. The cynics were correct, too, that San Clemente was halfway between Los Angeles and San Diego, and not really connected to either one.

As a result, perhaps, Hanson's attempt to build nirvana -- "a place," he once wrote, "where a man can breathe!" -- was never quite finished. The quirky, sleepy town became quite protective of itself. Its historical society was formed after a Hanson-era mansion was torn down in the dead of night to make room for condos, its antiques still inside. Later, the city restricted builders to 500 new homes a year.

San Clemente staved off the explosive growth that was spreading rapidly across the region. Preservationists fended off a number of ill-conceived development proposals -- to turn Ole Hanson's gorgeous seaside estate into a Mexican restaurant, for instance. But, particularly after toll roads began to spider web through south Orange County a decade ago, making the beach town more accessible to the rest of Southern California, San Clemente couldn't hold off change forever.

In recent years, the activists argue, builders have proposed -- and City Hall has often welcomed with an uncritical eye -- projects that they felt were out of character with the the town.

They include a $200-million-plus, 653,000-square-foot outlet mall-hotel-theater-restaurant complex, slated to open on a majestic bluff called Marblehead; a pocket of triple-lot seaside mansions; and a series of proposals that would pack the area known as North Beach, a popular beach access, with new commercial development.

"Some people say, well, you just want to live in Mayberry. You know what? Mayberry has some wonderful ideals, where you walk down the street and you know the name of the people you see -- and the name of their dog," said City Councilman Wayne Eggleston, a leader of the effort to tighten control on development.

"Yes, we're going to grow. It's how we grow," he said. "What is our vision for the future? Do we want to look Huntington Beach? Or Carmel?"

There is no reason to think that the activists, however emboldened they may be, are going to win at every turn. They still lack a majority of votes on the council, and there are plenty in town who believe they are nothing but obstructionists. Developer Steve Craig, whose Craig Realty Group is behind the proposed Marblehead complex, questioned how representative they are of San Clemente.

"I would say it's a small, vocal group as opposed to a groundswell," Craig said. "If you're going in there and trying to just throw up a building, I think that wouldn't work. . . . But I think they are looking for quality development."

Mayor Joe Anderson said the debate is little more than a healthy reflection of the fact that locals care. High standards, he said, "can breed contention."

"But we get along," he said. "I would not call it adversarial."

Charles Mann would disagree. The 60-year-old Mann moved to San Clemente 26 years ago, drawn by the surfing and the lifestyle -- and the golf, which, between the rolling hills and the sea breeze, reminded him of the storied golf courses in his native Scotland. He became a member at Pacific Golf and Country Club -- and then the leader of the effort to fight Pacific's plans to build houses on nine of its 27 holes.

It was an awkward combination. Executives pushing the development -- who did not return phone calls seeking comment -- spent more than $250,000 on a campaign to quell the uprising. They hired professional "blockers," Mann said, to intimidate his ragtag army of signature gatherers. And in the weeks before the vote, they distributed nasty fliers featuring shadowy photographs of him, accusing him of being more "concerned about his golf game" than preserving undeveloped land.

There were days, Mann said, when he wanted to quit.

"I'm not against development," he said. "I'm against ruining open space and quality of life. There's a big difference. But this city has always been run by developers. 'You can't fight City Hall' seemed to be invented here."

In the days that followed the February vote, the country club expelled at least 10 members who had sided against the proposed housing development. They included Mann and 82-year-old Jack Thomson, a retired sales manager who flew bombing missions during World War II.

Thomson said friends had warned him that he might be thrown out.

"I said: 'Oh, they're not going to do that. That's loony tunes,' " he said. "Two weeks later, they did it. I'm not bellyaching. But I was surprised."

Episodes like that, Mann said, made it clear that the activists must persevere.

They recently helped push through an ordinance requiring the public's approval before the city can approve any development on land designated as open space. That's not enough, Mann said; the group has pushed for a November ballot measure that would essentially ratify that vote, making it difficult for a future City Council to reverse the decision and placing more power in the hands of the public.

"And these guys will be after us the whole time," Mann said with a chuckle. "A dragon-slayer's day is never finished."

Thursday, April 24, 2008

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Hitch in Anza-Borrego Power Lines Plan:
SDG&E needs permission to use park easement

By DAVE DOWNEY - Staff Writer Wednesday, April 16, 2008


http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2008/04/16/news/sandiego/301442b4d3ab270a8825742d0061e53c.txt

A San Diego Gas & Electric Co. official acknowledged Wednesday that the utility does not have permission to build its proposed power line within an existing electric right of way in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park.

Lynn Trexel, a company land adviser, said during a San Francisco hearing on the Sunrise Powerlink project that the company has yet to secure permission from the owners of the right of way, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and the Imperial Irrigation District.The $1.5 billion, 150-mile high-voltage line has sparked protest from the environmental community and recreation enthusiasts because 22 miles of it would run through the popular state park in eastern San Diego County.

To avoid the need to obtain approval from state park officials to build a new line, the utility is trying to stay within the 100-foot-wide right of way by building taller, narrower towers.Of that 22-mile easement, the federal bureau controls access to 17 miles. Private entities, including the irrigation district, control other sections.

While being questioned Wednesday morning by attorney Carrie Downey of Coronado, Trexel acknowledged that Imperial Irrigation District has a competing proposal to build a line across the easement. Consequently, if the district's proposal and Sunrise Powerlink were approved, it is likely the two sets of wires would have to be hung from the same poles, she said.Trexel also acknowledged that the precise locations of easement boundaries are unclear in some places."There's been a history of land-surveying problems through the park," she said.

Under questioning by Harvey Payne, attorney for the Rancho Penasquitos Concerned Citizens, Trexel said SDG&E is seeking a 1.8-mile-long, 60-foot-wide easement from the city of San Diego to run the last leg of the line across the city-owned Los Penasquitos Canyon Preserve.Four miles east of there, within the community of Rancho Penasquitos, the wires will be buried in the ground ---- between Rancho Penasquitos Skate Park and the Park Village neighborhood.The hearing is one of many that have been conducted on the power line that was first proposed in December 2005. SDG&E wants to string 500- and 230-kilovolt wires between El Centro and Carmel Valley.

The California Public Utilities Commission is weighing the information being presented in the courtlike proceedings, and is expected to decide by August whether to license the project.Should the commission choose to reject the Sunrise Powerlink, SDG&E would have the option to appeal to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission as early as October.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008




South Coast Wildlands Project Publishes Study and Maps of Crucial So-Cal Wildlife Migration Pinch-Points

(Click on map to enlarge)

Local wilderness corridors help species avoid isolation and extinction
By Mike Lee

SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
March 20, 2008
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/science/20080320-9999-1c20wild.html


To most passers-by, the vast valley that drains into Lake Henshaw offers little more than a scenic diversion on the way to Julian.

A view to the east from Cuyamaca shows the San Felipe Valley, a key wildlife pathway.But to wildlife scientists, it's one of the 15 critical wildlife corridors left in Southern California because it connects Palomar Mountain and Anza-Borrego Desert State Park.

Yesterday, after six years of work, South Coast Wildlands and about 20 partner groups released the most comprehensive assessment ever done of the region's habitat links and created what is likely to be a national model for conservation planning.

“This really is the leading edge,” said Paul Beier, a co-author of the linkages document and a conservation biologist at Northern Arizona University. “We have done a great job of making a scientifically rigorous assessment (of) what lands will best serve the needs of all native species.”

Using geographic information systems and more than 60 academic studies, the South Coast Missing Linkages Project offers detailed maps of the pathways that connect the large patches of open space owned mainly by state and federal agencies. The central goal is to enhance the movement of plants and animals between segments of more than 18 million acres of protected lands.

Mountain lions are of special concern because they require large areas to roam. Researchers used radio-collar tracking studies to identify the routes the lions already use and target those lands for special protections from development.

Three of the wildland linkages are in North County and three more – which have yet to be mapped in detail – cross the U.S.-Mexico border. The others stretch as far north as Bakersfield, where thin strands of habitat connect the Sierra Nevada mountains to the coastal range.

The maps are both heartening and sobering. They show that Southern California – one of the world's biodiversity hot spots – still has enough open space to support a wide range of native plants and animals. However, they also provide a reminder that if those linkages are broken, species will become isolated in smaller and smaller pockets of land.

“The exciting thing for me is that we ... can have 20 million people coexisting with intact wildlands. We haven't lost them yet,” Beier said.

Project proponents said the pathways will help agency officials and conservation leaders focus on the most important areas to safeguard. For instance, county officials are consulting the maps as they create two large-scale species conservation plans for north and east San Diego County.

The maps also can be used by the California Department of Transportation to locate places where improvements such as bridges and stream culverts could be designed to help the movement of wildlife. In addition, the maps support conservation leaders' long-standing vision of a “vegetated land bridge” over Interstate 15 near Fallbrook as a way to facilitate migrations for mountain lions and other species.
The pathways are taking on increasing significance as global warming alters habitats.

“As we protect these linkages from the valley floor to the mountains, there will be some escape routes for species” to find suitable microclimates at higher elevations, said David Van Cleve, a senior official with The Nature Conservancy in San Diego.

Creating a network of conservation areas is a departure from old-school ecology, which relied heavily on government agencies such as the National Park Service setting aside huge chunks of property. That's not viewed as practical these days.

“It's much more efficient both in terms of economics and in terms of biology to create linkages between the existing reserves,” Van Cleve said.

That approach relies on cooperative agreements with private property owners. Land conservancies, working with state and federal agencies, commonly provide financial incentives for landowners to limit development or improve the habitat on their parcels.

Thanks to the linkage blueprint, that can happen in a targeted and scientifically defensible way.
The new atlas has its roots in a statewide conference eight years ago that included some 200 land managers, scientists and conservationists. They identified 232 linkages statewide – a number that was too big to tackle all at once, said Kristeen Penrod, conservation director at South Coast Wildlands, a nonprofit group in Los Angeles that coordinated the pathways project.

She and her colleagues whittled the number down to 15 Southern California links that “are so important that if even one fails, the biological integrity of the entire region would be compromised.”
At first, the links were nothing more than arrows on a map. But over time, conservationists have refined the corridors down to a matter of meters.

Doing that took several steps, starting with the selection of 109 “indicator species,” including black-tailed jack rabbits, badgers, golden eagles and white alder.

Next, the scientists performed what they call a “landscape permeability analysis,” a computer technique that models the difficulty that the various species would have moving between large conserved areas. Factors include vegetation types, elevation, slope and road density.

The best potential route for each species was combined with the others to create the most favorable path for all modeled plants and animals.
After that, the scientists factored in the size of habitat parcels in the pathways and whether they are close enough to benefit the species.

Researchers then checked the models during field trips and documented migration barriers such as roads.
In addition to generating maps, South Coast Wildlands and its partners offered several recommendations for how to improve the habitat connections. They include: designing road culverts to maximize wildlife use, encouraging the use of native plants by residents, enforcing leash laws on public lands to reduce predation of wildlife, and stopping illegal use of off-road vehicles.

Now that the South Coast report is done – at the cost of about $700,000 – Penrod and others aim to export their analytical approach.

“Let's do the rest of California at the level of detail that actually provides an implementable vision,” she said.

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In Lassen County: Sierra's Dyer Mountain Ski Resort Developer Files Bankruptcy


http://yubanet.com/regional/Sierra-s-Dyer-Mountain-Files-Bankruptcy.php

By: Tom Mooers, Sierra Watch

Westwood, CA (Lassen County), April 2, 2008 - The biggest development proposal in the Sierra Nevada came to a halt when proponents Dyer Mountain Associates filed for bankruptcy in the Federal Bankruptcy Court in San Francisco March 27.

"Now that the threat of development is lifted, we look forward to working to secure permanent protection for Dyer Mountain and its incredible natural resources," said Steve Robinson of Mountain Meadows Conservancy.

Dyer Mountain Associates (DMA) began pursuing development on remote Dyer Mountain in Lassen County nearly ten years ago. With the promise of a new ski resort and local jobs, a version of the project was initially approved by a voter initiative in 2000. But the scope of the project ballooned into a vague plan for 4,000 new homes, three golf courses, and the ski resort on 7,000 acres of forest lands.

Developers had promised ski operations by November 2007, but the project mired in deepening legal and financial turmoil; DMA was subject to at least five lawsuits and two scathing court orders. In May 2007, for example, San Francisco Superior Court assigned a majority stake in DMA to a court appointed receiver, stating that DMA "...is in default of outstanding loans to creditors, payroll, rent and other financial obligations."

DMA continued to push its project through the planning process, and, in September of 2007, Lassen County gave its approval. A powerful coalition of local, regional, and international conservation groups filed suit. Mountain Meadows Conservancy, Sierra Watch, and Sierra Club petitioned Lassen County Superior Court to overturn the county's approval, contending the proposed development was not only irresponsible but also illegal.

In January 2008, creditors foreclosed on the property itself. With last week's bankruptcy filing, DMA seeks to suspend foreclosure and gain protection from remaining debt, including nearly $200,000 in back taxes owed to Lassen County.

"Folks in Lassen County and throughout California recognized that this was not the best way to plan the future of the Sierra Nevada," said Tom Mooers of Sierra Watch. "Now Dyer Mountain is becoming another example of how we can work together to defend our favorite Sierra places."

In the months ahead, conservationists will seek an opportunity to bring all parties to the table to seek a conservation resolution for Dyer Mountain. "Bankruptcy might put a halt to the DMA development proposal, but it doesn't achieve our goal," said Robinson. "We look forward to sitting down with county officials, creditors, conservation allies, and others to secure permanent protection of the property itself."

The Mountain Meadows Conservancy's mission is to conserve and enhance the natural beauty and environmental health of the Mountain Meadows watershed; protect its significant Mountain Maidu burial and cultural sites; and provide recreation and public access for generations to come. For more information, visit www.mtmeadows.org.

Sierra Watch defends the incomparable natural resources and unparalleled quality of life in the Sierra Nevada mountain range. For more information, call (530) 265-2849 or visit www.sierrawatch.org.

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Dyer Mountain files bankruptcy

Apr 2, 2008

http://www.theunion.com/article/20080402/BREAKINGNEWS/406859781

The biggest development proposal in the Sierras has been put on hold after owners filed bankruptcy in a Federal Bankruptcy Court in San Francisco.

Dyer Mountain Associates filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on March 27 after pursuing development for ten years in a remote area of Lassen County known as Dyer Mountain.

Plans for the four season mountain resort included 4,000 homes, three golf courses and a ski resort on 7,000 acres of forest lands. The site is considered sacred by the Honey Lake Maidu.

In 2000, 62 percent of Lassen County voters approved re-zoning Dyer Mountain from timber production to a mountain resort.

In recent times the project has become mired in financial troubles with lawsuits stemming from defaulted loans and mismanaged funds.

Despite the problems, Lassen County approved the project in September 2007.

Mountain Meadows Conservancy, Sierra Watch and Sierra Club petitioned Lassen County Superior Court to overturn the county’s approval, contending the proposed development was illegal.

In January, creditors foreclosed on the property.

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Ski resort files for bankruptcy

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-briefs3apr03,1,1268186.story

The owners of a Sierra Nevada mountainside who planned to build California's first major ski operation in three decades have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, prompting environmentalists to renew calls to stop the controversial project.

A representative of Dyer Mountain Associates said the company still intends to pursue its proposal to turn nearly 7,000 acres abutting Walker Lake in Lassen County into a four-seasons resort with golf, mountain biking, boating and fishing and several thousand dwellings and hotel rooms.

Merle Meyers, the owners' attorney, said they filed for bankruptcy protection to avoid foreclosure on the property while seeking new loans or investors. "There is no intention of going out of business," he said. "It is still a great project and needs great capital."

Among the debts listed is nearly $200,000 in back taxes owed to Lassen County.

The project has been slowed by financial and legal troubles and infighting. County voters approved a more modest plan in 2000. But the plan grew, along with criticism from environmentalists and others who feared it would harm the area's quality of life, traffic, air, water and wildlife.

"We hope this [bankruptcy filing] takes the development proposal off the table," said Tom Mooers of Sierra Watch. "The project does not pencil out economically, environmentally or from any other standpoint."

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The developer’s website:

http://www.dyermtn.com/

and http://www.dyermountainusa.com/

WCB 5/2008

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5-22-2008: State Wildlife Board to Buy 5035 Acres of Critter Habitat at May Meeting

WILDLIFE CONSERVATION BOARD

May 22, 2008 10:00 A.M. 1/ State Capitol, Room 112 Sacramento, California 95814 http://www.wcb.ca.gov/

MAPS: https://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentID=14452

NORTH COAST:

6. Humboldt Bay Coastal Reserve, Expansions 2 and 3, $495,000.00 Humboldt County To consider the allocation for two grants to Friends of the Dunes for a cooperative project with State Coastal Conservancy and the State Department of Fish and Game to acquire fee title to two properties, totaling 53± acres located west of State Highway 255, southwest of Arcata, in Humboldt County.

20. Jacoby Creek Forest, Expansion 4, $509,000, Humboldt County
To consider the allocation for a grant to the City of Arcata for a cooperative project with the Humboldt Area Foundation and private donors to acquire fee title to 120± acres of land within the Jacoby Creek watershed, approximately seven miles southeast of the City of Arcata, in Humboldt County.


CENTRAL VALLEY:

*12. Canebrake Ecological Reserve, Canebrake Creek Unit $404,500, Expansion 3, Kern County To consider the acquisition of fee title to 196± acres as an addition to the Department of Fish and Game's Canebrake Ecological Reserve located near the community of Canebrake, northwest of State Highway 178, in eastern Kern County.

19. Rails to Trails, Modoc Line $420,000, Lassen and Modoc Counties
To consider the allocation for a grant to the Lassen Land and Trails Trust for a cooperative acquisition with the Department of Fish and Game, the Bureau of Land Management, and the Sierra Nevada Conservancy to acquire 86± miles of rail right-ofway covering 2,180± acres and running north from the town of Wendel, in Lassen County and ending south of Alturas, in Modoc County.

21. Mouth of Cottonwood Creek Wildlife Area $1,745,000, Balls Ferry Unit, Expansion 2, Shasta County
To consider the acquisition of fee title to 141± acres as an addition to the Department of Fish and Game's Mouth of Cottonwood Creek Wildlife Area located east of the community of Cottonwood, in Shasta County.

27. Millerton Preserve (Ecker Ranch) $3,015,000, Madera County
To consider the allocation for a grant to the California Rangeland Trust to acquire a conservation easement over 1,080± acres located 25 miles northeast of the City of Madera, near the community of Coarsegold, in Madera County.

28. Black Mountain Preserve, Expansion 3, $1,150,000, Fresno County
To consider the allocation for a grant to the Sierra Foothill Conservancy to acquire fee title to 358± acres located off of Tollhouse Road, in the Sierra Nevada Foothills, in Fresno County.


EASTERN SIERRA:

26. Wheeler Ridge Wildlife Area, Expansion 1, $840,000.00, Mono County
To consider the allocation for a grant to the Eastern Sierra Land Trust to acquire fee title to 33± acres located west of State Highway 395, south of Crowley Lake, in southern Mono County.


CENTRAL COAST:

32. Morro Bay Wildlife Area $810,000.00, San Luis Obispo County To consider the allocation for a grant to the Morro Coast Audubon Society; the acceptance of a Recovery Land Acquisition Grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and the authorization to enter into an Agreement to Subgrant the federal funds to the Morro Coast Audubon Society for a cooperative project with the State Coastal Conservancy and the Trust for Public Land to acquire fee title to approximately eight acres as an addition to the Audubon's existing Sweet Springs Preserve, located on the Morro Bay shoreline in the community of Los Osos, in San Luis Obispo County.


SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA:

*13. Coachella Valley Ecological Reserve (Edom Hill Unit) $5,000.00 Expansion 31, Riverside County
To consider the acceptance of a Habitat Conservation Planning Land Acquisition Grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the authorization to enter into an Agreement to Subgrant the federal funds to the Center for Natural Lands Management for a cooperative project with the Coachella Valley Mountains Conservancy to acquire fee title to 80± acres located southeast of the City of Desert Hot Springs, in Riverside County.

*14. San Jacinto Wildlife Area, Expansion 30, $400,000.00, Riverside County
To consider the acquisition of a conservation easement over 91± acres as an addition to the Department of Fish and Game's San Jacinto Wildlife Area located southwest of Mystic Lake, near Lakeview, in Riverside County. WITHDRAWN FROM AGENDA

*15. Santa Rosa Mountains Wildlife Area, Expansions 9 and 10, $280,000.00 Riverside County To consider the acquisition of fee title to two properties totaling 10± acres as additions to the Department of Fish and Game’s Santa Rosa Mountains Wildlife Area; the acceptance of a Recovery Land Acquisition Grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and the authorization to use the federal funds for the State’s purchase of the properties located west of Jefferson Street and south of Avenue 62, in the City of La Quinta, in Riverside County.

*16. Triple Creeks Conservation Area, Expansion 3, $5,000.00, Riverside County
To consider the acceptance of a Cooperative Agreement from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the authorization to enter into an Agreement to Subgrant the federal funds to the Western Riverside County Regional Conservation Authority to acquire fee title to 36± acres located west of State Highway 79, south of Scott Road in Murrieta, in Riverside County.

*17 Western Riverside County MSHCP, Expansion 3, $5,000.00, Riverside County To consider the acceptance of a Habitat Conservation Planning Land Acquisition Grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the authorization to enter into an Agreement to Subgrant the federal funds to the Western Riverside County Regional Conservation Authority to acquire fee title to 102± acres located approximately eight miles south of Hemet, in Riverside County.

*18 Ramona Grasslands, Expansion 3, $5,000.00, San Diego County
To consider the acceptance of a Habitat Conservation Planning Land Acquisition Grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the authorization to enter into an Agreement to Subgrant the federal funds to The Nature Conservancy for a cooperative project with the California Department of Water Resources and the County of San Diego to acquire fee title to 476± acres located west of the community of Ramona, in San Diego County.

35. El Sobrante $2,504,700.00, Riverside County
To consider the allocation for a grant to the Western Riverside County Regional Conservation Authority; the acceptance of a Habitat Conservation Planning Land Acquisition Grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and the authorization to enter into an Agreement to Subgrant the federal funds to the Western Riverside County Regional Conservation Authority to acquire fee title to 71± acres located within the Department of Fish and Game’s Natural Community Conservation Plan area, northeast of the City of Wildomar, south of Lake Elsinore, in Riverside County.

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The Bay is Under Assault

3/20/2008

The Bay once again is under assault from inappropriate development -- this time in Redwood City. The residents of Redwood City have a long history of protecting open space and the Bay shoreline. Bair Island, 3,000 acres of former salt ponds that is now being restored to healthy wetland habitat by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, was saved as open space by a vote of the public in 1982.






The OSV measure would
require public approval
prior to any development on
Redwood City open spaces,
parks and baylands



To stop future threats on the Bay and other open space lands in Redwood City, Save The Bay is pleased to be a sponsor of the Open Space Vote Coalition.

The Open Space Vote Coalition is a new partnership of local environmental and Redwood City neighborhood groups, including Friends of Redwood City and Sequoia Audubon Society. The coalition is proposing a Redwood City charter amendment that would require a public vote to approve any development on Redwood City open space, parks and baylands.

Approval of the "Open Space Vote" measure ensures that every Redwood City voter will get to weigh-in on Minnesota-based agribusiness giant Cargill̢۪s plan to develop its 1,433-acre salt pond site in Redwood City.

Visit www.saveSFbay.org/redwoodcity for more information.

Any development on these former Bay wetlands -- an area larger than San Francisco's Golden Gate Park -- would be the largest Bay fill project since Save The Bay was founded and would destroy forever any opportunity to restore these baylands to natural and vital wetland habitat.

To get involved in this effort, including help gathering signatures in Redwood City, please contact:

Stephen Knight at 510-452-9261x 112 or sknight@saveSFbay.org

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Chino Hills Defenders File Suit Over Road Through Park


3/19/2008

http://hillsforeveryone.org

Hills For Everyone partnered last week with Defenders of Wildlife, the Planning and Conservation League, and Friends of Harbors, Beaches, and Parks to challenge approval of a secondary access road to the Robert Diemer Water Filtration Plant (operated by MWD) that will cut through Chino Hills State Park in north Orange County. The organizations joined together in a suit that was filed in Orange County Superior Court on Thursday, March 13th.

The proposed road will climb a 45-degree slope through oak and walnut woodlands that are protected by a Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) signed in 1994. These woodlands lie within the viewshed of Chino Hills State Park. Given the steep topography in the area, the road will require extensive engineering, including cut and fill slopes of up to 30 feet that are secured with a mechanically stabilized earth retaining wall system. Since the road is to be built over a mile into the mouth of Telegraph Canyon, the formal Orange County entrance to the State Park, the ambiance of the Park will be permanently damaged there. Park users will have to share this quiet canyon with truck traffic traversing a steep hill.

The California Department of Parks and Recreation is also named a party to the lawsuit because it will receive more than $1.7 million in compensation for its support of this Project. The Department has stated that it plans to use the money to finish, furnish and permanently endow a staff position for an Interpretive Center to be built nearby.

Many State Parks face threats to their integrity because agencies look at parks as placeholders for urban infrastructure. In our Park alone we have fought off eight roads over three decades. At this point we are extremely disheartened that in supporting MWD's massive road, State Parks has decided that interpreting the Park is more important than protecting it. As park rangers try to teach visitors about nature, how can they explain that their agency supported the destruction of oak and walnut woodlands and important wildlife habitat-all for a single staff person and some furniture?"
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143 Acres of Pristine Santa Barbara County Coastal Dunes Conserved


3/17/2008

http://LCSLO.org

The Land Conservancy of San Luis Obispo County is overwhelmingly excited to announce the permanent conservation of 143 acres of prime coastal dunes just north of Point Sal. The Dunes Collaborative has found the Point Sal and Paradise Beach area to be one of the highest priorities for land conservation initiatives in the entire Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes Complex. After more than a year of work, the transaction was successfully completed just in time to celebrate the preservation of more “green” this St. Patrick’s Day.

The property includes roughly a ½-mile stretch of the white sands of Paradise Beach and several tidepool areas tucked into small, protected coves. According to the Point Sal Reserve Management Area Plan prepared by the firm of Storrer & Semonsen (c. 1990), other natural resources include thriving coastal dune and bluff scrub habitat, freshwater seeps, a marine mammal haul-out area, and several populations of endangered Surf Thistle (Cirsium rothophilum). The upland area of the property is described as a critical wildlife area that contains important habitat for mountain lion, bobcat, coyote, and deer.

“This is one of the most pristine and beautiful beaches I have ever been to in my life. We are thrilled to have the opportunity to protect it forever.” - Bob Hill, Conservation Director

This spectacular site provides stunning 360-degree views of ocean and dunes, and is an unspoiled example of what our native coastline looked like long ago. This area also held a special appeal to Don and Irene Gragnani who experienced its magic for many years but sold it for the purpose of continued conservation. The Gragnani’s regularly visited the property for picnic lunches and camping expeditions, and they are pleased to know that it will be maintained as a protected natural area for others to enjoy as well.

Project partners included the State Coastal Conservancy, the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, The Dunes Collaborative, The Nature Conservancy, and Santa Barbara County Parks. The purchase was approved by The State Coastal Conservancy Board in January and The Central Coast Regional Water Quality Board in February. Santa Barbara County Parks has expressed a strong interest in the long-term ownership and management of the property as they are already adjacent landowners.

The project is representative of The Land Conservancy’s ongoing commitment to protecting, restoring, and stewarding the unique and fragile ecosystem that makes up the world class Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes through collaborative efforts with our many partners.

Registration for our Tenth Annual Conference is now open!

Nature Within Reach is what makes the Bay Area so special, yet it also presents us with some of our most pressing challenges as the region continues to grow. Local agriculture, urban parks, water and air quality, climate change, wildlife habitat - there are many important reasons that the Bay Area needs to maintain and increase its system of natural areas.

This year's Conference will feature noted speakers and presentations that will showcase regional planning efforts and demonstrate creative approaches to ensuring both cultural and biological diversity. Learn about transformational leadership involving individuals and groups coming together to change the economic, environmental, and social landscapes of their regions by rediscovering their communities' visions and developing new paths and unconventional alliances to reach their goals.

The Conference will be held on Wednesday, May 21st from 8:00a-4:30p at the Golden Gate Club in San Francisco's Presidio. As last year, there will be no conference registration at the door, so you must pre-register. Early registration ends on April 11th, and regular registration ends on May 2nd. The event has reached capacity for the last several years, so make sure to reserve your spot early.

Agenda highlights include speakers on Agriculture, Environmental Education, Biodiversity and Collaboration.

Two Exhibit Halls will be filled with displays about agencies, organizations, professionals and businesses that protect and manage the region's diverse parks and open spaces.Please see our website for more details.

We will also see images from Christopher Beaver's book After the Storm: Bob Walker and the East Bay Regional Park District.

For more detailed information and to register for the conference, click on the link below:


To become an Exhibitor or Sponsor, please use the link above or contact Elizabeth Adam at 415.235.2756 or conference@openspacecouncil.org.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Elizabeth

Elizabeth Adam,Director of Marketing and Communications
Bay Area Open Space Council510.834.8399 (office)415.235.2756 (mobile)www.openspacecouncil.org
M, T, Th 8:30a-5:30p

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E-Mail the editor:

rexfrankel at yahoo.com

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