Vida Verde is a nature education center on Tunitas Creek Road, south of Half Moon Bay. In October, I’d linked to a story about Harley Farms that featured Vida Verde. Last week, the Chron ran a nice profile of their program.
Teaching kids they have choices about food is at the heart of Vida Verde. Five years ago, founders Shawn Sears and Laura Dickerson were teaching poor kids in rural Mississippi. “There’s a huge disconnect about where your food comes from,” says Dickerson, who grew up in Kentucky. She says she never even heard the word “organic” until she turned 18. “I just love to see kids’ surprise when they find out where food comes from—that milk actually comes out of an animal.”
After struggling for a couple of years with the challenges of teachers in poor schools, Sears and Dickerson met Jim Sheehan and Nancy Schaub. Social justice advocates from Spokane, Wash., Sheehan and Schaub purchased this farm south of Half Moon Bay, a former llama ranch, in the early ‘90s, and had been seeking the right people to establish an environmental education center.
After seeing “Supersize Me” last night, this really hit home.
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Cheri Parr
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Click on the image for a dino-sized view.
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San Mateo County Health Department has closed four Coastside beaches because of sewer overflows:
Additionally, the county closed the Bayside mouth of Colma Creek, and advisories have been issued for Gray Whale Cove, Montara State Beach, Pillar Point Harbor, and Half Moon Bay State Beach.
“Our lab is telling us that they have never seen bacteria levels this high,” said Dean Peterson, with the San Mateo County Office of Environmental Health. “Last year did exceed levels during El Niño and this year exceeded last year.”
Peterson says, “The waves should clean the beaches remarkably fast. Salt water is not a friendly environment to these bacteria, and the beaches should clear up within five days.”
There is an interactive map showing sampling locations and water status at earth911.org.
In a press release, Dr. Scott Morrow, San Mateo County Health Officer, said: “I recommend that people avoid all ocean and bay recreational water contact at this time. The water is highly contaminated and likely to cause illness. Anyone becoming ill after contact with these waters should consult their physician.”
UPDATE: About 2:00 this afternoon, I drove by Surfers Beach to get some pictures of the signs that the County had put up. There were none. Dean Peterson from the County tells me that they were put up, but that it’s common for people to take them down, either property owners wanting to avoid stigma, or people not wanting them to interfere with their use of the beach. I talked to one surfer at the beach who had no idea that the water was contaminated. I did find a sign down the road at Miramar.
There are some pictures of surfers enjoying the closed beach at Linda Mar posted on Montara.com.
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Scott Boyd
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Map of a deluge: 4.7 inches fell in Montara in less than 24 hours, with one inch fallling between 5 and 7am, and 0.6 inches in just half an hour. Click on the image for a larger view.
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Monday’s storm resulted in four overflows in four locations in the Sewer Authority Midcoastside (SAM) system. SAM provides sewer service from Half Moon Bay to Montara. Locations of the overflows, with links to maps:
“Last year’s rain was a 10 to 20 year event,” said SAM board member Scott Boyd, speaking of the deluge that resulted in a well-publicized overflow last year. “This year was bigger.” And the overflow was worse as well.
According to Jack Foley, manager of SAM, because rain flushed the sytem before the overflow and because of the amount of water involved, the sewage overflow was diluted ten to twenty times. And, of course, the continuing rains flushed it further.
The rain on Monday was tremendous. With 4.7 inches falling in Montara in less than 24 hours, more then 5 in Pacifica and more than 3 in Half Moon Bay. One inch fell in Montara between 5 and 7am, and 0.6 inches in just half an hour.
The result of all this water was to “max out the system” according to Scott Boyd. This, despite the half-million gallon storage facility that was added recently. The challenge for the system is that there are multiple points where water is collected and moved on in the system and each of these is a potential bottleneck.
Optimizing the system requires complex modeling, which has been ongoing at SAM. In addition to SAM’s continuing review of their system in light of recent events and their plans for additional storage to accomodate flooding, the authority is under review by the Environmental Protection Agency for last year’s overflow. This review could well result in additional federal requirements on the system.
Events of this nature were considered extreme, but it’s beginning to look like extreme events are the norm.
The letup in the rain over the last 24 hours has allowed SAM to empty its system of all the extra water. This is good news. Another big storm is expected to dump more rain on the Coastside starting Wednesday
John and Clarence Arata are some of the last old-time ranchers in San Mateo County. The fall in the fortunes of local agriculture and the rise of Bay Area property values made them a paradox: millionaires with no cash and an annual ranching income of less than $35,000. Developers would have given them millions for their 1,161 acres, but they don’t want to sell.
Instead, they sold the development rights to the Peninsula Open Space Trust for $4.7 million. Amelia Hansen of the San Mateo County Times paints a great portrait of one local family’s approach to the land use issues that are tearing Coastsiders apart.
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The Half Moon Bay Fire Department responded to the call from Montara Beach.
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The body of a wetsuited man who apparently drowned at Montara Beach has been identified as Scott Tomkins, 31, of San Francisco. He told his roommate he had been out swimming or body surfing on Sunday and planned to go back out Monday.
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Click on the image to download a PDF copy of the survey.
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Residents of the Montara Water and Sewer District have received a mail-in questionnaire that has left some wondering whether the sender wants more than their opinion [pdf].
The poll asks six simple questions:
One recipient posted a message to the midcoast-l mailing list saying, “It is blatantly a push poll.” A push poll is intended to shape the recipient’s opinion, rather than to collect it objectively.
The poll is the work of Adrian Moore, vice president of research of the Reason Public Policy Institute, a libertarian think tank in Santa Monica. The RPPI has a long record of research supporting privatization of water and wastewater utilities, which you’d expect from “a public policy think tank promoting choice, competition, and a dynamic market economy as the foundation for human dignity and progress”. According to the Foundation’s web site:
Mr. Moore oversees all the Institute’s policy research. That research includes a focus on issues pertaining to education and child welfare, transportation, urban land use and economic development, environmental quality, and privatization. His own research focuses on privatization, government reform, and infrastructure
Moore told me that he focused on MWSD because there are few case studies that allow you to compare public and private ownership of utilities. Moore says he expects to use the results of this survey as part of a larger study of public/private utility ownership, or possibly “there would be enough interest for it to be a standalone document.”
I asked Moore if he wasn’t predetermining the outcome by telling people their property taxes had gone up right before he asked them if they would vote for the measure again. Perhaps it would make more sense to ask how they felt about buying the water company before exploring the impact of the tax increase. He said, “We thought about that. But we felt that specifically because the purchase entailed a rate increase [sic] that it was good to ask it that way.”
I used to be a Research Director at big international market research firm. I’d fire any analyst who brought me a survey so clearly designed to elicit a specific response.
I asked him if perhaps he should have rephrased the questionnaire to read:
He didn’t really have a reply to that question.
The question is whether Moore’s survey is intended merely to generate pro-privatization propaganda or might have another, more local motive. Moore says that the project was not specifically funded by any donor. RPPI solicits grants as an organization and that all research is funded out of the Institute’s budget. In 2000, Reason Foundation, RPPI’s parent, had at least four water companies listed as donors. Moore says that there were only two in 2004, but it also means he’s keeping track.
Moore tells me that the individual responses to the survey, including names and addresses of all respondents, will be available for free from RPPI when the project is completed.
Felton, in Santa Cruz County, wants to buy out their waterworks, which is owned by California-American Water Company. They hope to follow the lead of Montara and Moss Beach, which bought their water company from Cal-Am. Cal-Am is owned by RWE, which is based in Germany.
Residents in Felton have formed Friends of Locally Owned Water (FLOW) to buy out Felton’s privately owned water company on behalf of 1,311 customers. Cal-Am has proposed increasing Felton’s price for water by 108 percent in 2004.
Felton Water News is an excellent source of information on this story.
A lone man in a wetsuit washed up at Montara Beach near where Martini Creek empties into the ocean, the apparent victim of today’s storm-driven surf. No surfboard has been found.
According to Lt. Steve Shiveley of the Sheriff’s Department Moss Beach Substation, they received a call about 2:45 this afternoon. The Fire Department attempted to resuscitate the man on the beach without success.
UPDATE: The body has been identified as Scott Tomkins, 31, of San Francisco. He told his roommate he had been out swimming or body surfing on Sunday and planned to go back out Monday.
The ‘warm coat’ folks forgot about the men standing in Mac Dutra Park on Main St. in Half Moon Bay looking for work. If you have any clean warm jackets, rain gear, heavy sweaters, hats, boots or socks to spare, please donate them to this group, who would not be standing around the park if people were not coming by and offering them jobs.
I have found them to be very nice and most appreciative of our efforts to help. There are usually about 20 of them, and if you are feeling particularly generous, HMB Bakery or Max at M. Coffee will make coffee for them for $25, or $30 if you want to go for doughnuts from the bakery.
Some of them seem to be teenagers, and most are wearing light sweatshirts and generally inadequate clothing for the cold weather. They start gathering at 7:30 or 8:00am, every day. No, they do not look ‘pretty’. Yes, most are probably illegal. But they are here, living in our community, and their only real fault is that they are poor.
What the election tells us about local politics, Jan 5 10:41pm, Carl May — This was not a good election for pointing out our differences from the South Coast up through Pacifica. Lots of…
What the election tells us about local politics, Jan 5 3:20pm, Barry Parr — That's an interesting point. San Mateo County varies dramatically from Daly City to Burlingame to Foster City to East Palo…
What the election tells us about local politics, Jan 5 3:10pm, Dennis Paull — Hi Barry, What is surprising is that the Coastside is so homogenious in its votong patterns. In fact the Coastside…
What the election tells us about local politics, Jan 4 7:17pm, Barry Parr — This analysis will be the basis for later work in the 2009 election season, as well as some pieces I…
Letter: Abandoned bunny needs a home, Jan 2 9:15pm, Tammy Lee — Thanks for taking the bunny in Florie. I already have my hands full with 4 adopted rescue cats but hope…
Letter: Tour of California to pass through HMB, February, Dec 22 11:33am, julie spiegler — There is a detailed Stage Map on the Route and Stage Info page: http://www.amgentourofcalifornia.com/Route/stages/stage2.html They're doing a giant "detour" off…
Letter: Tour of California to pass through HMB, February, Dec 16 11:08am, Jason Smith — Wow Thats Great!
A Few Hopeful Appointments, At Last, post 1, Dec 20 7:16pm, Carl May —
Recommendations for Housecleaning Service?, post 4, Nov 28 9:48am, Bruce Hultgren — If Betty is not available, try Francisco at White Glove Cleaning 728-2802 or 773-4033. He has a team that is…
History of Cunha Intermediate School, post 5, Nov 17 7:49am, Ken Johnson — Katharine Weber, If this morning at work, you walk over to the Kelly and Church Street entrance of the original…
Proposition 8, post 3, Nov 6 10:20am, Kevin Stokes — Seems most of the signs have been collected, thank you everyone.
Advanced technology ride sharing using the HMB purchased park lands on Highway 92, post 4, Nov 1 2:58pm, Terri Schoenrock Reece — What an interesting idea! Sort of a match.com, without the speed dating. Sounds like a great project for a budding…
Today: Patchy fog before 10am. Otherwise, partly sunny, with a high near 54. North wind at 5 mph becoming SSE.
Tonight: Patchy fog after 10pm. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 45. NW wind between 5 and 8 mph.
Wednesday: Patchy fog before 10am. Otherwise, sunny, with a high near 58. Calm wind becoming NNW around 5 mph.
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 45. West wind between 3 and 5 mph.
Thursday: A 40% chance of showers after 10am. Partly cloudy, with a high near 58. Calm wind becoming SW between 10 and 13 mph.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 43.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 57.
Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 43.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 60.
Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 44.
Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 63.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 44.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 61.
PFC: 2:59am; AFD: 2:30am