Montara Water hosting a community workshop Thursday night


Montara Water & Sanitary District (MWSD) is hosting community workshop at the Farallone View Elementary School’s multipurpose room. The meeting will run from 7:30pm to 10pm.

At the last workshop, attendees requested information on rate structures. This year, attendees will get a history of how the district got where it is, rate structures, progress in improving the water system, the Alta Vista Well, and water treatment projects, among other items.  There will be time for Q&A.


Coastside water summit is a—umm—watershed event


A summit of all the agencies responsible for water on the Coastside—in partnership with a host of other utilities, conservation organizations, and government agencies—will be held next Thursday in Half Moon Bay from 9am to 4pm.

The goal of the meeting is to balance the uses of the Pilarcitos Creek watershed. Coastside water use and quality is the responsibility of a bunch of agencies (Montara Water & Sanitary District, SF PUC, Coastside County Water District, and Sewer Authority Midcoastside—itself a joint effort of MWSD, Granada Sanitary District, and the city of Half Moon Bay) and the process of managing our water for home, agricultural, and the environmental use is complicated to say the least.

The people responsible for this complex system of water and waste will meet for a program that includes experts on water recycling, the current poor condition of Pilarcitos Creek, and how the creek can be restored. There will be an hour for Q&A, moderated by San Mateo County supervisor Rich Gordon.

The summit is produced by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, Coastside County Water District, and Sewer Authority Mid-Coastside.  Partners, in addition to the producing agencies, include:



  • California Department of Fish & Game

  • City of Half Moon Bay

  • Gulf of Farallones National Marine Sanctuary

  • Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary

  • NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service

  • San Mateo County Resource Conservation District

  • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

  • Committee for Green Foothills

  • Peninsula Open Space Trust

  • Pilarcitos Creek Advisory Committee

  • Planning & Conservation League Foundation

  • San Mateo County Farm Bureau

  • Save Our Shores

  • Surfrider Foundation San Mateo County

  • Sustainable Conservation

 

This is a very important meeting—a watershed meeting in all senses of the word. I apologize for not getting this story online sooner, but I expected the Half Moon Bay Review to be all over it. The announcement flyer went out last Thursday and the press release on Tuesday morning.  There was nothing in yesterday’s paper, although the Review did run an announcement in February before the date had been chosen. It’s an all-day meeting, and most members of the public are going to need at least a week’s notice to get away from their jobs for this important meeting.

The meeting will be Thursday, April 28 from 9am to 4pm at I.D.E.S. Hall, 735 Main Street, in Half Moon Bay. Admission is free. And if you pre-register at 650.712.7765 you can reserve at free lunch.
You can download the flyer and the agenda for the meeting from Coastsider.

Tell your friends.

Monterey water board will consider putting CalAm buyout on the ballot


A member of the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District Board of Directors has asked the board to put an advisory measure on November’s ballot to guage citizens’ willingness to buy the the Peninsula water system. The sytem is owned by California American Water Co., which used to own Montara’s system. Alvin Edwards wants the board to vote now, so that if the board votes the ballot measure down, citizens will have time to gather the necessary signatures to put it on the ballot.

Meanwhile, Felton, in Santa Cruz County, has been exploring buying its water system from Cal Am for some time.

CORRECTION: The original version of this story confused Monterey Peninsula’s buyout with Felton’s. These are two separate efforts.

Coastside farmlands are wetter than a lot of people would prefer


Farmland on the coast is a lot wetter than usual, due to this year’s unusually heavy rains. This is frustrating Coastside farmers whose fields are a lot muddier than usual. The San Mateo County Times confirms what we’ve suspected, and keeps alive the question of whether Wavecrest delayed their wetlands delineation because their wetlands were too . . . wet.

Bill limiting public takeover of utilities withdrawn


The bill to keep local authorities from buying private water systems via private domain has been withdrawn by the Fresno assemblyman who sponsored it, according to the Monterey Herald.


The bill, introduced last month, would have required a public agency to show that a privately held utility repeatedly broke the law before it could condemn it and acquire it through eminent domain. Current law presumes public ownership of utilities is preferable and places the burden of proof on the private utility to show why its continued ownership is in the public’s best interest.


Assemblyman Juan Arambula, D-Fresno, is a cheap date.  He had received a $500 contribution from the owner of a Fresno water system whose takeover is under consideration. He introduced the bill at the request of a lobbyist for the California Water Association. The CWA represents 42 private water companies, including California American Water Company (late owners of Montara’s water supply) whose system in Felton is being eyed for public takeover.

Arambula said when he introduced the bill that the lobbyist had described it to him as a “technical amendment without any significant opposition”. Then he started hearing from folks in Santa Cruz County who felt otherwise. The story doesn’t mention whether any of his own constituents took him to task and I can’t find any mention of it on the Fresno Bee’s site.

UPDATE:  From Friday’s Wall Street Journal:

Water has caught the eye of Wall Street, too. Water-industry stocks rose 24% last year, topping the 11% gain in the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index, and have slightly lagged behind the market so far this year, according to an index of water stocks compiled by Boenning & Scattergood, a West Conshohocken, Pa., brokerage firm. Over the past five years, water stocks have surged 113%, compared with a loss of 17% for the S&P 500.

Leland Yee holding a town meeting on Farallon Islands access


John Roletto via Wikipedia
The Farallon Islands are a group of islands and rocks 27 miles outside the Golden Gate. Fun fact: the islands are within San Francisco's city limits.

Assembly member and speaker pro tem Leland Yee (D-12th District) is holding a town hall meeting to discuss public access to the Farallon Islands National Marine Refuge.  The Chronicle reported in February:


House Resources Committee Chairman Richard Pombo, R-Tracy, and the top Democrat on the committee have introduced a bill that would direct the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to offer special permits to visit the Farallon National Wildlife Refuge in response to requests from amateur radio operators who enjoy broadcasting from remote islands.

But scientists who study seabirds and other species on the islands 28 miles off the coast of San Francisco—which some call “California’s Galapagos”—said even limited public visits could have serious effects on populations of birds and marine mammals that have rebounded since access to the islands by humans was strictly limited in 1969.


Yee will host a meeting that includes a representative of the American Radio Relay League, and a host of environmental organizations (Sierra Club, Farallones Marine Sanctuary Association, Audobon Society, Sierra Club, Enviromental Defenese).  The press release quotes Yee:  “This federal legislation is yet another example of efforts to peel back important environmental protections. I will not stand idly by while our environmental policies are neglected or reversed.”

The meeting will be held Thursday, April 14, 2005 at 7:00 P.M. at Richmond Recreation Center, 251 18th Avenue (between California and Clement St.), in San Francisco.

Click “read more” to see the press release.

Click here for the full story.

Maps and satellite images of the Coastside


USGS
This topographical map of Half Moon Bay from 1943 is available from the US Geographical Survey.
Google Maps
This remarkable image of the Half Moon Bay Airport is on Google Maps.
California Coastal Records Project
Miramar in 1972, as seen at California Coastal Records. The Miramar Beach Inn is in the lower left corner.

When I was first set up Coastsider about a year ago, I created a custom link to the TerraServer satellite image database with links to lots of Coastside locations, embedded in a Coastsider page.  I’m still pretty proud of it, as it was kind of a programming exercise for me. But Google just released their new satellite image database, which is superior to the old TerraServer stuff in every way--newer photos, more detail, color, and links to Google’s remarkable new map server.

I’m keeping the original Coastsider map page, because it still has links to topographic maps, which are useful. But from now on, I’m using Google maps and satellite images as my primary map links

Here are some links to satellite images and maps of Coastside locations on Google, TerraServer, and the California Coastal Records Project. I’ve also added some links to historical topographic maps at the US Geological Survey.


Google Satellite Images

You can click on a link on any of these pages to get the corresponding maps. You can also click and drag these images to scroll around them on the screen.

Devil’s Slide |
Montara, Moss Beach |
El Granada |
Half Moon Bay |
Cunha Middle and Hatch Elementary Schools |
Wavecrest |
22 Acre Park Site and Cypress Cove |


California Coastal Records

This site always takes my breath away. Kenneth Adelman has taken pictures of every square mile of the California coast.  And now he has added historical photos from 1972, 1979, 1987, 2002, as well as today.

Devil’s Slide |
Montara |
Moss Beach |
El Granada |
Miramar |
Half Moon Bay |
North Wavecrest |
Redondo Beach |
Ritz-Carlton |
Martin’s Beach, Lobitos Creek |
San Gregorio State Beach |
Pescadero |



Coastsider topographic maps

These are good if you’re looking for geographical features, such as mountains, streams, and beaches. You may also want to compare the images to the ones on Google for changes. The satellite photos were taken about 1992. Click on the arrows at the edges to scroll around and use the number scale to zoom the image.

Devil’s Slide |
Montara, Moss Beach |
El Granada |
Half Moon Bay |
Wavecrest |
Cunha Middle and Hatch Elementary Schools |
Purissima Creek |
Martin’s Beach, Lobitos Creek |
San Gregorio |
Pescadero |


US Geographical Survey

The US Geographical Survey site has some downloadable JPEG’s of great old maps of Half Moon Bay from 1940, 1943 and 1961, as well as of current maps of the Coastside and points north.


MROSD buys its first Coastside property


The Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District (MROSD) Board of Directors voted unanimously last night to purchase the 183-acre Peninsula Open Space Trust/Forde property near Half Moon Bay.  This is the District’s first purchase on the Coastside and its first board meeting here.

The property is adjacent to the District’s Purisima Creek Redwoods Open Space Preserve. It includes the headwaters of Lobitos Creek, a likely spawning area for the federally threatened steelhead, and the scenic top of Irish Ridge, which affords views of the Tunitas Creek and Lobitos Creek watersheds, coastal ranches, and the Pacific Ocean. A mixed evergreen forest of Douglas fir and redwood, including a few first growth trees, characterize a portion of the property’s landscape.

This story is based on MROSD’s press release. Click “read more” to see the full press release.

Click here for the full story.

Montaran reappointed to Monterey Bay Sanctuary advisory council


Michael Laffen, a resident of Montara, has been appointed to the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary advisory council. Laffen, a small-business owner, was re-appointed to a second term in an at-large seat. Laffen is a small-business owner.

The council includes representatives for tourism, diving, education, at-large, research and commercial fishing. The council povided input to the sanctuary’s draft management plan, which will be released for public review later this summer.  Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary includes more than 5,300 square miles on the coast.

MROSD buys a million-dollar shack, and not everyone is happy


There’s been some controversy over a 4 to 3 vote by MROSD to buy an acre and half with a “rundown mountain cabin” adjacent to its land in Los Gatos.  The idea is that it will improve parking and access as well as provide a place for MROSD’s local ranger to live.  Those voting against thought it might not be such a hot idea to spend $1 million of the District’s $15 million budget on the dump when there might be cheaper solutions to the access problem and the rest of the cash could be spent on . . . open space.

According to the Mercury News story, one board member “fretted” during the meeting over whether this would become a public relations disaster.

“This is just unfathomable,” said Terry Gossett, a Moss Beach engineer and member of the Silicon Valley Taxpayers Association. “It is a misuse of the funds from taxpayers. It is being used to take care of their own instead of the public, who are the customers.”

The article fails to mention that Gossett’s an implacable foe of the District in any event.  It’s not clear that he’d prefer to spend that money buying larger tracts from private landowners on the Coastside. 


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