Could a strategic retreat have saved SF’s Great Highway—and its beach?

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By on Wed, January 27, 2010

In 2003, San Francisco’s Ocean Beach Task Force recommended several proposed long-term solutions to erosion at Ocean Beach. One option was a strategic retreat from the coastline, moving a nearby sewage tunnel and the highway inland, reports the Examiner.

Now, the city may have to shore up the bluff with a rock wall that will likely only compound its problems.

In recent weeks, the bluffs along Great Highway south of Sloat Boulevard have yielded to powerful waves stirred up by this year’s El Niño weather system in the Pacific Ocean. In the most-extreme areas, the bluffs have retreated more than 70 feet from where they were in a 2007 assessment. In one area, the guardrail of Great Highway has crumbled off the road.

Worse, the waves are now within 20 feet of a mammoth sewage tunnel that lies deep under Great Highway, Department of Public Works project manager Frank Filice said. He said if left untended, and if waves through the rest of winter are anything like they were the past few weeks, that 14-foot-wide tunnel could be breached, spilling as much as 10 million gallons of raw sewage onto the beach. [...]

But advocate Dean LaTourrette, director of coastal advocate organization Save the Waves, said the rock wall could cause further erosion in the long run, and the bad erosion now being seen could partly be caused by the rock walls installed in the 1990s just to the north. The walls also can create a safety hazard and impact wildlife habitat, he said.

The Chron says the Army Corp of Engineers had a plan also:

In 1994, storms erased 30 to 40 feet of the coastline in the same area south of Sloat. A 1996 report from the Army Corps of Engineers recommended building a permanent seawall in the area.

 

Photo: Pacifica’s Nurdle Beach

Ian Butler in Pacifica Riptide

By on Wed, January 27, 2010

Ian Butler took this photo at Nurdle Beach, the new nickname for Pacifica’s northernmost beach.  Nurdles are small particles that Styrofoam (polystyrene) is made of. According to Butler, writing for the Riptide:

The entire beach was covered in a white layer of the particles, which probably numbered in the millions. Recent rains washed them from Pacifica and Daly City streets into the storm drains, down the "Secret Waterfall" and into the ocean. They were then washed up onto the beach during high tide. They will all wash away in a day or two and head out to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, poisoning birds, fish, turtles, and sea mammals all the way.

Video: Pacifica developer redefines “elegance”... as “hugeness”


By on Wed, January 27, 2010

This video for the Connemara blufftop development in Pacifica features "inspiring natural surroundings", "the promise of this seaside community’s [i.e. Pacifica’s] unique lifestyle", "whitewater" ocean views, and "unmistakable elegance". And whatever these homes reveal, it’s not "a commitment to architectural excellence". Thanks to Pacifica Riptide for the tip.

Help save California: circulate petitions for the Majority Vote Initiative

Letter

By on Wed, January 27, 2010

I have signed on as the Coastside Coordinator for this most important initiative that affects every Californian.

The full wording of the initiative that would appear on the November ballot is but fourteen words.

 

“All legislative actions on revenue and budget must be determined by a majority vote

Why is this important?

There’s one main reason:

Under California law, a two-thirds vote is required to pass a budget or raise revenue. That means a minority of legislators—one-third plus one, in either the state Senate or Assembly –– controls the legislature by saying no until they get what they want. This is minority rule, not democracy. A minority of ideological extremists, who do not believe
that state government should serve public needs, have used these two-thirds rules to block the will of the majority, take control, and drive our state into chaos and near-bankruptcy.

Our target for the coastside is more than 3000-signed petitions. To date we have 600+ signatures.

We need petition circulators to man our outreach tables at the local supermarkets, coffee houses, post offices, etc. To help please call me at 650-726-9280.

Charter Review Committee to meet Wednesday, Jan. 27, 5pm tonight

Letter

By on Wed, January 27, 2010

WHAT:  2nd meeting of the San Mateo County’s Charter Review Committee.
Meeting is Open to the Public
WHEN:  Wednesday, Jan. 27 5:00pm
WHERE:  Room 101, 455 County Center, in Redwood City.

County Supervisors appointed most of the Charter Review Committee members and Michael Murphy is the unofficial chair.

Very few members of the public attended the first meeting. I hope more people come to the Charter Review Committee meeting tonight.

At the January 13th meeting I read a letter supporting the June 30, 2009 Grand Jury Report. Public comment was the last item on the agenda. During public comment I requested the following:

Meetings should be located throughout the County so the public has an opportunity to participate in the process.

An email address for the Committee should be posted on the County website so the public can correspond with Charter Review Committee members.

The meeting should be video taped and broadcast on television and the internet.

Public comment should be moved to the beginning on the meeting.

I requested ALL committee questions for County Counsel and all responses to questions by County Counsel be posted on the County website to make the process more transparent.

-The last request was made in response to the following:  During the January 13th meeting Michael Murphy recommended that all committee questions be emailed to his office for review and Cced to committee members.  Murphy said he would respond with answers to committee questions via email and Cc the committee.  COULD THIS BE CONSIDERED A POSSIBLE BROWN ACT VIOLATION?

June 30, 2009 Grand Jury Report:
http://www.sanmateocourt.org/grandjury/2008/advisory_letter.pdf

Leave your legacy on the Coastside, Saturday, Jan 30

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Press release

By on Wed, January 27, 2010

You’re invited to join Coastside nonprofits for a free, no-obligation luncheon and educational seminar to learn about the many ways you can leave your legacy locally.

You will have access to attorneys, CPAs, and investment specialists who will talk about how both you and we Coastside nonprofits can benefit from careful attention to estate planning and related matters.

The event will take place Saturday, January 30, 1 to 3 pm at the Ted Adcock Center, 535 Kelly Avenue, Half Moon Bay.

Guest speakers:

  • Michael Gilfix, a nationally known authority in the field of law, aging and estate planning. A 1973 graduate of Stanford Law School, he is a Fellow of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA), a co-founder of NAELA, and a Certified Legal Specialist in Estate Planning, Trust and Probate Law. Mr. Gilfix regularly addresses professional audiences, including attorneys, physicians, certified public accountants, and financial planners, nationally as well as locally. 
  • Stan Pastorino, a local farmer who grows certified organic produce. Stan is a dynamic public speaker who communicates the passion we all feel for our beautiful Coastside community. 

Sponsoring nonprofits:

Cabrillo Education Foundation
Coastside Adult Day Health Center
Coastside Children’s Programs
Coastside Hope
Coastside Land Trust
Coastside Rotacare Clinic
Puente de la Costa Sur
Senior Coastsiders
Sonrisas Dental Center

Documents:  Attachments to Big Wave Draft EIR comments


By on Tue, January 26, 2010

Those 243 comments on the Big Wave Draft Environmental Impact Report also came with a stack of attachments, including presentations from previous planning commission hearings and technical appendices. You can download the appendices to the comments from Coastsider [64mb].

The presentations from November 18 Planning Commission hearing (Appendix B) are particularly interesting, and contain some excellent feedback about the development from community members.

Click below for the detailed list.

Coastside Mothers’ Club hosts kindergarten forum

Letter

By on Tue, January 26, 2010

The Coastside Mothers’ Club will host a half-day Kindergarten Forum on February 6th in Half Moon Bay. The Kindergarten Forum will bring together parents, educators, administrators and school representatives to openly discuss the options available in Coastside elementary schools.  The Forum is free and open to the public.

Saturday, February 6, 2010
Community United Methodist Church
777 Mirmontes Street
Half Moon Bay
12:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. 

Starting kindergarten is an exciting and hopeful time for families and children. A child’s education plays an important role in shaping his or her future and kindergarten will provide the strong start each child deserves. 

The Kindergarten Forum is a unique opportunity for parents to hear from educators, administrators and school representatives from both public and private elementary schools about the different options on the coast. Topics of discussion will include budgets, testing and curriculum. Plus, teachers will give insights into kindergarten preparation and curriculum, tips on choosing a school, determining Kindergarten readiness and skills needed for success. Participating schools will include: Farallone View, El Granada, Hatch, Kings Mountain, Sea Crest, Picasso, Wilkinson, Good Shepard and Alma Heights. Scheduled panel discussions on specific topics will take place at the times below.

12:45 – 2:00pm   Public School Principal Panel
2:15 – 3:15pm   Teacher Panel
3:30 – 4:30pm   Private School Panel

CUSD budget hearing tonight in El Granada


By on Mon, January 25, 2010

The Cabrillo Unified School District board is holding a series of public hearings to discuss its developing budget crisis and possible remedies, in addition to regularly scheduled Board meetings scheduled for January 14 and February 11.

The four special public hearings have been scheduled for 6pm over the next few weeks.  The next hearing is tonight in El Granada.

  • Thursday, January 21: Farallone View Elementary (Multi-Use Room)
  • Monday, January 25: El Granada (School Library)
  • Tuesday, February 23: Hatch Elementary (Multi-Use Room)
  • Thursday, February 25: District Office Board Room

From the press release:

Like school districts throughout California,  scrambling to respond to a structural budget deficit of nearly $2.5 million… and some key decisions will need to be made over the next two months in preparation for the upcoming 2010-2011 school year.

“It is incredibly frustrating,” CUSD Superintendent Rob Gaskill noted. “If we were funded at the appropriate level guaranteed by state formula we would be holding our own in these tough times. We’ve cut just about everywhere we can by now. The next round could prove really painful. The Board has some very difficult decisions to make by the end of February that will impact this school district for many years to come.” [...]

“We encourage members of our Coastside community to fully engage with us in developing creative strategies to cope with this imposing deficit,” Gaskill noted. “Everyone has something at stake in this one.”

 

Planning Commission was not given Big Wave comments

Letter

By on Mon, January 25, 2010

We just learned that San Mateo County Planning Division did not pass the over 245 Big Wave DEIR comments sent by residents to the Planning Commission.

This is a very serious omission, especially since the Planning Commission has scheduled a workshop on January 27, 8:00 am to study the Big Wave proposal. Not giving the Planning Commission the benefit of the various agencies and individuals input slants the evaluation and robs the commission an overview of the issues surrounding Big Wave; which range from zoning violations, lack of water and sewer in the DEIR, the issue of wetlands, the problems with the proximity of the airport, the traffic mess, the shady development schedule and much more.
It appears that the county planning division is playing politics by withholding this large body of studies from the Planning Commmission in hope to steamroll the project trough the DEIR.

A very serious omission that calls into question the whole DEIR process and its adherence to the CEQA guidelines.

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