Report to readers: Reviewing the Review

Editorial

By on Thu, September 30, 2004

I’ve made it a policy not to make Coastsider about what’s wrong with the Half Moon Bay Review. I’m content to make Coastsider the best site it can possibly be and let them do whatever it is they do.

I’m making an exception this week because the Review’s report on the September 21 Half Moon Bay City Council meeting was so bizarre that their coverage has become the story.  Jeanine Gore and Debra Godshall were at the meeting, and I only saw it on tape. But in reading Wednesday’s coverage, I got the impression that we were reporting on two different meetings.

This is a big story with lots of moving parts, so I’m going to break it into pieces. I’m in good company: the Review used three stories taking up 60% of their front page for it. I’ve already run my first story, the Review’s astonishing neglect of the Oak Avenue park story.

If this is too much negativity and cynicism for you—it is for me—I recommend you go back and read my original coverage of the Oak Avenue park or my new photo album of the Moss Beach Park reconstruction.

Album: Moss Beach Park is taking shape

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Barry Parr
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Barry Parr
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Barry Parr
These are just a sample. Click on any photo to enter the album.

By on Thu, September 30, 2004

I dropped by to see the construction of Moss Beach Park [photo album], and I was amazed by what I saw. My first impression was that there was no place to park. Then I got a good look at an amazing scene.

There were close to 50 volunteers on the site, ranging from the unskilled to professional contractors. What was amazing to me was that everyone was working hard. No one was standing around looking for something to do. This thing is very well organized.

Take a look at these scenes and realize just how far the work has come in just 24 hours work on two of the coldest and dampest days we’ve seen in a long time.

I’ll be posting more pictures as work progresses.  In the meantime, get out there and see it for yourself. Or lend a hand.

Why did the Review bury the Oak Avenue Park story?

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Did you see this? Neither did I until I went looking for it.

By on Thu, September 30, 2004

I’ve run a three stories about the Half Moon Bay City Council’s purchase of land between Oak Avenue and Pilarcitos Creek to build a park that would complement the trail they’re now building and to add some open space to a neighborhood that really needs it. The Review has not simply ignored the story, they buried it.

Not only is this a feel-good story, but the purchase was passed unanimously by a city council that was severely divided by the Nurserymen’s Exchange purchase earlier in the evening. Everyone agreed that this was a great plan for a neighborhood that desperately needs a park.

The Review reported this by dropping it in "In other matters", a tedious compendium of city council agenda items on the next-to-the-last page of Section A. Here’s what they wrote:

Adopted a resolution authorizing the city manager to enter into a purchase agreement and record title for the purchase of 056-141-950; 056-141-960; 056-141-970.

That’s it: no description of the parcels or their location, or any indication the city is building a new park. Not even a quote from Marina Fraser, who testified at the meeting that this was a priority ever since she was on the Parks and Recreation Commission and how it will provide a safe place for the kids of the neighborhood, many of whom are now playing in the street.

Perhaps Oak Avenue doesn’t matter to the Review.

Pescadero State Beach death found to be suicide


By on Wed, September 29, 2004

The body of the man who was found on Pescadero State Beach on Friday has been identified. The coroner said the death of the 28-year-old Dublin resident was a suicide.

Sprawl makes you sick


By on Tue, September 28, 2004

People who live in sprawling cities are more likely to report hypertension, arthritis, headaches and breathing difficulties, and other chronic health conditions, according to the Rand Corporation. A few weeks ago,  Smart Growth America reported that sprawl makes you fat.

Sedentary, car-dominated lifestyles and air pollution appeared to be contributing factors, says co-author Roland Sturm, a Rand economist. The findings suggest that an adult who lives in a more sprawling urban area will have a health profile similar to someone four years older who lives in a more compact city [LA Times, registration required].

Sprawl is defined as poorly connected streets (such as cul-de-sacs), lower population density and widely separated areas for housing, schools, shopping and employment.

If you must live in sprawl, Sturm says activities such as walking a child to school or bicycling to a corner market can have cumulative positive health effects. This assumes that you live within walking distance of your child’s school.

In the coming months, I want to start putting this information in a Coastside context. I want to look at existing examples of sprawl on the coastside and explore what we can do to avoid it in the future.

Pescadero minister Wendy Taylor is recognized for her work with coastside Latinos


By on Tue, September 28, 2004

Rev Wendy Taylor operates Puente de la Costa Sur (Bridge of the South Coast) to help build bridges between Latinos and Anglos in Pescadero. She helps farmworkers find literacy classes, medical and dental clinics, and transportation. She has distributed over 300 mountain bikes to workers and provided sleeping bags for the homeless. When ranches have closed down or families have been evicted, Taylor has helped them relocate.

Tonight, The San Francisco Foundation will award Taylor the John R. May Community Leadership Award at the Herbst Theater in San Francisco. The award includes a check for $20,000 for Puente de la Costa Sur.

 

Help build Moss Beach Park beginning Wednesday

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Moss Beach Park
For a larger version of this plan, click on the picture.

By on Mon, September 27, 2004

Build Day for the Moss Beach Park starts Wednesday, September 29 and continues through October 3. Everyone is invite to help build the new park. For more information see Coastsider’s earlier story, or see www.mossbeachpark.com

I just found this remarkable plan for the new park on the Web site. It looks really exciting. Click on the image for a larger version, or go to the Web site.

UPDATE: Stephen Miller posted this comment, which I’m adding to the main story:

The park effort is in need of tools: hammers, saws, drills, wrenches, wheelbarrows, etc.  The complete list can be viewed at on the Web site  If you are willing to loan your tools for the build, please bring them to the park.  Someone will check them in, tag each item, and you will get a receipt.  Alternatively, you can call Theresa MacNaughton, Tools Coordinator, at 563-9739.

Tools will be looked after, but if any are lost or damaged, the park has a budget to replace them.  See you at the build!

Album: HMB’s future Oak Avenue Park

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Construction of the pedestrian bridge at the northeast corner of the new park.
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Looking west down Oak Avenue, from the construction site.
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Looking east from the far end of the new park toward the bridge construction.

By on Mon, September 27, 2004

I stopped by the land that the Half Moon Bay City Council just bought to get some pictures of HMB’s newest parkland, on Oak Ave, just south of Pilarcitos Creek. This lot was purchased by unanimous vote.

There’s a lot of construction going on right now to build the southern footing of the bridge over Pilarcitos Creek. The third photo probably gives the best view of the lot.  Beyond the brush lies the creekbed.

Click on the pictures for a larger image.

Loma Mar wildland fire burned an acre on Thursday

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Capt. Cathy Whitney, La Honda Fire
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Capt. Cathy Whitney, La Honda Fire
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Capt. Cathy Whitney, La Honda Fire

By on Mon, September 27, 2004

A wildland fire broke out Thursday at the end of Loma Mar Ave. in Loma Mar, probably started by a downed power line. The fire was in difficult terrain.  The La Honda and Loma Mar Volunteer Fire Departments, as well as the CDF/San Mateo County Fire Department responded to the call at 2:53pm.

The fire burned nearly an acre and took nearly four hours for eight engines, one water tender, two hand crews, two helicopters, two air tankers and one air attack to bring under control.  Firefighters remained at the scene through Friday evening.

Chief Larry Whitney of the La Honda department reminds us that fall is the San Mateo County Coastside’s Fire Season. The wild fire threat will remain until the winter’s rains arrive in earnest. Over the last decade most all of the South Coast’s large acreage fires have occurred in the months of October and November. Keep defensible space around your home and report any sign of a fire immediately by dialing 911.

Click on the pictures for a larger image.

Album: Half Moon Bay Wine Walk

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Cheri Parr
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Cheri Parr
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Cheri Parr

By on Sat, September 25, 2004

The best part for me was that this this was the first public event where I met people who were not only readers, but had made Coastsider their home page. We also met some old friends. We’ve got over 100 pictures from tonight [click on the link to see the album]. You’re going to see a lot of babies and kids in these shots. You might get the impression that 20% of the people at the Wine Walk were babies from looking at our pictures. But, let’s face it, they’re more photogenic than the rest of us.

One of the things I love most about the coastside is a sense of community that isn’t possible anywhere else in the Bay Area, or many other places in this country. The notion of a community making its own fun has been pretty alien to the US really since the Second World War. We’re lucky to live in a place like this.

Thank you to the organizers of this wonderful event.

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