Agriculture is a $181 million business in San Mateo County


By on Thu, August 12, 2004

Agriculture revenue in the county was $180,621,000 in 2003, down from $183,148,000 in 2002, reports the San Mateo County Times:

Land in production for outdoor-grown floral and nursery crops increased by 198 acres, or 6 percent, over the 2002 totals.

...

Many important Coastal crops—including lilies, iris, artichokes, Brussels sprouts, and leeks—also showed increases in production. More cattle, sheep and lambs were sold.

The article noted that agriculture was down 90 percent in the county since 1940, citing "high real estate prices" as a reason.

Elsewhere, the Times says a team of Stanford Business School students helping farmers market their produce locally, under the slogan "Buy fresh, buy local", which has been very successful in Santa Cruz County.

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By on Thu, August 12, 2004

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It’s final: no more candidates sign up for CUSD election


By on Wed, August 11, 2004

The extended deadline expired today, and no additional candidates have filed for the CUSD school board. The candidates are Charles Gardner of Montara, Jonathan Lundell of Lobitos Creek, and John Moseley of El Granada. The Review reported today that Gardner has resigned his position on the Midcoast Community Council to run for the CUSD board.

There are four candidates for three seats on the La Honda Pescadero Unified School District, no contested seats on the Las Lomitas Elementary School District, no contested seats on the Pescadero Municipal Advisory Council, and seven candidates for three seats on the San Mateo County Harbor District.

Click on the "read more" link for the complete roster of candidates for midcoast positions.

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By on Wed, August 11, 2004

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Announcing Coastsider Calendar

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Coastsider Calendar

By on Wed, August 11, 2004

I’ve added a new feature to the site: Coastsider Calendar

Coastsider Calendar contains information about upcoming government meetings, school schedules, and entertainment on the coastside. You can view all the listings together or break it out by type, view them by day, week or month, and listings are linked to relevant websites. You can also subscribe to our calendar by RSS or with Apple’s iCal software.

Please check it out and tell me what you think. Is it useful? Do have any suggestions to make it better? Does it work correctly on your computer? Let me know.

Is El Niño coming back this winter?

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Jet Propulsion Lab
Warming in the central Pacific (in red), could mean that El Niño is coming this year.

By on Wed, August 11, 2004

Last Friday, Scientists at the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center declared that warming water in the central equatorial Pacific last month may indicate a 50% chance there could be an El Niño this year.

While coastsiders wouldn’t welcome El Niño, which brings prospects of outages on Devil’s Slide, newspapers in Texas and San Diego are hoping for rainier winter and Southeast Asia worries about a drought.

The National Climate Center in Australia played down the possibility, putting the probability at 30 to 40 percent, while stating that such percentages were a pretty subjective way to think about the possibility.

I’m going to make sure our roof is repaired.

What will Harbor Village look like?

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Current plan, Main Lodge south elevation. This probably gives the best idea of the scale of the project as seen from the harbor.
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Current plan, Main Lodge west elevation.
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This original site plan gives you an idea of how Harbor Village will be oriented on its site. The large parking lot will be the main feature as seen from Highway 1.
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Here is the layout of the project. The "lighthouse" in the upper right is no longer part of the project.
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Ground floor layout, showing two retail shells. It's unclear what the retail shell will look like if the hotel isn't built.
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Second floor layout.

By on Wed, August 11, 2004

Last week, I wrote about The planned Harbor Village development. Critics are assailing it as an eyesore, but I couldn’t find any pictures when I posted the story.  After some digging around, I managed to get some current pictures of the planned hotel from the county, and some old site plans of the project as a whole.

There have been changes since the original site plans were created. The fake "lighthouse" shown on these plans has been removed at the request of the Coastal Commission. But they give some idea of what we can expect until we can get more current site plans.

Personally, I’ve been ambivalent about the project, but I was startled by how large and monolithic the hotel would be from Capistrano Road.

Click on each of the pictures on the right to see a full-sized version in a separate window.

Start learning how to pronounce “Los Pueblecitos”


By on Tue, August 10, 2004

Oscar Braun’s drive to incorporate the Southcoast is featured in the Examiner. A couple of days ago, he put out a typically idiosyncratic press release attacking the Coastal Open Space Alliance for its opposition to the plan. The issue is real: self-rule for the 6,500 residents of a vast area that is now run by the county.

The County and incorporation opponents say the tax base can’t provide the necessary infrastructure. Braun plans to pay for it by charging $9.9 million in "mitigation fees" to the state, county and federal parks (and open space agencies?) in the new community. That’s about $1,500 per resident of the new community.

Click "read more" to see the Los Pueblecitos press release

The Harbor District race could be particularly bitter


By on Tue, August 10, 2004

The San Mateo County Harbor District race is shaping up to be very contentious. The district oversees the marina at Pillar Point in Princeton, as well as Oyster Point in South San Francisco. It currently owes the state $18 million for capital improvements.

There are seven candidates for three seats, and the prize is the balance of power on the board, according to the San Mateo County Times.

Jim Tucker, the district’s secretary, has the best quote in the story, "It’s a false sense of being in debt," he says of the $18 million. "By 2018, we will be debt-free."

 

San Mateo Times publisher accused of rigging ‘best-of’ survey to favor advertisers


By on Tue, August 10, 2004

ANG Newspapers, the company that publishes the San Mateo Times, Oakland Tribune and four other papers published faked "Best of" reader surveys that featured current and potential advertisers in place of reader-selected winners, according to Grade the News.

David Marin, who was fired from his job as director of advertising in March 2003, filed a lawsuit in Alameda County Superior Court alleging that the Tribune’s parent company, ANG newspapers, committed a "massive hoax" on readers, advertisers and the general public by ignoring survey results and hand-picking the names of businesses to receive awards.

In the suit, Mr. Marin says that before he took over the department in June 2002, another manager "would take the true poll results into a room by herself and alter the results, emerging with a new set of ‘winners.’" A call to the home of the woman named in the suit was not returned.

ANG, owned by Denver-based MediaNews Group, publishes the San Mateo County Times, Oakland Tribune, Alameda Times-Star, Hayward Daily Review, Fremont Argus, and Tri-Valley Herald. The Pacifica Tribune is owned by MediaNews, but apparently is not part of ANG.

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