Speaking of citizen journalism

Editorial

By on Thu, June 29, 2006

You’ve probably noticed that there hasn’t been a lot of news on Coastsider this week. At least, I hope you have. I’m in in Amherst, Massachusetts, speaking at a conference on citizen journalism.  I’m out here with a bunch of A-list journalism bloggers, j-school professors, newspaper executives , and (first and foremost) people who are doing in their communities what Coastsider is doing in ours. It’s exciting and inspiring to be among so many people who are moving in the same direction to remake community news. I expect to return with a new sense of purpose and lots of new ideas.

I’ve got a number of stories in the queue that I hope to post from the road, and I’ll keep moderating comments, but Coastsider will be relatively quiet for the next few days.

I’m on a couple of panels this afternoon, including one called "Can Free Media Sustain Democracy?" It would be an understatement to say I’m optimistic. 

Volunteers help plovers keep eggs safe


By on Mon, June 26, 2006

Volunteers on Half Moon Bay’s beaches are looking for snowy plover eggs, to keep them safe, according to a story by Julia Scott in the County Times:

Within an hour of their discovery on Francis Beach, volunteers erected a netted enclosure to protect the plover family from predators. Finding western snowy plover eggs is so rare, and the chance of their survival so small, that human intervention at this stage has been crucial since the bird was listed as a threatened species in 1993.

Letter: Disastrous preparedness

Letter to the editor

By on Sun, June 25, 2006

Dale Dunham is a resident of Half Moon Bay. This is a version of public comments he read at Tuesday’s Half Moon Bay City Council meeting.

Leadership in a disaster situation is critical; this is an unalterable truth that cannot be overemphasized.  The person appointed to the leadership role should be in a senior position of authority in local government, be extremely knowledgeable of disaster response requirements, and also be in a position that would normally permit their immediate response to fulfill emergency duties. In Half Moon Bay, as in other cities, the City Manager fills that most important leadership role of Director of Emergency Services. (HMB Municipal Code:  Chapter 2.40, Emergency Organization)

In addition, the City of HMB Emergency Plan states that “The City of Half Moon Bay City Manager, serving as the EOC (Emergency Operations Center) Director, will manage and coordinate the city’s disaster response in conformance with state law and county emergency response ordinances.” (City of HMB Emergency Operations Plan, Volume One, Page 1, Executive Summary)

The City Manager should then, be required to fulfill the requirements for authority, knowledge and availability.  As the “CEO” for the City, the City Manager has the authority and, presumably, because of emergency training and senior management involvement in all facets of city management, the knowledge.  And, as the person hired to be responsible for virtually every operation of the city, the City Manager should live in the city and be available.

The Half Moon Bay City Manager lives in Oakland.

Pescadero’s celebrates 150th anniversary with open house


By on Sun, June 25, 2006

The Pescadero Historical Society is hosting an Open House at the Native Sons Hall, 112 Stage Road in Pescadero, from 11am to 5pm on Saturday and Sunday, July 1 and 2. The community hall will become a mini-museum with displays of historic photographs, antique furnishings, photo albums, oral histories, and updated maps for self-guided historical walking tours of town. Some items such as historic re-colored photographs will be for sale in a small Emporium in the front lobby. Light refreshments will be available. Displays of the town photos taken on March 28, 2006 will be available for purchase—orders will be taken for later delivery.  Proceeds go to the Pescadero Foundation-Friends of PMAC.

Sunday, July 2 will be a locals-only celebration from 11am-4pm at IDES Hall.  Festivities include live music, a BBQ and potluck. Residents with last names beginning with A to M should bring a salad or appetizers for 8, and those with last names from N to Z should bring desserts or soft drinks (no alcohol please).

The BBQ by Caesar Silvestri will provide an entrée. We will also have information tables inside providing an opportunity to discuss plans with the architects working on a new master plan for the school district, and the progress on workforce housing at the Warheit site.  Community organizations or local artists wishing to participate should contact  Catherine Peery, 650-879-0150 or Jackson Robertson, 650-879-0072.   

County stops, and then allows, filling and grading at Big Wave

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UPDATED: The original photos for this story were lost. These photos from the same June 2006 series were substituted in February 8, 2009.

By on Fri, June 23, 2006

Two days after halting filling and grading on the southeast portion of the property [Google map]  to be used by the proposed Big Wave project, the San Mateo County Planning and Building Division has sent a letter to the owners allowing the activity to proceed.

On Friday afternoon, Jim Eggemeyer, the county’s Development Review Services Manager, sent a letter to the property’s owner and his attorney, as well as the farmer who would be planting the property, saying the property was exempt from coastal district and grading regulations:

Preliminary research indicates that this issue was the subject of litigation in 1988, and a Superior Court judgment was rendered finding that routine agricultural activity on the property was exempt from both Coastal District Regulations and County Grading Regulations.

The county has asked that the farmer maintain a 100-foot buffer zone around wetlands on the property.

Based on our site inspection, none of the new soil deposited and spread so far is anywhere close to the wetland’s 100’ buffer.  At our site inspection, we asked Mr. Iacopi to delineate the 100’ buffer boundary along the wetland’s entire length on both sides of Denniston Creek.  We understand there are orange cones demarcating the boundary.  Please maintain these cones during your growing season.

The wetland buffer was marked with orange cones on Thursday morning.

Alarms were raised Monday evening when a bulldozer was seen spreading truckloads of dirt on the property. The property is directly adjacent to the Pillar Point marsh.  Vegetation had been removed in late 2004 or early 2005 with harrowing or deep discing.

Work continued Tuesday.  Wednesday morning, at least seven large dump trucks brought in loads of soil about every ten minutes. The area being filled was lower than much of the rest of the Big Wave property.  The fill dirt raised the level substantially. 

The California Coastal Commission’s enforcement division began looking into the matter on Tuesday, and made contact with Gary Warren of San Mateo County’s Code Enforcement office.

Wednesday morning,  Sheriff’s deputies requested that the bulldozer operator and a farmer who was on-site halt their activities until code enforcement arrived.  Mr. Warren arrived at the site and issued a stop work order.  The bulldozer was loaded onto a truck and removed from the site Wednesday afternoon. The farmer reportedly told officers that he was trucking in the soil to mix with the existing soil to grow pumpkins for Pumpkin Festival season.

Click the link to see copy of the county’s letter.

Deadline for city council applications is Thursday, July 6


By on Thu, June 22, 2006

The city of Half Moon Bay has set a deadline of Thursday, July 6, for applications to fill the city council seat vacated by David Gorn.  Applicants must submit a "Willing to Serve Form", a letter of intent, and a resume detailing their public service by Thursday, July 6, 2006 at 5:00 p.m.. You can pick up the form at City Hall.

The city council will interview potential appointees at a special meeting on Tuesday, July 11 at 6:30pm at the Adcock Community Center, 535 Kelly Avenue.  For additional information, contact City Clerk Siobhan Smith at 726-8271.

City will add agriculture to Boys and Girls Club lease

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Darin Boville
Boys and Girls Club president David Cline explains the history of the site they lease from the city and why they want to grow pumpkins there this year.

By on Wed, June 21, 2006

Tuesday’s Half Moon Bay City Council meeting went into super-overtime, dragging past 1am on Wednesday in order to deal with the controversy over the Boys and Girls Club’s grading of the land they lease from the city.

While the council declined to give the group permission to set up a pumpkin patch at the meeting, they directed the city staff to work with club president David Cline to come up with a lease amendment that would allow agricultural uses in the future, and to determine who is responsible for cleaning up the industrial debris on the site.  The council determined that the lease was clearly designed for a building and not for agriculture.

City hall staff is continuing to investigate whether changing the use of the land to agriculture would require a coastal development permit.

HMB City Council will appoint Gorn’s successor


By on Wed, June 21, 2006

The Half Moon Bay city council majority voted to appoint a replacement for resigning council member David Gorn. The council had the option of holding an election in November.

The replacement must be appointed within 30 days of Gorn’s resignation, which was on June 12. The council plans to hold its interviews and appoint its new member on the next to the last possible day: Tuesday, July 11.

Council member Jim Grady recommended requiring all candidates to promise not to run for election when their term expired.  He said that this had been done twice in San Carlos and had lowered the level of politics in the appointment.  The council rejected this idea.

Council members Patridge, McClung, and Fraser voted to appoint a replacement. Grady voted no on the motion.  All three voting yes said that they were doing so because less than half of Gorn’s term remained to be served.

Boys and Girls Club president says unnamed planner verbally OK’d bulldozing

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Barry Parr
Concrete and rebar can be seen in the pile of debris on the site, although most of the pile appears to be vegetation.

By on Tue, June 20, 2006

David Cline says he has one focus:  To get a club house built for the Boys and Girls Club of the Coastside.

It has been a long process. Cline, who is president of the group, says they originally leased the land for the building in 1997. At some point in the past, the property had been graded. Since then, while the group was waiting for Wavecrest to materialize, he says it was used as a corporation yard by the city of Half Moon Bay and was used to dump debris from the construction of the Sewer Authority Midcoastside plant at the end of the road.  We saw concrete and steel rebar all over the site.

His short-term plan, he says, was to use the land to grow pumpkins as a signature project for the organization. It would be a place where he could show the kids what was happening on their site, as well as the location for a fundraising event.

He approached the city about how to go about removing the debris from the site in preparation for building, and talked to Public Works Director Paul Nagengast.  As the subject moved from removing debris to grading the property, Nagengast told him that a Coastal Development Permit would be required.

A new approach

Cline went back to the zoning ordinance, he says, and saw that the land was zoned for agriculture. The lease, he says, does not discuss agriculture. He went to the city planning department. "The senior planner wasn’t there.  I talked to another planner who was there."  He asked the planner, whom he declined to name, what he would need to do to prepare the land for agriculture. He was told that no permit would be required.  "He said to put up a sign. I put one up ten days ahead of time.  This time of year, we’d need to plant pumpkin seeds right away." The group’s phone number was on the sign and he says no one called to ask about the promised pumpkin patch.

When I asked if he had told the planner that he was going to grade the property, Cline said, "I told him we were going to prepare the ground for planting."

Cline talked to contractors and farmers for advice on preparing the land and planting pumpkins, and was ready to begin preparing the grounds. "I talked to the same planner. He said just go ahead and do it. We started scraping up the land.  There’s still a lot of debris on the site, it will require raking before disking [for planting]." Indeed, rebar can still be seen poking through the soil at some places.

As for his long-term goal, he just wants to build a community facility for kids and their parents.  "I’m interested in building a club. That’s all," he concluded.

Were there wetlands?

Cline says he was unaware that the site might have contained wetlands.

David Johnston, environmental scientist with the California Department of Fish and Game, says he walked the site

last year

two years ago with City Manager Debra Ryan Auker and city council member Mike Ferreira when the city was considering selling the property to the Humane Society for a headquarters and adoption center.

"The site is likely to have wetlands. Some of the areas we walked through had pockets of wetland vegetation."  He said that a thorough analysis of a site can be expensive and take two to three years.

When I showed him the pictures of the site, his first question was, "Is Coastal involved?" That is, the Coastal Commission.

Johnston says it’s still possible to establish if Cline’s group graded wetlands. "You only need to meet one of three criteria to be considered wetlands in California: ponding duration, plant types, or glade soils. It’s harder to tell from the soils, but you can still do it."

At the end of the day Monday, city manager Debra Auker said the matter was still under investigation and that she’d report on it at the city council meeting Tuesday night.

Photo: Ducking traffic


By on Tue, June 20, 2006

Photo: Ducking traffic

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Jack Walicki
4:44pm. Back to HMB traffic crawls up the hill. Mother duck decides to lead six of her ducklings from the south end to the north end of the Crystal Springs reservoir. Even though cars are pouring from the 280 ramp, all lanes stop and little ducks waddle as fast as they can through the road: Someone however, decides that waiting 20 seconds is too long, and decides to jump ahead and tries passing illegally on the right shoulder. We all lean on our horns, that impatient driver stops abruptly just when the  ducks enter the shoulder. I think that they all made it. Click on the picture for more.

 

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