“Once Upon a Mattress”  features over 75 Coastside kids, Friday

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Press release

By on Mon, April 27, 2009

Don’t miss out on your chance to see over 75 local kids act, sing and dance their hearts out on the Coastal Rep stage over the next 2 weekends. Join us for a hilarious spin on the Princess and the Pea fairy tale that will leave you laughing, clapping, and cheering for the unlikely courtship of Prince Dauntless and the moat-swimming princess of his dreams, Winnifred.

Coastal Repertory Theatre is proud to announce the opening of Once Upon a Mattress, the adaptation of the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale The Princess and the Pea. Book by Jay Thompson, Dean Fuller and Marshall Barer, music by Mary Rodgers, lyrics by Marshall Barer, and directed by Michael Lederman.

Coastal Theatre Conservatory celebrates its 15th year on the Coast and its first year as a part of Coastal Repertory Theatre in this lively, foot-stomping, oh-so-fun musical. Whether you’re three or ninety-three, this show will leave you with a smile on your face and lightness in your heart!

"To watch our Coastside youth light up the stage is a thrill of a lifetime." - Director, Michael Lederman

Once Upon a Mattress runs May 1 through 10 with Friday and Saturday performances at 7:30pm and Saturday and Sunday matinees at 1pm. The Coastal Repertory Theatre appreciates your patronage.

Buy Tickets Online at http://www.coastalrep.com/

Letter:  Rock The Rink on Sunday

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Letter

By on Mon, April 27, 2009

Come skate at Rock The Rink on Sunday, May 3, 1-5pm The entire community is invited to the 2nd annual "Rock the Rink" festivities on Sunday afternoon, May 3. There’ll be games, a skills competition, and Music from two bands: "Hometown" and "The Thrashers." Come skate and check out all the action at the Boys and Girls Club Rink at Half Moon Bay High School.

May 3 "Rock the Rink" Schedule:
1pm: Skate and shoot (Patina y Atina)
2pm: All-community free skate (Patinaje gratis para todos)
3pm: Skills competition (Competencias de patinaje)
4pm: More free skate
Plus special guest SJ Sharkie (depending upon the Sharks’ schedule)

Music will play throughout; the band "Hometown" takes the stage at 1:30pm "The Thrashers" gets the microphone at 2:30pm.

The NCHL’s popular Gear Swap and Evaluation Day occur earlier that Sunday. Sign up for the NCHL season at www.coastsiderollerhockey.com

Contact Joel Farbstein at 728-JOEL for more information on Rock the Rink, or about the NCHL Hockey season, which begins May 31

Sign up at Active.com

Joel Farbstein
President, North Coast Hockey League

Debating the fate of Sharp Park Golf Course

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By on Sun, April 26, 2009

Some people are trying to get Sharp Park Golf Course restored to a natural state, and others say that this is neither desirable nor practical.

There’s an interesting debate at the Examiner’s web site, and you can read the full text of the arguments there.

Sharp Park is a peculiar piece of land: a public golf course in Pacifica owned by the city of San Francisco. The San Francisco supervisors will hold a committee hearing on converting Sharp Park into a nature preserve on Thursday, April 30 at 1pm.

I first heard Brent Plater make his case for restoring the course on KQED:

The story of Sharp Park Golf Course, located in Pacifica but owned and operated by San Francisco’s Recreation and Parks Department, is one of benevolence, hubris, and tragedy. In 1918, wealthy benefactors who required the land be used as a "public park, or public playground" deeded Sharp Park to San Francisco.   Unfortunately, Sharp Park’s vibrant lagoon—with its abundant wildlife, coastal access, and beautiful vistas—was violently reshaped in the 1930s by Alister MacKenzie, a landscape architect who spent fourteen months filling Sharp Park’s wetlands to create an 18-hole golf course along the coast.  But he failed to tame Sharp Park’s natural ecology: the course’s ceremonial opening day was delayed twice because of wet playing conditions; coastal storms destroyed all seven of the beach-side holes a few years later; and a separate storm brought sea water so close to the clubhouse that the City illicitly built a crude sea wall to protect the course’s remains.  The sea wall gambit backfired: it cut-off Sharp Park’s natural water outlets, and now the golf course floods almost every year—with fresh water—threatening homes in the surrounding communities.

For this taxpayers take a net loss of nearly $300,000 each year on Sharp Park Golf Course.  A 2007 Recreation and Park Department analysis concludes that under current conditions the golf course will cost San Francisco taxpayers millions more by 2013.  But even with this massive subsidy golfers are leaving the sport, and more specifically leaving Sharp Park.  Rounds played at Sharp Park have declined nearly 40% since 2000, and it operates at 45% of capacity.

A new planning process for Sharp Park was recently proposed by San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors: partner with the Golden Gate National Recreation Area to transform Sharp Park from an environmentally destructive and budget-breaking golf course into a community-centered model for urban development, natural flood control, outdoor recreation, and endangered species recovery.


Meanwhile, Examiner public policy blogger Bruce Balshone says that this could be counterproductive.

If the course is removed and made into a biological reserve it will undercut the work of the environmental community in Pacifica and the development pressures that have been a constant in Pacifica will only increase – imperiling such properties as the old quarry site which developers have twice attempted pave over.

It is this dichotomy which is of the most significance. If the current council fails, a new more pro-development council may emerge. This would be an immense set back for the proponents of a biological preserve. Despite the fact that the City and County of San Francisco owns the golf course property, the City of Pacifica, according to State land use law will have the authority to determine its land use and  zoning.

In addition, the property carries with it a deed restriction included by the wealthy benefactors who gave the land to San Francisco which requires the land be used as a "public park, or public playground" and, if not kept as a public park or playground, the property could revert back to the heirs of the original donors. While San Francisco activists insist that an ecological reserve will suffice in meeting that requirement, it is likely that a court may decide that issue and it may or may not work out in the way activists foresee.

Yet another rationale for the destruction of the course is that the course consistently loses money, as much as $300,000 annually. But Pacifica city leaders and course administrators have publicly stated that the course is self-sustaining and much of the debt load is due to administrative costs and diversion of funds from the course into the revenue stream for the entire Parks & Recreation Department. As a stand-alone, many believe the course could maintain itself.

Save a Life

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Clayton Hagy
Letter

By on Sun, April 26, 2009

My name is Clayton Hagy and I would be in 8th grade if not for a horrible and rare disease, biphenotypic acute leukemia (BAL), that hit randomly and changed my world view.  Now instead of worrying about tests and school and friends, I’m worrying about, blood tests and shots and hospital visits. 

One of the treatments for BAL is bone marrow transplant.  Since no one in my family is a match, I’m looking for a match from the general pool.  There are lots of other kids looking for matches too.

On Thursday April 30th my old elementary school, Farallone View in Montara, will sponsor a bone marrow drive to increase the number of people registered in the National Marrow Donor Program.  Registering is easy:  it’s a cheek swab and some paper work.  Later, if you turn out to be a match for someone, you may be asked to give a blood sample.  To find out more about donating marrow check the website http://www.marrow.org.

If you can’t make it on April 30th and would like to register online go to http://www.marrow.org, click on "join the registry" and then click "join now."  Enter the promo code:  coast4clayton.  This online drive will be open until 5/8/09.  You could save a life.

Moon News in final four days, all books now 60% off


By on Sun, April 26, 2009

The slow-motion liquidation of Moon News is depressing to witness, but you should know that all their books are now 60% off, according to their latest newsletter.

We’ll be brief. All books are now 60% off, some hardcovers are as little as $2 and some paperbacks only $1. We still have some large display tables on wheels with side shelves that are now selling for only $100 a piece. Everything must go, so if you don’t see a sold or reserved sign on an item feel free to ask or make an offer.

We have sold many books and fixtures already and we are terribly grateful for your support and effort to help us move on. It looks like we’re down to our last few thousand books. When we last checked, we still had some great travel guides, a lot of good nonfiction and some great poetry and fiction still, including Bronte, Faulkner, and Dante…Also maps and books on CD—all at 60% off.

We will close the doors Wednesday, April 29th at 7pm for the last time

.

County releases long-anticipated Midcoast groundwater study

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The Midcoast Groundwater Study contains lots of interesting charts of the geology and hydrology of the Midcoast.

By on Fri, April 24, 2009

San Mateo county has released a long-anticipated Midcoast groundwater study. The study provides a great deal of useful information about the sustainability of the Midcoast’s water supply in the face of current and planned future demand.

There is a 60-day review and comment period for this report that will end at 5pm on June 22.  Comments should be directed to:

Steve Monowitz
Long Range Planning Services Manager
455 County Center, 2nd Floor
Redwood City, CA 94063
Phone: 650.363.4161
Fax: 650.363.4849
[email protected]

You can download the full report and the executive summary from Coastsider.  Both documents are worth downloading. The main report contains a great deal of detail about the sustainability of water in each of nine Midcoast regions, and detailed maps of the area. The summary makes it much easier to understand how the details fit together.

The Montara Water and Sanitary District (which serves Montara and Moss Beach) has a moratorium on new water connections. And although it’s possible in El Granada to buy a County Coastside Water District water connection on the open market, but this can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Meanwhile, the county has continued to approve new development on the Midcoast by allowing builders of new houses to drill onsite wells.  However, both the MWSD and the private wells draw from the same sources of groundwater.

We’re working on an analysis of the data and conclusions, but here is our summary of study.

The county’s inadequate records of the wells they have approved on the Midcoast have made it impossible to asses the sustainability of Midcoast development.

The initial purposes of the study were to evaluate Midcoast groundwater conditions and assess the suitability and long-term sustainability of Midcoast ground- water supplies.  This was to include an analysis of the potential impacts of groundwater withdrawals on sensitive areas such as riparian and wetland habitats, and an estimation of "safe yield."  However, as the study progressed, it was determined that safe yield and groundwater/habitat relationships could not be accurately assessed due to the limited availability of well data, concerns regarding the accuracy of the data, and information gaps regarding surface water flows.

While Midcoast aquifers may have a surplus in years with average rainfall, they may be in deficit in dry and very dry years.

  • There was only one very dry period (1975-77) in the last 55 years. However, the report doesn’t address whether climate changes could lead to a higher percentage of dry and very dry years in the future.
  • When Coastside aquifers are in a prolonged deficit, they can drop below sea level for an extended period of time and salt water can intrude into them. The report does not address the effect of rising sea level on the security of local aquifers.
  • Individual wells may go dry in prolonged dry years, particularly in areas where the aquifer is in fractured granite, rather than soil.

While most areas of the Midcoast are in "general long-term balance", the number of new houses planned by the county is likely to upset that balance and put the groundwater into deficit in dry years.

  • In the El Granada, planned growth would double the likelihood of groundwater falling below sea level from 11% to 24%.
  • In the Miramar Terrace area, planned growth would more than double the likelhood of groundwater falling below sea level from 7% to 18%.
  • In Upper Moss Beach, planned growth could put the area in groundwater deficit in two years out of three.
  • In Upper Montara, planned growth could increase the percentage of deficit years from 30% to 53%, and create "significant risk of localized well interference, large well drawdowns in dry years and the risk of indiviudal wells going dry in dry and very dry years."
  • in other areas, fewer houses are planned and there is less risk to sustainability from planned growth.

 

Help us build Coastsider’s Big Wave topic page


By on Fri, April 24, 2009

We’ve set up a wiki page to summarize news and background information about the Big Wave development. Any Coastsider user who can post without pre-moderation can create or edit information on our wiki, and you’re invited to help us keep the page complete and up to date.

Get Coastsider on Twitter, and the other way around


By on Thu, April 23, 2009

You can now get Coastsider headlines and reader comments on Twitter by following Coastsider_com.  They’re not posted in real time right now, but if you follow twitter it’s a good way to see what we’re posting.

We’re also running a feed of tweets mentioning Half Moon Bay on the bottom of our right-hand column.  Click on the links to see who posted and when.

Open mike at Caffe Lucca in Montara, Friday


By on Thu, April 23, 2009

Caffe Lucca will be holding an open mike event this Friday from 7 to 9:30pm, as well as May 8, May 22, June 5 and June 19.

What next after we’ve lost our clinic?  Meeting tonight in HMB


By on Thu, April 23, 2009

Interested in learning more about the state of health care on the coast? Shocked by the recent clinic closing? Dr. Grant Weiss, once a physician at Seton Medical Center Coastside, is helping to organize the community to deal with this sudden change in our health care services.

Thursday he and a group of like-minded residents will be holding a community meeting at the Community United Methodist Church, on the corner of Miramontes & Johnston—just a block or so away from Cuhna’s in downtown Half Moon Bay. The meeting will begin at 7:00.

Reused with permission from Montara Fog.

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