CGF journal

Observations and thoughts from Committee for Green Foothills.

Wednesday, April 21

Cupcake Alert! Last two days!

(CGF sent this News Alert out earlier this week - buy some Sprinkles Earth Day Vanilla Cupcakes and support CGF.  More info here on what Sprinkles is doing for the environment.  -Brian)


Dear Friend!

Every year on Earth Day, Sprinkles Cupcakes donates to non-profits located within communities where their stores are located.  Once again this year CGF has been selected by Sprinkle’s to receive this donation.  With your help we can all have our (cup)cake and eat it too!

How it works:
It’s easy! All proceeds from “Earth Day Vanilla” cupcakes sold Monday, April 19 through Thursday, April 23 will be donated to Committee for Green Foothills! 

What you can do:
Buy “Earth Day Vanilla” cupcakes from Sprinkles store in Stanford Shopping Center April 19-23 (Monday – Thursday)(393 Stanford Shopping Center, near Plum Lane ).

Since it opened, the Palo Alto Sprinkles store has chosen CGF to be the recipient of their Earth Day proceeds. Sprinkles Cupcakes uses recycled boxes, shopping bags, gift boxes, plates and napkins in all of its bakeries.  They donate to local charities and give all daily leftover cupcakes to local food banks.

Last Year Sprinkles donated $2,100 to CGF because of you! 
As always, we can’t do it without you.

Thank you for your support of CGF and we hope you will take part by enjoying a cupcake (or two) to celebrate Earth Day!

- The Folks at Committee for Green Foothills

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Wednesday, December 2

Action Alert: Midcoast LCP Update

Dear Friends,

The update of the Local Coastal Program (LCP) for the San Mateo Midcoast, which guides local implementation of the Coastal Act, is nearly completed at long last! After two delays requested by San Mateo County, the California Coastal Commission will consider whether to certify the LCP as consistent with the Coastal Act on Thursday, December 10, at their meeting in San Francisco.

This is an important time to speak up for protections for open space, protecting coastal resources, and maintaining the community character of the Midcoast communities of Montara, Moss Beach, El Granada, Miramar, and Princeton.

Why this is important
The LCP encourages sound land management and resource protection in the face of growing population pressures on the San Mateo County Coast. Strong LCP policies will help guide land use decisions that will ensure the livability and sustainability of our coastal communities.

What's happening
After two years of review and analysis, the staff of the Coastal Commission is recommending approval of the LCP Amendments for the Midcoast area with 72 suggested modifications to ensure that the LCP policies are consistent with the Coastal Act. The proposed modifications will ensure that the cumulative impacts of new development will not adversely impact coastal resources and/or public access to and along the shore.

Committee for Green Foothills strongly supports the Commission's staff recommendations including suggested modifications that would reduce the growth rate to 40 residential units per year, prohibit new private drinking water wells in areas served by public water agencies, require traffic mitigation plans for major new developments and retirement of lots for new land divisions, better protect the "Burnham Strip" open space in El Granada, and more effectively implement the transfer of the surplus Caltrans Devil's Slide Bypass lands to the county for a Linear Park and Trail.

CGF's letter, which includes more specific recommendations is below.

You can read the Coastal Commission's Staff Report, at: documents.coastal.ca.gov/reports/2009/12/Th18a-12-2009.pdf

What you can do
Please write a brief letter to the Coastal Commission and urge them to support the Staff Recommendation for Approval with Modifications. In the upper right hand corner, put Agenda Item TH18.a, and your name.

Letters need to be received by the end of Friday, December 4, in order to be included in the Commissioner's packet.

The Commission does not accept letters by email. Please fax your letter to:

Chair Bonnie Neely and Members
California Coastal Commission
45 Fremont Street, Suite 2000
San Francisco, CA 94105-2219

Fax: 415-904-5400

Now is an important time to speak up for protection of the Midcoast. Please let the Commissioners hear from you - your voice does make a difference!

- The Folks at Green Foothills

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November 28, 2009

Agenda Item TH18.a - Lennie Roberts
Bonnie Neely, Chair, and Members
California Coastal Commission
45 Fremont Street, Suite 2000
San Francisco, CA 94105-2219

Re: San Mateo County LCP Amendment No. SMC-MAJ-1-07
(Midcoast LCP Update)

Dear Chair Neely and Members of the Commission,

On behalf of Committee for Green Foothills (CGF), I write in support of the Staff Recommendation for Approval of the San Mateo County Midcoast LCP Update with suggested modifications.

The San Mateo County LCP was the first County LCP certified by the Coastal Commission (in 1981). The San Mateo County coastal zone is 55 miles long and up to five miles wide; most of the coastal zone is rural. The Midcoast area comprises a relatively small portion of the county’s coastal zone that shares critical infrastructure (roads, sewer, water, schools) with the City of Half Moon Bay.

There was a tremendous amount and intensity of work involved in drafting and certifying the LCP, which included both the Land Use Plan (LUP) policies and the Implementation Program (IP). Although the LCP, as certified, was a far-reaching and comprehensive document, CGF has long been concerned that significant gaps in LCP policies and data needed to be addressed through a comprehensive LCP Update.

In the urban Midcoast area, the cumulative impacts of new development in the City of Half Moon Bay as well as the unincorporated communities of El Granada, Princeton, Miramar, Moss Beach, and Montara have raised significant issues of adequacy of the infrastructure to serve buildout without adversely impacting coastal resources and/or public access to and along the shore.

CGF commends the collaborative effort by Commission and County staff in working to resolve most of the significant issues that have been at issue regarding the Update’s conformity with the Coastal Act.

Of the few remaining issues under discussion as of the 11/20/09 Staff Report, CGF has the following specific comments:

a. Annual Growth Rate: CGF supports the Coastal staff’s recommended growth rate limit of 40 (approximately 1%) residential units per year. The County Planning Commission also recommended this limit, and it is consistent with Half Moon Bay’s annual limit on residential units. Over the past five years an average of 38 residential units have been approved annually, and County Planning staff concedes that the limit of 40 residential units should not have a significant impact on the current rate of development. CGF does not support or understand the rationale for exceptions to the growth limit for Princeton caretaker units or for second units, as they also contribute to the infrastructure demand.
b. Private Drinking Water Wells and Septic Systems: CGF strongly supports the prohibition of new drinking water wells and septic systems in the urban midcoast area. Allowing private wells within the boundaries of public water agencies threatens the economic viability of the public agencies, and places an undue economic burden on their customers. Moreover, locating individual wells in an urban area in close proximity to sewer lines and old septic tanks increases the potential for contamination of these wells. The groundwater basins are very limited in this area of the coast. Already some wells have failed, and in drought cycles we can expect many more to fail. Similarly, it makes no sense to allow private septic systems within the boundaries of public wastewater treatment agencies, unless there are no public hookups available.
c. Public Works Capacities: The County’s certified LCP already requires new public works facilities to be phased with each other and to be sized so as to serve, but not exceed, the buildout allowed by the LCP. Coastal staff is recommending that for public works expansion projects aimed at solving existing deficiencies for existing development (i.e. to serve existing development on private wells or new infrastructure to solve the wet weather flow problem), other public works deficiencies do not need to be solved first. If the public works project were sized to accommodate estimated buildout, the permit for the project could be conditioned to allow the phasing of new sewer or water connections, for example. CGF supports this approach as being consistent with Sections 30250 and 30254 of the Coastal Act.
d. Prioritizing Service Capacities for Affordable Housing: Although affordable housing is not a Coastal Act priority land use, San Mateo County has made affordable housing a County LCP priority land use. To ensure the continued reservation of public works capacity for Coastal Act priority land uses, Coastal staff is proposing that a second tier of LCP priority uses, such as affordable housing, be reserved. CGF supports this approach.
e. Traffic/Transportation Mitigation: CGF supports the Coastal staff’s recommendation that new land divisions require merger or retirement of the same number of existing lots as new lots created by the land division. CGF could support an exception to the traffic mitigation for conditional COC’s that are necessary to legalize lots (per the Witt and Abernathy decisions) that are also conditioned to ensure consistency with current zoning and other applicable LCP requirements, inasmuch as these lots have already been accounted for in the certified LCP’s buildout numbers. The County has not yet adopted a traffic mitigation fee structure for new development in the urban midcaost, similar to Half Moon Bay’s. Such a traffic mitigation fee would help fund necessary traffic and safety improvements.
f. Rezoning of Bypass Lands: CGF supports the rezoning of the former Caltrans Right of Way for the Devil’s Slide Bypass as Linear Park and Trail as an important step to ensure that these lands will become a trail and park system that will provide public access and a scenic non-motorized transportation route. The issues of access to private property and/or areas needed by Caltrans for staging and maintenance purposes could be addressed by the zoning standards. Given all of the infrastructure and buildout issues discussed previously, particularly as those issues apply to the former Right of Way area, CGF does not understand or support the zoning of any portion of the Right of Way for housing purposes.

Thank you for consideration of our comments. We urge your approval of the LCP Amendment with the suggested modifications per staff.

Sincerely,


Lennie Roberts, Legislative Advocate
Committee for Green Foothills

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Friday, September 25

CGF News Alert: Success and progress in Palo Alto, San Jose, and the Water District

(The following News Alert went out today to our Action Alert subscribers. -Brian)

Dear

We want to let CGF supporters know about recent advances in local environmental protection: protecting Palo Alto foothills from sprawl, the takeout bag ban in San Jose, and increasing Water District support for environmental protection. We thank all of you for your generous help with your time and your donations, and we'll be sure to keep you informed about next steps where we can use your help.

In Palo Alto, the City Council reviewed extensive revisions to zoning which controls development in the foothills that extend from Page Mill Rd. all the way up to Skyline Drive. CGF Advocate Brian Schmidt was the only environmental group representative on the advisory committee and while city staff made certain improvements over an outdated ordinance, Brian encouraged them to go further. By decisive votes, the City Council rejected the proposal for inappropriate second residences on these parcels, directed planners to develop maximum house size limits, and even started considering the issues of giant basement developments that are the latest aspects of monster mansions. CGF will continue to work on these improvements that have been suggested.

In San Jose, the City Council took the first definitive step for the strongest take-out bag ban for any major city in the US, banning plastic and requiring paper bags be made from 40% recycled content. Contrary to media reports, a fee on paper bags isn't required but will be considered in the future. They will consider other options in an EIR, which actually gives us a chance to push for a few improvements. Councilmember Liccardo, one of the two leaders on the issue along with Kansen Chu, thanked CGF and other groups from the dais for our work on the issue.

Finally Santa Clara Valley Water District considered recommendations for environmental enhancements and erosion control from the District's Environmental Advisory Committee, where CGF Advocate Brian Schmidt is the chair of the committee. While they didn't take final action on the recommendations, the Board of Directors were very receptive and appreciative of the recommendations and will return to consider them further at a later date.

Thanks again for all your help and support of our work. Each of these advances requires that CGF be present for follow-up work, so we'll keep active and keep you informed.

Thanks for speaking up for environmental protections! Your voice does make a difference!

- The folks at Committee for Green Foothills

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Friday, September 18

Action Alert - Support San Jose's plastic bag ban

(The Action Alert below went out to our San Jose members. -Brian)

Dear Friend,

This Tuesday, September 22, San Jose's City Council will decide whether to have the best control of plastic bag litter and paper bag pollution of any major city. Seven of eleven voting City Council members have already supported a ban on plastic take-out bags and a requirement that paper bags be at least partially-recycled content. Please contact the City Council to help get us to the finish line on this groundbreaking proposal, and make it even better!

What's Happening

A County Commission proposed a fee on both plastic and paper take-out bags to reduce pollution and fund cleanup of bag pollution. While fees have the advantage of giving customers a choice, they are controversial in some circles, so many local cities are considering bans on plastic bags with some limited exceptions. Because paper bags also have environmental liabilities, San Jose has proposed requiring they have at least 40%-50% recycled content. Other Santa Clara County cities will soon be making their own decisions on these issues.

Why this is Important

Litter from plastic bags defaces our streets, lines our streams, and smothers both the San Francisco Bay and a significant part of the Pacific Ocean. Many local streams, including Guadalupe River and Coyote Creek, have so much trash that they have been listed or are considered for listing under the Clean Water Act as "impaired" waters due to trash. Paper bags are little better with even greater energy costs and the economic support they support for destructive logging projects like the recent San Jose Water Company proposal to log the redwoods of the Santa Cruz Mountains. The proposal will increase education about reusable bags, the real solution to the bag problem.

While over a dozen local cities will make their own decisions about bags, San Jose has half of the County population and can solve half of the problem at one stroke. Its proposal is even better than San Francisco's because of the recycled paper requirement and could be a model for the country.

What you can do

Tell the City Council you support the plastic bag ban and recycled content for paper bags. Please also tell them you want them to consider either a fee on paper bags or higher recycled content now, or by reviewing the issue two years in the future.

Please email your support to the Mayor and City Council (just copy and paste the emails below):

mayoremail@sanjoseca.gov; district1@sanjoseca.gov; district2@sanjoseca.gov;

district3@sanjoseca.gov; district4@sanjoseca.gov; district5@sanjoseca.gov;

District6@sanjoseca.gov; district7@sanjoseca.gov; district8@sanjoseca.gov;

district9@sanjoseca.gov; district10@sanjoseca.gov

by this Tuesday, September 22 at 9:00 a.m. Attending the meeting to voice your support is even better, if you can go.

Please let us know that you have written or fax us a copy (650) 968-843

For more information, see the Committee for Green Foothills letter, Coyote Creek as the #2 Litter Hot Spot according to Save the Bay, and San Jose City Council Agenda Item 7.2.

Thanks!

- The Folks at Green Foothills

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Committee for Green Foothills

Our mission is to protect the open space, farmlands, and natural resources of Santa Clara and San Mateo counties through advocacy, education, and grassroots action.

Shopping online? Visit the portal www.Maatiam.com, click on the link to CGF, and then to one of over 80 online retailers. At no additional cost to you, these retailers make a 2 – 5% donation to CGF, an easy way to support our work!

You have received this action alert because you are subscribed to Committee for Green Foothills' email alert list. To be removed from this list, please reply to this message with REMOVE in the subject line. To be added to this list and receive alerts about local open space issues, just send your name, address, and email address to info@GreenFoothills.org.


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Wednesday, July 1

Inaction Alert! You can save Santa Clara County open space - by doing nothing!

(CGF sent this "Inaction" Alert out to folks on our email alert list that are likely residents of the Santa Clara County Open Space Authority districts. -Brian)

Dear Friend,

The Committee for Green Foothills is sending out the easiest environmental Alert in its 47-year history. By doing nothing, you can help save millions of dollars for the Santa Clara County Open Space Authority (OSA) for land protection, and fix a mistake made by the California Supreme Court. All you have to do is to NOT request a refund of past parcel assessments that the Court said had to be made available. You are not required to apply for refunds - you can do nothing. Please help the environment more easily than you've ever had a chance to before!

What's Happening

In 2002, voters in the Open Space Authority district, which covers most of Santa Clara County from the city of Santa Clara eastwards, voted to enact a parcel assessment of about $20 annually to help fund the purchase and protection of local natural open spaces. Unfortunately, the California Supreme Court last year mistakenly applied a law that said the will of the majority is not enough, but that a two-thirds' vote in favor was required.

Following the decision, the OSA agreed to send a letter out to anyone who owned land in the district from 2002 to 2007 and paid the assessment, allowing them to apply for a refund if they wished. The letter has just been sent out.

Why This Is Important

The Supreme Court has cut off this voter-approved funding source for protecting local open spaces that funded most of the OSA's work, so the money collected to date remains the last major additional funding until the OSA can go back to voters for a super-majority approval. Most of this money, $57 million accrued so far, could still help preserve thousands of acres of land from sprawl and provide more public recreation for everyone - if people let the money stay instead of applying for refunds.

What You Can Do

Nothing!
If you owned land in the part of Santa Clara County where the OSA operates between 2002 and 2007 (OSA district map attached), you will receive a letter telling you how to apply for a refund. All you have to do is ignore the letter.

Please let us know how you did nothing - was it hard? Tell us your trials and tribulations, and how you accomplished doing nothing, and please let us know if you give us permission and we may publish your adventure on our website.

Okay, if you do want to do something - please forward this to your neighbors and friends who own residences in the OSA district, and tell them THEY CAN ALSO help protect their environment by doing nothing.

For more information, go to the OSA website to see all the good it does with the voter-approved funding: http://www.openspaceauthority.org/

Thanks! Your voice (and inaction) does make a difference!

- The Folks at Green Foothills
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UPDATE: Already received this reply: "I will put this on my to do list."

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