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Indybay Feature

Coast Dairies National Monument? - Not So Fast

by via Friends of the North Coast
A petition has been initiated by the group Friends of the North Coast calling on Representative Eshoo and Senator Boxer to complete a detailed environmental review and develop a "regional approach" for managing the properties proposed for National Monument protection in the Santa Cruz Mountains. The project is currently being called, "Coast Dairies National Monument." "National Monument status will not add any legal protections that do not already exist, and the resulting overuse could seriously harm the land’s unique and fragile eco-system, its resources, and public safety," the petition states.
800_coast_dairies_ted_benhari.jpg
Coast Dairies National Monument? - Not So Fast


National Monument Status for Coast Dairies Public Lands Could Be More Harmful Than Helpful

Rep. Anna Eshoo and Sen. Barbara Boxer have introduced into Congress bills to designate as a National Monument the 5,800-acre Coast Dairies public lands in Santa Cruz County, California, which is owned by the federal Bureau of Land Management. National Monument status will not add any legal protections that do not already exist, and the resulting overuse could seriously harm the land’s unique and fragile eco-system, its resources, and public safety.

Instead, we ask Rep. Eshoo and Sen. Boxer to support:

1. Development of a regional approach to manage the many preserved properties in northern Santa Cruz County and southern San Mateo County, which must include the various public agencies and private organizations that own and manage them, as well as the surrounding communities; and

2. Completion and approval of a detailed environmental study conforming to National Environmental Protection Act specifications to determine the level and locations of public access that can be accommodated at Coast Dairies while minimizing impacts to the environment and neighboring communities.

* National Monument status could result in monumental overuse, impacting the fauna and flora of Coast Dairies, and the surrounding communities, because of the worldwide promotion that such status will surely bring, while additional funding for facilities and management is uncertain.
* Animals may no longer find suitable habitat, and creeks, lagoons, wetlands and special status plants could be seriously harmed.
* The existing strong and irrevocable protections are all we need because the Deed Restrictions governing the federal Bureau of Land Management and the California Coastal Development Permit require maximized coastal resource protection, limit use of Coast Dairies to open space, agriculture, and public recreation, and preclude motorized off-road vehicles, commercial logging, mining, and resource extraction, including fracking.
* After a regional management plan is developed and the detailed environmental study certified it may be reasonable to seek National Monument status for the Cotoni-Coast Dairies public lands.
* The area will be opened to public use whether designated as a National Monument or not. Funding for infrastructure and management is not guaranteed for National Monuments, other than an extra $3 per acre, or only about $18,000 a year, about enough for a quarter-time ranger.
* Current protections give us the luxury to take the time for a proper review of all the ways that the National Monument designation will affect the Coast Dairies property and our communities. The current plan is to do this review after the site is designated a National Monument. Consequently there would be no review of the wisdom of the designation itself, and no review of locally controlled alternatives for opening up the area for public use.

There are very high downside risks of inviting the world to visit: fragile soils, multiple salmonid streams, and steep cliffs will make public access very tricky. The size of this property supports mammals such as puma, gray fox, and badger. These species will not remain in areas with high public use. If trails are not sited well, or if too many are opened up, we could lose these species. If hundreds of thousands of additional visitors descend upon the area, choke Mission Street and Highways 1, 92 and 17, and overwhelm the small town of Davenport, we could lose much more.

To learn more about this issue and follow developments, go to: http://www.friendsofthenorthcoast.org and join the Facebook group, Friends of the North Coast: https://www.facebook.com/groups/846372308752865/

Sign the Petition:
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/coast-dairies-national-monument-not-so-fast
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by ignore
Can't believe this made it on Indybay! Laughable. Being driven by rich folks in Bonny Doon who don't want to share their slice of paradise with ordinary peons.

Classist bullshit. Only in Santa Cruz would you have enviros OPPOSING a National Monument...
by Ignore squared.
So predictable: If the complaining IndyBay whiner had come up with the idea, it would have been presented as a "fight the man, fight governemt intrusion!".

But since someone beat him/her to the punch, it morfs to "Don't support it. It must be rich people".

Yeah, sure thing chump. Every person in Davenport and Bonny Doon is a freaking entitled millionaire. Hairnt!
by Google is your friend
The original poster might want to take their foot out of their mouth and do a little research before opining with no fact to back up their statement.

Here's a quick list of the most recent oppositions to National Monuments I easily found in 1 minute of looking. Could post a few dozen more, but I think intelligent folks will get the point:

Dona Ana County, New Mexico: https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=opposition+to+national+monument

Grand Canyon Watershed Nat. Monument: https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=opposition+to+national+monument

Cedar Mesa, Utah: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/20/us/politics/20utah.html

Fremont County, Idaho: http://www.localnews8.com/news/local-group-meets-in-opposition-to-national-monument/31020528

San Bernardino County, CA: http://www.sbsun.com/environment-and-nature/20140909/san-bernardino-county-supervisors-oppose-national-monument-designation

San Gabriel Mountains: https://www.facebook.com/events/1548285258739686/

by way to prove the point
I stopped reading after FIVE links in a row that pointed to articles on groups opposing National Monuments from the anti-enviro or anti-immigrant RIGHT. That was the point of the post above: usually it is right-wing, anti-enviro, anti-federal powers, anti-regulation groups that oppose Monument status. They are afraid of limitations on logging, mining, offroad vehicles, commercial development, etc.

In the case of Santa Cruz, we have the OPPOSITE: groups opposing a Monument simply because they don't want other citizens to enjoy their neck of the woods.

Rather than disproving the first reply, you have merely proven their point. Nice job! If somebody wants to read through those links and can find one based on a PRO-environment argument, please point it out. I got bored after five, like I said.
by Facts, please.
I could give a fig if you're bored. The fact is you've spewed an opinion with no factual evidence to back it up. The article states environmentalists oppose it for environmentally concerned reasons. Their issues sound valid. Your counter response has been nothing but a one liner and zero counter evidence.

Who are you, and what is your basis of data, to state that it's all about Nimbyism? You have zilch data, zero evidence. And by evidenced on this thread to date...you're generating zero interest or support.

Enjoy your shade grown coffee at SubRosa, where you can preach to like minded minions. You're striking out in the real world of free speech where opinion actually dares to *gasp*...disagree with you.
by John Cohen-Colby
... to the commenters pointing out these conservative NIMBYs.
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