Protect Shoreline Regional Park Funding

Please join us on Monday, Sept 18, 5:30 PM, to protect funding for Shoreline Park and its wildlife

Please join us at the Pebble room at Michael’s Restaurant at Shoreline Park at 5:30PM, or call in on ZOOM (or by dialing (669) 900-9128 and entering Webinar ID: 843 5126 7142) to speak up and ask the City of Mountain View and the school district trustees not to reduce the funding for Shoreline Regional Park! Tell members of the City Council and the School Board Trustees why the park is important to you and your family, and that Shoreline Park is special and merits continued, consistent investment.

Background:

The Shoreline Regional Park Community was created in 1969 by the California legislature as a special park district. Its core purposes are to develop and operate a regional park and enhance the area environmentally and economically. The Mountain View school districts currently receive millions of dollars from the Shoreline Community Fund, and are seeking a larger share of the fund.

The Shoreline Community Fund, paid into by North Bayshore businesses, provides a critical and irreplaceable budget for all of the important functions, services and programs that Shoreline Park entails. This includes: wildlife conservation (including Burrowing Owls, Black Skimmers, and many other sensitive animal species), protections from sea level rise, landfill operations to ensure that greenhouse gasses do not escape the landfill, recreation and educational opportunities, and general upkeep of the park that is visited by millions of Bay Area residents every year.

Meeting Agenda

September 2023 Conservation Corner

North Coyote Valley: Matthew Dodder

Dark Sky: Sign a petition (3 minutes)

Aidan Chen, a Saratoga high school student, is asking all of us to sign his petition in support of AB38, the State’s Dark Sky Bill. This bill requires the California government to reduce light pollution in state owned buildings. SCVAS initiated this bill last year, and we are currently one of the sponsors of the bill. Last year, the bill passed the California Assembly and Senate, but was then vetoed by Governor Newsome. We need everyone to sign it and let the governor know that birds, and people, rely on dark nights! 

Protect Coyote Valley: Participate in a virtual meeting (1-2 hours)

On Monday, August 28 at 6:00 p.m., planners from the City of San Jose will conduct a community meeting to gather feedback on potential future development all along Monterey Road in Coyote Valley. Please attend by Zoom to ask San Jose not to roll back the protection of Coyote Valley! 

Monterey Road landowners are asking for many types of inappropriate development to be allowed, from restaurants, beer gardens and event centers to massive suburban sprawl. Development like this could be devastating for wildlife. It’s critical for city staff to hear from community members, not just the landowners, about the future of Coyote Valley.

Coyote Creek runs along the back of the Monterey Road parcels, and is a critical wildlife habitat area and movement corridor. The creek is the spine of animal movement in the valley, and is critical for wildlife movement. The bobcats, deer, raptors and other wildlife that depend on Coyote Creek’s riparian forest would be significantly harmed by development that exacerbates traffic, and increases nighttime lighting and other impacts from development.

The Monterey Road landowners claim that they deserve to have a special zoning district just for them because Monterey Road is a high-traffic area. But that traffic also makes Monterey Road a roadkill hotspot. More animals are struck and killed on this road than anywhere else in Coyote Valley, including Highway 101. Increased development here would mean more traffic and more animal deaths. 

Please tell the planners not to block wildlife movement in coyote valley and along Coyote Creek by new physical barriers or by land uses that create light and pollution, or increase traffic 

Become a Bay Advocate 

Our friends at the Sierra Club Bay Alive Campaign are offering a free 8-week Bay Advocate Training Program (Thursday evenings 7:00 - 8:30 pm, starting on September 21, 2023) for people who want.

 

Do you want to protect the San Francisco Bay shoreline but don’t know how to begin? Wish you knew more about the challenges that sea level rise presents to the Bay and the resilience of our communities? Wonder how to promote coordinated regional solutions? The Bay Advocate Training Program will offer insights, camaraderie and support. Learn more about this unique course

Santa Clara County Parks: Respond to a short survey  (5 minutes)

The Santa Clara County Park Department’s Everybody Belongs at Parks Initiative is asking the public to respond to a short survey. 

Santa Clara County has 28 wonderful Parks open to all. What are the barriers that prevent residents of all races, incomes, abilities and areas from enjoying the parks? How can the park be improved to accommodate everyone?

Please take this survey and share it with your families and friends. In your response, consider asking for: dark sky, no insecticides, more habitat for birds and wildlife, access by shuttles and public transportation, information in multiple languages, and reducing conflicts between user groups? 

For more information, visit the project website.

Environmental Action Campaign 2023

You give us strength

The recent State of the Birds Report documents more than half of our nation’s bird species are in decline. This is shocking news. The trend is reflected in nearly all major habitats except one—wetlands. It is easy to feel helpless when reading such stories... But the facts show that more than 40 years of investment in the protection of crucial wetland habitat has made a difference in Waterfowl populations as well as other birds that utilize that habitat. Investment and advocacy can and do make a difference!

Our Environmental Action Committee (EAC), led by long-time Environmental Advocate, Shani Kleinhaus, and Chair, Annie Yang, has a track record of getting positive results. From the decades-long effort to protect Coyote Valley, to working with city planners to preserve green spaces that include bird friendly habitat, or inspiring corporate campuses to make use of bird-safe design, our voice for the environment is heard loud and clear. Because of our work, local municipalities are even adopting dark sky ordinances which protect migrating birds. These local issues have national and even global impact because the Bay Area is an Important Bird Area (IBA) providing signature habitats for more than 400 bird species.

Support the SCVAS Environmental Action Committee and help our birds.

We need your financial support to keep this difficult work going and make our voice heard as stress on the environment intensifies. Your contribution helps us respond quickly and efficiently to pressing local issues involving potential habitat loss. It provides us with the resources we need to research relevant laws, consult with legal council, and file effective documents with city councils and their offices. Your financial support has real impact and ensures our local habitats and the birds that depend on it will have have a place in our county. I urge you to pledge your support now.

Read about what the EAC is working on

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