Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Mickey Joins Our Bloggin' Bunch

Give a great big welcome to writer, researcher and Santa Barbara jogger, Mickey Rowe.

Congalton's Medialogue recaps the Pulitzer typos and usual Friday Tribune critique session.
Once again, thank you for helping our blog reach its first 1,000+ unique viewer month! Please tell your friends of this URL--and we thank you again!

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Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Mourning Our Fallen Giants

David Ciaffardini says "love is the answer," but what is the question?
Ann Calhoun mourns the loss of a mighty eucalyptus grove in Los Osos.
Ron Fink asks how much does it cost to save our environment?
Dr. Don Regan wonders if it's worth it to "stay the course."
Mr. Rogers tells us a quadriplegic sailed the English Channel solo!

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Monday, August 29, 2005

Could The Ocean Be Our Trash Can?

Our sources point out a frightening plan for coastal dumping and how to stop it with your public outcry--now until Thursday, 9/1/05.

The state Bureau of Reclamation proposes to pipe 40 years of untreated agricultural waste from the San Joaquin Valley into Estero Bay at Point Estero near Cayucos.
This plan calls for untreated selenium and pesticide-bearing waste to be dumped a mile and a half from shore in an area rich with migrating marine mammals, birds and fish, and an area that is the habitat for a threatened species, the southern sea otter. The effects of this discharge would be devastating to our local estuary and marine ecosystem.

Please send your comments by Sept. 1 to: Ms. Claire Jacquemin, Bureau of Reclamation, 2800 Cottage Way, MP-700, Sacramento 95825. Ms. Jacquemin's fax is 916-978-5094 and her e-mail address is: cjacquemin at mp.usbr.gov.

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Sunday, August 28, 2005

New Post Roundup

Calhoun's Can(n)on questions 'Lord of the Flies' analogy in Tribune editorial.
Bill Benica lets us know the citizen standoff is growing in Cambria.
Dr Don Regan
speaks from the heart about adoption and thankfulness.
Gary Ray Rogers fills us in on the ADA and ADAAG and accessibility.

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Friday, August 26, 2005

The Weekend Begins Here

Ron Fink asks: is Cindy Sheehan a pawn of the left?

Dave Congalton helps us remember a great joker.

Newsstand Greg brings down the hammer on SLO politics.

Bill Benica locates the "Gateway to the Far Western Tavern!"

Ann Cahoun confirms Los Osos tree cutting begins Monday!

David Ciaffardini details a "precisely accurate" editorial opinion.

Take a spin around the site. Snap us an email. Tell us what you want. Thanks, and enjoy your weekend!

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Thursday, August 25, 2005

End All 'Waivers' Of The Clean Water Act in California

by guest blogger and community activist, Joey Racano,
check his site: Stopthewaiver.com

Dear Friends,

Please allow me to introduce myself. I am a Joey Racano, a founding member of the Orange County Ocean Outfall Group, dedicated to ending all 'waivers' of the Clean Water Act in California.

I am also the author of a book on activism and--perhaps most importantly--I am the author of the 'A-B-C Plan,' a regional wastewater treatment plan for the Morro Bay Estuary watershed.

The 'A-B-C Plan' (or more formally known as the Andre-Bay-Cayucos' Plan) has been officially endorsed by the San Luis Bay Chapter of Surfrider Foundation and elected officials from a coalition of central coast cities.

In the course of creating and implementing such a watershed-wide plan, it is necessary to address the fundamental problems impacting the Morro Bay Estuary, not the least of which is the swirling controversy surrounding the proposed wastewater treatment facility in Los Osos.

Let's begin by acknowledging the existence of a September 1997 report entitled "A Detailed Examination of the San Luis Obispo County Nitrate Sampling "Program" by Wade Brim which has convinced many, including me, that the entire 'high nitrates--we need a sewer' emergency was a complete fabrication. Mr. Brim's credentials and qualifications are too numerous to list here.

This report was submitted to all involved agencies (FED EPA, California Coastal Commission, CCRWQCB, DWR, SWRCB, etc) and found that seven of the ten test wells (like CSA-9, for instance) were never given sanitary seal and in fact some were actually a source of nitrate contamination of the upper aquifer!

Further, please be aware of a May 2002 letter written by Environmental Consultant James F. Kreissl, in which he states:

"I was distressed to see the misinterpretation of my 1994 report on possible solutions for Los Osos wastewater problems provided by (CCRWQCB)Gerhardt Hubner and signed by Ms. McGovern of USEPA..."

He goes on to say: "To claim that my report supported an areawide conventional sewer system is a gross misrepresentation of my report".

Until and unless these and other more recent unsettling issues concerning the CCRWQCB are addressed (see stopthewaiver.com), the wastewater treatment plant as currently proposed for Los Osos can neither move forward nor should it even be taken seriously.

I also have other enormous concerns with the Los Osos project of which I shall list ten:

1. A study must be done to identify what contaminants are in the upper aquifer in order to protect the integrity of the lower drinking water aquifer when effluent is disposed of at area 'C' beneath the hillside at Broderson. We may be about to poison our own water supply!

2. Contrary to misinformation being spread by the Los Osos Community Services District's deceptive PR spin campaign, the Los Osos Wastewater Treatment Plant as currently proposed does not address the #1 threat to this community--the peril of salt water intrusion.

A recent study has shown salt water is currently beneath Palisades Ave and moving in at 60 feet per year. My A-B-C Regional Plan would act to counter that advance by supplying treated effluent to agricultural interests, who currently suck 1 Million Gallons per day from the lower aquifer. They would no longer have to do so! The Los Osos plant as currently proposed does no such thing.

3. It is the height of recklessness to 'protect' the environment from pollution by placing a sewer plant right next to--and directly uphill from--the Morro Bay National Estuary.

4. Under the currnt plan for building the Los Osos plant, a small part of the community would have to pay for it all, causing an estimated 3,000 people to move from their homes. Many of these people are elderly. Others are Latino and their community was virtually excluded from the entire process when the LOCSD mysteriously ceased printing community information in Spanish.

5. There is money available for regional wastewater treatment plans for which the myopic LOWWTP as currently proposed does not qualify.

6. A precedent was recently set by the SWRCB in Sacramento as they stopped large-scale logging operations in two watersheds, ordering enforcement of the 'WWWDR', or Watershed-Wide Waste Discharge Requirement.' The 'WWWDR' certainly applies here in the Morro Bay Estuary watershed.

7. If you build a sewer in the center of town, all it will take is 12 odor complaints in a 24 hour period to bring on fines of Ten Thousand and up to twenty-five Thousand Dollars per day! Are you really that sure about controlling the odors from your bouquet?

8. There is great risk in a WWTP that costs nearly $200,000,000.00 (and rising) but doesn't recycle, or eliminate the need to import water, doesn't protect the estuary, doesn't stop salt water intrusion--and don't
forget the constant flow of sludge trucks in and out of the center of town, all laden with sludge so dirty it is neither class 'A' nor class 'B'--it is actually 'No Name' sludge! All this, and built with an accompanying park and 'tot-lot'? The risks are simply too great.

9. A system comparable to that proposed at Tri-W is being built at CMC for $17 Million but is costing $46 Million at Tri-W! The inflated costs are clearly associated with the Tri-W location.

10. The threat of Regional board fines can be addressed with legislation that would be available for a regional full tertiary system. Such legislation would exempt the participating cities from such fines, whereas the Los Osos Wastewater fascility is currently proposed to be built in a low-lying ravine just uphill from the Morro Bay National Estuary and so would be fined by the Regional Board when the plant 'surcharges' (spills sewage) every holiday and every rainstorm!

By building a regional plan, there will be no delay. Los Osos will still come on line in less than 3 years with Morro Bay and Cayucos hooking in later.

Remember: the cost of a regional sewer will forever drop as more and more entities join up and hook in. It is not a good idea to put a sewer next to the estuary, and it is not a good idea to spend $200 Million of 21st Century money for a 19th Century sewer being forced upon you by three guys about to be shown the door and a regional water board rife with embarrassing conflicts.

Vote YES on the recall. Let's go with the regional plan.

Joey Racano
Ocean Outfall Group, email: joeylittleshell at yahoo.com

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Happy Thursday!

The rockin' week is rolling on...with new postings and a new blogger to introduce.

Welcome to Nipomo resident and Santa Barbara county watchdog, Andy Caldwell.
Photo: University of New South Wales
There's a "Mad Hatter's Tea Party" in Los Osos, we're told Oceano and Nipomo are in a sloganeering slugfest, and Thom Hutchings considers why "the terrorists" hate us.

Cranky Anne is really irascible when she looks at her eye problems, Ron Fink relives basic training at Lackland AFB and guest Dr. Andrew Millar asks if the STAR test is all it's cracked up to be.

At Noon-thirty (12:30pm) citizens are set to converge on the Cambria Veteran's Memorial Bldg., 1000 Main Street, to protect their rights! Or is it a "terrorist investigation?" Take a look around and post a comment or two--and we thank you!

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