Sunday, May 20, 2012

New Non-Profit Inc.

Non-Profit Incorporation

*Our Initial project focuses on removing impediments to restore and enhance the health of the Pescadero and Butano Marsh and waterways.

MAY 20, 2010 Pescadero, California – A group of concerned citizens and conservationists today announced the formation of a new non-profit organization determined to reverse the population decline of native coastal and marine species and enhance and restore their habitat.

The Coastal Alliance for Species Enhancement (CASE) aims to expedite critical restoration projects to preserve the biological diversity of coastal areas while working to ensure continued public enjoyment of these areas.

For its initial project, the organization is pressing for immediate corrective actions in the Pescadero Marsh Natural Preserve and its related watershed, where in recent years, populations of native species have plummeted dramatically and habitat degradation is ongoing. The most visible threat is evidenced by the annual die off locals commonly refer to as the “fish kill.” The kill includes sculpin, dungeness crab, the endangered tidewater goby, and the threatened steelhead trout — to name a few.

Scientific studies have estimated that the steelhead juvenile rearing population in the marsh now hovers at less than 1,000 fish, from a high point of 25,000 measured just 20 years ago.

Another glaring indication of the crisis existing in the Pescadero Marsh is evidenced by the complete loss of a portion of the Butano Creek channel this winter. As a result of the loss of this channel, fish passage into the upstream Butano watershed is presently impossible. CASE is committed to re-establishing a clear channel through Butano Creek and taking whatever corrective actions are necessary to ensure species’ survival until passage through Butano Creek is once again feasible.

“The precarious condition of the Pescadero Marsh needs to be corrected immediately,” says CASE president Steve Simms. “We are alarmed that poor management practices and lack of oversight have continued for more than a decade. Meanwhile, every year, we lose more coastal species, not just steelhead but a host of other species, some of which are endangered or threatened, all along the watershed.”

The Pescadero Marsh is home to multiple species of concern and provides important habitat for foraging, breeding, rearing and transitioning to oceanic conditions. These species include the endangered San Francisco garter snake, the endangered tidewater goby, the threatened steelhead trout, and threatened California red-legged frog. The marsh also serves as an important wintering ground for waterfowl on the Pacific migratory flyway, as well as a prime feeding and reproductive area for coastal raptors and other wildlife.

Through collaboration, negotiation, and if needed, litigation, CASE hopes to drive corrective action to prevent another massive fish die-off in the marsh, an event which typically occurs each winter as anoxic water infiltrates the freshwater lagoon and literally suffocates hundreds of fish and shellfish.

CASE has incorporated as a California non-profit organization and has filed for non-profit status with the Internal Revenue Service. CASE is currently launching its inaugural fundraising effort. A community awareness and fundraising event is planned for midsummer, in conjunction with a Chili Cook-off hosted by the Native Sons of the Golden West, Pebble Beach Parlor, in Pescadero.

 

Help to Restore the Marsh!

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*ESTIMATES: STEEHEAD REARING*
*click to view

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Heron and other predatory birds were seen feeding on the shorelines.

November 25, 2010

January 3, 2008

KGO news report 2010

KGO news report 2003

Quotes From News Article, Reports, and Resources

“We’re now 15 years in and the problem is still unsolved. When the system is in utter collapse, you don’t study that. You take action,” said Ronda Azevado Lucas, an attorney representing a group of Pescadero anglers and concerned citizens who are about to file a lawsuit accusing state resources agencies of abdicating their responsibility to protect sensitive fish and amphibians under the California Endangered Species Act.”

“Everyone acknowledges something went wrong in the 1990s, when State Parks, which owns the marsh, re-engineered the water flow with levees, culverts and water gates. Many of these fixes quickly became defective but were left in place.”

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“North Marsh was to have been kept no more than mildly brackish, to ensure habitat for
red-legged frogs. However, saline water spilled over the low levee and filled the marsh within
months of the completion of the levee in 1993. In March 1994 the salinity of the Marsh (F2),
the ditch along the south side (El) and the sag ponds (Sl) exceeded 6.6 PPT (Table 1) and
remained saline all year.” (Smith and Reis).

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“If you or I owned this property, we’d definitely be in jail. There are endangered species here that are in peril,” said Ronda Azevado Lucas, an attorney representing the plaintiffs. “We were ignored, and that’s why we’re in court. We had no other options.”

“In the fall months, decomposing vegetation and the water column’s salty, sulfuric underlayers use up all the oxygen in the water, which essentially suffocates the aquatic ecosystem. The salty, sulfurous layers typically remain on the bottom of the marsh ponds, and aquatic species are able to veer away from low-oxygen areas. But in late fall, when the ocean waves burst through the sandbars, the currents stir up toxic layers in the lagoons and quickly make the water lethal.”

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“Each year of the past decade, as fall becomes winter, the Pescadero fisherman watches the silver bodies of steelhead trout wash up on the banks at Pescadero Marsh, hoping the government will heed his call for intervention and respond with action. It’s not happening fast enough.”

“My view on it is State Parks should be given a letter of intent which clearly describes the problems everyone has with the way State Parks is doing things, and (the department) should be given a chance to respond,” Steel said. “Once that’s on the table, it’s up to Parks. But if they continue to block everyone’s concerns without explaining the rationale for doing so, I have a feeling (the Native Sons) will file suit.”

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“Around this time each year, the sandbar separating Pescadero Marsh from the Pacific Ocean breaks, ushering in another season for fishing steelhead trout and, to varying degrees, another episode of what Coastsiders call the “fish kill.” It’s a yearly phenomenon in which fish turn up dead at a critical point in their lifecycle.”

“When the sandbar broke, a passerby mistook the out pour of brackish marsh water in the ocean for an oil spill, and reported the ominous black cloud to Fish and Game.”

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