www.tamvalley.org

Tam Valley Improvement Club
P.O.Box 1446
Mill Valley, CA 94942
Message line: 415-383-3691
JOIN TODAY!

Website directory
Marc Hershon cartoon: boys jammed into a phone booth. Caption: Hey! 50 years ago this was
a fad across the country. Now, here in Marin, it's affordable housing.

Tam Valley Development

On this page we will post letters, emails, and other correspondence concerning development issues in Tam Valley.

Scroll down to the bottom of the page for links to documents and maps referenced in some of these posts.

Index

08/06/10 Stan Barbarich:Almonte Marsh and the Goat

11/06/07 Charles McGlashan: Adoption of the Countywide Plan

11/04/07 Charles McGlashan: Update on the Countywide Plan

10/15/07 Email from Curry re: Good news about the Countywide Plan

09/16/07 Email from Curry re: Board of Supervisors Hearing

09/04/07 Email from Curry re: Dick Spottswood IJ Article

08/22/07 Email from Curry re: Gateway Planning Committee Meeting Aug 22nd

07/16/07 Email from Curry re: Gateway Planning Committee Meeting July 18th

05/30/07 Email from Curry re: TPABC letter to Marin Development Agency

05/06/07 Email from Ann Spake to the Planning Commission

04/29/07 Email from Curry re: Importance of tomorrow Planning Commission meeting

04/27/07 TPABC Letter to the Planning Commission

04/24/07 Email from Curry re: Planning Commission activity since April 9 hearings

04/10/07 Email from Curry re: Planning Commission hearing April 9, 2007

04/06/07 Email from Curry re: HOD status for Tam Junction

03/20/07 Marin IJ: "Tam Housing Plan Criticized" by Rob Rogers

03/20/07 Email from Curry: Thanks! Great meeting last night

03/17/07 TPABC Letter to the Planning Commission

03/17/07 Marin IJ: "Affordable Housing Statistics Buttress Both Sides " by Dick Spotswood

03/14/07 TPABC Letter to the Planning Commission

03/07 Pacific Sun article: housing and global warming

03/04/07 KettZegart to Planning Commission (638kb pdf in NEW WINDOW)

03/02/07 TPABC Letter to the Planning Commission re: Baylands Corridor (442kb pdf in NEW WINDOW)

02/07 KettZegart to Supervisor Charles McGlashan

02/07 Lex Campbell email to Tamvalley.org

02/08/07 TPABC Letter to the Planning Commission (123kb pdf)

01/25/07 Mill Valley Herald: Projections Too High

PDF Version

DATE: August, 6 2010
FROM: Stan Barbarich, President of the Floating Homes Association in Sausalito


Almonte Marsh and the goat

No doubt, if you travel Miller Avenue, you have noticed an area of unkempt, overgrown vegetation at the intersection of Almonte Avenue, just south of the Tam High football field. What you might not know is that this is a protected wetland that has not seen much upkeep over time, due to a lack of available funds to allow the area's owner, the school district, to do the work. Residents of the neighborhood have for many years hoped for a restoration of this valuable wetland and the county has also looked for a solution, but funding has always been the roadblock.

Enter the goat

Across the highway, at Gate 6 Road and Bridgeway, there is an area known as the Gates Cooperative, which is a part of the Waldo Point Harbor floating home marina. For decades, Waldo Point residents, and the state and county agencies, have explored ways to clean this area up and bring it up to code. Finally, after a lot of hard work, a reconfiguration of the harbor and rehabilitation of the Gates area was agreed by all the stake holders. State, county and federal permits were issued. Of course, this required years of negotiation, planning, EIRs and so on. Everyone was happy that there were no marsh-type areas that needed to be preserved, and then the Gates Cooperative's pet goat died.

That's right, their goat died. Along comes the Army Corps of Engineers, who, at the 11th hour, just prior to issuing their permit, discovered a total of about one square foot of pickleweed in the area. Apparently, the goat had been eating it, and, absent the goat, the pickleweed returned. Full stop to the project, until and unless an acceptable offsite mitigation could be identified. An extensive search for that mitigation began, but was not bearing fruit.

Rapproachement!

In order to fulfill the needs of all the stakeholders and to bring this shaggy goat story to a conclusion, Supervisor and Mill Valley resident Charles McGlashan suggested that the Almonte Marsh be reclaimed to fulfill the offsite mitigation requirement. With the eager support of the Almonte residents, the concurrence of the numerous agencies, including the Army Corps and the sewer district and the school district, and of course the agreement of Waldo Point Harbor to fund the project to the tune of several hundred thousand dollars, the deal was sealed. Work has begun to remove the old, non-native species and do a general cleanup of the area. Very soon new, native plantings will be brought in and established.

Waldo Point Harbor will not only pay for the restoration, but will also maintain the new plantings for five years, to assure that the restoration was successful. After that, the maintenance will be done by the school district. So, the environment wins, the school district wins with a model marsh to serve as a teaching tool, the neighbors who have longed for the restoration win, Waldo Point Harbor gets its Army Corps permit and the agencies are happy. Everyone wins. Mill Valley, Almonte and Tam Valley folks can look forward to visiting the new and improved Gate 6 area, with a very nice public park and improved Bay access, and WPH residents can visit and enjoy the restored marsh.


Other References


Maps

Click on the thumbnail to see a larger image.
(Warning: these are large images which will open in a new browser window)

Housing Overlay Map
Housing Overlay Map
Tam Junction Map
Tam Junction Aerial Map
One Meter Sea Level Rise on Richardsons Bay
One Meter Sea Level Rise at Richardsons Bay Map

Suggestions? Let us know:
webmaster@tamvalley.org
Copyright 2019 TVIC - all rights reserved