Tag Archives: Angelides

Fundraiser For East Sacramento Preservation-We Need Your Help!

If you’ve been thinking about joining ESP, now’s the time to sign up. Buy a Spaghetti Feed ticket for $20 and you also get a free membership to ESP! That’s a $35 value. Call 457-2725 to join today, or come on Friday and let us know you want to be a member!

This will be a FUN bonding event with friendly, fun, warm neighbors! Eat, drink, be merry! (We’ll drive you home if needed.)

Attendance at your East Sac Wine & Pasta fundraiser is needed to help us continue to educate the neighborhood about McKinley Village. 

We can’t continue our education campaign without your help.  

Can’t attend? There are other ways you can help! 
1. Donate a bottle of wine. Call (916) 662-3179 for pick up.
2. Go to our website  http://eastsacpreservation.org/ where you can donate by purchasing the Entertainment book online for yourself or as gifts.
3. Donation for your community under the membership tab through our online Paypal.
East Sac Preservation is a 501(c)3 non-profit all donations & memberships are tax deductible
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McKinley Village Pollutants–Buyer Beware of Freeway and Train Dangers

Q: Why do you need HEPA filters in McKinley Village homes?
A: Fumes and exhaust from trains and and the freeway. Ugh.

Location, location, location is the familiar mantra for any potential home buyer. But buyers want a healthy location to raise families, enjoy their yards and be free from a toxic environment. This should be an ethical concern to all responsible developers and sellers of real estate. Unfortunately, Phil Angelides and his company Riverview Capital Investments are ignoring this basic human need. The McKinley Village project is in a perilous location.

What potential buyer in their fully informed and right state of mind would purchase a home on this hazardous location that is bounded by a severely congested freeway and two very active train routes? Noise, air pollution, sound pollution, and train derailments are all legitimate concerns for any future homeowner. Especially when considering this question: Is this the best location for the purchase of my new home?

Air quality is a major concern with this site. Scientific studies jointly conducted by UCLA researchers and the California Air Resources Board concur and conclude that residential developments near a congested freeway and its traffic emissions are health risks.

The studies find that ultrafine particulate distributions of hydrocarbon emissions, nitrous oxide, and carbon monoxide, on and near freeways and congested streets are health hazards.  The health problems include increased risks for asthma, heart disease, bronchitis and lung cancer. This applies to both young and old. Recently, some scientists are finding that vehicle exhaust can lead to brain damage in young and old. There is evidence for correlation of higher rates of dementia and autism in people that live in these more polluted areas.

The developer states that the new housing will have HEPA air filtration systems.  This may reduce the risk for exposure while being inside the homes, but what about when you want to be outside barbequing, swimming, etc. (Are residents then to don their respirator- filtration masks to enjoy the outdoors?)

Increased traffic from the site onto our existing neighborhood streets will increase toxic emissions to innocent established neighborhoods. Moms and dads that jog around McKinley Park while pushing the baby in the athletic stroller need to be aware that their newborn and toddler’s brains and lungs are being affected by the ambient air quality.

I encourage you to read Sac Bee’s article, Monday, August 26th, 2013, “EPA to focus on L.A. Freeways”. This article further substantiates our concerns.  The EPA is being sued by Physicians for Social Responsibility and several other advocacy groups in southern California. The groups are demanding that particulate monitoring be conducted next to the freeways.  This lawsuit has led to placement of 4 monitors in Southern California freeways, and three in the San Francisco Bay area. Similar monitoring installations will occur in more than 100 big cities across this nation.

This closer investigation and monitoring is expected to reveal data that will show higher pollution levels than previously assumed. Then more environmental organizations and neighborhood activists will certainly be calling upon their local and national officials to take more aggressive steps in reduction of emission controls and to more strictly curtail residential development near freeways.

Council member Cohn, City Council members, and all other officials of the City of Sacramento, you are now informed and need to be on serious alert  about this site. The site is a health hazard and unhealthy for residential development.

Legitimate neighborhood associations, environmental activists, and concerned neighbors oppose this project, as proposed. We are supported by numerous scientific studies that validate our concerns about the air quality problems at this proposed location. We, the citizens, will be closely monitoring what your positions and findings will be in the draft-Environmental Impact Report. Here’s the important question: Is it safe and ethically right to REZONE and develop this site for residential development?

 

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