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East Sacramento Preservation
- Make a Date to Help the Tree Canopy 01/06/2025
- Insist on Trees (First published in 2015) 12/14/2024
- Busy Weekend in McKinley Park: Volunteers Needed 12/12/2024
- Report Your Road Safety Concerns 11/12/2024
- Urban Trees and Green Space – Health Benefits 08/20/2024
Tag Archives: city of sacramento
Lawsuit Against McKinley Village – Appellate Court Hearing Set
Below is information from East Sacramento Partnerships for a Livable City regarding their suit against McKinley Village, including a link to the legal brief.
Dear Friends and Neighbors,
The lawsuit brought by East Sacramento Partnerships for a Livable City (ESPLC) to protect our neighborhood and future residents from the dangers of the McKinley Village project will be heard on Monday, September 19, 2016. ESPLC will present oral argument to a panel of judges at the Court of Appeal in Sacramento.
ESPLC pursued legal action after all attempts failed to persuade our City leaders to put the interests of City residents above special interests of developers. ESPLC continues its advocacy for first preserving, protecting, and improving environmental quality of life for residents throughout Sacramento. Common sense reveals the dangers and irresponsibility of approving a residential housing complex on an island of land surrounded by a major freeway on one side, high‐volume railroad tracks on the other, and bordering a former landfill:
• Increased cancer risks up to 12 times the accepted standard.
• Noise and toxic air particles from the anticipated 100 trains per day that require installation of air filtration units inside all of the homes and will render the outdoor portions of these residences, and project playgrounds, virtually unusable.
• An additional 1.2 million vehicle trips per year generated by this car‐dependent project through our already‐congested neighborhood.
• Potential methane contamination from the adjacent landfill site and inadequate monitoring systems that two independent agencies have described as not “fully effective in detecting and/or controlling landfill gas migration.”
These dangers, and many others, are simply too grave to ignore, and will never go away. ESPLC encourages you to join in support of our advocacy for common sense and for a fair and just public process by attending the oral argument before the Court of Appeal and by reading ESPLC’s attached legal brief. The oral arguments are open to the public and typically last less than an hour.
When: September 19, 2016
2:00 p.m.
Where: Court of Appeal of the State of California (Third Appellate District)
Stanley Mosk Library and Courts Building
914 Capitol Mall, First Floor
Sacramento, CA 95814
Case Name: East Sacramento Partnerships for a Livable City v. City of Sacramento, et al.
Case No. C079614
ATTENDANCE
For those attending the hearing, please plan to arrive by 1:30 PM. We have visited the Court and spoken to the security officers about procedures. Business or business casual attire is appropriate. Electronic devices (including cell phones), food, and drinks are not allowed. Visitors are asked not to speak once inside the courtroom and proceedings have started.
PARKING
The parking lot closest to the Library and Courts Building is the City Parking Lot on L Street between 10th and 11th Streets. Entrance is on 10th Street between L and K Streets. Payment is collected by credit card at the “Pay Here” machine on the 10th Street side, or by cash on the 11th Street side. (It is a large facility used by downtown employees but usually has plenty of room.)
THANK YOU
For your support of our neighborhood efforts to preserve and to protect the quality of life for all people within the City of Sacramento through advocacy of common sense and a fair and just public process.
Posted in McKinley Park, McKinley Village, Uncategorized
Tagged Angelides, calming traffic, city of sacramento, East Sacramento, East Sacramento Preservation, McKinley Village, McKinley Village Lawsuit, meagan garcia norris, Smart Growth, traffic
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Turtle territory: “Turtle lady” and park volunteers discuss city park ponds and the future of the popular reptilian residents
Reprinted from Valcomnews
As news of “turtle trouble” at McKinley and William Land Park’s ponds hit various media outlets, Greenhaven’s very own turtle lady, Felice Rood, has been fielding phone calls for future turtle adoptions because starting in July people can adopt a turtle by calling 311.
In July, construction to renovate the ponds will begin after waterfowl nesting cycles complete.
The city of Sacramento is improving these ponds by restoring them to serve as both park amenities and a wildlife resource. The projects are in the design phase; therefore, the wildlife constraints and opportunities are being evaluated continually and on a pond-by-pond basis.
McKinley Pond contains about 90 non-native red-eared sliders that will need to be relocated during pond renovations. The three ponds in Land Park also contain red-eared sliders; however, they occur at a lower density than at McKinley Pond. Waterfowl also use both parks’ ponds and there is an unknown fish population in each pond. It is anticipated that the ponds will need to be drained, cleaned and reconstructed as part of the renovation process.
It was decided the non-natives can’t return to the ponds and language in the restoration pond contract discussed euthanizing the turtles. Two years ago, Felice said her club was asked to foster them before returning them back to the ponds. Since then, it’s been deemed against the law, but fortunately with the help from members of the Land Park Community Association Felice and other residents, language has been changed to not include euthanize when referring to the relocation of the ponds’ turtles.
Felice takes issue with the fact that after the ponds are drained non-native red-eared sliders, the most popular turtles occupying the ponds, can’t be returned to their homes. “There is no reason for the turtles to be evicted from their home forever … My grandsons area all grown up and they remember seeing (the turtles) as children and the city council wants to get rid of something people have enjoyed for years and years – it’s just not fair,” she said. She also fears that in July, the baby turtles won’t actually be saved. “I think the trucks that will be there will compact the earth so hard that the babies will not be able to dig out. Won’t there be duck eggs there too? What about frogs? The more you think, the worse it gets…
“The one good thing that has happened is I now have a bunch of new people to give turtles to me that land here after being found running down the street.”
Having adopted turtles and tortoises out since 1975, Felice thinks she may be the only legitimate turtle and tortoise rescue in Sacramento, with a rubber stamp of approval from the California Department Fish and Game. “My home is a hotel, hospital, hospice, orphanage and maternity ward all for turtles and tortoises and there is no charge although if people want to donate, the money goes into the Sick Turtle Fund,” she says.
Felice has an adoption form people fill out and from that, she can tell fairly well, if they are qualified or not by their answers to the questions. Dogs can and do often kill the turtles (as to raccoons) and they are not a suitable pet for small children and should never be trapped in a fish tank. It’s cruel and they become very deformed, if they live at all, she says.
Rick Stevenson of the Land Park Volunteer Corps monitors William Land Park daily and described McKinley Pond’s situation different from Land Park’s.
“In McKinley, they have the problem of collecting animals. But at Land Park, if one (pond) is drained, the turtles will move on their own (to a different pond).” Additionally, while volunteers at McKinley advocated for not deepening the pond, Stevenson said they want deeper ponds in Land Park. “In summer, when it’s so hot, when water is too shallow, oxygen it goes down and we get big fish kills.
They’re completely different situations because they are different ponds.”
While about 90 turtles have been identified in McKinley Pond, Rick said they won’t get a good idea in Land Park until the ponds are drained, though he noted Lily Pond doesn’t have any turtles.
Over on Duck Lake, the turtles sun themselves and Rick said he’s seen them vary in size from 3 to 10 inches long. He’s also seen a turtle dig a hole in the walkway inside the WPA rock garden and lay eggs. “I had never seen a turtle lay eggs. I didn’t bother turtle at all,” he said. “I have seen them on Land Park Drive in over a seven-year period and I picked them up, the ones that got hit by cars. Normally, they stick to the ponds. They don’t travel much beyond the rock garden … They got a pretty good gig there. Nice big pond, everything they need. It’s good turtle territory.”
Posted in McKinley Park, Uncategorized
Tagged city of sacramento, East Sacramento, East Sacramento Neighborhood Associations, East Sacramento Preservation, Felice Rood, judy mcclaver, mckinley park, pond turtles, sacramento urban wildlife, turtles in sacramento
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