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East Sacramento Preservation
- Neighborhood National Night Out Celebration 07/25/2023
- East Sacramento Preservation 2023 Scholarship Winners 07/20/2023
- Neighborhood National Night Out Celebration 07/30/2022
- East Sacramento Preservation 2022 Scholarship Winners 07/26/2022
- Tell the City: Climate Action Plan must Protect Trees 07/24/2022
Tag Archives: Craig Powell
Eye on Sacramento Founder Craig Powell is October 10th ESP Speaker
Thank you neighbors who came out to the last ESP General Meeting. We invite all to our regular monthly meeting to hear our speaker, Craig Powell. Craig is the founder of Eye on Sacramento, the citizen led watch dog group keeping an eye on city government. He’s a wealth of information and can tell you what our representatives are doing. The meeting will be one hour long, with Q and A afterwards. East Sacramento Preservation Meeting Wednesday October 10th 7pm McClaskey Adult Center Enter the rear parking lot, plenty of parking for bikes and cars!
As a follow up to the last meeting: We had more than 70 neighbors attend. The speakers were excellent. We will be posting follow up answers to questions placed on the “parking lot sheet.”
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged city of sacramento, Craig Powell, darrel steinburg, east sac preservation, East Sacramento, East Sacramento Preservation, Eye on Sacramento, mayor, mayor of sacramento, sacramento city council
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East Sacramento Preservation—Year End Photo Gallery and Annual Report
East Sacramento Preservation wishes all our members and friends a Happy New Year. After more than two years working to help the neighborhood oppose McKinley Village, 2015 was a time to return to our roots. Below is a brief summary of what we’ve been up to this year and some plans for next year.
Our popular Speaker Series hosted three outstanding presenters with unique talents and deep historical understanding of Sacramento.
Paula Peper–Historian and author of several books about our beautiful park neighborhoods and trees
Bill Burg–State Historian, author and Sacramento trolley history expert
Wes Green–design genius and owner of Twigs Floral Design
When ESP’s Judy McClaver started to volunteer at McKinley Pond three years ago she never imagined that she would become an award winning neighborhood icon. Her efforts have forced the city to address the issues at the pond. ESP supports her and the cadre of pond volunteers’ incredible dedication and hard work. She serves on the city pond committee and worked daily to clean and preserve the pond. (City Parks denied her use of the boat, so her garbage patrol and island work are curtailed.) However, park maintenance has stepped up and is now keeping trash cans empty on regular basis and the City reportedly has hired a pond maintenance company starting Jan 2016. We’ve set aside a portion of funds to donate to the rehab effort, once the city is able to create a workable plan. (At the end of this article is Judy’s “pondlife” list. Amazing what we have in the city!)
This year’s National Night Out was a packed bonanza. SWAT, canine, car patrol, bike patrol, fire, politicals—they all came, as did the neighborhood. It was a party.
Essays, provocative and informative, tackled East Sac issues with humor and insight. Our most popular essays were Airbnb, Pond Update, Exact Spot, Insist on Trees, No Permit, Illegal Building Draws East Sac Neighbors’ Ire.
ESP has joined multiple neighborhood associations in the effort to preserve Sacramento’s tree canopy. We are cosigners on numerous comments and letters to the city and support the healthy preservation of our canopy. We also promoted the retention of snag habitats, whenever it is safe to do so.
When the city sends us information, we share it. From parking, palm pruning, to events and meetings, we send it your way. When neighbors ask for help with city issues, we step up.
ESP supported the Ethics and Transparency movement led by the League of Women Voters and Eye on Sacramento. We stand firm with Eye on Sacramento and know there is much more to be done. However, we offer kudos to both groups for their work.
ESP featured Nextdoor in an article on the web site. The fun of this was that we drove to San Francisco and visited the start up. What a great group of innovators.
For more than seven years East Sacramento Preservation has been the pour and clean up team at Pops in the Park at East Portal. In 2016 we’re helping out at East Portal and Bertha Henschel Parks. If you’d like to pour with the team, send us an email!
Supporting SCUSD and school events is a pleasure. We post and spread the word about fundraisers, events and surveys.
Locals send us information about community events, farmers’ market, volunteer days, health and safety, river danger issues and individual efforts. We post all that come our way.
Traffic is an on-going concern in East Sacramento and our flag program on 33th and H is in its third year. Although flag theft makes the effort a little tricky, we know this is a great safety benefit to the community. ESP also distributes the Drive Like Your Kids Live Here Signs.
East Sacramento Preservation, Inc. is proud to support the designation of the Maple Avenue/38th Street Historical District that has been presented to the City of Sacramento’s Preservation Director. We should hear soon how the city will act on the application. These two blocks of 38th Street between J Street and Folsom Boulevard are a showcase of early 20th Century residential structures and the history of their occupants is long and important to the development of Sacramento. Many of the original occupants were captains of industry that have left a legacy of contributions to the city.
We are hopeful that this first historical district in East Sacramento will lead to other deserving portions and individual structures in the neighborhood being similarly designated. This is essential so that these resources are not lost to the speculative fever that is currently resulting in the wanton destruction of the residential fabric and character that helps make this community special.
News for 2016
An ESP High School Scholarship is under discussion. Our student board member, Emiliano Gómez, will be leading the study.
In the coming year we will work to improve the web site set up and delivery system. We love all feedback, positive and negative, and have read all your comments.
Our popular speaker series will continue with new and exciting speakers.
Please consider year-end donations to ESP. We’re an East Sacramento charity that works in your neighborhood. We spend money in no other place. All donations or membership will go to our established programs and is 100% tax deductible. All ESP community workers, writers, project organizers, forum and speaker series participants are non-paid volunteers.
Judy’s Pondlife List
Birds
Black-crowned night herons
Wood ducks
Mallards/mixes
Canada geese
Greater White fronted geese
Cackling geese
Coots
Cormorants
Egrets
Hawks
Barn owls
Swallows
Bush tits
Robins and other common Sacramento birds
Miscellaneous migrating birds
All the domestic ducks and geese were relocated by Judy to help preserve the pond and protect wildlife’s health.
Reptiles
Turtles—99% are red-eared sliders
Fish
Koi
Goldfish
Carp
Bluegills
Catfish
Mammals
Bats
Raccoons
Opossum
And, of course, the ubiquitous, squirrel (most are Fox Squirrels with a few Grays)
Posted in City Council, District 3, Ellen Cochrane, Essays, Events, Pat Lynch, Speaker Series, Uncategorized
Tagged bertha Henschel, Bill Burg, calming traffic, city of sacramento, Craig Powell, drive like your kids live here signs, drive-like-your-kids-live-here, ducks at mckinley pond, east portal park, east sac preservation, East Sacramento Neighborhood Associations, East Sacramento Preservation, ellen cochrane, ESP, essays, Ethics and Transparency, Eye on Sacramento, Fundraiser for Theodore Judah, Historic Preservation District, judy mcclaver, League of Women Voters, mckinley park, mckinley po, mckinley pond, McKinley Village, National Night Out, Nextdoor, NNO, Pat Lynch, Photos East Sacramento, planning commission, Pops in the Park, Sacramento History, Sacramento Trolley Cars, traffic calming, trees, wes green
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