SAN FRANCISCO— Six San Francisco conservation groups are
seeking a preliminary injunction in federal court against the San
Francisco Recreation and Parks Department to stop illegal pumping of
water from wetlands and prohibit harmful mowing and motorized golf-cart
use on nine golf course holes near wetlands at the Sharp Park golf
course in Pacifica. The injunction will help protect endangered San
Francisco garter snakes and California red-legged frogs from these
harmful activities.
“No
more business as usual at Sharp Park — illegal pumping and mowing of
wetlands stops now,” said Jeff Miller with the Center for Biological
Diversity. “The best scientific experts on endangered species are
calling for a moratorium on harmful golf course activities in and near
wetlands habitat, and we hope the court agrees.”
The Wild Equity Institute, Center for Biological Diversity, National Parks Conservation Association, Surfrider Foundation, Sequoia Audubon and Sierra Club filed a motion for a temporary injunction on Friday on golf-course activities that are hurting endangered species. The injunction would last until a pending lawsuit is heard or the Recreation and Parks Department adopts an approved “habitat conservation plan” and obtains legal permits under the Endangered Species Act. The plaintiffs are represented by the environmental law firm Meyer, Glitzenstein & Crystal.
The Wild Equity Institute, Center for Biological Diversity, National Parks Conservation Association, Surfrider Foundation, Sequoia Audubon and Sierra Club filed a motion for a temporary injunction on Friday on golf-course activities that are hurting endangered species. The injunction would last until a pending lawsuit is heard or the Recreation and Parks Department adopts an approved “habitat conservation plan” and obtains legal permits under the Endangered Species Act. The plaintiffs are represented by the environmental law firm Meyer, Glitzenstein & Crystal.
“These science-based restrictions will
protect our most imperiled wildlife from harm while allowing golf on
many of the course areas,” said Brent Plater, executive director
of the Wild Equity Institute. “Their duration will provide us all an
opportunity to evaluate proper permitting options and restoration
activities at Sharp Park.”
Leading scientific experts
on the red-legged frog and garter snake, with collective experience of
more than seven decades of research and study of California amphibians
and reptiles, submitted declarations
in support of the requested injunction. These experts contend that golf
course activities impair the long-term survival and recovery of the
species and that the Parks Department’s alleged compliance plan is not
being followed and is unworkable.
See quotes below from these experts explaining why the injunction is justified.
Crumbling infrastructure,
annual flooding problems, declining conditions and ongoing Endangered
Species Act violations at the golf course require changing how Sharp
Park is managed, but such changes are not financially feasible for San
Francisco’s strained budget. The San Francisco Board of Supervisors will
vote next month on legislation introduced by Supervisor John Avalos to
repurpose the golf course and transition management of Sharp Park to the
National Park Service’s Golden Gate National Recreation Area to improve
recreation and public access, protect endangered wildlife and save San
Francisco taxpayers money. The proposed partnership will end the city’s
legal and financial liabilities and put the National Park Service in
charge of protecting endangered species and providing public recreation,
allowing San Francisco to reinvest its scarce resources back into
city-based parks, recreation centers and golf
courses.
Quotes From Scientific Experts
Dr. Vance Vredenburg is
an assistant professor in biology at San Francisco State University,
research associate at the California Academy of Sciences and U.C. Museum
of Vertebrate Zoology, and an expert on California amphibians and the
red-legged frog.
“Sharp Park must have
successful recovery actions implemented, or it will one day lose its
red-legged frog population, and potentially jeopardize populations at
nearby properties as well.”
“The city is not, and
cannot, actually implement the Compliance Plan…making it virtually
certain that California red-legged frogs will be taken unless the relief
requested by the plaintiffs here is granted...San Francisco must be
ordered to cease all pumping at Sharp Park.”
Dr. Marc Hayes is a biologist
with four decades of experience studying reptiles and amphibians in
California. He wrote the Department of Fish and Game’s “Amphibians and Reptiles of Special Concern in California” and submitted the petition that led to listing the red-legged frog as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
“Unless
golf-course operations that cause ongoing take of these species are
halted, both populations at Sharp Park may be lost, and the San
Francisco garter snake’s entire species will be in jeopardy.”
“The Recreation and Parks Department
should be prohibited from operating the pumps at Sharp Park until a
decision is rendered in this matter…the court should grant plaintiffs’
request to prohibit all mowing and golf-cart use within roughly 200
meters of the delineated wetland.”
Wendy Dexter is
the principal biologist at Condor Country Consulting, with 20 years of
experience in herpetology, particularly regarding the San Francisco garter snake and red-legged frog, and specializes in endangered species compliance and permits.
“The San Francisco garter snake’s
habitat at Sharp Park has not been secured, and the subspecies has been
taken, and will continue to be taken in the foreseeable future, by the
continued operations and management of Sharp Park Golf Course…I am
certain that undocumented deaths of snakes occur annually if not more
frequently.”
“Unless the golf-course operations that
cause take of the San Francisco garter snake are halted in areas where
the snake is likely to be found, the Sharp Park/Mori Point population
will continue to decline, increasing the potential for the population to
become extirpated.”
********************************************
Jeff Miller
Conservation Advocate
Center for Biological Diversity
351 California Street, Suite 600
San Francisco, CA 94104
Submitted by Lionel Emde
3 comments:
"I am certain that undocumented deaths of snakes occur annually if not more frequently.”
I am certain that I saw a Bigfoot last night as well!!!
What a crock. Don't let these people fool you. It is not about Frogs & Snakes but money & power.
Everyone who is a land owner in this country should take notice of these people and what they are trying to do. If this injunction is granted and the lawsuit is lost, the WEI, CBD & the rest will go after existing farms, ranches and more golf courses.
Hey Butch, There be vampires in the barn, bring pitchforks and torches!!!!
Undocumented "take" is just that, undocumented take which is no "take" at all. Science is not based on hearsay and neither are our laws.
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