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Breaking the logjam  on Butano Creek
by Pete Holloran

Beavers were the first hydraulic engineers of  the arid West. The wetlands caused by their dams were so important in  recharging local aquifers and regulating the flow of water that the plumbing  was never quite the same after they were nearly wiped out by trappers.


Resurgent populations of beavers are therefore  welcome along many rivers, but not here on Butano Creek. Their dams are  too effective, it seems, in slowing the flow of water; they cause flooding.  Flooding may be a fact of life, like sex and wildfire, but that doesn't  mean people want to witness it in their living rooms. So the dams are  being taken out. Interfering with cute mammals in this way is not common,  but the dam removers hold a trump card. Trappers were responsible for  the presence - not the absence - of beavers in Butano Creek. So in a way,  removing their dams may be making amends for the error made in the late  1930s when they were introduced here, far outside their native range.

It's much more complicated making amends for all the other insults the  20th century has heaped upon the watersheds of Butano and Pescadero Creeks.  That was the message of a forum on Pescadero Marsh recently sponsored  by the Committee for Green Foothills. Supervisor Rich Gordon herded a  half-dozen experts through a whirlwind introduction to Pescadero Marsh  during the first half of the evening.

Then the real star of the panel spoke. Mike Rippey, now in his third term  as a Napa County Supervisor, charmed us with a fascinating account of  flood control work along the Napa River. A series of costly floods had  demonstrated the need for flood management; the voters' rejection of several  traditional plans demonstrated the need for alternative solutions. The  key, according to Supervisor Rippey, was that every interest group had  to give up something.

And so a diverse coalition of conservationists,  fishermen, vintners, ranchers, and business people helped rally support  for a "living river." In 1998 two-thirds of the voters agreed  to raise the sales tax to help fund the restoration plan. No wonder the  evolution of the Napa River project has received so much attention lately,  including a chapter - "How a town can live with a river and not get  soaked" - in The New Economy of Nature: The Quest to Make Conservation  Profitable (Island Press, 2002) by Stanford University biologist Gretchen  Daily and Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist Katherine Ellison.

It's too early to tell whether the future of flood control along Butano  Creek will inspire such accolades. The standing-room-only crowd at the  Pescadero Marsh forum testified to the high level of community interest  in addressing the impacts of flooding along Butano Creek. The example  of the Napa River project may yet serve as a beacon to light the way ahead.  But the forum could also mark a rare episode of civility in the long-running  battle over the future of Butano Creek. Sandwiched between flood waters  and ocean tides, scarce is the middle ground in Pescadero Marsh.

The concerns raised by the Pescadero Municipal Advisory Council in recent  years about flooding are understandable. But the solutions it proposes  - raising the road, removing riparian vegetation, dredging the creek,  and circling the wagons against all government agencies - make it hard  to find common ground with those who do not share their certainty about  the long-term viability of such solutions.

It is true that the lower reach of Butano Creek does not carry sediment  as well as it once did. A sustainable solution, however, will probably  require a more holistic approach, one that looks at the entire watershed  in addition to the constricted channel of the lower reach. If the water  coming out of the tap is rusty, it might help to replace the faucet, but  the problem probably lies elsewhere. And I'd think pretty hard about investing  lots of money fixing the plumbing if rising sea level (due to global warming)  is likely to flood the whole house.

Despite such differences, everyone at the Pescadero Marsh forum clearly  shared many common points of reference, including a deep appreciation  for this special corner of the San Mateo coast. And we agree about beavers,  too. If removing beaver dams together would help break the political logjam,  then let's get muddy.

Pete Holloran has been a naturalist and botanist  for the past decade, working in San Francisco and elsewhere to restore  the native flora of the central California coast. He is working toward  his Ph.D. in environmental studies at UC Santa Cruz.


Published October 2002 in Green  Footnotes.
Page last updated November 4, 2002.

 

 

Copyright 2001 Committee for Green Foothills

Photo of Pescadero Marsh and Butano Creek by  Lennie Roberts.