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The Almanac
December 18, 2002
 
Three conservation  organizations helped change the future of the Peninsula, from 'Los Angeles  North' to mostly open Bayfront, foothills, mountains, and coast

By Marion Softky

Not many people remember the 1960 San Mateo County  Master Plan.

Yet this pioneering document lays out a vision for  what San Mateo County would look like in 1990 that few of today's residents  would recognize -- or welcome.

In 1960, at the height of California's post-war building  boom, San Mateo County was planning for a population of 800,000 by 1990.  The late William Spangle of Ladera led the team that created one of the  first master plans in California to accommodate the growth that was sweeping  the Golden State.

To today's eyes, much of the plan jars with our present  reality. Key aspects of its vision -- freeways down the Bay and coast,  BART down the Peninsula, heliports, lakes -- have not happened.

Instead, San Mateo County is still mostly rural outside  the dense urban corridor down the Bayside. Large tracts along the edge  of San Francisco Bay are still natural and being restored. From Interstate  280, over the hills to the outskirts of Half Moon Bay and Pacifica, and  south to the Santa Cruz County line, the county's incomparable coast is  still mostly open.

Why? What happened to stem the powerful spread of  megalopolis into San Francisco Bay, over the hills, and down the coastal  terraces south of Half Moon Bay?

One of many things that happened was the environmental  movement. Starting in the early 1960s and growing through the 1970s, grassroots  groups started saying no to growth, and government agencies followed their  lead. "Save the Bay" became a rallying cry, and the state established  the Bay Conservation and Development Commission (BCDC) to stop rampant  filling of San Francisco Bay, and to control uses along its shores. Neighborhoods  arose and blocked the building of freeways -- including the Willow Freeway  and later the Willow Expressway in Menlo Park.

Nationally, Congress passed revolutionary laws protecting  the environment, clean water, clean air, and endangered species.

On the Peninsula, three organizations that are celebrating  key anniversaries this year helped change many areas of the master plan  from urban yellow to open-space green, and make many green areas permanent:

** The Committee for Green Foothills was founded  in 1962 to fight the development crawling up the foothills above Stanford.

** The Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District  (MROSD) was created in 1972 as a government agency to buy and manage open  space for low-intensity recreation and natural resources.

** The Peninsula Open Space Trust (POST) is a private,  nonprofit land trust founded in 1977 to help buy and save Peninsula lands,  many of which are now part of MROSD's open space.

Over two generations, these organizations, and their  allies in and out of government, have cumulatively made extraordinary  changes in the future of San Mateo County. Working through political action,  government purchase, and private finance, they have helped preserve tens  of thousands of acres for open space, agriculture, recreation, and natural  habitat. Most of the unincorporated Coastside is still open -- a large  green swath on current plans.

"The whole mindset was so incredibly different,"  says George Mader of Ladera, who worked on the 1960 master plan, and has  served as town planner for Portola Valley since it incorporated in 1964.  People then weren't thinking about water quality or air quality or toxic  waste. "Recycling had never been heard of. They were still burning  dumps," he says.

"The Midpeninsula was the incubator for both  planning and environmental efforts that are now taken for granted,"  says Lennie Roberts of Ladera, who has represented the Committee for Green  Foothills in San Mateo County for almost 25 years. "These three organizations  have made tremendous strides in preserving open space."

Audrey Rust, president of POST, agrees. "We  all benefit from each other. We depend on work they've done," she  says, quickly adding, "We don't always agree with each other."

Now that the foothills and Skyline are mostly secure,  the organizations have a new vision, and a new challenge: to save the  Coastside. "This is the only undeveloped, accessible coast adjacent  to a metropolitan area in the world. It's amazing," says Mrs. Rust.  "We have incredible diversity under immediate threat. But we have  an immediate obligation to ourselves and to the future to see that these  lands aren't lost forever."

In 2000, POST launched a campaign to raise $200 million  to save more than 20,000 acres on the Coastside. Next year MROSD will  continue its effort to annex the San Mateo County Coastside, from the  southern boundary of Pacifica to the Santa Cruz County line, in order  to be able to buy and manage land for agriculture, low-intensity recreation,  and to preserve natural resources.

At a celebration of the 30th anniversary of MROSD,  San Mateo County Supervisor Rich Gordon praised the vision of its founders.  He also warned of opposition from farmers, property rights advocates,  and those generally hostile to government; but he urged, "Hold fast  to your vision."

Factories out of the Foothills
"All you have to do to feel the hills as a blessing is to live  within sight of them, within reach of their climatic controls, and under  the influence of their watershed."

These words by the late Pulitzer Prize-winning author  Wallace Stegner set the vision for the Committee for Green Foothills.  As its founding president in 1962, Mr. Stegner continued as the eloquent  voice of the conservation movement on the Peninsula until his death in  1993.

The impetus for the Committee for Green Foothills  came in 1959, when local conservationists organized to keep "factories  out of the foothills" -- specifically to prevent Stanford from extending  its industrial park beyond Foothill Expressway, then a narrow winding  road.

As pressures grew to develop the green backdrop of  the urban Peninsula, "Greenfeet" organized in 1962, with theoretical  physicist and solar-energy pioneer Don Aitken of Skyline as its first  president.

In one of its first battles, the committee joined  Woodside to stop large power lines, being built to serve the new Stanford  Linear Accelerator, from marching up the hills to Skyline. The David-and-Goliath  fight against the Atomic Energy Commission also launched a young land-use  attorney, Pete McCloskey, to a career in Congress.

Over the past 40 years the committee has been a powerful  force for keeping the foothills, and now the Coastside, open. Its members  fought -- and are still fighting -- Stanford to keep major development  out of its foothill lands. They have fought private developers all over  the county to stop large-scale developments in county open spaces.

The committee has also supported positive initiatives.  With the leadership of Portola Valley Mayor and Councilwoman Eleanor Boushey,  the committee helped make Skyline a state Scenic Corridor. They have supported  parks, and played a key role in preservation of the Coastside.

Relations with county government, which controls  land use over the two-thirds of San Mateo County not in cities, have come  a long way from the 1960s, when the Board of Supervisors and Planning  Commission basically bought into the 1960 master plan, but thought it  had too much open space.

In the 1970s under Planning Director Don Woolfe,  the county rezoned thousands of acres of the Coastside from parcel sizes  of one acre or less, to a sliding scale of five to 40 acres. "That  was very fundamental," says Mr. Mader.

In 1972, voters of California passed Proposition  20, the Coastal Initiative, which set up a commission to regulate development  along the California coast. The Committee for Green Foothills joined other  conservation organizations to pass Measure A in 1986 to strengthen protection  of the Coastside even more.

These conservation milestones grew out of many factors.  Individuals got turned on to a local issue. Organizations formed around  specific issues, and joined together to work for a common goal -- defeat  of the freeway bypass of dangerous Devil's Slide, for example. Larger  organizations such as the Committee for Green Foothills or the Sierra  Club got on board. They pressured government, filed lawsuits, passed initiatives.

"I started organizing people around hikes to  see what was in their back yard," says veteran conservation fighter  Olive Mayer of Woodside, who helped establish the county's trail system.  "They saw what was out there, what needed to be done. It comes down  to people working in their own back yards, and then cooperating."

In this county, preservation of the mountains and  the coast was substantially helped by three physical factors: the mountain  barrier between city and country; San Francisco's 23,000 acres of watershed  dividing the Bayside from the Coastside; and the lack of water to support  major development on the coast.

"There were big plans for development of the  entire coast. We had to knock them down one by one," says Mrs. Mayer,  who has worked for 25 years to block the a freeway and achieve a tunnel  to bypass Devil's Slide. "We were helped considerably by topography  and lack of water."

Also important in the county's change in planning  was the incorporation of the foothill communities of Woodside and then  Portola Valley in the 1950s and 1960s. Their leaders -- not always conservationists  -- didn't like the way the county was planning their future; they wanted  to control their own destinies. Portola Valley, in particular, feared  subdivisions climbing Windy Hill -- now a Peninsula symbol for open space.

MROSD: fee simple
There's a saying in the conservation movement: "Victories are temporary;  defeats are permanent."

As the 1960s wore on, conservationists tired of fighting  trench wars against developers; they wanted something permanent.

A group of seven conservation leaders led by Palo  Alto activist Nonette Hanko started meeting to plan a special government  district that could raise tax money to buy and manage open space. Bill  Spangle from Ladera, the visionary planner who made sure that San Mateo  County's 1960 master plan had plenty of green, did the technical work  for creating the new government agency.

As a result, the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space  District was adopted by voters in northern Santa Clara County in 1972,  and expanded to southern San Mateo County in 1976.

Since that time, MROSD has acquired and preserved  more than 47,000 acres of Baylands, foothills, mountains, and forest,  from Cupertino to San Carlos, and from San Francisco Bay past Skyline  Ridge. It manages 26 open space preserves for low-intensity recreation  and preservation of natural resources.

In its first 20 years, the district totally reversed  the dynamics of land use in the Peninsula hills. By acquiring large swaths  of land, it has become the largest landowner of the Midpeninsula. It has  changed expectations for the use of rural land from "develop it"  to "protect and enjoy it."

"The open space district is the best thing that  has happened," wrote Wallace Stegner. "The answer to preservation  of land is fee simple. You have to own it to control it."

Non-government
As the Committee for Green Foothills helped  form the open space district, the open space district helped form POST.

It soon became evident to the newly elected board  and General Manager Herb Grench that the fledgling government agency had  neither the money nor the flexibility to deal with many private landowners  and buy the lands needed. They tapped Portola Valley venture capitalist  Ward Paine, and other leaders in booming Silicon Valley, to form a private,  nonprofit land trust, which could expand the district's ability to preserve  land.

Enter POST, formed in December 1977.

POST helps the district in three ways, Mrs. Rust  explains. It can operate in private, act faster, and make deals that government  agencies are barred from; it can deal with landowners who don't want to  work with the government; and it can raise private money. "I remember  thinking: Wouldn't it be great if we could raise a million dollars?"  Mrs. Rust chuckles.

POST has been phenomenally successful. It has saved  some 50,000 acres, worth many, many millions of dollars. Much of the land  has been sold to the open space district, but other lands are part of  state and national parks. POST also owns and manages several thousand  acres of farm and ranch land on the Coastside.

Landmark Windy Hill, which rises open and beautiful  above Portola Valley, was POST's first major acquisition in 1981. It can  be seen from the teeming Bayside from Redwood City to Mountain View as  a symbol of the green revolution that has swept the rural Peninsula. POST  acquired Windy Hill as a gift from Ryland Kelley and Corte Madera Associates,  then sold it to MROSD for $1.5 million -- half its value -- and used the  purchase price to create its revolving land-acquisition fund.

"When people look at Windy Hill, they know it's  open," says Mrs. Rust. "They know it's not L.A. here."

Mrs. Rust is proud of POST's acquisitions, which  spell the difference between sprawling city and living land. Its 187-plus  acquisitions include: Bair Island, at the foot of Whipple Avenue in Redwood  City; the Phleger Estate, climbing the hill from Canada Road to Skyline;  the Cowell Ranch, with cliffs and Brussels sprouts just south of Half  Moon Bay; Cloverdale Coastal Ranch, between Butano State Park and Ano  Nuevo State Reserve.

Now POST is concentrating on saving the coast for  nature, farming, natural resources, and recreation. It's more than half  way toward its goal of raising $200 million to buy 20,000 endangered acres.

"Our challenge is to be able to acquire key  large pieces of open space that allow us to construct a permanent conservation  landscape," Mrs. Rust explains. "We're talking about a variety  of uses compatible with conservation, like farming or sustainable timber  harvesting. We have to serve the urban population through low-intensity  recreation."

Challenges ahead
Over the last 40 years, the challenges to forging a sustainable and benign  environment on the Peninsula have changed. And thanks to new conservation  rules, the challenges are quite different on the urban Bayside of the  county than they are on the still-rural coast.

"In this county, we have been successful in  separating the urban from the rural -- permanently. That's crucial,"  says Mrs. Roberts of the Committee for Green Foothills. "On the Bayside,  we drew a line around the cities and said, 'This is it.'"

On the Bayside, where transportation and housing  problems are horrendous, cities and the county are working toward what  is called "smart growth." They are trying to direct higher-density  growth and affordable housing toward city centers and transportation corridors.

On the Coastside, with all its protections, the threat  is no longer the row-houses and urban sprawl envisioned in 1960. "The  coast is under threat from very large mini-mansions. People are building  second and third, and even fourth homes," says Mrs. Rust.

Mrs. Roberts and the Committee for Green Foothills  share the concern about the influx of applications for mega-houses. "You  want to maintain the coast as an agricultural area," she says. "Putting  monster houses that would look OK in Atherton or Hillsborough out there  in the farm fields is not appropriate."

Next year could be decisive. POST hopes to complete  its acquisition drive. And MROSD will be going through legal procedures  to gain approval for extending the district into the Coastside. Under  its proposal, Coastside residents would be able to vote for district board  members, but would not pay taxes to the district. The district would then  have authority to buy and manage open space for low-intensity recreation,  and preservation of natural resources and agriculture.

Even though MROSD has agreed to give up the power  of eminent domain on the coast, and promises to buy land only from willing  sellers, the plan to extend the district still faces strong local opposition.

Wallace Stegner spoke for the groups that are trying  to fulfill the dream of a healthy, rural Coastside: "Every green  natural place we save saves a fragment of our sanity and gives us a little  more hope that we have a future."

To reach:
Committee for Green Foothills, 3921 E. Bayshore Road, Palo Alto,  CA 94303; 968-7243;
www.GreenFoothills.org.

Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District, 330 Distel  Circle, Los Altos, CA 94022; 691-1200; www.openspace.org.

Peninsula Open Space Trust, 3000 Sand Hill Road,  Suite 4-135, Menlo Park, CA 94025; 854-7696; www.openspacetrust.org.

Read the related article, "Partial  vision: San Mateo County Master Plan of 1960."


Page last updated July 24, 2003 .

 

 

Copyright 2001 Committee for Green Foothills