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 Los Altos Hills  enacts protections
for Town-owned open space
New open space committee being formed
by Nancy Couperus

The history of open  space owned by the Town of Los Altos Hills is a story that includes personal  generosity, public risk-taking, and enthusiastic support and hard work  by citizens. The latest chapter in this story involves a core of dedicated  residents led by Nancy Couperus, who describes here a recent success and  new efforts to protect the Town's open space. - Editor

Byrne Preserve established  through private generosity and public foresight
Back in the mid-sixties, Dr. Albert  Byrne generously donated a beautiful and scenic 55-acre parcel of open  grassland in the town of Los Altos Hills to The Nature Conservancy.

This land was eventually dedicated as permanent open space thanks to an  extraordinary
partnership between  the Town of Los Altos Hills and the  Committee  for Green Foothills. Led by forward-looking Councilmember Mary Davey  and Town Manager Lowell Morse, the Town negotiated to purchase from the Nature Conservancy this  land - now known as the Albert  Byrne Preserve. The cost to the Town was $99,500, to be paid over  a period of several years, and the land was dedicated as permanent open  space.


After working to help bring Burne Preserve  into public open space in the late 1960's,  CGF Founding President Wallace Stegner said, "This corridor will  be of inestimable value to the whole community, for it will provide open  space, erosion control, walking and horse trails, and that intangible  but indispensable benefit we call 'visual amenity' -- the pure pleasure  of seen beauty." Today, that value is seen clearly in this aerial  photograph, in which the upper part of
Byrne  Preserve appears, center, surrounded by development.

After an extraordinary fundraising effort and generous contributions from  local residents Lucille Packard, Jack Melchor, and others, the Town was  also able to purchase a portion of the Byrne corridor, linking the Preserve  to
Hidden  Villa , thus protecting the Preserve's edge and providing important  connections between these areas. Thanks to this foresight, Byrne Preserve  today comprises nearly 90 acres of beautiful grassland and thick woodlands.

Open space legacy threatened by potential sale of lands
Over the next 35 years, residents enjoyed  the natural beauty of this preserve with its quiet glens and scenic views.  But in early 2002, residents in Los Altos Hills began hearing rumors about  Town-owned properties being considered for possible sale. Mayor Toni Casey  had requested an inventory of properties to evaluate whether they were  being put to their "highest and best use."

Two properties were singled out initially - the O'Keefe Property, an eight-acre  parcel of open space originally acquired as a result of Highway 280 construction,  and Westwind Barn, a 14-acre parcel also owned by the town and adjacent  to Byrne Preserve. Discussion by certain members of the Town Council suggesting  that Westwind Barn be relocated to Byrne Preserve to enable sale of the  land on which it sat, galvanized the community into organizing a grassroots  movement -
Los  Altos Hills Open Space.

Citizens develop initiative to protect lands
Town residents met with others concerned  about open space, and we quickly agreed that we should try to protect  the Town's open spaces by means of an initiative. The initiative would  prevent the sale of Town-owned properties without a vote of the residents,  and would define appropriate land-use designations for these properties  - also subject to change only by a vote of the residents.

With the November elections also looming, the open space initiative became  a central issue in the campaigns for two seats on the Town Council. Two  candidates positioned themselves squarely behind the Citizens' Initiative,  while two opposing candidates refused to endorse it - while nevertheless  claiming to spearhead the movement to preserve the open space.

Thanks to the hard work of many working on the campaign and to the generosity  of over 125 individuals who contributed financially to the campaign, we  had the initiative finalized and officially filed by the end of October  2002. The enormous outpouring of community support surprised everyone,  and told us we were on the right track.

Competing initiative designed to confuse voters
Within three days of the Citizens'  Initiative being filed, however, three members of the Council, led by  Toni Casey, offered up their own competing initiative. The latter, it  was claimed was simpler to understand - mainly because it covered all  168 acres of Town-owned properties rather than the 157 specified in the  Citizens' Initiative. Less apparent to the casual reader was that this  Council-sponsored Initiative locked into place incorrect land-use designations  (i.e. residential instead of open space) on a number of the properties,  because the Land Use Map hadn't been updated since its adoption in 1975.  The Citizens' Initiative, by contrast, had carefully examined each land  use designation - changing incorrect designations to open space or public  recreation to reflect current use.

Public education campaign helped defuse political maneuvers
This attempt to co-opt the Citizens'  Initiative could have achieved its objective of confusing the voters,  except that help was at hand to educate the public. The Committee for  Green Foothills, in association with the
Santa  Clara Valley Audubon Society, offered to send out a town-wide mailer  explaining the differences between the Citizens' Initiative and the Council-sponsored  Initiative. This mailer, along with local publicity, informed residents  about the two initiatives and clarified the differences.


Los Altos Hills Town Clerk Karen Jost accepts petitions signed by more than 1,200 Town residents in support  of the Citizen's Initiative for Open Space. Handed in by residents (L  to R) Elaine Nelson, Jean Mordo, Barbara Mordo, and Nancy Couperous, these  petitions led the new Town Council to adopt the Initiative in December.

Nearly twenty-five open space coffees were held during the Council campaign,  which gave the organizers an opportunity to further clarify the initiative  and clear up misinformation that was being spread by the opposition. A  website - which is still in operation (
www.LAHOpenSpace.com)  - and an e-mail bulletin list further helped to keep residents abreast  of events and the war of words as they unfolded. The internet was extremely  important in this effort - not only by helping to counter opposition mailers  almost immediately and at minimal expense, but also as the vehicle by  which funds were raised to pay the legal fees.

Election brings in open space candidates - Citizen's Initiative adopted!
The good news - the November election  brought about a change in Council direction with the two open space candidates  winning in a landslide! This win assured that once the required numbers  of signatures were gathered for the Citizen's Open Space Initiative, the  new majority would be able to adopt the initiative directly, thereby saving  the cost of an expensive special election.

Within 30 days of our having presented the initiative to residents, it  had already qualified for a ballot by receiving 1240 signatures - over  50% more than the 822 signatures required to be collected within 180 days,  an overwhelming and gratifying show of community support.
On December 19, 2002, the new Council voted to adopt the Citizens' Open  Space Initiative directly, and at the following meeting the new Council  also voted unanimously to rescind the former Council-sponsored Initiative.

Next steps: Citizens form open space committee
Does this win signal the culmination  of work to protect open space in Los Altos Hills? No - it merely marks  the transition from one phase to the next. Now that the Town-owned properties  are legally secure, there remain many more issues to consider.

Residents are now hard at work defining the objectives of a permanent  Los Altos Hills Open Space Committee, similar to that just created in  the Town of Woodside. We expect this committee to take on environmental  aspects (erosion, infestation by noxious weeds, etc.), public awareness  (where lands are and how best to enjoy them), potential avenues for enhancement  (tax benefits that encourage donation of open space through conservation  easements) and similar issues. This is an exciting venture, and we hope  to involve as many residents as possible and foster a sense of ownership  of these priceless public assets.

The fight for Los Altos Hills Open Space awakened residents to the value  they place on open space and public recreation lands. In time, people  will forget the battle to save these valuable resources. However, our  hope is that they will nevertheless understand their responsibility as  stewards of these lands for future generations. As Huey Johnson so eloquently  stated: "We must defend the integrity of place."

Nancy Couperus is a Board Member and Founding Member of the Friends  of Westwind, Inc., a nonprofit corporation that helps operate Westwind  Community Barn in Los Altos Hills.


Published March 2003 in Green  Footnotes .
Page last updated March 19, 2003 .

 

 

Copyright 2001 Committee for Green Foothills

  Byrne Preserve photo by Saul Chaikin. Petitions photo by Jitze Couperus.