Posted on 07/08/2006 1:02:12 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
Did residents of this idyllic wine country town illegally plant an endangered flower to sabotage a proposed housing development?
That's the question at the heart of a quarrel folks here have dubbed "Foamgate."
Bob Evans, a 72-year-old retired elementary school principal, says he was walking with his dog last year when he came upon the tiny white flowers of Sebastopol meadowfoam poking from shallow pools of water in a grassy field.
The former bean farm happens to be the chosen site of the 20-acre Laguna Vista housing development. Evans and other opponents seized on the discovery of the federally protected species in hopes it would force the developer to scale back plans calling for 145 houses and apartments.
"It was the bad luck of the developer that it popped up," Evans said.
But when state wildlife officials investigated, they determined the meadowfoam had been planted there and ordered it dug up.
This year, the flowers returned, and with them the controversy.
Sebastopol, an upscale community of about 8,000 people 50 miles north of San Francisco, is known for its environmentally conscious residents and restrictive growth policies.
"Our community takes a very hard, careful look at development," said Kenyon Webster, the town's planning director. "That small-town character is the reason a lot of people want to live here."
When the meadowfoam appeared in April 2005, and the Department of Fish and Game determined it had been transplanted, it appeared to be a case of overzealous conservationists.
"The people who planted it mistakenly believed that it would be the silver bullet that killed the project," said Scott Schellinger of Schellinger Brothers, the Santa Rosa developer behind Laguna Vista.
Known as Limnanthes vinculans, the multistemmed herbs grow up to a foot tall and have small bowl-shaped white flowers. They are only found in seasonal wetlands and vernal pools created by spring rains in this part of Sonoma County.
Threatened by agriculture and urban development, the meadowfoam was listed as an endangered species by the state and federal governments, making it illegal to harm or remove them without permission. Wetland and vernal pool habitat has been set aside to protect them.
Evans and other members of the Laguna Preservation Council say the proposed $70 million development could damage the nearby Laguna de Santa Rosa, a 240-square-mile basin of wetlands that runs through Sebastopol.
"When you minimize wetlands, then you decrease of diversity of species everywhere," Evans said.
Evans called Sonoma State University biology professor Phil Northen as well as the head of the local chapter of the California Native Plant Society. They visited the site and agreed the plants were native.
Northen, who doesn't live in Sebastopol and had never met Evans before, said the field was "perfect habitat" for meadowfoam, and that there was no evidence the flowers had been planted.
But when the Fish and Game team visited the site at Schellinger's invitation a few weeks later, it reached the opposite conclusion.
Eric Larsen, the department's deputy regional manager, said the flowers had never before been seen at the Laguna Vista site, which is at a higher elevation than the typical meadowfoam habitat. Team members also noticed plants beneath the meadowfoam, leading them to believe it had been relocated.
"They didn't belong there," Larsen said. "It was appropriate to remove them from the site."
Fish and Game launched an investigation into who planted the flowers, but they never identified any suspects. Their refusal to offer evidence for their conclusion has prompted Laguna Vista opponents to cry foul.
"The Department of Fish and Game refuses to show the data that supports this alleged act of eco-terrorism," Evans said. "I didn't plant it. No one planted it. It's clearly a natural plant that grew there because that's where it belongs."
Fish and Game interviewed Evans and Northen, but Larsen said the case went cold. Releasing evidence from the investigation could encourage others to try the same stunt, he said.
If the plants were found to be indigenous, it could have triggered another round of environmental studies and forced the developer to reconfigure the project, said planning director Webster.
Foamgate might have ended there, had the flowers not sprouted again in recent months in the same area.
Schellinger said the new plants grew from seeds scattered during the "original criminal act." Fish and Game agreed and wasn't inclined to reopen the investigation.
Still, following a series of public hearings, the Sebastopol City Council tabled final approval of Laguna Vista. A mediator is now overseeing negotiations between Schellinger Brothers and residents in hopes of reaching a compromise that could include a scaled-down version of the project.
Evans and his allies believe the reappearance of the meadowfoam proves that the land targeted for development is home to an endangered species.
"They're just simple little white plants," Evans said. "What makes them special is that they have overcome great difficulty and survive in a place where it's very difficult to survive."
L
Okay, let's say I rush out and buy 100 hundred acres of woodland to be conserved. What happens when on an adjoining 20 acres a brewery opens up and in this pure capitilistic scenario they decide it's cheaper to toss the chemical byproducts out the back door rather than pay for proper cleanup and removal.
This chemical byproduct moves into my area killing the nature I was trying to conserve.
No, Environmental Protection and conservation has a proper role for government. Left to their own devices buisnessmen would too often take the lowest cost solution even if it harmed their neighbors and workers. History bears my point out.
What is the matter, don't these liberals understand Darwin? Species evolve or die. Make these liberals stop fighting Darwinism!
We have a problem in San Diego related to a public school. The site didn't exist until it was created by man for a future public school. A canyon was filled in. Now that the school is needed, enviromentalists suddenly discovered "fairy shrimp" in vernal pools on the site. Fish & Wildlife has declared these shrimp endangered although they refuse to conduct the DNA testing required to prove these are the endangered variety and not a common one. Talk host Roger Hedgecock suspects these "fairy shrimp" were planted by eco-terrorists.
Man is no more a virus than beaver, ants, termites, bees, moles, or prarie dogs are. In fact most animals make alterations to their environments in some form.
Environmentalists are a bunch of kooks. What doesn't follow is that we should there fore asphaplt over every square inch of land we can.
There are ways of spreading out and building to accomadate nature, and we should consider them.
Florida burns because their are too many residents now. All those people pulling water from the aquifier are making things go dry. People upthread are telling me that's just tough cookies, I don't see it that way.
Before house hunting last time, I studied the lahar maps. We should be safe from those, but my husband likes to tell me if the mountain blows in the right direction, we could still have debris land on us.
There will be lots and lots of poison gas ~ did you put that in your equation?
Then you sue the b@stards for fouling your property. It's the American way...
We must remain good and faithful stewards. Evidence from communist and former communist countries should tell you that environmental conservation and stewardship is not a leftist ideal.
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I agree. If land has importance toward preserving the earth, then the community should justly pay the owner for its collective use.
I don't believe that Christ would approve of falsely planting an endangered plant on a farmer's land. He would consider this theft and destruction of that man's financial worth. Those falsely planting the endangered species are not worshiping Christ. They are worshiping their own golden calf of environmentalism.
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