|
Month: May 2018
2017 MCCVB Travel Economic Impact report










Better, cleaner graphic by Brendon Shave:

Fire Mitigation Coordinator for MoCo
Following is a request from the Wildfire Coalition. Monterey County will be finalizing their 2018-19 budget in the coming two weeks. Time is of the essence and it would be greatly appreciated if you can respond to this request at your earliest convenience.
In 2010, the Monterey County Community Wildfire Protection Plan (MCCWPP) was signed by CAL-FIRE, Monterey County Board of Supervisors, Monterey County Fire Chief’s Association, the Fire Safe Council for Monterey County, the United States Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management, California State Parks, and all of the fire districts, departments and brigades in Monterey County.. The establishment of a non-agency, non-regulatory wildfire mitigation coordinator to facilitate the implementation of the MCCWPP was recommended at that time.
In 2011, a Memorandum of Understanding In Support of Monterey County Fire Warden Office (MOU) was executed by the chair of the Monterey County Board of Supervisors, CAL-FIRE and all of the fire districts, agencies, and brigades in Monterey County. The MOU expressly supported a wildfire mitigation position to coordinate and undertake responsibilities for fuel mitigation activities in Monterey County. The position is intended to implement the MCCWPP by facilitating grants, environmental compliance, and wildfire hazard mitigation project activities to protect areas in the wildland urban interface and by coordinating adaptive management planning for forest health and community wildfire resiliency. The position has yet to be filled due to budgetary and other constraints.
Nonetheless, the conversations about the need for this position has not stopped. A common theme that continues to emerge time and time again is the need for a wildfire mitigation coordinator to give guidance, support and assistance to landowners and the network of organizations (e.g., Fire Safe Council for Monterey County, FireScape Monterey, Wildfire Coalition, Carmel River Watershed Conservancy, etc.) that have formed over time to prepare for and mitigate the risk of wildfires.
For the next fiscal year (2018-2019), Monterey County Resource Management Agency (RMA) has submitted a budget augmentation request to the Monterey County Board of Supervisors to retain this essential wildfire mitigation coordinator.
We ask you to submit a letter to the Monterey County Board of Supervisors, supporting RMA’s budget augmentation request to fund the wildfire mitigation coordinator position. This position is essential to enhancing Monterey County’s preparedness for wildland fire.
Each Supervisor has their own direct contact information which can be found at http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/government/board-of-supervisors. It’s important to know that emails, letters and faxes sent to individual board members are not distributed to other board offices so please copy your email to all Supervisors on the Board.
Strategic Community Firebreak, Monterey District
In a separate post, I will be posting a request by CPOA regarding funding a Fire Mitigation Position for Monterey County. That post will go live this afternoon.
The Los Padres National Forest (LPNF) is pleased to announce the availability of the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) and draft Record of Decision (ROD) for the Strategic Community Fuelbreak Improvement project on the Monterey Ranger District. The FEIS and draft ROD are available for review at the Monterey Ranger District office, 406 South Mildred Ave, King City, CA 93903, and at the Supervisor’s Office, 6750 Navigator Way, Suite 150, Goleta, CA 93117. Beginning on May 22, 2018 it can also be viewed on-line at the following internet address: https://www.fs.usda.gov/project/?project=40713. More information is included in the attached letter.
|




Fire Safety for Memorial Day Weekend

Campfire left unattended…
Brendon shot a video this last weekend. Unfortunately, it is shot sidewise, and there is a black out section when he put the camera down, and lots of f**ks, but he found an unattended campfire. He was on his way down to the coast, and was down there about 4 hours. When he came back, these campers were just returning, and one of the guys completely denied that they left a burning campfire unattended, but did admit he didn’t touch it. I wish he had gotten a video of them coming back to their campsite.
Look at the smoke coming off that fire as Brendon uses their water to put out their fire. There wasn’t enough water, so he went to another camper to grab more water. Completely unattended for 4 hours. Un-f***ing-real.
Summer unofficially kicks off this Memorial Day weekend. Be extra vigilant. Be polite but firm, unless it involves fire. Then you have permission to get in their face.



Tourist Tuesday #2, 5/22/18
Someone managed to get this trailer wedged in sidewise on South Coast Ridge Rd in the narrow “chute” where no one could get by, and then drove off and left it there last night. A neighbor had to go all the way back down Nacimiento – with the traffic – and back up Plaskett, through my place, in order to get home. The USFS dragged it out of the chute and to a nearby turnout so that traffic could again use South Coast Ridge Rd. is one story I was told, another is that a local helped others get the damn thing unstuck. It was still there late this am. Wedged in is even more stupid than flipping it.

Tourist Tuesday, 5/22/18
From the CRA latest newsletter:

Controlled Burn on Camp Roberts & other locations in SLO Co.
Prescribed burn planned Tuesday at Camp Roberts
Posted: May 21, 2018 2:45 PM PDTUpdated: May 21, 2018 2:45 PM PDT
Highway Closure Update, 5/21/18



Photos 1 and 2 of Mud Creek (PM 8.9) from Friday, May 18 and photo 3 of the repair at Hermitage (PM 22.42) last Monday, May 14 requiring Paul’s Slide area to be closed.
HIGHWAY 1 UPDATE – Monday, May 21
State Route 1 in Monterey County remains closed from north of Salmon Creek, just south of the Ranger Station (PM 3) to just south of Gorda (PM 10) due to the Mud Creek slide. State Route 1 south of Salmon Creek is accessible via State Route 1 in San Luis Obispo County near Ragged Point.
REMINDER: Travelers still CANNOT access the entire length of Highway 1 from Carmel to Cambria but local businesses are open on both sides of Mud Creek.
Mud Creek (PM 8.9)
Mud Creek had a major slide on Saturday, May 20, 2017, losing over 5 million cubic yards of material. Caltrans continues with its plan to realign the existing terrain. The Department has announced a new target of mid-September to get lanes re-opened to traffic. Caltrans will continuously evaluate the opening date as work progresses so we anticipate providing an update in July. It’s expected that even after the highway is re-open, intermittent lane closures and roadwork may continue. The updated current cost is at $54 million.
There is currently no public/local access through the Mud Creek area since this remains an active, emergency construction zone.
This week: Work continues with the north fill, north cut and north berm with hilfiker retaining wall.
Paul’s Slide (PM 21.6)*
Paul’s Slide is still active but the 24/7 traffic signal remains in place and temporary guardrail (k-rail) in the centerline. A full, daytime closure took place at Paul’s last Monday, May 14, 2018 to make repairs to the Hermitage Tieback Wall. (See attached photo).
ADDITIONAL WORK—CALPORTLAND PAVING BETWEEN LUCIA (PM 23) AND JUST SOUTH OF PCB (45.52)
Final items continue taking place. Metal Beam Guardrail (MBGR) end treatment work at Castro Canyon (PM 43.12) and slope work at the Coastlands (PM 44.41) continues taking place. However, no work is scheduled for this week north of Lucia.
The next update will be on Tuesday, May 29.
