Sistership Magazine and Sailing Mahdee

Sistership Magazine is an international magazine; written by women for women on the water.  In June Sistership Magazine included my article about sailing Mahdee and this month, in a free November special issue, a reprint of the article is included.  I hope blog readers of Sailing Mahdee: Life Aboard a 1931 Schooner will also enjoy reading the article (page 76) in the free issue of Sistership Magazine online.

Schooner Mahdee

Traditional varnished woods, leathered mast hoops, and a mile of rigging grace Mahdee.

mountains from the deck of Schooner Mahdee

Great views of snowy mountaintops visible from the deck of the schooner Mahdee in Alaska.

Fry's Anchorage, Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands CA

At Fry’s Anchorage, Santa Cruz Island, the Channel Islands of California.

Stanford Treeathlon

2018 Stanford Treeathlon

Nothing like having a bunch of really amazing athletes swimming past your boat on an early Sunday morning all full of energy and well … energy! We’ve seen this bunch before. In the rain or in the sun they’re quite impressive.

In 2016, during a rainy spring morning we watched from the cockpit. It was a brutal cold swim that time.

2016 Stanford Treeathon Swimmers

This year it was entirely another matter with sunshine and beautiful scenes all around!

2018 Stanford Treeathon Swimmers

David took the canoe out and about to catch some additional photos of the swimmers in action. We also have some pics from Dean Hyatt who was shooting a few on his celphone as his wife was doing videos of the event. Below is a photo by Dean of the runners along Pacific Shores pathway.

Dean Hyatt's pic of the runners

Tents and festivities along the shoreline at Westpoint Harbor supported the various team swimmers.

2018 Stanfor Treeathlon

The support team were stationed around the docks and in the slough on stand up paddleboards.

2018 Stanford Treeathlon

2018 Stanford Treeathlon

Reach, reach, reach, all together now!

2018 Stanford Treeathlon

I really wonder how these folks can breathe during the startup with all the froth and fury around them!

2018 Stanford Treeathlon

2018 Stanford Treeathlon

2018 Stanford Treeathlon

psssss… if you have not already done so, read about this harbor and sign the petition here on change .org to #savewestpointharbor 

 

Westpoint Harbor Marina faces BCDC fines

Westpoint Harbor (WPH), in development over the past 20 years, is the San Francisco Bay’s newest marina but it is now facing severe fines and punitive actions by the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission (BCDC) that jeopardize the marina’s continued ability to operate and support the public’s access to the Bay.

WE HAVE UPDATED INFORMATION ABOUT WESTPOINT HARBOR AND BCDC  AND MADE IT AVAILABLE HERE ON OUR SISTER SITE.   Bookmark the link — share it with your friends or add it to your blogroll because we’ll keep it up to date for you.

January 13 2018 ACTION ITEM:  please sign the new petition here on change.org! And, share it with your friends, too!

The WPH website is linked to here and if you don’t know the marina or its owner, Mark Sanders, you may read this 2015 article about both marina and owner.  We first met the owner of WPH in 2012 and when we re-visited the Bay area in 2016 we decided to stay at this safe marina largely because we appreciated the friendly owners who happened to also have a penchant for preserving traditional wooden boats and soundly conserving the Bay environment.

This Thursday, November 16, 2017, WPH will appear for a public hearing in front of the BCDC Enforcement Committee. Public input and oversight of the enforcement process can help assure the BCDC actions are appropriate to the situation and in the best interests of the public and the environment. Your help is needed to that end.

The hearing is taking place because BCDC staff brought an enforcement action against WPH, alleging the marina violated a number of its BCDC permit conditions. Disputes between the marina and BCDC have escalated for over a decade. As part of this current enforcement action, BCDC staff seeks to require major changes at the harbor, issue a cease and desist order against the marina, and pay a penalty of more than half a million dollars. The marina owner is vigorously contesting BCDC staff’s claims and maintains that the allegations are false. The marina owner is not a big faceless corporation, but just a regular boater who, in retirement, wanted to improve Bay boating and create an environmentally sound marina environment for other boaters to enjoy.  This is another story of the small guy and the public interest getting buried in the red tape of big government agendas.

Westpoint Harbor’s “statement of defense” was submitted to BCDC last month and can be downloaded from BCDC’s website here. The BCDC staff allegations and the proposed “cease and desist and civil penalty order” are available  here.

Letters from concerned boaters and all members of the public can prompt the government agency to act on behalf of the public, thoughtfully, rather than rubber-stamping fines punitively against the marina owner and ultimately to the harm of both the general public and the boating community.

Our own assessment of the situation is that the Westpoint Harbor owners and employees have consistently taken actions to protect and improve the Bay environment, foster and encourage Bay access by pedestrians and boaters alike, protect the personal and boating safety of boaters in the harbor, and encourage safe boating in the San Francisco Bay. The information linked to in the hearing documents above presents as a series of arbitrary and capricious actions on the part of the BCDC that simultaneously harm public access to the Bay while purposefully seeking to undermine the success of a privately owned marina. It presents as government at its worst.

We can’t stand by and let such unjust actions take place. Input to BCDC from the public is needed, now. David and I are writing a letter requesting the BCDC staff stop the nonsense and work with the marina to the benefit of the public and the environment. You can do the same. If you are in the area, you can attend the enforcement hearing.

What can you do?

1. Email

If you wish to show your support for Westpoint Harbor, you can comment on the proceeding by sending an email addressed to the “Enforcement Committee Members” and the “BCDC Commissioners.” The email can be sent to BCDC’s legal counsel, Marc Zeppetello, at marc.zeppetello@bcdc.ca.gov with a copy to info@bcdc.ca.gov. You can include “Westpoint Harbor Proposed Order No. CDO 2017.04” to easily identify what your comments are about.

2. Attend the hearing

If you would like to attend the Enforcement Committee hearing, it is open to members of the public. It will be held on November 16, 2017, at 9:30 a.m. at 455 Golden Gate Avenue, Milton Mark Conference Center, Monterey Room, Basement Level, San Francisco, CA 94102.

3. Why do anything?

WHY take action? Because the only way to protect the rights of the public and the Bay environment is to speak up. Let the BCDC know that the WPH is important to us all.

If you are a member of the public who enjoys kayaking, SUP, boat launching, or other public access activities at the Westpoint Harbor, please send an email or letter of support to BCDC stating as such.

If you are a boater who has visited the harbor or who plans to do so some day, please provide an email or letter of support to the same.

If you are concerned about big government bullying private citizens and businesses, please send an email to BCDC asking those concerns to be addressed.

If you are concerned about government waste, fraud and abuse within BCDC, please send an email asking those concerns to be addressed.

Thanks so much!

Westpoint Harbor Marina BCDC fines

Sample Email–If you don’t know what to write, consider this a start:

emails:
marc.zeppetello@bcdc.ca.gov
info@bcdc.ca.gov

To the BCDC Enforcement Committee:

In the matter of Westpoint Harbor Proposed Order No. CDO 2017.04, I am writing to express my support for the Westpoint Harbor (WPH) marina and request that BCDC carefully consider all options to work with the marina to achieve the public access and environmental goals of this privately funded marina.

I have accessed the Bay via the WPH walkways, boat launch, docks, or other facilities at WPH 1529 Seaport Blvd, Redwood City, CA 94063.

It appears that BCDC permit requirements, including those for unbounded public pedestrian access, at WPH were put in place to provide an enforcement trigger rather than to enhance the benefits of the public or environment.

I believe that WPH owners and employees have consistently taken actions to protect and improve the Bay environment, foster and encourage Bay access by pedestrians and boaters alike, protect the personal security and boating safety of boaters in the harbor, and encourage safe boating in the San Francisco Bay.

It greatly concerns me that the BCDC appears to have undertaken a series of arbitrary and capricious actions that simultaneously harm public access to the Bay while purposefully seeking to cause financial harm and undermine the success of a privately owned marina.

Please start the process of working WITH the WPH marina for successful Bay access and conservation rather than trying to shut down the excellent public access and environmental improvements to the Bay at the site of the WPH.

Sincerely,

name,
address,
phone or email,

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