Ellen Pirie Letter Attachments

Exhibit #1

Exhibit #1
Letter to Planning Department
Exhibit 1 Dec 26 1986 Letter.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [1.3 MB]

Exhibit #2

Exhibit #2
Response from County
Exhibit 2.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [3.3 MB]

Exhibit #3

Exhibit # 3
Releasing the Native Seedbank: Project Report
Exhibit 3 Releasing the Native Seedbank.[...]
Adobe Acrobat document [1.1 MB]

Exhibit #4

Exhibit #4
Biotic Site Review
Exhibit 4 Biotic Site Review.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [4.0 MB]

Exhibit #5

Exhibit #5
Letter from Michael Shaw Oct.23,2008
Exhibit 5 Michael Shaw Letter Oct 23.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [1.5 MB]

Exhibit #6

Exhibit #6
The FOI re-request
Exhibit 6 the FOI re-request.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [1.6 MB]

Exhibit #7

Exhibit #7
Letter of Agreement from Mark Demming, Dec.2, 2008
Exhibit 7 Mark Deming Letter.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [111.4 KB]

Exhibit #8 Map Image

Consevations Land Network for Santa Cruz County (Click Picture for Enlaged Image) Consevations Land Network for Santa Cruz County (Click Picture for Enlaged Image)
Highlights from A Conservation Blueprints
conservation-blueprint-highlights.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [2.6 MB]

Exhibit #9

Download
Technical Advisors List
New file download
Technical Advisors List (pgs 21-22 of Conservation Blueprint)
Technical Advisors List pg 21-22.docx
Microsoft Word document [825.6 KB]

Exhibit #10

KSCO Radio Show

9/3/11 - Land Trust of Santa Cruz County, a coordination between insiders and government officials, creates the Santa Cruz County wildlands and buffer zone maps. Michael Shaw and Daniel Beckett discuss the implications.

Listen Now. . .

Exhibit #11

Program H
An Update to the General Plan
Program H.pdf
Adobe Acrobat document [1.4 MB]

A Tale of Two Counties

 

 Santa Cruz County:


After 26 years, Santa Cruz County and Supervisor Ellen Pirie, continue to block economic use of Liberty Garden



and

 

Alameda County:



Michael Shaw, owner of Lockaway Storage, delivers Misprision of Treason Notice to Alameda County

 


"To release the potential productivity and diversity of a landscape, an owner must be free to engage in rigorous disturbance, and free to pursue a reasoned and creative process of trial and error. This process would be suited to the choice of each individual and the uniqueness of each property,"

–Michael Shaw from Ecological Restoration, Spring 2002