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Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Friends of Oceano Dunes 2010 Crab Feed Fundraiser


In this time of a rebuilding economy, Friends of Oceano Dunes (“FoOD”) continues to need your help as we diligently push forward in our efforts to keep the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area (ODSVRA), formerly known as Pismo Beach, open to all.

“FoOD” is a non-profit organization working solely for the cause of saving the ODSVRA and all our work is 100% volunteer; there are no salaries paid. We do this for those who wish to visit Oceano Dunes and enjoy participating in the many varied activities available at this popular park, the only remaining portion of beachfront OHV land in California. In order to be successful in this endeavor, a tremendous amount of resources, including volunteer
time and financial support from our many members and supporters, is required. We hope that you will show your support our efforts in maintaining “access for all.”

As part of our fundraising, “FoOD” holds an annual Crab Feed in Hanford, CA each year. This year’s 8th annual event will be very exciting, with dinner, cocktails, music, dancing, auctions and raffle prizes. The 2010 Crab Feed will be held Saturday March 27, 2010 in the Grape Room at the Kings Fair Building and our hopes are for it to be bigger and better than last year!

“FoOD” is seeking donations (merchandise, gift certificates, etc.) to help make this event exciting. All donations are tax deductible (Tax ID#954867891) and every dollar earned goes into the “FoOD” legal fund. This fund supports our legal efforts and allows “FoOD” to continue our fight to keep the most popular State Park in California open. We greatly appreciate your support and we look forward to seeing your donations at this event.

For information on how to donate contact:

Richard Dellanini
Fundraising Director
6387 N Teilman Ave
Fresno, Ca. 93711

Dellanini@hotmail.com

About Friends of Oceano Dunes:

Friends of Oceano Dunes is a 501(c)(3) California Not-for-Profit Public Benefit Corporation. We represent businesses, environmentalists, equestrians, campers, fishermen, families and off-road enthusiasts who enjoy the benefits of Public Access through Responsible Recreation at the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area (ODSVRA). We want to maintain Access For All!

Friends of Oceano Dunes
P. O. Box 398
Oceano, CA 93445
805-788-4926
www.oceanodunes.org

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Monday, December 14, 2009

Are airborn particulates the next weapon that will be used to close Oceano Dunes?

Source: Commentary: What in particulate to do about the Dunes?

The kick-the-off-roaders-off-the-Oceano-Dunes camp scored a major victory this week with a scientific study that found air pollution from the state park is posing a health threat for people on the nearby Nipomo Mesa.

Duh.

Yes, when you mess up the air in one place, there’s a very good chance the messed-up air will spread around to somewhere else, especially when the one place is right at the edge of the ocean and susceptible to strong winds blowing to the other place.

The study discovered two critical points:

One, that the air on the Nipomo Mesa has significantly higher particulate levels than anywhere else in the county.

And two, that the levels measured directly off the all-terrain-vehicle area were higher than those off areas not occupied by the cast of “The Road Warrior.”

I’m pretty sure that’s how the study worded it, but don’t quote me on that.

While air pollution control officer Larry Allen declined to elaborate specifically on just how ATV riding was contributing to the higher particulate levels, it seems pretty obvious that at least one and probably all of the possible noted impacts are to blame.

Off-road vehicles basically pummel the dunes, blasting away the natural crust, grinding sand particles into dust and shooting everything into the air.

The wind catches this plume of pollution, whisks it east and deposits it on Granny Flo, who assumed she would enjoy a perfectly cozy retirement on the Mesa watching soaps from her velour La-Z-Boy and now instead finds she needs to tug an oxygen tank around with her everywhere she goes.

As far as coming up with ideas to mitigate the pollution, I’m not optimistic.

One idea is revegetation, but unless they want to lay down a carpet of ice plant as thick as Bill Morem’s chest hair (Bill being the manliest of all men, you recall), how would anything survive the off-roading to actually keep the sand in place?

Then there’s watering, and I’m imagining a giant network of sprinklers pelting the dune buggies as they bounce by.

Funny, but probably not practical, unless the sprinklers can be individually operated. Then, you could invite in the enviros and charge them a fee to play Squirt-a-Motobiker.

For his part, Pismo Beach City Councilman Ed Waage suggested dust screens, and visions of Christo’s fluttering bed sheets — er, “art” — dance in my head.

Aside from simply limiting the number of riders or booting them altogether, I see only one other option.

Big glass globe.

Lower it down on the OHV area.

Call it the Thunderdome.

Let all the Mad Maxes frolic as they will, undisturbed and (relatively) undisturbing.

Hundreds of dirtbikers enter, no dirtbikers leave.

They have their area. You have yours. Pollution AND noise problems solved!

Now if only we can spruce it up with some colorful linens.

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Friday, December 11, 2009

New Study Claims That OHVs is a Cause for Unhealthy Air Near Oceano Dunes

Source: Dunes vehicles pollute air, study says

The Nipomo Mesa has particulate levels that exceed federal health standards, the report says

A scientific study has concluded that off-highway-vehicle riding at Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area is a major cause of unhealthy air quality on the Nipomo Mesa.

Larry Allen, county air pollution control officer, announced the findings of the study at a recent meeting of the San Luis Obispo County Air Pollution Control District.

“The results in the study do conclude that there is a strong link between OHV activity on the SVRA and particulate levels on the Mesa,” Allen told the board, referring to Oceano Dunes.

The air district hopes to release the study to the public before Christmas, Allen said. The district has also tentatively scheduled two public workshops, on Jan. 5 and 6, at the South County Regional Center in Arroyo Grande to discuss the findings.

The study does not contain recommendations about how to reduce dust pollution from the park, Allen said. Members of the air board will begin discussing what to do with the study when they meet Jan. 27.

Andrew Zilke, Oceano Dunes superintendent, said he accepts the findings of the study and promised to work with air officials to find ways to minimize the problem.

“We can’t ignore it,” he said. “I think we are still a ways out from being able to determine what we need to do.”

Allen’s announcement prompted a debate among the air board directors, including all five county supervisors and one council member from each of the county’s seven incorporated cities.

Kris Vardas, Pismo Beach’s representative on the panel, said the board needs to protect public health but keep in mind that Oceano Dunes is economically important to nearby cities.

Ed Waage, another Pismo Beach city councilman, suggested that dust screens might be a solution to the problem. Zilke said his department is likely to look at what other jurisdictions with high particulate levels have done to address the problem.

For example, in the Owens Valley east of the Sierra Nevada, revegetation and watering were used to control dust, Zilke said. However, it is questionable whether those solutions are practical in a dune environment, he said.

The study is likely to add fuel to the debate about the environmental consequences of off-highway-vehicle riding in the park. Nell Langford, a longtime critic of the park, said the county and air officials should use their authority to shut the park down.

“If there was ever an opportunity to protect public health, this is it,” she said.

Public health impact

The study is the result of more than three years of data collection and analysis, Allen said. An initial phase of the study showed that the Nipomo Mesa, which is downwind of Oceano Dunes, has much higher particulate levels than any other part of the county and frequently exceeds state and federal health standards.

“This is a significant public health issue,” Allen said. “People on the Mesa are breathing very high levels of particulates.”

A second phase of the study sought specifically to determine whether the vehicular recreation area was exacerbating the problem. Monitoring stations compared the amount of particulates coming off parts of the Dunes where OHV riding is allowed with areas where they are not allowed.

The findings that dune buggies are contributing to the particulate pollution on the Mesa were peer-reviewed and confirmed by some of the top particulate scientists in the nation, Allen said. He told air board members that they should reject any effort to undercut the scientific validity of the study.

“Our only agenda is protecting public health,” he said.

Particulates are airborne particles small enough to be inhaled deeply into the lungs. Smoke and dust are two common forms of particulates.

At a public workshop in San Luis Obispo in September, Melanie Marty, chief of air toxicology and epidemiology at the state Environmental Protection Agency, said multiple studies have shown a link between high particulate levels and increased sickness and mortality.

Health problems caused by particulates include decreased lung capacity, asthma, chronic bronchitis, irregular heartbeat and heart attacks, Marty said. The elderly and children are at greatest risk.

Allen declined to elaborate specifically on how OHV riding increases particulate levels pending the release of the study later this month. However, there are three possible causes.

Dirt bikes and other vehicles often send plumes of sand into the air, increasing the likelihood that it will be blown away by prevailing winds that come from the northwest.

Vehicles can also crush the sand into smaller particles, similarly increasing the chance of them becoming airborne.

Finally, under natural circumstances, a crust forms on top of sand dunes and holds the particles in place. OHV riding breaks up this crust.

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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Sale of Oceano Dunes land: Grand jury chastises county staff

From: http://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/local/story/782653.html

Jul. 14, 2009

Bob Cuddy
The county’s handling of a report affecting the multi-million dollar sale of the Oceano Dunes is “disturbing” because it gave the erroneous impression that the sale allows off-road vehicles in an area where they are banned, the civil grand jury says.
The planning department’s omission of a key map — and references to it — in its report gave a false impression to the county Planning Commission and “was at best inept staff performance or at worst deliberate deception,” the grand jury wrote in one of several reports released toward the end of its term June 30.
The report dealt with the county’s possible sale of its 584 acres of the Oceano Dunes, known as the La Grande Tract, to the state, which operates the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreational Area.
The would-be sale is one of many factors that could decide whether off-roaders continue to use that section of the dunes, roughly one-third of the total.
The county says its planners merely made a mistake.
“There was no effort to deceive the public or decision makers,” Acting Planning Director Kami Griffin said in an
e-mail that excerpted parts of the department’s response to the grand jury. “Whether a mistake made by staff is ‘inept performance’ is subjective and should not be part of ‘findings’ from a grand jury unless it is supported by facts,” the department’s response reads.
The department’s conclusions “do not control the decision to buy, sell or lease land,” it continued.
“Public review and testimony is critical to the planning process, and in this case, was vital in that it was responsible for catching mistakes in the staff report,” the department response says.
When the report came to the Planning Commission in 2006, county planners omitted what they dubbed the “Figure 4 map,” which designated a “vehicle free area” in a large portion of the land being offered for sale.
The ban on vehicles would have “conflict(ed) with the state parks’ intended use for the parcel,” the grand jury wrote.
In addition, the report omitted references to the map in other parts of the text.
The county found out about this only after a citizen, Larry Bross, called the report into question at the Planning Commission meeting. The Board of Supervisors later agreed with Bross.
Questioned about the changes in the staff report, an unnamed planner told the grand jury that it was “an accident, an oversight.”
Another said the county official with the greatest knowledge of the land’s complicated history had retired, and staffers newly assigned to the report “did not recognize the importance of the Figure 4 map.”
The grand jury was skeptical of that explanation, however, since text references to the Figure 4 map also had been removed.
The implications were significant, the grand jury wrote. “This report was designed to inform important environmental and financial decisions.”
“The appearance of changing approved policy documents to indicate the opposite of their intent is disturbing.
“Planning staff are not policy makers and misrepresenting approved policies cannot be tolerated.”
The grand jury recommended that the Planning Commission require source documents when it receives reports from the Planning Department, and if a report is changed, the department should justify the change.
The Planning Department must file a written response to the Superior Court by Aug. 17, and the Board of Supervisors must file its response by Sept. 16.
The 19-member civil grand jury, composed of citizen volunteers, investigates complaints about county government.
Its recommendations are not binding, but the departments it investigates must file a formal response with Superior Court.

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Birds' defenders want all off-roaders out of Oceano Dunes SVRA

Jul. 13, 2009
The Associated Press

PISMO BEACH, Calif. At one Central Coast beach, birds and buggies aren't mixing.
Advocates for the threatened Western snowy plover want off-road vehicles totally banned from the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area, saying the dune buggies and motorcycles are a danger to the tiny bird.
Environmentalists say bird monitors have observed plovers crushed and terrorized by vehicles.
For more than 10 years, lawsuits and other measures have cut down off-road areas used for recreation by thousands of acres. Fencing now borders the plover nesting areas.
Still, as many as 40,000 visitors turn the dunes near Pismo Beach into on off-road mecca each summer weekend.
John Hodgson, parts manager at an ATV rental chain that thrives on park traffic, said employees go to City Council meetings to fight for beach off-roading. For others, keeping the few remaining dunes open is personal.
"I'd rather have the riding area, where people can grow with their families and have fun, rather than some bird that we've never even seen out here," said George Lopez, a visitor who has been coming to the park for a dozen years.
The California budget squeeze is forcing closure of some state parks. Funded by gasoline taxes, however, Oceano Dunes is not on the closure list.
The Sierra Club's Mark Massara says it's "a cruel twist of fate," noting the only state park "dedicated to environmental destruction and climate roasting" is unscathed.
Weighing less than two ounces, plovers are a polarizing issue for a park that draws 2 million visitors annually.
"There are really only two sides to this thing," said Andrew Zilke, superintendent at the park. "You either love it or you hate it."

Information from: Los Angeles Times, www.latimes.com

Information about how to save OHV access at Oceano Dunes can be found at: www.oceanodunes.org

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Friday, July 10, 2009

Oceano Dunes - New Whip Flag Proposal

The California State Parks Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Recreation Division is proposing revisions to the safety regulations for Oceano Dunes State Vehicle Recreation Area. The current regulations require a whip and flag for non-street legal vehicles. The new proposal would require a whip and flag for every vehicle in the dunes. This requirement would be consistent with the regulations for Dumont Dunes and Imperial Sand Dunes Recreation Areas, which are popular areas managed by the Bureau of Land Management. Source: www.ohv.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=25980

www.DuneGuide.com

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Thursday, June 18, 2009

The Dune Tour hits Pismo Beach

Mark your calendars as The Dune Tour hits Pismo Beach, Calif. August 7-8, 2009
With the follow up success of the “Rhino Rally at the Dune Tour” in Glamis, Calif. this past March, we are excited to announce the Dune Tour’s next stop will be at the Pismo Beach State Recreation Area.

The famed Dune Tour promises to live up to its claim as the largest event in the western United States! Open to the public and any vehicle, this family-friendly event includes: a scavenger hunt, bon fire, Drive-in Movie, Show & Shine contest, Kid-Zone, Karaoke Party, raffle (with thousands of dollars in prizes), dune clean-up, and more.

You’re sure to have an experience you’ll never forget!

Be sure to get your permits early and register online at www.thedunetour.com.

About PGI Media
PGI Media, Inc. is the publisher for three premiere off-road industry magazines; Side X Side Action, UTV Outdoorsman, and Sand Addiction Magazine. PGI Media, Inc. also hosts interactive consumer events; The Dune Tour, Side X Side Jamboree, and the Side X Side Roundup. Founded in 2002, this private publishing company has risen to the top of the industry and come to be recognized as a leader in off-road publications and consumer events. PGI Media can be found on the internet at: www.pgimedia.com.

www.DuneGuide.com

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Monday, June 1, 2009

Could California's Budget Crisis Close Oceano Dunes SVRA?

Because the state of California is in "crisis," forced to bridge a $24.3 billion budget shortfall that may in fact be a $27 billion shortfall, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has proposed a long list of spending cuts. Among the proposals is closing State Parks and Oceano Dunes SVRA is a State Park.
Closing State Parks would only save California's general fund about $150 million at a time when it's facing a $24 billion crisis.
Although closing state parks would be extremely unpopular, it would make the environmentalist jump for joy if Oceano Dunes was closed to OHVs.

A few news articles:
If you enjoy riding OHVs at Oceano Dunes SVRA, take the time to let the Governor and Legislators know that Oceano Dunes should not be on the list of potential closure sites.
More info at: www.savestateparks.org


Oceano Dunes SVRA Information
www.DuneGuide.com

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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Oceano Dunes - Editorial Printed as News

http://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/local/story/735668.html

Beach vacation takes a turn down noisy, congested lane
Bob Cuddy - bcuddy@thetribuneenws.com

Beach days are here,and here’s a swift kick in the pail and shovel from a top coastal protector to those looking for a family vacation experience near Pier Avenue in Oceano:
Go someplace else. The vehicles have taken over. “Without intending to be cavalier about your concerns ... I suggest you find another area for your next vacation,” Peter Douglas, executive director of the California Coastal Commission, wrote in a letter to a couple from San Jose who had a nightmare experience at the beach.
“P.S.,” Douglas added, “unfortunately, I have given this same advice to others who have had similar reactions and experiences to yours.”
The fact that the beach south of Pier Avenue has become a highway may be old news to Douglas, but to Bob and Nickie Sumner of San Jose, it was a revelation.
The Sumners had been coming to Pismo Beach every May and December for 12 years, staying at a hotel. This year, with the hotel unwilling to accommodate three small dogs they wanted to walk, they rented a house on Oceano’s Strand.
“What we thought to be a restful vacation turned ... very stressful and horrible,” they wrote Douglas. The portion of beach the Sumners’ rental house fronted is a mile-long approach to the spot across Arroyo Grande Creek where off-roaders ride their off-highway vehicles (OHVs) in the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreational Area.
Now, no rational person seeking peace and quiet would vacation at the ATV portion of this park. It is not about solitude or mystical bonding with nature; it is about noise and speed and power and a shared family love of same.
It is a subculture all its own, a perfectly legitimate one, but it is different from the subculture of other beach-goers, including the Sumners.
And so there is noise down there. But what about the approach to the Vroom-Vroom Dunes? Is restfulness there, as the Sumners expected?

Read the rest of this "news" here:
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/local/story/735668.html

It is pathetic that this was printed as a news article. It is much better suited as an editorial.

Oceano Dunes SVRA Guide

http://www.duneguide.com/

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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

First Responder Dies in ATV Accident at Oceano Dunes

A San Luis Obispo emergency responder is killed while on his way to a medical call at the Oceano Dunes.

Sergeant Charles Jordan with the California Highway Patrol said, "The ATV crested a very steep dune and unfortunately lost control of his ATV and it landed on top of him, inflicting major injuries to the rider. The ambulance followed the ATV over the crest of the dune, was unable to stop and the front of the ambulance made impact with the upside-down ATV."

More Coverage:

Volunteer killed at Oceano Dunes died before ambulance hit him ...
The search and rescue volunteer killed at the Oceano Dunes over the weekend died after crashing his ATV, and not from an ambulance that hit him moments later, according to autopsy results.
Christopher Meadows, 24, was riding a four-wheel-drive all-terrain vehicle at the Dunes on Sunday, leading a four-wheel-drive ambulance to the scene of a first-aid call, when he crested a dune he had previously ridden and started heading down a steep grade, according to sheriff's officials. However, the sand conditions had changed and Meadow's ATV rolled, trapping his body underneath.
The ambulance crested the same dune and was unable to stop before hitting the ATV.

Emergency workers mourn colleague who crashed ATV at Oceano Dunes
San Luis Obispo Tribune - San Luis Obispo,CA,USAEmergency personnel set out on their routine patrols of the Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreational Area with heavy hearts Monday, a day after one of ...

Search and rescue volunteer dies at Oceano Dunes
Bakersfield Californian - Bakersfield,CA,USA Meadows' quad flipped as he descended a dune, said Rob Bryn, spokesman for the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Department. The ATV landed on top of Meadows ...

First search and rescue volunteer dies in line of duty at Oceano Dunes
KSBY - San Luis Obispo,CA,USASergeant Charles Jordan with the California Highway Patrol said, "The ATV crested a very steep dune and unfortunately lost control of his ATV and it landed ...

Volunteer killed on Oceano Dunes identified
San Luis Obispo Tribune - San Luis Obispo,CA,USA... the Oceano Dunes on Sunday as 24-year-old Christopher Meadows of San Luis Obispo. ... CHP investigators said he lost control of his ATV, flipped and was ...

Oceano Dunes SVRA Guide
http://www.duneguide.com/

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Sunday, January 4, 2009

Offroaders bring prosperity to Oceano Dunes Community

Offroaders bring prosperity
KEVIN P. RICE

A recent commentary (“Let’s return to nature,” Dec. 11) by Nell Langford tears into the dispute over how many dollars Oceano Dunes tourism brings to SLO County. In-depth and very expensive studies have repeatedly shown that Dunes tourism brings as much as $200 million or more annually. The latest study by Dean Runyan and Associates calls Oceano “a key attraction”, one of only two they identify in SLO County (Hearst Castle being the other, with one-third the popularity).
The study found that South County tourism accounts “for nearly one-third of all travel spending within the county (32% or $359 million)”—far more than any other area of the county. Yet, Langford would have us believe that Oceano Dunes is responsible for “less than $23 million” of that $359 million, or only 6.4% of South County tourism!
After searching, I discovered Langford’s $23 million figure comes from California Travel Impacts by County, a report also published by Runyan. Langford blunders (perhaps cunningly) by singling out spending by travelers staying only at public campgrounds. But park attendance numbers reveal campers comprise only 22% of visitors, leaving 78% of visitors not accounted for in Langford’s $23 million claim.
The “non-camping” 78% spend far more than beach campers, because they patronize restaurants and pay for hotels, motels, private campgrounds, and the multitude of vacation rental homes surrounding Oceano and Pismo Beach. One might forgive Langford for simple oversight if her own vacation rentals were not often seen with OHVs parked in the driveway.
With its tourism supporting more than 2,000 full time jobs, Oceano Dunes is the South County’s single largest “employer” (except for maybe PG&E). Oceano Dunes is the largest single source of SLO County tourism dollars. A supervisor at Vons market on Grand Avenue related, laughing, “God yes! We wouldn’t be one of the biggest stores in the company without it!” Here is a quote from a letter signed by the entire Pismo Beach City Council: “The City of Pismo Beach derives a significant amount of revenue from the visitors drawn to this State Recreation Vehicle Area and much of the City’s future economic planning is dependent on the continuation of this State Recreation Vehicle Area and a change of use on the property would adversely impact the economic well being of our City.” The economic benefit of Dunes generated tourism cannot be argued without blinders or extreme bias.
For more than a year Langford has been citing an air pollution study that does not yet exist as cause for closing our state park. Langford’s complaint is over “particulate matter” (dust) that blows off the Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes complex. On April 17 this year, she and her friends marched into the Board of Supervisors chambers wearing dust masks, handing one out to each supervisor in a dramatic display.
Blaming vehicles for blowing sand completely disregards the dunes themselves. Coastal dunes occur where strong winds blow onshore, bringing in sediment from eroding mountains and rivers. Movement of sediment via wind is called aeolian transportation. The U.S. Geological Survey in 2006 estimated nearly 500,000,000 pounds of sand are blown inland each year along the stretch of coastline from Pismo Beach to Point Arguello. Despite this, and the overwhelming testimony of 20-plus miles of sand dunes, recreators are blamed.

Kevin P. Rice helped organize a summer clean-up of the Oceano Dunes that drew more than 100 volunteers.

Full article can be found at:
http://www.newtimesslo.com/commentary/1636/offroaders-bring-prosperity

Help Save Oceano Dunes, join the Friends of Oceano Dunes

www.DuneGuide.com

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