June 2014 NEWSLETTER - boulevardparkna.org
Transcription
June 2014 NEWSLETTER - boulevardparkna.org
Park Beat The Pulse of Greater Boulevard Park Boulevard Park Neighborhood Association ¶ Box 163179, Sacramento 95816 ¶ June 2014 Ferment fest: Summer Kick-off Picnic B An Open letter to city council regarding mckinley village O ver the past year, BPNA has been involved with a coalition of 10 neighborhood groups from both Midtown and East Sacramento regarding McKinley Park Village. While all of the groups were opposed to the project the reasons and mitigations discussed were varied, the group was finally able to agree on a unified position that would be presented at the City Council Meeting on April 29, 2014. The fact this diverse group was able to come together was no small feat, and is largely due to the leadership of Councilmember Steve Cohn. Steve worked tirelessly with the group, holding several community forums and many meetings in the Council chambers. The position taken by BPNA and the other neighborhood groups was that a third access point at Alhambra should be absolutely required if the project was approved, but there are several other reasons this project is flawed. IT’S NOT SMART, SUSTAINABLE INFILL. Smart infill is built near public transportation. Restaurants, shops, and schools are within walking distance. Smart infill is integrated into surrounding neighborhoods rather than built as an isolated island with poor access and egress. Smart infill includes affordable housing and housing for seniors, rather than more than 300 single-family houses. POOR AIR QUALITY WILL ADVERSELY AFFECT THE RESIDENTS. The proposed site is not suitable for habitation because the houses will be built in a valley between a busy freeway and railroad tracks where tons of auto exhaust, diesel, and particulate matter will get trapped on a daily basis. Residents, especially children, the elderly, and those with compromised immune systems will inhale polluted air. PNA will host a picnic on June 21, 2014 from 5-8 p.m. in the commons between 21st and 22nd Street and F and G Streets. If you are a fermentation enthusiast making your own sauerkraut, kimchi or kombucha, this is the place to share your craft with neighbors. Don’t worry if you don’t ferment, just bring a potluck dish to share, lawn chairs or blankets for sitting and your own reusable dinnerware. BPNA will provide hot dogs and drinks for all, and dinnerware for those who forget. This promises to be a fun event for the whole family with Bocce ball, bean bag toss, water balloons and more. Hope to see your there. l Donate Tree Trimmings to Feed the zoo Animals W ith more than 500 animals that call the Sacramento Zoo home, there are a lot of mouths to feed. From the tiny yellow-banded poison dart frogs to the tall giraffes, each animal is given a specific diet. This includes everything from blueberries to bugs and beef bones to browse. What is browse you ask? Browse is non-toxic leafy branches from trees and shrubs that can be found in your front or backyard. That’s right; your tree trimmings can be a feast for the animals. The Sacramento Zoo is accepting donations of browse all year for preapproved specific species of plants, and with spring in full-bloom, donations of large branches are also accepted. So rather than placing your tree trimmings in the green waste bin, animals such as giraffes, bongos, chimps, lemurs and many birds can benefit from your browse donations. Sharing your trimmings with the zoo also means less is going to the landfills. Not only is browse a supplement to the animals’ diets, but they also enjoy nibbling leaves, stripping bark and chewing on stems, which stimulates their minds through natural behaviors, just like in the wild. To learn more about donating your browse to the Sacramento Zoo, and for a list of edible plants, please visit saczoo.org/browse or contact the zoo at 916.808.5888 or at [email protected]. l continues on pg. 3 boulevardparkna.org Places to Go, People to See Every Monday. Monday Night Skate. 7 p.m. Meet at the parking lot at the corner of 3rd and S Streets. For more information, go to www. sacramentoskating.com or call Brian Malone at 715-2808 or Bernard Scoville at 568-1491. Every Saturday. Midtown Farmer’s Market. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on J Street between 20th & 21st Streets. Every Saturday. Free Yoga in the Park. 9 a.m. at the McKinley Park Clunie Center. Yoga in the Park is provided by Yoga Across America. For more information, go to www.yogaintheusa.org. Tue., June 3. Fireside Concert Series: Derek Thomas and Larisa Bryski. 5:30 p.m. Camp Pollock. (See article) Wed., June 4. BPNA Board Meeting. 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Contact BPNA Chair Lorna Martens by June 2 at [email protected] or 718-3900 to add items to the agenda. Open to BPNA members and other interested neighbors. Sat., June 14. Second Saturday Art Walk. Galleries open to showcase specific artists and new shows; bands and vendors line the sidewalks. Mon., June 19. Park Beat newsletter content due. To submit articles and calendar entries, email Julia Marino at [email protected] or call (330) 289-5758. To place an ad, call Jennifer Knutson at (925) 3241289 or email [email protected]. Sat., June 21. Green Thumb Brigade. 9 to 11 a.m. Meet in the alley behind 711/715 22nd Street. The most crucial task now is to keep the devices swept and weeded. If you’d like to help our leafy friends, contact Sally Flory O’Neil at 446-3390 or [email protected] for more information. Sat., June 21. Sutter’s Fort Hands on History: War in California! 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, please call 445-4422, or visit www.suttersfort.org. (See article) THE YEAR AHEAD–FRIENDS OF THE RIVER BANKS ¶¶ ¶¶ ¶¶ June 14 July 12 aug. 9 Native Peoples of the River Banks Bats Dragons and Damsels THE YEAR AHEAD FOR BPNA ¶¶ ¶¶ ¶¶ JUNE 21 aug. 5 sept. 13 BPNA Ferment Fest! National Night Out Spaghetti Dinner Camp Pollock Fireside Concert Series June-August Camp Pollock Every Tuesday 5:30 p.m. l l l The Sacramento Valley Conservancy (SVC) presents the Fireside Concert Series at Camp Pollock. Playing free of charge to the public every second Tuesday starting at 5:30 p.m. through August, the series will host an eclectic mix of bands including: Derek Thomas & Larisa Bryski on June 3; Shade Chasers & Connor and Karlee on July 8; and River City Ukulele Orchestra on August 12. Enjoy tunes indoors in the lodge beside the 1920’s stone fireplace or in warmer weather, outside in the beauty of nature, under the stars on the Pollock grounds, often near one of the fire-pits. There will be no food or drink vendors on site, but attendees are welcome and encouraged to bring a picnic basket and blanket. Parking and entry are free, however SVC welcomes donates to help with our lodge renovation project. For more information visit www.sacramentovalleyconservancy.org. l Sutter’s fort hands on history: War in California Sat., June 21 Sutter’s Fort 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. adults $7, kids 5-17 $5 and kids under 5 free l l In 1846, Mexican California was in a continuous state of political unrest and threats from foreign powers were a constant menace. The English Navy was anxious to have a good seaport on the Pacific Coast and kept warships in the area; French emissaries had approached John Sutter for an alliance; United State President James Polk was espousing the concept of manifest destiny and the dream that the U.S. would extend from the Atlantic to Pacific Oceans. The turmoil reached an apex in June of 1846, when as many as five flags may have had a turn flying over Sutter’s Fort. Join Sutter’s Fort Hands on History for an exciting day of scavenger hunts for history and demonstrations of black powder weapons. Hear debates about which alliance Sutter and the Fort should take in the conflict; find out which five flags may have flown over the Fort. For more information, please call (916) 445-4422 or visit www.suttersfort.org. l Ready for Spaghetti? Sat., Sept. 13 21st and G Streets 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. adults $10, kids 5-12 $5 and kids under 5 free l l BPNA’s Annual Spaghetti Dinner is a terrific way to get to know your neighbors while eating pasta and salad in a beautiful setting. The food is fine, with homemade spaghetti sauces and salad dressings, garlic bread and desserts, as well as wine, sodas, and Tom Marten’s House of Spirits craft brew. The evening also includes the presentation of our annual award honoring volunteers for outstanding service to BPNA and our community. Back by popular demand, all the way from Faerie Land, will arrive Sparkle Faerie at the For Kids Only (FKO) dessert table. An even better way to get to know your neighbors is to work side-by-side with them (1) setting up Saturday morning at 9 a.m.; (2) working in the kitchen stirring sauces, monitoring boiling pasta, tossing salads, and lowering food from the kitchen to the serving tables (45 minute shifts); (3) serving food (45 minute shifts); and (4) cleanup on Sunday at 9 a.m. for about an hour. Contact Suzie Johnston at 397-9294 or [email protected] if you are willing to volunteer. l 2 Park Beat, The Pulse of Greater Boulevard Park Committees BPNA Board of Directors 2014 Chair Lorna Martens 718-3900 [email protected] Secretary Nita Davidson 448-8064 [email protected] Treasurer Dave Philipp 212-1322 [email protected] Eric Knutson 925-324-1289 [email protected] Marsha McCormick 448-1032 [email protected] James McDaniel 802-5228 [email protected] Suzie Johnston 397-9294 [email protected] Boulevard Park Neighborhood Association purpose: The BPNA is created to support, promote, and improve the quality of life for the residents of the greater Boulevard Park neighborhood. By achieving this goal we strive thereby to improve the quality of life for others who work and live in and around Boulevard Park and for Sacramento as a whole. continued from pg. 1 MITIGATION FOR HABITAT LOSS ESSENTIAL IN THE IMMEDIATE AREA. The proposed site is adjacent to the American River Parkway, which has a number of plant and animal species that depend on riparian, meadow, and agricultural habitat. For example, the Swainson’s hawk, a threatened species in California, makes its home around Sutter’s Landing Park and forages in the surrounding grassy meadows, including the proposed building site. Membership: Dave Philipp, 212-1322 Preservation: Eric Knutson, 925-324-1289 Park Beat Production Team Editor / Designer: Julia Marino, 330-289-5758, [email protected] Block Captain Coordinator: Joe Cress, 698-7938, [email protected] Ad Manager: Jennifer Knutson, 925-324-1289, [email protected] Great ad rates! Call Jennifer at 925.324.1289 for details. Don’t forget! The deadline for ads and copy for the June issue of Park Beat is June 19 by 5 p.m.! seeking newsletter editor BPNA needs a skilled writer/editor for Park Beat newsletter editor. Julia Marino would like to step down from the position to focus on her more-than-full-time job and start-up nonprofit. The newsletter editor is part of an overall production team that includes Board members who author articles (editor and others do as well), proofreaders, the graphic designer, printer, and block captain coordinator. The editor needs to have strong writing skills, the ability to turn around articles quickly, and committed time to produce the newsletter on schedule each month. If you think you would be interested or want more information or what is involved, please contact BPNA Chair Lorna Martens at 718-3900 or [email protected]. l THE RESULT BEING. At the Council meeting, our own Councilmember Steve Hansen started the discussion by making a motion to approve the project. As part of this motion he offered several amendments to the building plan— the only significant one being that the building of the Alhambra tunnel becomes a City project rather than a developer project or requirement. The effect of this change is that the developer will pay only the small portion of any tunnel that he had always proposed paying, or to put it another way, about 10 percent or less of the total cost estimate of the tunnel. The taxpayers are on the hook for the rest, and there is no guarantee or requirement that it will ever be built. Hansen argued that it was the best project we could get on this site, so we should go ahead with it, but the criteria used for this judgment were not spelled out. After much public testimony, the McKinley Village project was approved, with Councilmembers Steve Cohn, Angelique Ashby and Kevin McCarty opposing. seeking web designer / developer BPNA needs a webmaster and someone to revamp and update the current website. If you think you would be interested or want more information or what is involved, please contact BPNA Chair Lorna Martens at 718-3900 or [email protected]. l While one could be tempted to wonder if a less politically wellconnected developer would have gotten even close to getting this development approved, it’s also fair to surmise that if the standard is now to go with whatever is the best project on the table, perhaps those connections won’t be as important going forward. BPNA will continue to work with the neighborhood coalition to try and make the Alhambra tunnel a reality. l BPNA is on Facebook! Want to stay in the know on the latest events in the neighborhood? Then find and “like” the Boulevard Park Neighborhood Association page on Facebook. We post stories about recent developments and reminders about BPNA events. It’s another great way to connect with BPNA and your neighbors! don’t let fruit go to waste! Anyone who walks or rides the streets and alleys of midtown know that tons of fruit goes to waste each year: lemons, grapefruit, peaches, apricots, and (sigh) figs! It doesn’t have to be this way. Soil Born Farms, a local urban farming and education nonprofit, has started Harvest Sacramento, which organizes volunteers to pick fruit and nuts from trees whose owners invite them. The harvest is shared with the tree owner, food banks, and the harvesters themselves. The organizers of the midtown/downtown harvest are Julia Bauer and Mike Phillips and can be contacted at [email protected] or (512) 981-735. They can also tell you about how Soil Born Farms helps people set up community gardening in unusual spaces. For more information or to get involved with Harvest Sacramento’s programs please contact Program Cordinator Dominic Allamano at [email protected] l June 2014 3 forb update: BUGS at the river O n Saturday, May 10, about a dozen people gathered to explore the insects of Sutter’s Landing Park. Daven Stillwell, one of our neighborhood entomologists, led the expedition. Daven set the stage by talking about the riparian (river) habitat and the history of the American River in that area. As the group walked toward the river, the discussion focused on the plants they saw such as curly dock, elderberry trees, and cottonwoods, and how these support communities of insects, birds, and mammals. The group found a variety of insects such as leafhoppers, box elder bugs, click beetles, weevils, cabbage butterflies, and a snakefly. They watched an immature dragonfly crawling out of the water to a place where it could transform into an adult dragonfly. Along the river bank, the group found clumps of sandbar willows with sawfly stem galls. The insects by the river match the ever-changing plant cycles, so chances are you’ll always see something new. By August, the FORB adventure will involve dragonflies, and we should see a cross section of insect life very different from that of mid-May. The next FORB gathering will be Native Peoples of the River Banks on Saturday, June 14 at 9 a.m. Meet at Camp Pollock where Chuck Kritzon, primitive education expert, will focus on how the local native people lived and thrived along the river for thousands of years by carefully managing and then respectfully gathering from this natural bounty. Chuck will share examples of some of the everyday things that the Nisenan Maidu made from the plants and animals of the area. This will be a hands-on event for children and adults. Camp Pollock is located just upstream from the confluence of the Sacramento and American rivers. Take 16th Street (160 North) and turn left on Northgate Blvd. Drive under the freeway and make a second left, following the paved road. Turn right on the dirt road just before you enter the trailer park. The dirt road will lead to Camp Pollock’s gateway and its parking lot and historic lodge. l 4 Park Beat, The Pulse of Greater Boulevard Park HISTORIC HoUSE Knutson Architecture 630 21st Street Clinton White House Eric Knutson architect-aia, leed, ap, cgbp 2231 h street, sacramento 925.324.0587 [email protected] commercial and residential specializing in historic preservation and detail-driven sustainable design T his home was built by Clinton White, a prominent attorney and President of the Park Realty Company, the partnership that developed Boulevard Park. This Colonial Revival corner house faces the 21st Street median but its deep porch opens to G Street. Its large cube form has elements of both Colonial Revival (pyramid roof, boxy shape) and Craftsman features (shaped rafter tails) and shows a restrained use of details that heralded a modern post-Victorian aesthetic. The second story doors, balcony and stairway, shown in the drawing, were a later alteration to convert the home into a boarding house. These features have been removed by the present owners. Clinton White became Mayor of Sacramento in 1909. During his tenure, he campaigned for the extension of the 21st and 22nd street parked median strips to P Street, but the measure was voted down in a referendum. Until recently, this house was a group home for adolescents, owned by the Sacramento Children’s Home. It has been returned to a single-family home. l [Adapted from “Boulevard Park: A Walking Tour” by the Historic Boulevard Park Committee.] June 2014 5 LOUIE Critter Corner: new kit in town A ibhlin (aka Avi Clare) Martens got a kitty for her fourth birthday from grandma and grandpa. On her birthday, she went on a special adventure to Elk Grove to pick out her kitty. Avi noticed Oscar right away, picked him up and cuddled him and the two were instant friends. On the way home, Avi decided that Oscar was not the right name for this kitty. Grandma suggested Olaf, Sven or Hans (a tribute to the current Frozen frenzy at the house), but those were rejected. “How about Ivan from Peter and the Wolf,” Grandma suggested. “Of course, Ivan is his name,” Avi replied. And so Oscar became Ivan. Ivan is a little blond kitty with green eyes. He has a personality a bit like Avi’s little brother Eamon—part scallywag and part Prince Charming— nipping at your toes one minute and cuddling under your neck the next. Ivan has adapted well to the life in the big house. Even Anniper, the 17-yearold matriarch cat at the house, has only given him a look of disdain, which means she secretly likes him (or will at least tolerate him). Got an unusual pet or a great pet story you’d like featured in Critter Corner? Send information and photo to Board Member Suzie Johnston at [email protected]. l DONALD J. LEWIS, JR. GENERAL CONTRACTOR HOME IMPROVEMENTS REPAIRS HANDIWORK AFFORDABLE HOURLY RATES FOR SMALL JOBS LOCAL TO THE MID-TOWN AREA 916-443-6617 916-443-6618 FAX 916-838-5677 CELL [email protected] [email protected] WINDOWS AND DOORS CARPENTRY PLUMBING ELECTRICAL ETC. KITCHENS AND BATHS DRYWALL AND PAINT CONCRETE AND STUCCO DECKS AND FENCING ETC. Licensed, Bonded, and Insured CSLB #662431 EDMONDS AND PHILIPP: Your Way Home Whether buying or selling, call the team that lives & works in Boulevard Park. Recycling vintage homes in record time is our specialty! Dave Philipp Realtor 916.212.1322 [email protected] Liz Edmonds Realtor 916.838.1208 [email protected] Boulevard Park Neighborhood Association Membership Form Send form with your $5 to $15 check per member for the remainder of the calendar year to: P.O. Box 163179, Sacramento, CA 95816-9179 Name:_ __________________________________________________________________________________ Address:_ ________________________________________________________________________________ Telephone:____________________________E-mail:_______________________________________________ New Member Renewing Member Yes! I want to help. Call me. Would you like to receive the newsletter by email, as well as home delivery? 6 Park Beat, The Pulse of Greater Boulevard Park
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