Retired Water Executive Speaks Out on Logging Plan
The following letter was sent to representatives of CDF by a retired executive of East Bay Municipal Utility District. EBMUD continues to disallow logging on their watershed land.
Reuben Grijalva, Director
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection
1416 Ninth Street
P. O. Box 944246
Sacramento, CA 94244-2460
Dear Mr. Grijalva:
While commercial logging has been permitted on a few
watershed lands, my years of relations with representatives of other publicly
owned water agencies – members of the California Municipal Utilities
Association (CMUA) and the Association of California Water Agencies (ACWA) –
convince me that it is anathema to their board members, managers and engineers.
As a frequent visitor to my family member's home, I
have acquired knowledge of that area’s water supply from Los Gatos Creek
(purchased from SJWC, and treated, stored and distributed by the Aldercroft
Heights County Water District). I have also
become familiar with the SJWC-owned lands and the network of narrow, twisting,
landslide-prone, hard-to-maintain residential roads serving the area. I have been greatly concerned with the fire
danger to homes and residents, particularly along Aldercroft Heights Road which
is dead-ended at gates and locked entrances to SJWC lands – allowing no
possible egress to the approximately one hundred residents of the road if the single access is blocked by fire. The danger of fast spreading fires would be incrementally increased by logging operations, one of the primary reasons why
we, at EBMUD, were concerned by such proposals.
The prospect of logging trucks traversing Aldercroft Heights
Road, or any of the narrow, blacktop, shoulder less roads in the proposed
logging area, is frankly inconceivable to anyone who is familiar with logging
practices. Because of the topography of
the area, homes and their garages closely front the roadways. The obvious dangers to residents –
particularly children – are patently obvious, and the sounds of the logging
vehicles would be nerve wracking. I
understand from the application that sound tests were done, but anyone who has
listened with their own ears to the way sounds carry in this quiet area cannot
seriously believe the alleged results and conclusions. Go listen for ourselves! Listen to the people who live there, who are
almost universally opposed to the NTMP.
I cannot help but sympathize with a private water agency’s need and desire to increase its revenues, but it is my professional opinion as a former executive with one of the largest and best run water agencies in the Western United States, that to permit commercial logging in this area would be an environmental disaster and the State’s Forest service should reject the plan.