Showing posts with label Phyllis Faber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phyllis Faber. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Co-author of Endanger Species Act joins Luminaries in Legal Cause for DBOC


Luminaries File Brief in Support of Drakes Bay Oyster
Environmentalists, Agricultural Leaders, Elected Officials, and
Leaders of Local Sustainable Food Movement File Amici Curiae Brief

INVERNESS, CALIF. — Drakes Bay Oyster Company announced today that an impressive group of environmentalists and proponents of sustainable agriculture filed an Amici Curiae (“friend of the court”) brief in support of its petition requesting an En Banc hearing of its case in the Ninth Circuit. The historic oyster farm is fighting to remain open in the face of Park Service wrongdoing. Its case in the Ninth Circuit is about the request for an injunction to remain in business while its lawsuit against the agency proceeds.
The brief argues: “The Drakes Bay Oyster Company is a treasured part of California’s coastal zone in the Point Reyes National Seashore.  Shellfish from Drakes Estero are an important part of the San Francisco Bay Area’s world famous local, sustainably raised food movement.  Modern environmentalists hail Marin County and DBOC as a model for sustainable agriculture. Consistent with Federal policies supporting increasing the Nation’s supply of sustainably raised seafood, California, which leases Drakes Estero to DBOC, has declared shellfish cultivation there to be ‘in the public interest.’ ”
Joining the brief are:
·         Former Congressman “Pete” McCloskey, coauthor of the Endangered Species Act, who intervened with the Office of the President to secure the 1970 Congressional appropriation that enabled the National Park Service to create the Seashore,
·         Former State Assemblyman William T. Bagley, who in 1965 authored Assembly Bill 124 transferring the Point Reyes tidelands to the National Park Service, specifically reserving the State’s right to fish,
·         Phyllis Faber, a noted wetland scientist who helped found, and served on, the California Coastal Commission, and co-founded the Marin Agricultural Land Trust,
·         Mark Dowie, an award-winning investigative environmental and science reporter and resident of Marin County with a stated interest “is in ensuring that public policy and decisions impacting the environment are based on accurate facts and sound science,"
·         Tomales Bay Association, a 50-year old West Marin County environmental organization that supports DBOC “as a critical component of on-going habitat restoration projects for Threatened & Endangered species, especially native oyster restoration projects in SF Bay and elsewhere in the State, because it is the last operating cannery in California and therefore the only readily available source of shell in California,”
·         Patricia Unterman, owner of the Hayes Street Grill, known for its fresh fish, who says “The loss of the oysters produced by DBOC would have a devastating impact on our mission, our menu and the expectations and pleasure of our customers.  We cannot replace the fresh, local, shucked oysters from DBOC,”
·         Tomales Bay Oyster Company, one of two oyster farms located on Tomales Bay in Marin County with retail shops along State Highway One; its retail and picnic area is at capacity and its customers will be adversely affected if DBOC’s 50,000 customers attempt to visit,
·         Alliance for Local Sustainable Agriculture,  an unincorporated association of people who believe that “a diversified and healthy agricultural community is important to our individual health and to our community’s and our nation’s safety, economy and environment,” and are “advocates for the use of good science and fair processes,”
·         The California Farm Bureau Federation and the Marin and Sonoma County FarmBureaus, nonprofit voluntary membership corporations that exist to protect and promote agricultural interests in the State and in their Counties,
·         Food Democracy Now, a grassroots movement of more than 350,000 American farmers and citizens dedicated to reforming policies relating to food, agriculture and the environment,
·         Marin Organic, founded in 2001 to foster “direct relationship between organic producers, restaurants, and consumers” to strengthen the commitment and support for local organic farms, such as DBOC. 

Friday, July 26, 2013

July 15th Farm & Foodshed Report Transcript - Last Half Hour

West Marin Farms are in clear danger! The rest of the Farm and Foodshed Report with Sam Dolcini, Phyllis Faber, Peter Prows is now ready here. The discussion reminds us of the importance of a proactive movement to protect West Marin's farms.
Sam: "The environmental action committee is supporting a coastal zone amendment that would say, “Even if you are on an organic dairy in West Marin, making your living that way, and there are already three homes built, sorry but you’ll have to commute from town or from another location. You will not even have the opportunity to easily build a home,” ... So there is a huge disconnect between the positives that we provide and the image that’s being put out. And, the challenge that we run into is that there is a very vocal minority that is getting a lot of attention. I think there is bigger support than we realize. And I think one of the challenges needs to be to come up with a way to maybe reproduce what Mr. Friedman once built that has been hijacked and see if we can’t follow that blue print and get a majority of us back on track protecting something that is so important and so valuable. 

Thursday, July 18, 2013

July 15, 2013 Farm & Foodshed Report - Transcript of first half

The first half of the July 15, 2013 interview audio  Farm & Foodshed Report, transcript here, is available.

Host Robin Carpenter with Samuel Dolcini, president of the Marin County Farm Bureau and most eligible bachelor in West Marin with Peter Prows, an attorney for Drake’s Bay Oyster Company, and  Phyllis Faber, a founder of the Marin Agricultural Land Trust and part of a lawsuit regarding the Coastal Commission and Drake’s Bay Oyster Company.

During interview, Carpenter read a correction sent from Public Relations representative to DBOC, Sam Singer objecting to the characterization of himself by Trainer during a previous, 6-17-13 interview audio with Trainer on Farm & Foodshed Report. Transcript here.  "



" Neither I nor my company have anything to do with either the Koch Brothers or the Tea Party. Period.
I am personally and professionally appalled by the false statements Amy Trainer made about me, my agency and about the Drakes Bay Oyster Co.   She has made a number of knowingly false statements about Drakes Bay.  It is a sad commentary on the Environmental Action Committee of West Marin that they would allow her behavior and rumor mongering."