Caltrans Bypass Battle in Willits Heats Up As Activists Sit Down to Block Equipment

16 March 2013

16 March 2013

Willits, CA-Local res­i­dents say Cal­trans tried to bull­doze their way through Fed­er­al and State reg­u­la­tions again in what has become a run­ning bat­tle over the planned Bypass high­way around Willits in Men­do­ci­no Coun­ty. Activists sat down in front of mov­ing equip­ment and called Cal-tip to report vio­la­tions of the Inter­na­tion­al Migra­to­ry Bird Act after bird nests were found. This was the third time activists have blocked equip­ment since Jan. 28, when a tree sit­ter named War­bler Warblerwent aloft in a tall pon­derosa pine at the south­ern end of the pro­posed con­struc­tion site on Hwy. 101 just out­side Willits to protest Cal­trans’ Bypass.

At issue is pro­to­col regard­ing required sur­veys for nest­ing birds in com­pli­ance with the Migra­to­ry Bird Act and a “juris­dic­tion­al wet­land” dam­aged when Cal­trans work­ers drove an exca­va­tor into the bog­gy area and it became stuck.
 
When Cal­trans arrived at 7:30 a.m. Wednes­day, they were accom­pa­nied by Arrow Fenc­ing Com­pa­ny and their con­sult­ing biol­o­gists, who walked ahead of the noisy machine in case nests were again found in its path. Cal­trans and Arrow Fenc­ing employ­ees on site claimed they had been told they could pro­ceed by Joann Dunn, Cal­i­for­nia Depart­ment of Fish and Wildlife’s (DFW) region­al liai­son to Cal­trans. No proof was avail­able that revised pro­to­cols for the bird sur­veys required before start­ing con­struc­tion had been approved by DFW.
 
Reached by phone, DFW Joann Dunn said she had not seen the pro­to­cols but that the Depart­ment had agreed Cal­trans could con­tin­ue fenc­ing in the pre­vi­ous­ly dis­turbed area, despite being under an “active inves­ti­ga­tion”. Last week it was revealed that Cal­trans did not have the approved pro­to­cols from DFW need­ed pri­or to per­form­ing bird sur­veys.  State DFW ordered Cal­trans to sub­mit revised pro­to­cols and do new bird sur­veys.
 Excavator tracks flat jurisdictional wetlands
The Bypass would raise a  thir­ty-foot high earth­en wall on either end of the small north­ern Cal­i­for­nia town, con­nect­ed by an ele­vat­ed two-lane, high-speed viaduct span­ning the Lit­tle Lake Val­ley. Sen­si­tive wet­lands and Coho salmon in the two longest trib­u­taries to the Eel Riv­er would be severe­ly impact­ed.  More­over, safe­ty con­cerns about the viaduct, which has no exits, have been raised repeat­ed­ly. Cal­trans’ EIR says the safe­ty stan­dards will be met in Phase II of the plan, which oppo­nents sus­pect may nev­er be fund­ed, leav­ing them with a sta­tis­ti­cal­ly pre­dictable high­er rate of seri­ous and fatal acci­dents.
 
State Sen­a­tor Noreen Evans last week sent a let­ter to Cal­trans with some “point­ed ques­tions” about Cal­trans’ design plans after her aide vis­it­ed the site and met with those opposed to the Cal­trans’ Bypass, accord­ing to the Willits News.  That let­ter can be found on the Willits News site at https://www.facebook.com/WillitsWeekly/posts/493170500739029.
 
Dur­ing the sit-down block­ade, activist Jaime Cheva­lier said, “We told Cal­trans we’d leave if they’d stop all work and sit down and talk with Sen­a­tor Noreen Evans.”