Legal Weapon

EPIC recruits UC Berkeley professor to wage Richardson Grove battle

(Aug. 18, 2011)  In a move characteristic of its legal tenacity, the Environmental Protection Information Center found a key witness who helped persuade a federal judge to temporarily halt Caltrans’ plan to widen Highway 101 through Richardson Grove State Park.

The decision by U.S. District Judge William Alsup to issue a preliminary injunction against the project last month hinged primarily on a 16-page analysis done by Joe McBride, a professor of forestry and landscape architecture at the University of California, Berkeley. McBride got involved because Sharon Duggan, an Oakland-based attorney with EPIC, asked him earlier this year to serve as an expert witness.

After methodically measuring trees in the park, McBride concluded that soil disturbance from the construction project would injure the root systems of 108 trees, 37 of which would be greatly harmed or die; that the installation of culverts would damage seven ancient redwoods; and that the removal of 54 trees would diminish the health of the forest.

In his decision favoring EPIC and two other environmental groups, Alsup called McBride’s analysis convincing.

“Exposing and cutting the roots of these trees makes them prone to infection and drying out,” Alsup wrote, sounding not a little like McBride. “Weakening the roots of redwoods adjacent to the road affects the complex root structure of the entire grove. Caltrans cannot plant new redwoods to provide adequate relief. Some of the trees that are likely to be harmed are more than a thousand years old.”

Alsup’s ruling means the road widening will not begin next January as Caltrans had hoped. Instead, a hearing on the merits of the case has been scheduled for Dec. 1. In the meantime, the two sides are participating in court-mandated settlement conferences, the most recent of which took place last Friday in San Francisco.

1 SHARE

  • Mail
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

FOUR Comments

Comment / By Anonymous / Aug. 18, 10:18 p.m.

Wouldn’t it be more prudent to spend $10 million on Broadway in Eureka, where record-high injuries and deaths of pedestrians, cyclists, and motorists actually exist?

Comment / By anon.r.mous / Aug. 21, 1:35 a.m.

The Eureka by-pass was voted down by Eureka main street back in the 80’s, so you can thank the people that vote against Walmart for that as well.

Comment / By Ronald McWalmart / Aug. 21, 9:36 a.m.

Which one of these people are you, Anon-r-mous?

Comment / By anon.r.mous / Aug. 21, 10:40 a.m.

None, I’m this guy:

http://youtu.be/in0_VvHVIEQ

→ post a comment

Recent on the cover

May 17

Ring of Fire

Sun and moon will perform a rare pas de deux in Humboldt skies on Sunday

May 10

District Soup

Racing for the top county seat in the 1st, 2nd and 3rd districts

May 3

A Place in the Woods

As park closure deadline nears, a scramble to save what we can

Today

44th Annual Kinetic Grand Championship Race

STAFF PICK / events, art, outdoors, sports, for kids, free / 9 a.m.-6 p.m. A 3-day, 42-mile kinetic sculpture race over land, sand, mud and water! LeMans start at the Noon Whistle on the Arcata Plaza. Follow the race through Manila, Eureka and into Ferndale on Memorial Day for the Glorious Finish. kineticgrandchampionship.com. 889-3024.

Flow 2012 Fashion Show

STAFF PICK / events / 8 p.m. Arcata Theatre Lounge, 1036 G St. Student designed and produced clothing. Fundraiser for Arcata Arts Institute. $35/$25 students. artsinstitute.net. 822-1220.

Woodside Preschool's Rummage/Bake Sale

events / 8 a.m.-noon. Woodside Preschool, 900 Hodgson St, Eureka. www.woodsidepreschool.com. 445-9132.

Lanphere Dunes Restoration

STAFF PICK / outdoors / 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Meet at Pacific Union School. Help remove non-native invasives at the Lanphere Dunes Unit of the Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge. Tools and gloves provided, wear work clothes and bring water. Carpool to the protected site. 444-1397.

More →