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Home Your Region South Bay Habitat Conservation Plan |
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Habitat Conservation PlanThe Santa Clara Valley Habitat Plan, started in 2006, is a long-range conservation strategy to enhance ecological diversity and habitat function in about two-thirds of South Santa Clara County. The plan includes the protection of 19 endangered and threatened species, including the Bay checkerspot butterfly, California red-legged frog, and California tiger salamander. Participating in the Santa Clara Valley Habitat Plan are Santa Clara County, the cities of Morgan Hill, Gilroy, and San Jose, the Valley Transportation authority, Valley Water District, the California Dept. of Fish and Game, the National Marine Fisheries Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and California State Parks. Designed to last 50 years, the plan will eventually lead to the permanent protection of 45,000 acres of habitat and working landscapes through a combination of easements and acquisition. In addition, the plan encourages building in the right places by curbing development from the most ecologically valuable lands supporting the endangered species. Development in these sensitive areas, primarily located on ranchlands, parks and natural areas, will be charged a mitigation fee. For more information visit www.scv-habitatplan.org. Habitat Conservation NowGreenbelt Alliance is part of Habitat Conservation Now. We support a plan that has the following characteristics:
What's at StakeThe partners must decide whether to allocate funds for continuing the planning process. After eight years in development the plan is at risk as two key partners, the city of San Jose and Santa Clara County have required the plan be scaled back in light of the poor economy. On August 18 the plan’s management team released a framework for revision that proposes a 30% reduction in overall cost, a 16% reduction in covered lands and the removal of two species from the covered list. In addition, small developments (2 acres) on the valley floor will not be covered by the plan, but parcel owners could choose to opt in to the plan in anticipation of endangered species impacts from development projects. Greenbelt Alliance and our partners in Habitat Conservation Now are closely involved in this process to ensure that any revisions are consistent with achieving the plan’s biological goals. What you can doJoin Habitat Conservation Now -- habitatconservationnow.org Call or email the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors and the San Jose City Council to express your support for strong, comprehensive plan. |
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