Chimes Creek Neighbors


CORRESPONDENCE
THE ISSUES

ALAMEDA
WHIPSNAKE


BANK EROSION AND FLOODING AT CHIMES CREEK

SEWER PIPES AT CHIMES CREEK

CREEK PERMIT FOR WORK IN THE RIDGEMONT BASIN?

THE DETENTION POND

WHAT IS TURBIDITY?

HYDROMODIFICATION


CONFLICT OF INTEREST FOR COUNCILMEMBER CHANG?

NPDES 


  • March, 2005

    On March 4, 2005, Natural Heritage Institute - attorneys representing the Millsmont Homeowners Association - issued a response to the City's Staff Report submitted to the Public Works Committee on January 25, 2005.


    ..... MHA is not interested in stopping the Leona Quarry Project. Our interests lie in preventing further degradation to and restoring the form and function of Chimes Creek. This degradation is the result of the City’s permitting decisions to permanently route flows to Chimes
    Creek in excess of its natural capacity. The streambed in the vicinity of the 3000 block of Delmont Avenue has dropped ten feet or more in the past decade. Fences crossing the channel are now stranded ten feet or more above the streambed and serve as monuments to the former depth of the streambed. The rate of degradation greatly accelerated after the Ridgemont development was constructed in the 1980s. The Leona Quarry Project will contribute to this degradation. MHA members are losing an essential feature of their property as a result of upstream development. It is fundamentally inequitable to place the indirect costs of upstream development on downstream property owners.


    For full text of this letter, go to Correspondence/NHI letter dated March 4, 2005.


    After 9 months of non-compliance, the City is finally enforcing the mitigation requirements for the Alameda Whipsnake at Leona Quarry. Go to Alameda Whipsnake for more details, including a chronology of how the City's Project Planner took care of the Whipsnake issue in the Draft EIR back in 2001-2002.

    February 21, Presidents Day: Half of the site runoff, including stormwater from Ridgemont, was diverted away from the detention pond and plugged directly into the 39" pipe connecting to the City storm drains. Residents along Chimes Creek reported massive water flow and additional loss of property. At the bottom of Oakdale, the homeowner reported a 6-foot geyser spewing raw sewage from the manhole during an SSO (Sanitary Sewer Overflow) event that lasted "for hours." City Engineers have so far not denied that they approved this temporary diversion to help alleviate the pressure on the overworked filtration system.

    On February 8, City Engineer Fuad Sweiss sent out an email that declared "the restoration of the quarry site would reduce peak discharge and total runoff from the site even with the construction of the residential units." We requested further clarification, but one month has passed without a response or explanation on how it would be possible to reduce the total runoff from the site after 70 percent of the permeable surface is paved over. See Correspondence to follow our intriguing dialogue with the experts.





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