Posts about Wild Equity and how you can be part of our movement.

Hello GGNP Big Year participants, this is the last day to fulfill the monthly Big Year prize request for August!

To be eligible for the $25 gift certificate to Sports Basement, be the first person to either (a) Use a reusable bag when you shop and then sign the California Plastic Bag Ban petition for the Steller Sea Lion, or (b) Ask public officials to implement a speed limit for large vessels when whales are present for the Humpback Whale, or (c ) Volunteer in the GGNP restoring riparian areas for the Central California Coast Steelhead Distinct Population Segment. You must record your action item before the deadline (Midnight on 8/31/2012) to be eligible.

For more details about the GGNP Big Year rules, events and prize deadlines, visit the GGNP Big Year page.

So far, 2012 has been extremely productive for the Wild Equity Institute. But we need you to become a Wild Equity Institute member for us to advance our mission. Take a look at what we’ve already accomplished:

And this is just the beginning of what we can accomplish. We’ve got more ideas to build a sustainable and just world than we can implement by the end of the year!

But if you join the Wild Equity Institute today you can help us expand our work, engage new allies, and build a healthy and sustainable community for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth. By joining us today you will help us close out 2012 with a bang:

  • We will expand our challenge to power plants in Antioch while protecting the Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly.
  • We will pass new legislation to protect San Francisco’s natural areas while creating a new National Park at Sharp Park.
  • We will ensure that the Franciscan Manzanita obtains the critical habitat and endangered species protections it deserves.
  • We will host endangered species bike rides, movie nights, and more to build a stronger community for conservation and justice right here in San Francisco.

We can’t do any of this without your support: please join us now and watch our campaigns thrive! Become a member of the Wild Equity Institute today. If you are already a member, consider becoming a monthly donor or making a special contribution to our work.

Thank you for all you do to help us engage and win!

Wild Equity is leading more adventures this coming September. The GGNP Endangered Species Big Year schedule is set to explore some interesting areas, and save species.

Join us on Saturday, September 1 from 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. — We will be working with the National Park Service to restore habitat for the endangered San Francisco Lessingia. Due to habitat loss and invasive species, the SF Lessingia is in critical condition. Wild Equity and the Golden Gate National Parks will help to restore and protect one of only two populations left in the world.

We will also be giving one lucky winner a REI Flash Pack 18 for helping to recover two endangered species in the GGNRA!

All you have to do is: Be the first person to either (a) help the San Francisco Lessingia by protecting and restoring one of its last two habitats, or (b) tell five people about the rare San Mateo Wooly Sunflower and its plight and be the lucky prizewinner for September!

Click on the picture for details about the prize.


The REI Flash pack 18, the GGNP Big Year prize for September.

More events in September:

Twain’s Frog and the Beautiful Serpent:

Sunday, September 16, 2012, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. — Hike Mori Point in search of the two most imperiled species on the San Francisco Peninsula: The San Francisco garter snake and the California red-legged frog.

Presidio Wildlife Run:

Sunday, September 23, from 9:00 a.m. -12:00 p.m. — Grab your running shoes and join Wild Equity on a morning jog through the beautiful San Francisco Presidio to see and save threatened and endangered species.

On this day, customers will receive a 10% discount on purchases made at Sports Basement Presidio and 10% will be donated to support Wild Equity!

Sign up for the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year now!

Only one week left to claim the $25 Gift Certificate to Sports Basement. Be the first to fulfill the species requests for the month of August, record your action, and the prize is yours!

Here are the details:

In August, there are several chances to win! Be the first person to either (a) Use a reusable bag when you shop and then sign the California Plastic Bag Ban petition for the Steller Sea Lion, or (b) Ask public officials to implement a speed limit for large vessels when whales are present for the Humpback Whale, or (c ) Volunteer in the GGNP restoring riparian areas for the Central California Coast Steelhead DPS.

You must sign-up for the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year in order to be eligible to win.


Steller Sea Lion


The Humpback Whale


Steelhead Trout

Wild Equity had one exciting week hosting fun-filled events that helped bring awareness about the plight of our imperiled species. Thank you to all who came out last week to support our work and help advance our mission!

Here are the highlights of the week:

On Thursday, we headed out to the Antioch Dunes with the National Park Service and Tatzoo to partake in a Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly count. We were fortunate enough to spot 11 Metalmark Butterflies and several other native species including the Western Pygmy Blue, the world’s smallest butterfly. It was a wonderful time. Thank you to Tatzoo for organizing to save the Metalmark!


Searching for the Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly.


Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly, Photo © Liam O’Brien.

After a full day of hiking and butterfly counting, we joined SF Environment to host a film night where we showed The Big Year, a film inspired by the true story of three avid birders who embark on a yearlong bird-spotting competition. We had a significant turnout, met a lot of new faces, watched a cool movie, and best of all, inspired others to sign-up for the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year.

Don’t miss out on more adventures coming up in September. There are still species to save and prizes to win!


Enjoying refreshments and good conversation before the film starts.

On Saturday, Wild Equity headed out to Fort Funston to scout for endangered sea creatures. Several enthusiastic people excited about seeing some marine life joined us. The fog was thick, but that didn’t stop us from seeing Surf Scoter, Common Murre, Double-crested Cormorant, Red-tailed Hawk, Raven, Whimbrel, Heermann’s Gull and a dolphin!


At Fort Funston searching for marine sea creatures.

On Sunday we trekked over to Muir Woods to help the National Park Service restore riparian habitat for the endangered Steelhead trout and Coho Salmon. We had a blast removing invasive species in Redwood Creek, learning about the area and working with other wildlife enthusiasts. We even had a chance to search for Black Abalone, a species critically declining from overfishing, habitat destruction and withering syndrome.

Fight poaching to save the Black abalone: Ask public officials to fund game wardens and record it as a conservation action item for the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year.


At Redwood Creek restoring habitat for the endangered Steelhead Trout and the Coho Salmon.


Brent Plater searching for Black Abalone.

Thank you to all who joined us this past week to help make a difference in the environment and protect our most precious wildlife.

There are many ways you can contribute to the Wild Equity Institute’s campaigns and help us build a stronger environmental movement for all. Become a member, donate or volunteer today!

The GGNRA Inventory and Monitoring Program is more than half way through its monitoring season for Coho salmon. Unfortunately, it appears Coho salmon smolt (young salmon) are not doing well. At Redwood Creek smolt numbers were 25% lower than expected. At Pine Gulch, a stream in western Marin County, there was a total wipeout: no smolts were counted at all.

This is particularly disconcerting because a relatively large number of redds (salmon nests) were observed last season: it appears some in-stream threat is killing Coho before they reach the smolt stage.

The future of the Coho salmon is filled with challenges, but there is hope to save this dwindling population. Join the GGNRA Endangered Species Big Year and you can help save Coho salmon while observing the animals in the wild. Sign-up for your Big Year today!


A pair of Coho salmon


Click on image to download a .pdf of the statement.

Today, September 1st, is the first day to start working towards the Big Year monthly prize. The contest goes until the last day of the month and there are two chances to win!

In September, the first person to either (a) help the San Francisco Lessingia by protecting and restoring one of its last two habitats, or (b) tell five people about the rare San Mateo Wooly Sunflower and its plight will be the lucky prizewinner for September!

Just be sure to sign-up for the Big Year and record your sightings and action items. Good Luck!

Sunday, August 19, 2012, 9:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. — Join Wild Equity and the Golden Gate Parks Conservancy for a chance to see endangered Coho Salmon and Steelhead Trout at the Redwood Creek Watershed in Marin, CA. Then score points in your Endangered Species Big Year by restoring riparian habitat under the dappled canopy of alder and willow trees.

Meet at Frank Valley Group Horse Camp on Muir Woods Road. Frank Valley Group Horse Camp is located 1.5 miles West of Muir Woods National Monument. RSVP required: use the RSVP form above. For carpool arrangements email us at rramirez@wildequity.org.


Brent Plater looking for Salmon.

Saturday, August 18, 2012, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. — Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute at Fort Funston to learn about the endangered marine mammals that exist within the Golden Gate National Parks. This is a great opportunity to spot the majestic Humpback whale and the Steller Sea Lions in their natural habitat as part of the Endangered Species Big Year, a race against time to see and save each of the GGNP’s endangered species. The Fort Funston Observation Deck is located at Skyline Blvd, San Francisco, CA 94101. RSVP required. For more information or for carpool arrangements please contact us at info@wildequity.org.

Thursday, August 16, 2012, 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. — Join Wild Equity and SF Environment to watch a screening of The Big Year in honor of the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year. The film, inspired by Mark Obmascik’s non-fiction book, The Big Year: A Tale of Man, Nature and Fowl Obsession, comically captures the passion of bird enthusiasts and documents two birders who enter a year-long bird-spotting competition. Meet us at SF Environment, 11 Grove Street, San Francisco, CA 94102. Get inspired to see and save endangered species by joining us for this FREE film night. Snacks will be provided!

There is limited seating so RSVP now!

The GGNRA Acquires New Land and Two Endangered Species:

In December 2011, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area obtained land at Fort Point just south of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, CA. Along with it came an opportunity to recover the endangered marsh sandwort (Arenaria paludicola).

The marsh sandwort was said to occupy this area in the early 1900’s, but because of human development and other threats, it had been completely wiped out at Fort Point, and only ten individuals were known to exist in the wild.

It was therefore crucial to restore populations to a site where they were once abundant.

With the help of volunteers, a team of biologists, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and U.C. Santa Cruz, 800 marsh sandworts were recently planted at Fort Point and other wetlands in the GGNRA. The plants will need constant monitoring to measure survival rates to determine if the site is indeed an ideal location for reintroduction.

Another successful land acquisition by the GGNRA aids in the protection of Hickman’s Potentilla (Potentilla hickmanii).

After ten years and a battle with developers, the federally recognized endangered Hickman’s potentilla will be protected and restored at Rancho Corral de Tierra, a newly acquired GGNRA property in San Mateo County.

The Hickman’s potentilla can only be found in two places: Monterey County, CA and in San Mateo County, CA. This yellow wildflower needs coastal habitat to flourish, leaving it constantly pressured by urban developers who aspire to build profit-making high-rises and golf courses.

Thanks to the Peninsula Open Space Trust (POST), who fought to keep the land in its natural state, this species and other wildlife can thrive in the GGNRA for many years to come.

Although these two imperiled species are now known to be present in the Golden Gate National Parks, they will not be added to the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year competition until the official threatened & endangered species list for the park is revised.

The National Parks need help to protect and recover the many endangered species that exist in the GGNRA. Sign-up to volunteer or join Wild Equity on a habitat restoration day.

The Wild Equity Institute is growing, and we want our Board of Directors to grow with us. We are looking for candidates to join our Board of Directors: candidates who believe in our mission and have specific skill sets to help our Board thrive.

Who are we looking for? Well, here are some specific skill sets we’d like to add to our board:

Secretary. We are looking for a candidate to become our permanent Board Secretary. The secretary takes meeting notes and keeps track of our organization records and filing requirements. The job could take up to 20 hours per year. The ideal candidate will have experience organizing corporate record books and meeting filing deadlines in a consistent, timely manner.

Treasurer. We are also looking for a candidate to become our permanent Board Treasurer. The treasurer keeps track of payroll, meeting other expense deadlines, and helps steward Wild Equity’s growing budget. The ideal candidate will have experience with fundraising planning, developing major donors, managing budgets, and meeting payroll. The job is expected to take up to 40 hours a year.

San Mateo County Residents. As our campaign to build a new national park at Sharp Park grows, we are doing more work in San Mateo County. We’d love to get more San Mateo County members and supporters on our Board to match this growth. A San Mateo County resident with experience in local political organizing and strong relationships with San Mateo County environmental partners would be ideal. This role is expected to take 10 hours a year.

Golfers. As more golfers recognize the benefits closing Sharp Park Golf Course will have on on the regional golf market, the larger our golfing constituency has become. We’d like to add some of those voices to our Board to help us explain to more golfers why closing Sharp Park Golf Course is good for the game. The ideal candidate will have experience playing public courses throughout the Bay Area, and a strong understanding of the history of golf. This role is expected to take 10 hours a year.

Think you can fill these roles, or help Wild Equity grow in other ways? Drop us a line at info@wildequity.org and we’ll get the application process started. Thanks for all your support!

Hello Folks, Wild Equity is bringing you some exciting GGNP Big Year events in August and we need volunteers to help make them a success!

Join our phone banking party next week! From 8/13/2012 – 8/15/2012, 5 p.m. – 8 p.m., we will be calling all Wild Equity supporters to invite them to our upcoming events. We will have free drinks, dinner and wonderful company on this night!

Our August events include:
Film Night with Wild Equity and SF Environment: Thursday, August 16, 2012, 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. — Join Wild Equity and SF Environment to watch a screening of The Big Year in honor of the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year.

Sea Watch for Endangered Sea Creatures: Saturday, August 18, 2012, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. — Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute at Fort Funston to learn about the endangered marine mammals that exist within the Golden Gate National Parks.

Steelhead Restoration Day: Sunday, August 19, 2012, 9:30 a.m. –12:30 p.m. — Join the Golden Gate National Parks for a chance to see the endangered Coho Salmon,Central California Coast ESU and the Steelhead Trout, Central California Coast DPS at the Redwood Creek Watershed in Marin, Ca.

We also need volunteers to help us hand out flyers, table at events and phone bank on other nights. Be a part of the Wild Equity team and help us build a more just and fair world.

If you can help volunteer please let us know by contacting us at info@wildequity.org or call (415) 871.3953.

Hello Folks, Wild Equity is bringing you some exciting GGNP Big Year events in August and we need volunteers to help make them a success!

For August we need volunteers for:
Film Night with Wild Equity and SF Environment: Thursday, August 16, 2012, 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. — Join Wild Equity and SF Environment to watch a screening of The Big Year in honor of the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year.

Sea Watch for Endangered Sea Creatures: Saturday, August 18, 2012, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. — Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute at Fort Funston to learn about the endangered marine mammals that exist within the Golden Gate National Parks.

Steelhead Restoration Day: Sunday, August 19, 2012, 9:30 a.m. –12:30 p.m. — Join the Golden Gate National Parks for a chance to see the endangered Coho Salmon,Central California Coast ESU and the Steelhead Trout, Central California Coast DPS at the Redwood Creek Watershed in Marin, Ca.

If you can help on these days or any other day leading up to the events, please let us know ASAP!
Contact us @ info@wildequity.org or call (415) 871.3953.

Hello GGNP Big Year participants, August 31st is the last day to fulfill the monthly Big Year prize request for August!

To be eligible for the $25 gift certificate to Sports Basement, be the first person to either (a) Use a reusable bag when you shop and then sign the California Plastic Bag Ban petition for the Steller Sea Lion, or (b) Ask public officials to implement a speed limit for large vessels when whales are present for the Humpback Whale, or (c ) Volunteer in the GGNP restoring riparian areas for the Central California Coast Steelhead Distinct Population Segment. You must record your action item before the deadline to be eligible.

For more details about the GGNP Big Year rules, events and prize deadlines, visit the GGNP Big Year page.

Join Tatzoo at a San Francisco Garter Snake Bar Slither on Friday, August 3, 2012 at 8 p.m.! Come out to meet the Tatzoo 2012 SF garter snake team and learn how you can protect this beautiful imperiled serpent. Enjoy good company and good drinks as we “slither” like a San Francisco garter snake from place to place! Meet at the Napper Tandy, 3200 24th Street, San Francisco, CA. 94110

Come and support the conservation efforts of Tatzoo and learn how to help endangered species in San Francisco!

Wild Equity has finished scheduling our 2012 Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year events—check out our guided offerings to see and save local endangered species at our events calendar.

In addition to the grand prize winners— those folks who see and save the most species by the end of the year — we are now offering several interim prizes for species sightings and conservation action items every month from now through December!

To qualify for prizes, you must get a free wildequity.org web account and then sign-up to participate in the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year. Once you are signed-up you’ll need to record your sighting or action item on the species’ corresponding Big Year page. It’s that easy!!

While you can always score points on your own, we’ve set up several events to help you climb the leaderboard. Here’s a rundown of what we have in store:

In August, Be the first person to either (a) Use a reusable bag when you shop and then sign the California Plastic Bag Ban petition for the Steller Sea Lion, or (b) Ask public officials to implement a speed limit for large vessels when whales are present for the Humpback Whale, or (c ) Volunteer in the GGNP restoring riparian areas for the Central California Coast Steelhead Distinct Population Segment and receive a $25 gift certificate to Sports Basement! Just be sure to sign-up and record your actions.


The Humpback Whale and the Steller Sea Lion

Wild Equity will be offering a chance to see and save these amazing sea creatures on our Sea Watch on August 18, at 10 a.m.

In September, the first person to either (a) help the San Francisco Lessingia by protecting and restoring one of its last two habitats, or (b) tell five people about the rare San Mateo Wooly Sunflower and its plight will be the lucky prizewinner for September!


SF Lessingia (left) and the San Mateo Wooly Sunflower (right)

Wild Equity will take a trip on September 1, at 9 a.m. with the GGNP to protect and restore San Francisco Lessingia habitat at Lobos Creek Valley.

In October, the first person to spot and record a sighting for any one of the 11 endangered plants found in the GGNP will be October’s lucky prizewinner!


Myrtle’s Silverspot Butterfly (left), the Presidio Manzanita (center) and the Marbled Murrelet (right)

Join our Big Year Bike Ride on October 20, at 9:30 a.m. for a chance to see and save several endangered species—including some imperiled plants.

In November, see the Western Snowy Plover and protect it from harassment in its last San Francisco habitats. The first person to record a sighting for the Western Snowy Plover and ask a dog owner to leash their dog while visiting the GGNRA will be awarded November’s prize!


The Western Snowy Plover

Join Wild Equity on our Snowy Plover Walk at Crissy Field on November 11, at 11:00 a.m.

In December, the last month for the Big Year, be the first person to report an observation of any of our returning endangered Salmonids and receive a prize!

Remember, December is the last month to get your sightings and action items in for the GGNP Big Year! The grand prizewinner will be determined in January 2013. Sightings always need to be within the legislative boundary of the Golden Gate National Parks — sightings outside this boundary don’t count. Action items can be completed anywhere the instructions allow.

Good Luck!

Thank you to all who came out to the Big Year Happy Hour last Thursday to enjoy good food, good drinks and great company at the Southern Pacific Brewery. It was a fun-filled night catching up with the Wild Equity folks. We talked about upcoming GGNP Endangered Species Big Year hikes, bike rides, fun runs and film nights, which can all be accessed through the Event Calendar.

Congratulations to two lucky raffle winners; Shawna Casebier, who won a copy of the national bestseller The Last Child In the Woods, and Michael Starkey, who received The Laws Pocket Guide Set to the San Francisco Bay Area. Enjoy your Prizes!


Lucky winners, Michael Starkey and Shawna Casebier, with Brent Plater.

We also toasted a bittersweet good-bye to two wonderful interns, John Bowie and Mike Linder. Thank you for all your help and dedication this summer. We wish you well on your endeavors.


Toasting good-bye and thank you to our summer interns.

We have many more Big Year events coming up very soon. Join us by signing up for the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year now!
Signing up is a two-step process: first join the Wild Equity Institute’s on-line community to become a registered user of this website. An e-mail will be automatically sent to your e-mail account confirming your registration and giving you instructions for the next step. Second, click on the link in the e-mail automatically sent to you, and on the page where you land fill-out the form to become an official registrant in the Big Year Competition.


A big cheers to the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year!

Without member and donors like you, our work could not be possible. Please help us expand our work by joining us on-line today!

Thursday, July 26, 2012, 6:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. — Join Wild Equity Institute for a Big Year Happy Hour! We will enjoy good company, good food and drinks, and get updates on some exciting Big Year events Wild Equity has planned for 2012. We will also bid farewell, for now, to two incredible interns, John Bowie and Mike Linder, who have helped Wild Equity in outstanding ways!

Please join Wild Equity at the The Southern Pacific Brewery located in the Mission, 620 Treat Ave., San Francisco, CA 94110 (between 19th St. & Mistral St.). RSVP using the form above. We hope to see you there!

action

From May 9 through June 5, Whole Foods Market in SoMA is donating funds from its Nickels for Nonprofits program to the Wild Equity Institute!

To participate, shop at the SoMa store with your reusable bags and then donate your 5-cent bag credit to the Wild Equity Institute. It’s that easy!

The Wild Equity Institute will be one of several organizations participating in the program this month. Our work builds a healthy and sustainable global community for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth. Currently our campaigns help build new national park units that save local municipalities money; they help reduce pollution burdens in disproportionately impacted communities; and they help connect people to the incredibly diverse lands in which they live.

By donating to the Wild Equity Institute through the Nickels for Nonprofits program, you’ll help our work thrive while shopping sustainably for you and your family. Thank you for your support!

Tatzoo had a wonderful Happy Hour this past Tuesday! We had a chance to meet the 2012 Tatzoo group and hear of the wonderful ongoing projects to protect the Lange’s metalmark butterfly, the San Francisco garter snake and other endangered species.

The San Francisco Garter Snake team is hosting a bar “slither” Friday, August 3, at 8 p.m. starting at The Napper Tandy, 3200 24th St., (between Cypress St. & Van Ness Ave.), San Francisco, CA 94110. Hope to see you all there!

RSVP to join the conservation efforts of Tatzoo!

Join Wild Equity for another fun Sunday Streets in the Bayview/Dogpatch neighborhood! Visit us at the Warm Water Cove (24th st.). Hope to see you there!

Get directions here.

We accidentally posted the wrong date and time for the Big Year Happy Hour and Summer Intern Goodbye Party in our last edition of “From I to We: News from WEI” Sorry about that! Here is the correct information:

Big Year Happy Hour and Intern Goodbye Party: Thursday, July 26, 2012, 6;00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. — Join Wild Equity Institute for a Big Year Happy Hour! We will enjoy good company, good food and drinks, and get updates on some exciting Big Year events Wild Equity has planned for 2012. We will also bid farewell, for now, to two incredible interns, John Bowie and Mike Linder, who have helped Wild Equity in outstanding ways!

Visit the Happy Hour event page and RSVP now. Hope to see you there!

Wednesday, July 18, 2012, 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. — Join Tatzoo at a San Francisco garter snake Bar Slither! Come hang out and meet Tatzoo 2012 fellows, tattoo artists and mentors and learn about this year’s amazing projects to protect local endangered species – the Blue Whale, Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly and the San Francisco Garter Snake – and how you can participate. Enjoy good company and good drinks as we “slither” like a San Francisco garter snake from place to place! Meet at El Rio, 3158 Mission St (@ Cesar Chavez), San Francisco, CA 94110. Come and support the conservation efforts of Tatzoo and learn how to help endangered species in San Francisco!

The Wild Equity Institute received grants from two new foundations this month that will help us build a healthy and sustainable world.

The JiJi Foundation and the NITA Foundation provided grants worth over $10,000, making the work of Wild Equity possible. We are honored and humbled to have the support of these respected foundations. Thank you!

Are you a member of the Wild Equity Institute? Help us expand our work by joining us on-line today!

All —

Attend one of these if you cannot, send in written comments.
If you are going to attend, send an RSVP to Athena Honore: ahonore@waterboards.ca.gov or 510-622-2325

http://www.cityofpacifica.org/civica/filebank/blobdload.asp?BlobID=4968

Public Input Needed for Coastal Erosion Plan, San Francisco to Pacifica

Developing a Coastal Regional Sediment Management Plan (CRSMP)

The Association of Bay Area Governments and the Coastal Sediment Management Workgroup invite the public to provide input on a Coastal Regional Sediment Management Plan being developed for Fort Point, San Francisco, to Point San Pedro, Pacifica, at two identical meetings to be held in July, 2012. “Regional sediment management” refers to sand.

These meetings will:

  • Describe erosion issues affecting ocean beaches and coastal infrastructure, such as parking lots, highways, structures, storm drains, and sewage outfalls
  • Present implementation options (proposed solutions such as beach nourishment, multi-purpose reefs, armor, allowed erosion, and managed retreat) and concepts for a regional plan
  • Solicit public comments on plan concepts

Thursday, July 12, 6:00-8:30pm OR
SPUR 2nd Floor Public Assembly Hall
654 Mission Street, San Francisco
Exhibition opens at 6:00; meeting begins at 6:30

Thursday, July 19, 7-9pm
City Council Chambers
2212 Beach Boulevard, Pacifica

All are welcome to attend. Please RSVP to Athena Honore: ahonore@waterboards.ca.gov or 510-622-2325. Individuals requiring special accommodations to access the meeting should contact Ms. Honore at least five business days prior to the meeting.

The plan will address geological and geomorphic processes (movement of water and earth affecting sand), habitats and plant and animal species of concern, infrastructure at risk, economic costs/benefits, public access, sea level rise, and policies affecting sediment (sand) management.

ESA PWA, an environmental hydrology firm, is completing this CRSMP for the Coastal Sediment Management Workgroup, a task force co-chaired by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the California Natural Resources Agency. The Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) is providing a governance structure for the effort.

The CRSMP is being developed now, and a draft CRSMP will be available for public review in the fall of 2012. Public meetings to solicit feedback on the draft will be held at that time.

SUBMIT WRITTEN COMMENTS
Your views and comments on the plan concepts and this project are welcomed. If you are unable to attend the meetings, you may submit written comments, which must be postmarked or submitted by e-mail by July 25 to Doug George, ESA PWA Project Manager, 550 Kearny St., Ste. 900, San Francisco CA 94108; or dgeorge@esassoc.com.

For more information, contact Athena Honore at ahonore@waterboards.ca.gov or 510-622-2325. Association of Bay Area Governments

What matters more: our human communities or the natural world? This or a variant of this question drives environmental debates, and also drives a wedge between progressive movements. In this lecture, Brent Plater, founder and executive director of the Wild Equity Institute, will describe what his organization is doing to get past this dilemma and build a healthy and sustainable community for people and the plants and animals that accompany on Earth. In the process, he will describe at least one possible way to get past these superficial distinctions and build a stronger environmental and social justice movement for all.

Saturday, May 19, 2012, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.: Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute and Tim Sullivan of the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission for a leisurely walk into the usually inaccessible Crystal Springs watershed to search for the endangered San Mateo woolly sunflower. Park in the small parking lot slightly east of the Crystal Springs Road and Tartan Trail Road intersection, in San Mateo, CA. RSVP required: please use this website to RSVP – See above. Part of the Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year, a competitive event to help endangered species recover.

The Wild Equity Institute is excited about two events this Saturday, May 19, and we hope you are too!

In the morning we’ll be offering a special trip to view the San Mateo Woolly Sunflower on normally inaccessible San Francisco Public Utilities Commission watershed lands. In the afternoon we’ll be joining Save the Frogs! at a tailgate celebration for endangered species in Sharp Park Golf Course’s parking lot! Join us for both— let us know if you’d like to carpool. Details below:

  • Tailgate & Drum for Endangered Species, Occupy Sharp Park(ing lot)!—Saturday, May 19, 4:30 p.m. — Join Save the Frogs! at Sharp Park Golf Course’s parking lot to tailgate and drum for endangered species and help occupy Sharp Park(ing lot)! That’s right: Save the Frogs! is occupying Sharp Park Golf Course’s parking lot, and we will all eat, drink, be merry, and express our love for endangered species and better public parks—*loudly and clearly so everyone knows that killing endangered species to play a game is wrong.* Bring food and drink to share if you like, and all your friends who stand with the “underfrog”! RSVP today using the Save the Frogs! Google Document or at the Tailgate’s Facebook page. If you can get there early to help organize or want to carpool, contact us and we’ll get you started. Get driving and transit directions to Sharp Park Golf Course here.

We are excited to announce that Dr. Douglas Bevington has joined the Wild Equity Institute’s Board of Directors. He is replacing Stan Kaufman, who served on our Board since 2009 and developed wildequity.org.


Dr. Douglas Bevington

Dr. Bevington is the Forest Program Director for Environment Now, a grantmaking foundation in California. He has a PhD in sociology from the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he taught courses on social movement studies. He is the author of The Rebirth of Environmentalism: Grassroots Activism from the Spotted Owl to the Polar Bear (Island Press, 2009), which explores how grassroots forest and wildlife protection groups have made a big impact on federal environmental policies in the U.S. over the past twenty years. He also serves on the board of directors of the Fund for Wild Nature, which helps provide resources to bold and effective grassroots groups: such as WEI!

Welcome Doug, we look forward to working with you as we build a healthy and sustainable global community for all!

May 6, 2012, 11am-4pm: Join the Wild Equity Institute for a fun-filled and colorful day at Sunday Streets. Visit our table and learn about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live. We are working on campaigns to help end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

There will be fun activities.

The Sunday Streets Mission Route: Valencia Street (Between Duboce Avenue & 24th Street) and 24th Street (Between Valencia Street & Hampshire Street).

To see a more detailed map of Sunday Streets, go to: Sunday Streets

The Wild Equity Institute table will be located on Valencia Street between 15th and 16th Streets, Mission District, San Francisco.

Join the Center for Biological Diversity, San Francisco Bay Chapter of the Sierra Club, Wild Equity Institute, Pacific Institute and others as we “connect the dots” between global warming, sea-level rise, and the impacts on communities, animals and plants in a dramatic, interactive human wave at San Francisco’s restored tidal marsh Crissy Field, in the Presidio under the iconic Golden Gate Bridge.

Wear blue and bring a pair of blue jeans, a blue T-shirt or blue sheet. The wave of blue we’ll create together will dramatically illustrate sea-level rise, as well as the more frequent and severe storms, storm surges and erosion that we can expect at places like Crissy Field — unless we can start slowing climate change now. We’ll even be filmed!

The event will also feature impact “dots” — “dot” being our word for an informative poster — which will represent impacts and solutions. The “impact dots” will share facts about climate impacts on people and other species here in the Bay, including threats posed by sea-level rise, erosion and ocean acidification. Our “action/solution dots” will identify actions that can help us avoid these impacts — cutting carbon in our atmosphere by stopping the Keystone XL pipeline and Arctic drilling plans, enforcing the Clean Air Act, and restoring Sharp Park.

Almost 4 million Americans live less than four feet above current high-tide levels. Scientists predict approximately 2 to 7 feet of sea-level rise this century.

Marshes such as Crissy Field are particularly vulnerable to sea-level rise. In the worst-case scenario, 93 percent of San Francisco Bay’s tidal marsh could be lost in the next 50 to 100 years.

Join the Wild Equity Institute for a fun-filled and colorful day at the Real Food Company natural foods market neighborhood Earth Day Festival. Visit our table and learn about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live. We are working on campaigns to help end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

There will be fun activities.

Location:
Real Food Company Market, 2140 Polk St. at Broadway, San Francisco

What would your rather do: give your money to the government, or to the causes you care most about? With tax deadlines fast approaching, we suspect many of you might choose the latter!

Fortunately the Wild Equity Institute makes it easy for you to contribute to our work, and get a tax break while you are at it. All while building a better world for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth!

Make a generous contribution to the Wild Equity Institute today and get a head-start on next year’s tax deductions. We promise we won’t spend a dime of your hard-earned money on foreign wars, corn syrup subsides, or bridges to nowhere—a promise you know the other guys can’t keep! There are many ways you can contribute:

Become a Member of the Wild Equity Institute.

  • Become a member now with a credit card or a PayPal account:
  • Download a membership form and mail it to: Wild Equity Institute PO Box 191695 San Francisco, CA 94119

Become a Monthly Donor.

The best way to sustain our organization is to become a monthly donor. Monthly donations allow us to spend less time fundraising and more time building a healthy and sustainable community for all.

Go to our donate page and fill-out the form to become a monthly donor.

Give a Gift Membership.

What could be more satisfying than sharing our campaigns with someone you love? Now you can by giving a Wild Equity Institute gift membership. Just download and fill-out this form and mail it with your payment to:

Wild Equity Institute
PO Box 191695
San Francisco, CA 94119

Double Your Impact With Matching Gifts.

Many employers, large or small, will match their employees’ charitable contributions — some double or triple your gift! Whatever the program your company may have, there’s never any additional cost to you. Typically, all that is required is filling out an additional form and either sending it to WEI or submitting it directly to your employer. Contact your human resources department to see if your employer provides this benefit. If you need it, our Federal Identification Number is 27-0984775.

1% for the Planet.

The Wild Equity Institute is an approved 1% for the Planet partner. Companies who participate in this program can give 1% of sales or more to the Wild Equity Institute while satisfying the programs giving requirements. To join the program, visit the 1% for the Planet website. If you are already a member, you can donate directly to the Wild Equity Institute today.

Go Solar, Help WEI.

The Wild Equity Institute is proud to offer a new fundraising partnership with Sungevity, a solar-leasing company founded by long-time environmental activists.

For a limited time, when Wild Equity Institute members like you sign-up for a new, zero-down solar lease from Sungevity, the company will donate $500 to the Wild Equity Institute, while giving you an additional $500. That’s what we call a win-win!

To take advantage of this limited-time opportunity, all you need to do is visit the Wild Equity Institute’s special landing page on Sungevity’s website, enter your street address and answer a few simple questions to get your free installation iQuote.

For more information about this program, click here.

Volunteer.

The Wild Equity Institute always makes room for dedicated people who want to make a difference with their time. Our volunteers do everything from data entry to tabling to writing press releases to helping craft legal arguments. If you have some time to help out, contact us at info@wildequity.org and we’ll try and match your interest to our needs while meeting your schedule.

Donate Office Supplies and Furniture.

We could also use help outfitting our new office. 100% post-consumer waste and chlorine-bleach free recycled paper, envelopes, and general office supplies are always welcome. We could also use:

  • Document shredders
  • Flat-screen computer monitors
  • Working computers with wireless networking capabilities
  • Filing cabinets
  • Bookshelves

If you have any supplies to donate, contact us and we’ll be happy to arrange a pick-up.

Thanks again for all you do for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth! View our privacy policy.

The meeting location is near the intersection of CA-92 and Canada Rd. in Burlingame, California. Park in the west side of Canada Rd. From here we will take a short hike to see the fountain thistle.

After the hike we will drive to the restoration access site. To get there, get back on 92 heading east. Drive a short distance and take Exit 9A, the Ralston Ave. exit, toward Belmont. Veer right at the end of the off ramp, and the road becomes Polhemus Rd. After crossing over the highway, take the first left Paul Scannell Dr. Paul Scannell Dr. Stay on Scannell Dr. until you see a left turn called Lessingia Ct. Take Lessingia Ct. to its end, and park. We will walk to the site from here.

Informal reports from several locations suggest that the Mission Blue Butterfly is flying in the GGNRA right now. That means it’s the right time for Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year participants to score points in the year-long competition to see and save the park’s endangered species.

To give you an extra incentive, the Wild Equity Institute is offering a $25 Sports Basement gift certificate to the first person who logs a GGNP sighting of the Mission Blue on our website!


Mission Blue Butterfly, © Margo Bors.

The Mission Blue is a small, quarter-sized butterfly. Males are characterized by dark-bordered, silver blue to violet blue upper wings, while females have brown upper-wings with blue traces. The species flies from March until mid-June, but an adult Mission Blue Butterfly only lives for 6-10 days, so the time for observing any one individual is short. It uses one of three species of perennial lupines as a host plant: the silver lupine (Lupinus albifrons) the Lindley varied lupine (L. variicolor) and the summer lupine (L. formosus). Sometimes the butterfly makes it easy to spot: the species has the unique behavior of actually sitting on its lupine host for a while.

The Mission Blue Butterfly exists within the GGNP at Fort Baker in Marin County, and Milagra Ridge in San Mateo County. Remember, always stay on trail in the park, and always comply with our ethical principles when participating in the Big Year. To log your sighting, you must have a wildequity.org account, sign-up to participate in the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year, and enter your sighting information at the wildequity.org Mission Blue Butterfly species profile.

In 2012, the Wild Equity Institute is partnering with Downtown High School’s Wilderness, Arts, & Literacy Collaborative and the Mission Beacon Center at Everett Middle School to help at-risk youth discover the connections between the plights facing their communities and the plight of our local endangered species.


WALC’s Catherine Salvin helps students with their field journals
during an Endangered Semester trip to Mori Point.


Wild Equity Institute Executive Director Brent Plater helps Mission Beacon
students find Western Snowy Plovers at Ocean Beach.

The joint project is called “Endangered Semester,” an off-shoot of the Wild Equity Institute’s signature education project, the Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year. Generously supported by Audubon/Toyota TogetherGreen, the California Wildlands Grassroots Fund of the Tides Foundation, and Patagonia SF, the project provides students from these schools with opportunities to see and help save endangered species in the field, while earning prizes for learning how to communicate with public officials, make sustainable and healthy lifestyle choices, and take ownership of their local green spaces and parks.

To date, students have been able to search for spawning steelhead at Muir Woods, western snowy plovers at Ocean Beach, and California red-legged frogs at Mori Point. On each trip, students participated in activities that helped these species recover, while sharpening skill sets in nature observation, exercising outdoors, and communicating effectively about issues they care most passionately about.


WALC students observed this California red-legged frog at Mori Point
and earned prizes from Patagonia while learning how to write effective letters.


Mission Beacon students observed these Western snowy plovers at Ocean Beach
while sharpening their observation skills and learning how to coexist with wildlife in urban areas.

Four more trips are schedule for the semester, each to a site that helps students discover the root causes of harm in our communities and our remaining wild areas. In the process, the Endangered Semester helps each of us recognize how interconnected we are to each other and the lands in which we live, and provides inspiration to each of us to work for a more equitable world for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth.

The California Energy Commission has approved five power plants in the immediate vicinity of the Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge. Each of these plants causes nitrogen to be deposited at the Dunes, changing the chemical composition of the dune soil so that it favors invasive weeds. If this continues, all three endangered species at the Antioch Dunes could be lost.


Gateway Generating Station

The long-term chronic adverse biological effects of nitrogen deposition on native ecosystems and associated animals have been described in a number of papers. Sand dunes like the Antioch Dunes are nitrogen deficient, and the changes in plant and microbial communities resulting from increased amounts of the airborne deposition of this chemical has been documented to cause cascading negative effects on ecosystem processes and the species that depend upon the structure of the existing native plant community. One of the primary adverse effects is the enhancement of environmental conditions for the invasion of non-native weeds, which outcompete native plants.

Currently, the Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge receives nitrogen deposition from the surrounding atmosphere at a rate of 6.51 kg-N/ha/year This is above the level at which nitrogen deposition effects must be assessed for impacts on species and ecological communities. In nutrient-poor soils and deserts like those found at the Antioch Dunes this level is around 4-6 kg-N/ha/year; see also Exhibit A. The power plants are roughly within one mile of the Antioch Dunes, and will deposit nitrogen into the Wildlife Refuge.

The Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly, the Antioch Dunes Evening Primrose, and the Contra Costa Wildflower are all highly endangered, and even small changes in the plant distribution at the dunes could take these species, adversely modify critical habitat, impede recovery, and even cause the species to go extinct. In particular, the Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly is so critically endangered that a single failure in the productivity of the species host plant could lead to the permanent extinction of the species

The Antioch Dunes Evening Primrose, Oenothera deltoides ssp. howellii, is a short-lived perennial plant in the evening-primrose family (Onagraceae). It has large, white flowers that bloom from March to September. Natural stands of the Antioch Dunes evening primrose are found only on the riverine dune habitat located on and immediately adjacent to the Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge.


Antioch Dunes Evening Primrose

From 1984 to 1991, the total population of the Antioch Dunes evening primrose was estimated to range from 4,300 to 5,800 plants. Population numbers fluctuate annually, but the long term trend is clearly declining. The current population numbers for 2011 are estimated to be 1146 individuals. The species and its critical habitats have been protected by the Endangered Species act since 1978.

The Contra Costa Wallflower, Erysimum capitatum var. angustatum, is a biennial or perennial sub-shrub in the Brassicaceae (mustard) family. It grows fairly erect and can reach 18 inches in height, with fragrant and highly structured wildflower with yellow petals. It has been protected as endangered under the Federal Endangered Species Act since 1978, and critical habitat has been since 1978 as well.

The Contra Costa wallflower was originally described in 1896 based on specimens collected “on the banks of the San Joaquin River in the interior of California.” It is endemic to the riverine dune habitat found within and immediately adjacent to the Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge. The plant generally begins flowering in March, peaking in April or May. Pollination of the Contra Costa wallflower is conducted by a variety of unspecialized insects.

Like the Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly, the Contra Costa Wallflower is endemic to the Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge. Although the population of the plant fluctuates greatly, the long-term trend indicates the species is in jeopardy. In 1978 only 174 fruiting plants were identified. In 1982 the estimate of plants had increased to 700 plants. The highest population count recorded to date was in 1999 but a steady decline in population size has occurred since then. Non-native, invasive weeds are threatening to crowd-out the species in the Antioch Dunes, and this is spurred by nitrogen deposition in the dunes.

Winning campaigns and building a movement isn’t always easy. But we can make it rewarding. At the Wild Equity Institute, we strive to make our internships and campaigns vigorous and inspiring. But don’t take our word for it: you can hear what some of our past interns and students have to say about working with the Wild Equity Institute’s Executive Director Brent Plater in this short, super sweet video. Then apply for your internship right away!

Saturday, March 17, 2012 10:00 am-12:00 pm: Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute to search for two of the most imperiled vertebrate species on the San Francisco peninsula: the California red-legged frog and the San Francisco garter snake. This will be a leisurely walk to enjoy the restoration work being conducted at Mori Point and to learn about the bold steps being taken to save both species from the brink of extinction. RSVP required: please use this website to RSVP – See above. Rain or Shine. Meet at the Mori Point Entrance Gate, at the intersection of Bradford Way and Mori Point Road, Pacifica, CA, 94044. Rain or Shine. Part of the Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year, a competitive event to help endangered species recover.

The Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year is off to a rapid start, with students and members of the public competing to see and save our local endangered species. This weekend we’ll search and help save two of the most imperiled species of all: the San Francisco garter snake and the California red-legged frog. Join us for a great hike in a gorgeous place and guaranteed wildlife sightings!

  • Twain’s Frog and the Beautiful Serpent—Saturday, March 17, 2012 10:00 am to 12:00 pm: Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute to search for two of the most imperiled vertebrate species on the San Francisco peninsula: the California red-legged frog and the San Francisco garter snake. This will be a leisurely walk to enjoy the restoration work being conducted at Mori Point and to learn about the bold steps being taken to save both species from the brink of extinction. RSVP required: please use this website to RSVP. Meet at the Mori Point Entrance Gate, at the intersection of Bradford Way and Mori Point Road, Pacifica, CA, 94044. Rain or Shine. Part of the Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year, a competitive event to help endangered species recover.

The GGNP Endangered Species Big Year is in full swing, and we’re helping you compete this weekend by leading a trip to see and help save the diminutive Western Snowy Plover at Ocean Beach! Come join us as we search for these little guys and learn how we can all take part in the species’ recovery. See you outside!

Saturday, February 25, 2012, 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm: Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute as we take a leisurely walk from the San Francisco Zoo to Ocean Beach searching for the threatened snowy plovers. Once we reach Ocean Beach we’ll head north observing wildlife and searching for these cryptic birds. RSVP required: please use this website to RSVP. Meet at the San Francisco Zoo Parking Lot Entrance on Sloat Blvd., near the Great Highway, San Francisco 94132. Bring a lunch. Free. Rain Cancels. Part of the Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year, a competitive event to help endangered species recover.

hi everyone – I found this photo online of a Snowy Plover and another Plover – guess which one is the Snowy Plover!

Saturday, February 25, 2012, 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm: Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute as we take a leisurely walk from the San Francisco Zoo to Ocean Beach searching for the threatened snowy plovers. Once we reach Ocean Beach we’ll head north observing wildlife and searching for these cryptic birds. RSVP required: please use this website to RSVP – See above. Meet at the San Francisco Zoo Parking Lot Entrance on Sloat Blvd., near the Great Highway, San Francisco 94132. Bring a lunch. Free. Rain Cancels. Part of the Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year, a competitive event to help endangered species recover.

The Wild Equity Institute is a partner of the 2nd annual San Francisco Green Film Festival, which runs March 1-7, 2012. This year’s Green Film Festival includes premieres of 40 international films focused on the environment, sustainability and other green issues, as well as many filmmakers and panel discussions.

WEI is honored to co-present the film Green Fire by local filmmakers Ann and Steven Dunsky, who also created the film Butterflies and Bulldozers. Green Fire looks into the life of Aldo Leopold, one of our greatest and influential conservation heroes.

“The first full-length documentary film ever made about legendary environmentalist Aldo Leopold, Green Fire highlights Leopold’s extraordinary career, tracing how he shaped and influenced the modern environmental movement. Leopold remains relevant today, inspiring projects all over the country that connect people and land.” http://www.greenfiremovie.com/

Aldo Leopold’s vision of humanity’s relationship with wilderness and his work in conservation has influenced many and connects with WEI’s mission to unite the grassroot conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that build a healthy and sustainable global community for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth.

Join the Wild Equity Institute for Green Fire, showing March 5, 2012 at 5:30pm, and many other wonderful films at the San Francisco Green Film Festival. Also, check out the festival’s new Action Steps resources. The festival is located at the San Francisco Film Society Cinema, 1746 Post Street, San Francisco, CA 94115. See you there!

Sunday, January 22, 2012, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.: Join Brent Plater of the Wild Equity Institute as we take an easy stroll through Muir Woods National Monument to search for endangered salmonids in Redwood Creek. We’ll learn about the lives of Coho Salmon and Steelhead as the fish return from the Ocean, and discuss what we all can do to help them recover. Part of the Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year, a competition to see and help save the Park’s endangered species. Dress for cold, wet weather and wear boots as trails may be muddy. RSVP required: please use this website to RSVP – See above. Meet at the Dipsea Trail Trailhead: the trailhead is within the auxiliary/south parking lot for Muir Woods. Park entrance fees apply, but the hike is free.

2011 was an inauspicious year for the Bay Area’s environmental and justice movements. Park and community service budgets were slashed, and environmentally destructive developments were green-lighted by public officials around San Francisco Bay.

But I know we can reverse this trend if you join the Wild Equity Institute today. On the ground, in the courts, and at City Hall, the Wild Equity Institute succeeded against great odds in 2011. Over 70 different media outlets recognized our efforts this year; Audubon and Toyota gave me one of five prestigious TogetherGreen environmental fellowships in California; and the Sierra Club’s Arthur Feinstein observed that our turnout for the restore Sharp Park campaign was “one of the largest the environmental community has ever generated in San Francisco.”


Supervisor John Avalos Helped Us Convince
the Board of Supervisors to Restore Sharp Park

We’ve built an effective organization. But we’re not here to build an organization: we’re building a powerful movement that scales-up to the massive environmental threats we face. A movement that creates a healthy and sustainable global community for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth.

Movements aren’t defined by organizational effectiveness. They are defined by the inspiration, the passion, and the commitment of the people we serve. That’s why we need you to join our movement today with the most generous gift you can provide.

We are on the verge of accomplishing great things. But without you standing by our side, our potential will not be realized. And we are running out of time to build the world we believe in. In spite of our successes, 2011 brought more species to the brink of extinction, and the inequity across our human communities became larger. If our movement doesn’t grow quickly, it may soon be too late to make a difference.

That’s why I’m urging you to make your contribution to the Wild Equity Institute without delay. Because when you invest in the Wild Equity Institute, you not only get effective campaigns in return—you grow a movement that will ensure these victories aren’t snatched away by the 1%. Here are just some of the things your support will accomplish in 2012:

A GGNP Endangered Species Big Year — We’re providing urban youth who have not succeeded in traditional classrooms an opportunity to see and help save the GGNRA’s endangered species, while discovering the enviornmental justice concerns that led to the creation of this great national park. But if we don’t raise another $1,000 by the end of the year, we will have to cut-back on the prizes and events that made this program so special in 2011. Each event builds our movement’s constituency, making this funding more urgent then ever.
Sharp National Park — While the Mayor vetoed our legislation, he can’t stop our movement. Soon the golf developers’ tenuous grip on public officials will be overwhelmed by our rapidly growing movement. But we need your support to win our cutting-edge litigation and grassroots campaign. Last week, self-described “golf purist” and millionaire Sandy Tatum told the press that “we’re going to fight this like hell … and we’ve got access to money.” Unless you stand with us, the 1% will throw their wealth around and take this park from you—so they can continue to play a game on your dime.

Imagine the world we will build together: a more equitable world for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth. Thank you for supporting the Wild Equity Institute today!

Sincerely,

Brent Plater
Executive Director


The Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year is a race against time to observe each of the 36 endangered and threatened species found within the Golden Gate National Parks, while taking 36 discrete conservation recovery actions that will prevent these species from going extinct. It is a competitive event: the person who sees and helps the most species between January 1, 2012, and December 31, 2012, will win the Big Year.

The GGNP Endangered Species Big Year will enable you to explore the diverse habitats of the GGNP while helping each of the 36 endangered and threatened species that call the Park home. In the process, we hope you will discover the humility, compassion, and hope embodied in the legal protections for this land and our imperiled neighbors.

Here is how the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year works:

  • Sign-up for the 2012 Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year. Signing up is a two-step process: first join the Wild Equity Institute’s on-line community to become a registered user of this website. An e-mail will be automatically sent to your e-mail account confirming your registration and giving you instructions for the next step. Second, click on the link in the e-mail automatically sent to you, and on the page where you land fill-out the form to become an official registrant in the Big Year Competition. If you have problems, e-mail us and we’ll help you out!
  • Review and download your checklist of the 36 listed species found in the GGNP and the 36 conservation action items you can take to help these species recover.
  • Check-out the calendar of GGNP Endangered Species Big Year events for special trips to observe endangered species and opportunities to help them recover, and sign-up for some trips. Or explore the park on your own.
  • In order to check one of the 36 federally protected threatened or endangered species off your list, you must observe the species alive while you and/or the species are within the GGNP’s legislative boundary.
  • If you are within the legislative boundary but the species is outside of the legislative boundary (for example, you witness a Humpback Whale breaching 5 miles off the coast while you are standing on Ocean Beach) you can still count it as a sighting. Similarly, if the species is inside the boundary but you are outside of the boundary when you observe it, you may still count it as a sighting. However, if both the species and you are outside the legislative boundary when you observe it, you may not count it as a sighting.
  • In order to check one of the 36 conservation action items off your list, you need to complete the specific conservation action item listed on the checklist: no substitutions allowed. The action items are located at the bottom of each species’ page.
  • All participants must agree to comply with the Endangered Species Big Year’s Ethical Principles. No exceptions.
  • All sightings and all conservation action items must be completed no sooner than 12:00:00 a.m. on January 1, 2012, and no later than 11:59:59 p.m. on December 31, 2012.
  • The Big Year runs on the honor system. No one will be looking over your shoulder to make sure you fill out your checklist accurately, but highly unusual sightings may be subject to verification.
  • Enter all of your sightings on the Big Year web site.
  • Build a conservation community by using the tools on the Wild Equity Institute’s website to communicate with other competitors. You can opt into forum discussions when you signup for the Big Year competition, but if you want to be added or dropped later, just e-mail us and we’ll help you out!


Download Your Copy of the 2012 GGNP
Endangered Species Big Year Checklist

Participating in the Endangered Species Big Year is easy:

First, sign-up for the Big Year. Signing up is a two-step process: first join the Wild Equity Institute’s on-line community by signing up for this website. Shortly thereafter you will receive an e-mail message with a link back to our website. On the webpage where that link directs you to, you will see an option to join the 2012 GGNP Endangered Species Big Year. Just fill out the form and submit it, and you are ready to compete in the Big Year!

Second, review the endangered species you will be looking for, and find out how you can help them recover. You can download a checklist of the species and action items after you sign up.

Third, check out the Endangered Species Big Year Calendar page to find out when and how you can see these species in the GGNP or participate in conservation actions scheduled. You may also explore the GGNP on your own to complete your checklist.

Fourth, as you see species and take action items, check them off your checklist and then submit your completed items to the Big Year organizers on-line. For each action item and species you want to check-off, you must go to the corresponding species’ webpage and enter the data into the form on that page.

Fifth, if you like, you can interact with this web site and other Big Year competitors: you may comment about each species and conservation action item on each species’ page, and you can also find out about the latest sightings and share information with other competitors by joining the Big Year Group and community forum when you sign-up for the competition. If you want to be added or removed from this group, just let the Big Year organizers know and we’ll be happy to assist you!


Download Your Copy of the 2012 GGNP
Endangered Species Big Year Checklist

Contact:
Elizabeth Sorrell (212) 979-3185
Kaberi Kar Gupta (559) 357-3157
Mira Manickam (609) 356-3908
Brent Plater (415) 572-6989
John C. Robinson (707) 688-2848
Ian Signer (917) 843-2759

Five California Environmentalists Singled Out for Leadership
Honorees Receive Audubon/Toyota TogetherGreen Fellowships

New York, NY, November 16, 2011 – Five California residents are the recipients of a national fellowship that will enable them to help build on conservation work in the state.

Supported by a conservation alliance between Audubon and Toyota, the TogetherGreen Fellowship offers specialized training in conservation planning and execution, the chance to work and share best practices with gifted conservation professionals, and assistance with project outreach and evaluation. Each Fellow receives $10,000 towards a community-focused project to engage local residents in conserving land, water and energy, and contributing to greater environmental health.

Five of this year’s 40 TogetherGreen fellows include:

  • Brent Plater, Executive Director, Wild Equity Institute
    With the help of his TogetherGreen Fellowship, Plater will expand upon the Golden Gate National Parks’ Endangered Species Big Year, a program he founded in 2008 that created a race against time to see and help save each of the 36 endangered and threatened species found within the Parks. This year’s Big Year will teach valuable job and naturalist skills to participants in a group setting, with a focus on underserved youth, a group he is passionate about reaching and with whom he has already seen success in the program.
  • Kaberi Kar Gupta, Board Member Fresno Audubon
    With her TogetherGreen Fellowship, Kaberi Kar Gupta will lead the Fresno Audubon Community Greenscape Program, a collaborative, volunteer-driven, residential landscape transformation process. Building on efforts already in place in Fresno, Kar Gupta will reach out to underrepresented homeowners as well as the urban upper socioeconomic class homeowners, landscape architects, nonprofit organizations, institutional policy makers and other community members to engage them in comprehensive water wise yard landscape management through focus groups, informational workshops and residential greenscaping transformation workday events. Kar Gupta’s goal with the Community Greenscape Program is to build a dynamic and active coalition of local government, low income housing developers, community organizations, educational institutions, and environmental groups helping to create a more sustainable environment. Through this program, she will help homeowners install water conserving native plants in their yards, providing enhanced biodiversity and new habitat for birds.
  • Mira Manickam, Field Science Educator, Headlands Institute
    As a TogetherGreen Fellow, Manickam will launch a program called “Green Team” targeted at-risk youth Oakland who have faced homelessness, addiction, incarceration, unstable homes, or who have few job prospects. In partnership with United Roots, the program will focus on job-skill training and planting projects in the community. Green Team will draw upon the Roots of Success Curriculum developed by the Environmental Literacy Curriculum Project to engage disenfranchised communities in the green economy. Training will also draw upon United Roots strengths in media production, and include workshops with other participants in the center to document through music and video the work of the Green Team. The program will host a yearly community planting celebration showcasing the Green Team’s planting work and media produced at the center around it.
  • John C. Robinson, President, On My Mountain
    Robinson will be utilizing his TogetherGreen Fellowship to continue his quest to share his knowledge and love of nature and birds with inner city youth. Robinson will create an environmental “Starter Kit” that will include, among other items, his book, Birding For Everyone. He will work closely with Audubon Centers and leverage connections with other conservation organizations and agencies to expand awareness and effectiveness of this program. Partners in Flight, which has a proven track record in engaging students in conservation projects, will be a key collaborator in supplying projects, educational materials, and conservation plans for youths to implement. This network, in combination with Robinson’s exposure in the media, could potentially broadcast his environmental message to several million homes.
  • Ian Signer, Associate Education Director, California Institute for Biodiversity
    For his Fellowship Project, Signer will work in his home state, connecting an underserved community to the conservation of habitat for the Lange’s metalmark, a local butterfly on the brink of extinction. He’ll be working close to where he grew up, in Eastern Contra Costa County (East County), an economically depressed region founded on coal mining in the late 1800s. Industries such as PG&E and DOW Chemical continue to be important, where they employ much of the diverse local population. Signer will host an ecology institute in collaboration with the East Bay Regional Park District, Delta Science Center, and California State Parks, focusing on empowering educators to contribute to local conservation through hands-on investigations and citizen science. He’ll focus on providing tools, training, mentorship, and formative evaluation that will help translate sometimes abstract conservation concepts into concrete community action.

“This Fellowship funding will provide Oakland teens with a fresh approach to nature, creating an empowering and enriching experience and a long-lasting, culturally relevant point of reference for years to come.” said Manickam.

“The TogetherGreen fellowship is a perfect match for the Wild Equity Institute’s mission: to unite conservation and justice movements into a powerful force that builds a healthy and sustainable global community for all,” said Brent Plater, Executive Director of the Wild Equity Institute. “The grant will help us connect urban youth to the Golden Gate National Recreation Area’s environmental justice creation story and the biological richness of these lands.”

“California is a clear powerhouse of passionate individuals who want to make a difference in the health of our environment,” said Audubon President David Yarnold. “These Fellows have the passion and the skills to inspire others, exactly the kind of people the environmental community needs to tackle the huge challenges and opportunities confronting us.”

Fellowship recipients were chosen from a large pool of highly qualified individuals. All were required to have at least six years of experience in conservation, environmental education, policy, or related issues; a demonstrated passion for conservation and a proven track record of reaching previously underserved audiences. Applicants also need to express a desire to learn and grow. An advisory committee composed of conservation professionals and experts in environmental education, communications, outreach, and conservation planning made selections.

A complete list of the 2011 TogetherGreen Fellows can be found at www.TogetherGreen.org/fellows.

###

About TogetherGreen
Audubon and Toyota launched the five-year TogetherGreen initiative in 2008 to build the promise of a greener, healthier future through innovation, leadership and volunteerism. For more information, visit www.togethergreen.org.

About Audubon
Now in its second century, Audubon connects people with birds, nature and the environment that supports us all. Our national network of community-based nature centers, chapters, scientific, education, and advocacy programs engages millions of people from all walks of life in conservation action to protect and restore the natural world. Visit Audubon online at www.audubon.org.

About Toyota
Toyota (NYSE: TM) established operations in the United States in 1957 and currently operates 10 manufacturing plants, including one under construction. Toyota directly employs nearly 30,000 people in the U.S. and its investment here is currently valued at more than $18 billion, including sales and manufacturing operations, research and development, financial services and design.

Toyota is committed to being a good corporate citizen in the communities where it does business and believes in supporting programs with long-term sustainable results. Toyota supports numerous organizations across the country, focusing on education, the environment and safety. Since 1991, Toyota has contributed over half a billion dollars to philanthropic programs in the U.S. For more information on Toyota’s commitment to improving communities nationwide, visit http://www.toyota.com/community.

December 20, 2011

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contacts:

Brent Plater, Wild Equity Institute, (415) 572-6989
Adrienne Bloch, Communities for a Better Environment, (510) 302-0430 x16
Jonathan Evans, Center for Biological Diversity, (415) 436-9682 x318

Lawsuit Launched Challenging Massive Power Plant Expansion in Northern California

Emissions Threaten Public Health, Critically Endangered Butterfly

ANTIOCH, Calif.—The Wild Equity Institute, Communities for a Better Environment, and the Center for Biological Diversity today filed formal notices of intent to sue the California Energy Commission, the Environmental Protection Agency and several power plant owners and operators for authorizing, constructing, and operating four power plants in Antioch and Oakley, California. The power plants’ emissions will pollute nearby communities, worsen the global climate crisis and threaten the survival of the Bay Area’s most critically imperiled butterfly.

“When shortcuts are taken with environmental health, disadvantaged communities and wildlife often suffer the most,” said Brent Plater, executive director of the Wild Equity Institute. “Today’s action will help us create a healthier environment for people and for the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth.”


Gateway Generating Station is one of four power plants approved
to operate near the Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge.

In the past several years, the California Energy Commission has authorized three new power plants within one mile of the existing Contra Costa County Power Plant in Antioch, Calif. These approvals would leave Antioch with one of the largest concentrations of power plant emissions in the Bay Area. While the energy will be distributed to San Francisco and other urban areas, the concentrated emissions will threaten public health in nearby communities and push the Lange’s metalmark butterfly, whose last wild habitats will be partially surrounded by power plants, closer than ever to extinction.

“This small area houses a disproportionately large number of power plants, each of which emits greenhouse gases and pollutants that are toxic both to the people who live, work and go to school near the plants, and the surrounding environment,” said Maya Golden-Krasner, an attorney at Communities for a Better Environment.

The groups are challenging these operations under the Clean Air Act and the Endangered Species Act. Under the Clean Air Act, power plants that initiate construction after July 1, 2011 must comply with regulations governing greenhouse gases. But two of the proposed power plants, Marsh Landing and Oakley generating stations, have never complied with these greenhouse gas regulations. The lawsuit will force these power plants to comply with greenhouse gas regulations before they are authorized to operate.

“The Lange’s metalmark butterfly is a Bay Area jewel that’s already perilously close to extinction,” said Jonathan Evans, toxics and endangered species campaign director of the Center for Biological Diversity. “Pollution from these power plants will push the metalmark over the edge, leaving us with the very real possibility that this rare and remarkable butterfly could disappear forever.”

Under the Endangered Species Act, the groups assert that the proposed Marsh Landing and Oakley generating stations—along with the existing Contra Costa County and Gateway generating stations—are emitting pollutants that are reasonably certain to kill the Lange’s metalmark butterfly. Under these circumstances, the power plants must obtain permits before operating, and at least one power plant will be required to consult with expert agencies about their emission levels before the permit can be obtained.

“For too long pollution from power plants has threatened local communities and the butterfly’s very survival,” said Plater. “It’s time for our energy infrastructure to become part of the solution, and the best way to do that is through the Clean Air Act and the Endangered Species Act, our nation’s best defense for people, plants and animals on the brink of extinction.”

Background on the Lange’s metalmark butterfly:

The Lange’s metalmark butterfly is a brightly colored, fragile, and highly endangered butterfly that has been protected by the federal Endangered Species Act since 1976. The species is endemic to the Antioch Dunes in Contra Costa County: a relict desert landscape left behind as California’s prehistoric deserts retreated from the Bay Area 140,000 years ago. Because of the Antioch Dunes’ isolation, many species found in the dunes are unique and very rare.


Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly

The sole food plant for the Lange’s caterpillar is the naked-stemmed buckwheat, a native plant adapted to survive in the nutrient-poor soils found in the Antioch Dunes. The butterfly’s population is dependent on this plant but nitrogen emissions from the power plants are changing the chemical composition of the dune soil, and invasive weeds are now so common that they are crowding out the dune’s indigenous flora and fauna. The U.S, Fish and Wildlife Service has already determined that nitrogen emissions from power plants near the dunes are “virtually certain” to cause harm to endangered species.

Visit wildequity.org for more information about our campaign to protect Antioch.

The Wild Equity Institute is building a healthy and sustainable global community for people
and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth.

https://www.wildequity.org/

###

As our second full year draws to a close, the Wild Equity Institute has had several remarkable successes. And people are noticing. Over 70 different media outlets covered our work in 2011, including a cover story in the San Francisco Chronicle, an appearance on KQED’s Forum with Michael Krasny, and features in the New York Times and Los Angeles Times.

We’ve also built a sound financial model with growing foundation support. This year Patagonia awarded us the San Francisco store’s Voice Your Choice grand prize, and our executive director was one of five Californian’s to receive a TogetherGreen fellowship for environmental leadership.

As remarkable as our second year has been, our work is not complete: and we need your support to continue. If you’ve been waiting to see if our theory of change can work, I think our recent results will inspire you to join now, just as media outlets and foundations have been compelled to cover and fund our efforts. I want you to become a Wild Equity Institute member today: with you standing with us, 2012 will bring more campaign victories that build a stronger environmental movement for all.

The Wild Equity Institute believes we can achieve extraordinary environmental victories while building a larger, more resilient environmental movement. Throughout 2011, we implemented this theory by uniting grassroots conservation and environmental justice groups in campaigns that build a healthy and sustainable global community for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth. When you contribute to our work you achieve measurable environmental gains on the ground: and you ensure that our movement grows so that the scale of our efforts can match the size of the threats facing our communities, our landscapes, and the Earth.

The Wild Equity Institute is a nimble, efficient organization with a precise vision and the skills needed to get the job done right. We utilize our funds with great thrift. But movements are not defined by the effectiveness of organizations. They are defined by the inspiration, the passion, the commitment of the people these organizations serve.

This is why we need you to join our movement today with the most generous gift you can provide. Our memberships start at $35 annually, and every dollar is invested into campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live.

Thank you for all your support!

Become a Member of the Wild Equity Institute.

  • Become a member now with a credit card or a PayPal account:
  • Download a membership form and mail it to: Wild Equity Institute PO Box 191695 San Francisco, CA 94119

Become a Monthly Donor.

The best way to sustain our organization is to become a monthly donor. Monthly donations allow us to spend less time fundraising and more time building a healthy and sustainable community for all.

Go to our donate page and fill-out the form to become a monthly donor.

Give a Gift Membership.

What could be more satisfying than sharing our campaigns with someone you love? Now you can by giving a Wild Equity Institute gift membership. Just download and fill-out this form and mail it with your payment to:

Wild Equity Institute
PO Box 191695
San Francisco, CA 94119

Double Your Impact With Matching Gifts.

Many employers, large or small, will match their employees’ charitable contributions — some double or triple your gift! Whatever the program your company may have, there’s never any additional cost to you. Typically, all that is required is filling out an additional form and either sending it to WEI or submitting it directly to your employer. Contact your human resources department to see if your employer provides this benefit. If you need it, our Federal Identification Number is 27-0984775.

1% for the Planet.

The Wild Equity Institute is an approved 1% for the Planet partner. Companies who participate in this program can give 1% of sales or more to the Wild Equity Institute while satisfying the programs giving requirements. To join the program, visit the 1% for the Planet website. If you are already a member, you can donate directly to the Wild Equity Institute today.

Go Solar, Help WEI.

The Wild Equity Institute is proud to offer a new fundraising partnership with Sungevity, a solar-leasing company founded by long-time environmental activists.

For a limited time, when Wild Equity Institute members like you sign-up for a new, zero-down solar lease from Sungevity, the company will donate $500 to the Wild Equity Institute, while giving you an additional $500. That’s what we call a win-win!

To take advantage of this limited-time opportunity, all you need to do is visit the Wild Equity Institute’s special landing page on Sungevity’s website, enter your street address and answer a few simple questions to get your free installation iQuote.

For more information about this program, click here.

Volunteer.

The Wild Equity Institute always makes room for dedicated people who want to make a difference with their time. Our volunteers do everything from data entry to tabling to writing press releases to helping craft legal arguments. If you have some time to help out, contact us at info@wildequity.org and we’ll try and match your interest to our needs while meeting your schedule.

Donate Office Supplies and Furniture.

We could also use help outfitting our new office. Recycled paper, envelopes, and general office supplies are always welcome. We could also use:

  • Bookshelves
  • Working computers with wireless networking capabilities
  • Filing cabinets

If you have any supplies to donate, contact us and we’ll be happy to arrange a pick-up.

Thanks again for all you do for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth! View our privacy policy.

Lets have fun at the Green Festival with the Sierra Club.

Saturday and Sunday, November 12th & 13th
We will be outreaching for Restore Sharp Park.
You can help with tabling and/or gathering signatures while walking around the festival.
Great chance to see the festival and enjoy some of the workshops.

SF Concourse Exhibition Center
635 8th Street (at Brannan), San Francisco

Saturday, November 12th, 10am-7pm
Sunday, November 13th, 11am-6pm

Meet at the Sierra Club table to volunteer – Volunteering shifts are flexible, whatever time you can offer is appreciated.
Contact Michelle Myers at 415 646-6930 to volunteer and for free entry tickets (need a ticket to enter).

Sunday, November 13, 2011, 9:00am-1:00pm: Visit the Wild Equity Institute table at Sharp Park. At 12pm there will be a short walking tour discussing the concerns and solutions to the environmental and recreational problems associated with the golf course. Meet at the WEI Table.

The Wild Equity Institute table will be near Sharp Park Beach, just south of 2201 Beach Boulevard or on the trail in between Laguna Salada and the beach, Pacifica, CA 94044

The Surfrider Foundation, San Mateo County Chapter will also be conducting a beach cleanup at Sharp Park, 9am-noon. Please help clean our beaches.


Artwork by Liam O’Brien

The Wild Equity Institute’s lawsuit to protect the Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly was a hot topic with Bay Area media outlets this week, covered by The Bay Citizen, CBS 5, and the Contra Costa Times. But our favorite story was left on our voicemail: by someone with a decidedly different point of view.

This message has the hallmarks of an all-time classic. It’s anonymous, inaccurate, breathlessly angry, and masterfully on message: in under thirty seconds it gets all the talk radio insults in. This guy should be giving clinics.

Listen to the message for the full effect, but here’s the text:

Hey dummies! Hey environmental wackos! Why don’t you pay attention to the volcanoes, and the geysers that are erupting out of the ground and polluting our air, not the people, nor the insects that ruin the crops in the state of California. LEAVE THOSE DAMN BUTTERFLIES ALONE AND LET THEM DIE!! If you don’t know about butterflies they destroy crops! READ YOUR INFORMATION YOU COMMUNISTS BASTARDS!!

Never mind that the Lange’s Metalmark Butterfly’s only host plant is the naked-stem buckwheat, Eriogonum nudum var. auriculatum, which as far as we know has never been a crop plant in all of human history!

Deranged voicemails, death threats, and hateful scribes comes with the territory: at least once a month someone who’s ox has been gored tries to intimidate us. But the Wild Equity Institute thrives on this bulletin-board material: it strengthens our resolve to fight for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth.

For many years the GGNRA has illicitly permitted off-leash dog walking in many locations. When park visitorship and the number of dogs were low, this had little impact. But today the GGNRA receives millions of visitors annually and San Francisco purportedly now has more dogs than kids. This has led to increasing numbers of negative impacts in the park: dogs are being lost, injured, and killed; people and horses are being bitten and attacked; endangered wildlife are put at risk; and it has even impacted the diversity of the GGNRA’s users.

The GGNRA’s ad hoc off-leash policy is no longer tenable. The GGNRA is currently reviewing comments on a Draft Environmental Impact Statement that discusses pet management in the Park. The outcome of this environmental impact assessment process will dictate how the park is managed for many years.

We all love our dogs. The question facing us all is whether we love each other enough to recognize that how we recreate with our dogs at the GGNRA has impacts on other people and other forms of life. The Wild Equity Institute believes that the GGNRA has not struck a proper balance with its draft document, because it fails to ensure that off-leash dogs remain safe in the park.

The best way to ensure dogs remain safe while roaming off-leash is to ensure that any off-leash area is enclosed with a physical boundary. These boundaries could be post-and-cable fences or natural features. But if a physical boundary cannot be placed around a specific off-leash area, than that area should not be an official off-leash area: it is simply too risky for our dogs.

The following Frequently Asked Questions discusses the GGNRA’s proposal and the Wild Equity Institute’s position on pet management at the GGNRA. It is based on documents created by Golden Gate Audubon Society, the Sierra Club’s San Francisco Bay Area Chapter, the San Francisco League of Conservation Voters, the California Native Plant Society’s Yerba Buena Chapter, Nature in the City, the National Parks Conservation Association, San Francisco Tomorrow, and the Wild Equity Institute. You can download hard copies of these documents here.

Lets have fun at the Green Festival with the Sierra Club.

Saturday and Sunday, November 12th & 13th
We will be outreaching for Restore Sharp Park.
You can help with tabling and/or gathering signatures while walking around the festival.
Great chance to see the festival and enjoy some of the workshops.

SF Concourse Exhibition Center
635 8th Street (at Brannan), San Francisco

Saturday, November 12th, 10am-7pm
Sunday, November 13th, 11am-6pm

Meet at the Sierra Club table to volunteer – Volunteering shifts are flexible, whatever time you can offer is appreciated.
Contact Michelle Myers at 415 646-6930 to volunteer and for free entry tickets (need a ticket to enter).

Join the Wild Equity Institute for a fun-filled and colorful day at Sunday Streets. Visit our table and learn about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live. We are working on campaigns to help end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

There will be fun activities.

The Sunday Streets Mission Route: Valencia Street (Between Duboce Avenue & 24th Street) and 24th Street (Between Valencia Street & Hampshire Street).

To see a more detailed map of Sunday Streets, go to: Sunday Streets

The Wild Equity Institute table location: On Valencia Street either at 18th Street or 23rd Street, Mission District.

Shaping San Francisco/CounterPULSE hosts a discussion about endangered species campaigning with Todd Gilens, creator of the Endangered Buses art project; Brent Plater, Executive Director of the Wild Equity Institute; and Jessie Raeder of the Tuolomne River Trust. You’ll learn about some of the most pressing issues facing San Francisco’s local endangered species, and how you can become part of the solution and help these species thrive.

Join the Wild Equity Institute for a fun-filled and colorful day at Sunday Streets. Visit our table and learn about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live. We are working on campaigns to help end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

There will be fun activities.

The Sunday Streets Western Addition will be located on the following streets: Fillmore Street between Geary and Fulton Street, Fulton Street between Fillmore and Baker, and parts of Grove, Baker and Central near the Panhandle.
To see a more detailed map of Sunday Streets, go to: Sunday Streets

The Wild Equity Institute table location: The intersection of Baker Street and Grove Street.

  • September 14, 2011, 7:30 p.m.—Shaping San Francisco: Endangered Species Campaigning: Shaping San Francisco/CounterPULSE hosts a discussion about endangered species campaigning with Todd Gilens, creator of the Endangered Buses art project; Brent Plater, Executive Director of the Wild Equity Institute; and Jessie Raeder of the Tuolomne River Trust. You’ll learn about some of the most pressing issues facing San Francisco’s local endangered species, and how you can become part of the solution and help these species thrive. RSVP for the event here.


Todd Gilens Endangered Buses Project.

Sunday Streets Western Addition is located on the following streets: Fillmore Street between Geary and Fulton Street, Fulton Street between Fillmore and Baker, and parts of Grove, Baker and Central near the Panhandle. See Sunday Streets for a more detailed map.

At the Wild Equity Institute, we are working to build a better world based on a shared moral foundation: equity, and the desire to create a more just and fair world. Bridging moral foundations and unifying our moral concerns was a theme of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.‘s work. This short video of Dr. King’s message of unity inspires us forty years later to keep building a healthy and sustainable global community for all.

In this Wild Equity Institute update from Trinidad, we’ve got a cute video for you of a little bird with a big surprise. Enjoy!

Some of you may know that the Wild Equity Institute is helping draft new regulations to protect leatherback sea turtles in Trinidad and Tobago, the twin island nation in the Caribbean off the coast of Venezuela. Trinidad has the 2nd largest nesting colony of leatherback sea turtles on Earth, and WEI is helping ensure that the population remains robust.

But the ways our lifestyles impact the leatherback sometimes confound even the most elegantly drafted rules. On April 27, 2010, a nesting leatherback sea turtle was digging her nest at Matura Beach in Trinidad when a wholly unnatural sound came from her nesting hole. The turtle had struck a plastic bottle four feet under the sand, jeopardizing her nesting attempt.

This was particularly disheartening because hundreds of volunteers had recently scoured the beach picking-up thousands of pieces of plastic trash to prepare the beach for turtle nesting season. This particular bottle may have been buried long ago, so the volunteers couldn’t have found it.

Fortunately quick action by WEI collaborators at Nature Seekers removed the bottle and the turtle was able to complete its nesting cycle.

Our plastic trash ends up in the darnedest places, and often reaches new territory before our regulations do. WEI isn’t one to normally sweat the small stuff, but this one is a no brainer: kick the plastic habit and use reusable cups and bags. Future generations of leatherback sea turtles are counting on it.

Sunday, August 14, 2011, 11:00am – 4:00pm: Come visit the Wild Equity Institute table at Sunday Streets Tenderloin/Civic Center.

Join the Wild Equity Institute for a fun-filled and colorful day at Sunday Streets. Visit our table and learn about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live. We are working on campaigns to help end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

There will be face painting and other fun activities.

The Sunday Streets Tenderlion/Civic Center route: Around Civic Center Plaza, between Polk and Jones on Golden Gate, Ellis and O’Farrell

The Wild Equity Institute table will be at Grove Street and Larkin.

To see a more detailed map of Sunday Streets, go to: Sunday Streets

Saturday, August 6, 2011, 11:00am – 4:00pm: Come visit the Wild Equity Institute table at the Noriega Street Food Fair.

Join the Wild Equity Institute for a fun-filled and colorful day at the Noriega Street Food Fair. Visit our table and learn about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live. We are working on campaigns to help end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

There will be face painting and other fun activities.

The Noriega Street Food Fair is on Noriega Street between 31st & 33rd Avenues.

The Wild Equity Institute table will be on Noriega Street between 31st & 32nd Avenues.

For more details about the Noriega Street Food Fair

Noriega Street between 31st & 33rd Avenues, San Francisco, CA, 94122. Sunset District

Sunday, July 10, 2011, 11:00am – 4:00pm: Come visit the Wild Equity Institute table at Sunday Streets, along the Great Highway Route.

Join the Wild Equity Institute for a fun-filled and colorful day at Sunday Streets. Visit our table and learn about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live. We are working on campaigns to help end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

There will be face painting and other fun activities.

The Sunday Streets Great Highway Route: 6th Ave. and JFK Drive at Bernice Rogers to Great Highway at Sloat, San Francisco, CA

The Wild Equity Institute table will be on Martin Luther King Jr Drive, between Lincoln Way and S. Fork Drive, in the southwest end of Golden Gate Park.

To see a more detailed map of Sunday Streets, go to: Sunday Streets

Sunday, June 12, 2011, 11:00am – 4:00pm: Come visit the Wild Equity Institute table at Sunday Streets, along the Bayview/Dogpatch/Potrero Route

The Wild Equity Institute will be tabling and informing the public about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live, such as how we are working to end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

The Sunday Streets: Bayview/Dogpatch/Potrero Route will mainly be along 3rd Street, San Francisco

The Wild Equity institute table will be on 3rd street at 24th Street at or near the Warm Water Cove Area.

To see a more detailed map of Sunday Streets, go to: Sunday Streets

The Sunday Streets: Bayview/Dogpatch/Potrero Route will mainly be along 3rd Street, San Francisco
The Wild Equity institute table will be on 3rd street at 24th Street, San Francisco, CA

For a more detailed map of the exact route, please go to:
Sunday Streets: Bayview/Dogpatch/Potrero Route
Sunday Streets

The apparent location of the shrub.

Saturday, May 14, 2011
9:00pm-1:30am
Grant & Green Saloon
1371 Grant Ave
San Francisco, CA 94133
(between Green St & Vallejo St)
North Beach/Telegraph Hill neighborhoods

Enjoy music by:
The New Thoreaus
Sufis
The Great Sand Waste

Come to the Grant & Green Saloon for an evening of great music, smooth libations, and good company to support the Wild Equity Institute, a San Francisco-based non-profit organization building a healthy and sustainable global community for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth! No cover, but donations are accepted, 25% of the bar goes to WEI. Sorry, ages 21+ only. Inebriation not recommended, don’t drink and drive, so bring a straight-edge friend or prep for a taxi ride.

For more information contact: 415-349-5787 or info@wildequity.org

Sunday, May 8, 2011, 11:00am – 4:00pm: Come visit the Wild Equity Institute table at Sunday Streets, along the Mission Route.

The Wild Equity Institute will be tabling and informing the public about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live, such as how we are working to end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

The Sunday Streets Mission Route: Valencia Street (Between Duboce Avenue & 24th Street) and 24th Street (Between Valencia Street & Hampshire Street).

To see a more detailed map of Sunday Streets, go to: Sunday Streets

RSVP at wildequity.org

Saturday, May 14, 2011
9:00pm-1:30am
Grant & Green Saloon
1371 Grant Ave
San Francisco, CA 94133
(between Green St & Vallejo St)
North Beach/Telegraph Hill neighborhoods

Enjoy music by:
The New Thoreaus
Sufis
The Great Sand Waste

Come to the Grant & Green Saloon for an evening of great music, smooth libations, and good company to support the Wild Equity Institute, a San Francisco-based non-profit organization building a healthy and sustainable global community for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth! No cover, but donations are accepted, and 25% of the bar goes to WEI.

Sorry, ages 21+ only. Inebriation not recommended. Don’t drink and drive: so bring a straight-edge friend or prep for a taxi ride.

For more information contact the Wild Equity Institute at 415-349-5787 or info@wildequity.org.

399 4th Street
San Francisco, CA 94107

Directions:

By Public Transit:
Check 511.org

From the North Bay:
Take Golden Gate Bridge to San Francisco
Get onto 101 Lombard St.(101 turns into Lombard St.)
Go Right on Van Ness Ave
Turn Left onto Broadway
Turn Right into Stockton St.
Go across Market St, making a slight left turn onto 4th Street
Go approximately 0.4 miles
The store is on the left corner of 4th St and Harrison

From the South Bay:
Take 101 North to San Francisco
Merge onto I-280 N towards Port of SF
Take the Sixth Street Exit
Stay straight onto 6th St.
Turn Right onto Folsom
Turn Right onto 4th Street
The store is on the left corner of 4th St and Harrison

From the East Bay:
Take I-80 W to Bay Bridge
After crossing Bay Bridge take the 5th St exit on the left
Make a slight Right onto 5th street
Turn Right onto Folsom
Turn Right onto 4th Street
The store is on the left corner of 4th St and Harrison

The people have spoken: and they have selected the Wild Equity Institute to receive Patagonia San Francisco’s $2,500 grand prize!

The store’s third annual “Voice Your Choice” campaign invited Patagonia’s shoppers to cast votes and determine how the store should distribute $5,000 in grant money to three local environmental organizations. The Wild Equity Institute was awarded $2,500, and the second- and third-place organizations received $1,500 and $1,000 respectively.

“We are grateful to Patagonia San Francisco for selecting us for the program, and honored that so many of its customers support our work,” said Brent Plater, Executive Director of the Wild Equity Institute. “Patagonia has a rich tradition of supporting cutting-edge environmental organizations, and we’ll continue that tradition by uniting the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in shared campaigns that create a more equitable world for all.”


Volunteers John Bowie, Barbara Beth, and Courtney Rose Rump table at Patagonia San Francisco.

In addition to the Wild Equity Institute, San Francisco Surfrider and TransForm competed in the Voice Your Choice program. Votes were accepted at the store in San Francisco from March 10 through March 24. Participants could cast one vote per store per visit. No purchase was necessary. At the close of voting, the Wild Equity Institute was announced as the grand prize winner, with San Francisco Surfrider and TransForm announced as the runner-up and third place winners, respectively.

Patagonia retail stores in 27 communities throughout the country particiapted in the Voice Your Choice program as part of the company’s support for environmental organizations. Patagonia’s Environmental Grants Program has generated more than $38 million in grants since 1985 by donating 1% of annual sales to environmental organizations worldwide.

The Wild Equity Institute unites the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in shared campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live. Special thanks to Barbara Beth, John Bowie, and Courtney Rose Rump for helping reach Patagonia’s customers during our two days of tabling at the San Francisco store.

Wild Equity Institute’s helping out on Earth Day!

On April 16th, 2011, Pacifica Beach Coalition is holding their annual Earth day Beach Clean-Up and celebration. John Bowie, a WEI intern, will be a site leader for the Esplanade Beach/Manor area, and is looking for volunteers to help with the clean-up. Esplanade Beach always needs care, and the Beach Coalition is helping us out by sharing their event for tabling space. We will be meeting at 8:45AM in the Manor Safeway Parking Lot on April 16th.

The clean-up goes from 9:00-11:30AM, after which we will gather in Linda Mar for a massive Earth Day celebration where there will be bands, speakers, and other attractions. Wild Equity will be hosting a table for the Restore Sharp Park campaign, and could use help manning the table to petition the crowd.

Please help and volunteer for Earth Day Clean-up and tabling at the event. Contact johnbowie77@gmail.com if you are interested, or follow the link below to register for the site clean-up.

Earth Day Registration

Pacifica Beach Coalition
http://www.pacificabeachcoalition.org/

Sunday, April 10, 2011, 11:00am – 4:00pm: Come visit the Wild Equity Institute table at Sunday Streets, along the Great Highway Route.

The Wild Equity Institute will be tabling and informing the public about our efforts to unite the grassroots conservation and environmental justice movements in campaigns that redress inequity, both across our human communities and towards the lands in which we live, such as how we are working to end some of the City’s wasteful spending, create a better public park, restore wetlands and save the endangered San Francisco garter snake and the threatened California red-legged frog at Sharp Park.

The Sunday Streets Great Highway Route: 6th Ave. and JFK Drive at Bernice Rogers to Great Highway at Sloat, San Francisco, CA
The Wild Equity Institute table will be on Martin Luther King Jr Drive, between Lincoln Way and S. Fork Drive, in the west end of Golden Gate Park.

To see a more detailed map of Sunday Streets, go to: Sunday Streets

The classic beauty, the troubled slugger, and the Wild Equity Institute’s campaign to restore Sharp Park were all on the front page of the San Francisco chronicle on Thursday, March 24, 2011.
Click here to see a .pdf of the article in today’s San Francisco Chronicle.

Now send a letter to the editor
thanking the paper for running this important story. Remind all San Franciscans that all the available evidence indicates that Sharp Park was once a backbarrier fresh to brackish lagoon, not a saline tidal lagoon as the proponents of the status quo allege in this article. That means we can restore the natural system while preserving endangered species at Sharp Park. In the process we’ll build a better public park with recreation opportunities everyone can enjoy.

 

For a limited time you can help the Wild Equity Institute earn $2,500: simply by shopping at Patagonia’s San Francisco store! Just visit Patagonia San Francisco and cast your ballot for Wild Equity during Patagonia’s Voice Your Choice program. You may only vote once per visit to the store during the Voice Your Choice voting period.

The Wild Equity Institute is one of three local organizations selected to participate in Patagonia’s Voice Your Choice program this year, a great honor for our nascent group. Through this program WEI is competing to win up to $2,500: we take home the grand prize if we have the most supporters visit the Patagonia San Francisco store and cast a ballot for the Wild Equity Institute. The second and third place organizations receive consolation prizes.

You can vote at any time during the Voice Your Choice program. We’ll be tabling at the store on March 13 and March 19, 2011 to drum-up support for our work restoring Sharp Park, defending San Francisco Bay from sea level rise, and protecting equitable access to our public parks. Stop by and see us, cast your ballot, and give thanks to Patagonia for its exceptional generosity to people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth!

For a limited time you can help the Wild Equity Institute earn $2,500: simply by shopping at Patagonia’s San Francisco store! Just visit Patagonia San Francisco and cast your ballot for Wild Equity during Patagonia’s Voice Your Choice program. You may only vote once per visit to the store during the Voice Your Choice voting period.

The Wild Equity Institute is one of three local organizations selected to participate in Patagonia’s Voice Your Choice program this year, a great honor for our nascent group. Through this program WEI is competing to win up to $2,500: we take home the grand prize if we have the most supporters visit the Patagonia San Francisco store and cast a ballot for the Wild Equity Institute. The second and third place organizations receive consolation prizes.

You can vote at any time during the Voice Your Choice program. We’ll be tabling at the store on March 13 and March 19, 2011 to drum-up support for our work restoring Sharp Park, defending San Francisco Bay from sea level rise, and protecting equitable access to our public parks. Stop by and see us, cast your ballot, and give thanks to Patagonia for its exceptional generosity to people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth!

You can help the Wild Equity Institute earn $2,500: simply by shopping at Patagonia’s San Francisco store! Just visit Patagonia San Francisco from March 10 through March 31 and cast your ballot for Wild Equity during Patagonia’s Voice Your Choice program.

The Voice Your Choice program encourages Patagonia customers to become better informed and more involved with environmental work in their communities. That’s why Wild Equity is such a great match for the program: our work helps build community every day by engaging people to care for each other and for other forms of life.

WEI is one of three local organizations selected to participate in Patagonia’s Voice Your Choice program this year, a great honor for our nascent group. Through this program WEI is competing to win up to $2,500: we take home the grand prize if we have the most supporters visit the Patagonia San Francisco store and cast a ballot for the Wild Equity Institute. The second and third place organizations receive $1,500 and $1,000, respectively.

We’ll be tabling at the store on March 13 and March 19 from noon until 4pm to drum-up support for our work restoring Sharp Park, defending San Francisco Bay from sea level rise, and protecting equitable access to our public parks.


Patagonia’s San Francisco store is located at 770 North Point, San Francisco, CA 94109.
Click here for driving directions.

Stop by and see us, cast your ballot, and give thanks to Patagonia for its exceptional generosity to people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth! You can cast your vote even if we aren’t there, but you may only vote once per visit to the store during the voting period. Of course, multiple visits to the store by Wild Equity supporters are encouraged!

The Wild Equity Institute’s Executive Director Brent Plater received a Fulbright Scholar grant to study leatherback sea turtle conservation in Trinidad and Tobago in 2010. While he was there, nearly 20 Bay Area conservationists visited to explore the country, including Eddie Bartley and Noreen Weeden of San Francisco Nature Trip. Eddie and Brent have put together this slide show of the experience, documenting the amazing wildlife, incredible culture, and heart-wrenching problems in T&T—and the inspiring people that are doing something about it.


Nesting Leatherback Sea Turtle, Trinidad & Tobago

This Thursday, February 17 at 7pm, the Wild Equity Institute’s Executive Director will present a slideshow with Eddie Bartley of Nature Trip about Brent’s Fulbright Scholar experience in Trinidad and Tobago. The presentation will be at the First Unitarian Universalist Church in San Francisco: hope to see you there!

  • Birding, Turtling, & Conserving Trinidad & Tobago, Thursday, February 17, 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.: The Wild Equity Institute’s Executive Director Brent Plater received a Fulbright Scholar grant to study leatherback sea turtle conservation in Trinidad and Tobago in 2010. While he was there, nearly 20 Bay Area conservationists visited to explore the country, including Eddie Bartley and Noreen Weeden of San Francisco Nature Trip. Eddie and Brent have put together this slide show of the experience, documenting the amazing wildlife, incredible culture, and heart-wrenching problems in T&T—and the inspiring people that are doing something about it. Held at the First Unitarian Universalist Church in San Francisco. Admission is free.


Nesting Leatherback Sea Turtle, Trinidad & Tobago

Thanks to the 75+ supporters of the Wild Equity Institute and our suite mates, Restore Hetch Hethcy, that helped warm our office and bring the 2010 GGNP Endangered Species Big Year to a close.


Members enjoyed delicious foods and wines generously donated by
Arizmendi Bakery and Muir-Hanna Vineyards

We spent some time honoring our Big Year winners: Steve Price and Liam O’Brien were once again crowned co-champions, while Molly Latimer won a free pair of binoculars from REI’s San Francisco Store for being the top youth competitor. Kate and Gofi Gelles rounded out the top five finishers in the Big Year competition. Congratulations to you all!

And we couldn’t have done it without the support of Barbara Beth, who received special acknowledgement as the Wild Equity Institute’s Volunteer of the Year for 2010!


Barbara Beth and Brent Plater

Thanks to everyone who came out and celebrated with us. Here’s to a big 2011!

We’ve opened our first office, and we want to celebrate with you!

Our new office, furnished entirely with salvaged, donated, and recycled materials, is open for business! We’re celebrating with our suite-mates, Restore Hetch Hetchy, on January 27 from 5-7pm. Come by for some drinks and snacks: and to see who won the Golden Gate National Parks Endangered Species Big Year!

Please RSVP to info@wildequity.org.

Throughout 2010, the Wild Equity Institute is building 2,000 members at a special $10 rate. It is an incredible—but essential—bargain: we offer free programs that build a healthy and sustainable global community for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth, but we can’t do it without you. Will you become a member by making a financial contribution today on-line or through the mail? Thanks for your support!

We didn’t get lucky in our search for the Golden Gate Parks’ endangered sea creatures earlier in the month, so we’re heading out to look for them again! We’ll have some of the Bay Area’s greatest naturalists on hand to help you find these endangered species and identify the rest of the rich life around you. Hope to see you outside!

Wondering how to get started with your Endangered Species Big Year? Need tips on how to win prizes or see or save specific species? We are now offering personalized coaching from endangered species experts from around the Bay! If you join the Wild Equity Institute with a donation of $35 or more, you will receive free coaching and strategy sessions from experts to help you meet your goals for the 2010 Endangered Species Big Year. Sign-up today and we’ll get you started with personalized tips that will get you outside and saving species right away!

And don’t forget about our Coach’s Corner where you can find free tips on how to compete and win prizes in the Big Year from our experts.

We can’t thank you enough for supporting our campaigns to build a more equitable world for people and the plants and animals that accompany us on Earth. In honor of the year 2010, our first full year in operation, the Wild Equity Institute is building 10 founding supporters who will donate $2,000 each and 2000 members who will donate $10 each to help us fulfill our mission. And for those of you looking for a level of support that is just right, we’re rounding out our campaign by building 100 supporters who will contribute $100 each to WEI. If you are interested in becoming a founding supporter, a member, or contributing to our work at any level please make a contribution today and help our programs thrive!

We’ve added new functionality to our website: now you can share Wild Equity Institute news clips with your friends on Facebook with a simple mouse click, and you can do the same every time you enter an action item or species sighting for the GGNP Endangered Species Big Year! Try it out and let us know what you think!

Over a dozen GGNP Endangered Species Big Year competitors won a subscription to Bay Nature magazine last month by entering their first action item or endangered species sighting on the competition’s website. Join the competition and be eligible to win more prizes and compete for the $1,000 grand prize!

We’ve got three great trips for you this week that will help you see and save our imperiled neighbors:

  • Spotted Owls After Dark. Sunday, February 14, 2010, 5:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m.: After hours at Muir Woods when no one is around, hear the water in the creek, the gentle drops of redwood seeds on tanoak leaves, and learn how protecting nesting northern spotted owl led to the National Park Service’s efforts to preserve the natural soundscape of Muir Woods. Bring a flashlight, dress in layers, and wear sturdy shoes. Heavy rain cancels the trip. Meet at Muir Woods National Monument Visitor Center. Park entrances fees apply, but the trip is free. Reservations required; click here or call 415-388-2596.

Artist Todd Gilens has implemented a fascinating new public art project that highlights the link between how we treat each other, and how we treat other forms of life.

The project is called Endangered Bus. Todd has placed photos of several imperiled species on San Francisco MUNI buses to highlight the similar challenges we face addressing these collective problems: saving endangered species on the one hand, and providing affordable, reliable public transit on the other.


Coho Salmon Endangered Bus


Salt Marsh Harvest Mouse Endangered Bus

You can interact with the project. Whenever you see an Endangered Bus in San Francisco, tweet your sighting with the #endangeredbus tag, or post photos on Flickr with an endangeredbus tag. The buses travel different routs every day, so keep your eyes peeled.

The Wild Equity Institute has partnered with Downtown High School in San Francisco to give students and endangered species a second chance at life.

“We’ve been inspired by the students at Downtown High School and the empathy they’ve shown toward each other and to other forms of life,” said Brent Plater, Executive Director of the Wild Equity Institute. “We’re grateful for the opportunity to help them succeed both in and out of the classroom.”

The joint project is called “Endangered Semester,” and it provides students who have not succeeded in traditional classrooms an opportunity to see 10 endangered species in the field, while taking 10 actions that help these species recover. It is a competitive event: as the students see and help save endangered species, they earn prizes that help their class succeed.


Endangered Semester Presentation at Downtown High School

On January 13, 2011, students completed their first trip to help see and save Coho Salmon at Muir Woods National Monument and Muir Beach. Although inclement weather made it difficult to spot salmon, the students marshaled on and planted 120 native plants along creek beds to help improve spawning habitat for the anadromous fish.


Downtown High School Students Restore Native Plants
Along a Tributary of Redwood Creek

In addition to Muir Woods, students will visit the Antioch Dunes National Wildlife Refuge and the Presidio of San Francisco this semester. During each visit students will be given opportunities to see imperiled wildlife, developing nature observation and field skills in the process. Students are also given diverse tasks to help these species recover, including restoring habitat, contacting public officials, and making healthy lifestyle choices.


Downtown High School Students Celebrate Restoration Work for Coho Salmon

The Endangered Semester was made possible by a generous gift from the California Wildlands Grassroots Fund of the Tides Foundation. Visit https://www.wildequity.org for more information about the project as the semester progresses.