BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Marin Conservation League - ECPv6.16.4.1//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Marin Conservation League
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Los_Angeles
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20250309T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20251102T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20260308T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20261101T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20270314T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20271107T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20280312T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20281105T090000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261021T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261021T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002517-1792576800-1792584000@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2026-10-21/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261104T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261104T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002563-1793786400-1793793600@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2026-11-04/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261112T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261112T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T190847Z
CREATED:20260626T185107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260626T190847Z
UID:10002609-1794493800-1794501000@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Parks and Open Space Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nParks and Open Space Committee\n3:00- 5:00 pm\nIn-person/Zoom hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcOmgrD4vG9XtnkUk-dxDuEZFSvAuGyhD \nJuly 9: Wildlife Monitoring and Management \nAt the July 9 meeting we will learn about two continually-evolving efforts to monitor and manage wildlife in the north bay. Both species\, tule elk and black bear\, play an important role in ecosystem function\, and both are occasionally in conflict with human communities. However\, with research\, thoughtful planning\, and a willingness to try new approaches\, we can find ways to live in balance with these species and the habitat they require. We will also have a discussion on the Bowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration released for public comment. \nTule Elk History\, Monitoring\, & Management at Point Reyes National Seashore \nDave Press\, Program Lead for Integrated Resources Management at Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS)\, will briefly review the history of tule elk since their reintroduction to PRNS\, describe tule elk monitoring strategies\, and focus on recent changes in tule elk management approaches. \nTule elk are one of three subspecies of elk native to California and the only California endemic elk species. By the mid-1800s\, tule elk populations had been severely reduced by hunting\, introduction of cattle\, and loss of habitat. Tule elk were thought to be extinct until a rancher found a small remnant herd on his land in 1874. All tule elk in California today\, roughly 6\,000\, are descendants of that small herd. \nTule elk were historically found on the grasslands of what is now PRNS and were grazers important for balancing the coastal prairie ecosystem. By the 1850s they had been extirpated from the peninsula. A small population of ten tule elk\, two bulls and eight cows\, were reintroduced to a fenced Tule Elk Reserve on Tomales Point in 1978. The PRNS tule elk population has grown significantly over the years\, though with annual fluctuations\, and has experienced challenges related to overpopulation in the Tule Elk Reserve\, disease\, and limited forage availability during dry years.  In 1999 a small group of elk was released in the Limantour area and established a free-ranging herd here as well as a subsequent free-ranging sub-herd at Drake’s Beach.  These free-ranging herds have continued to grow and shape the landscape. \nUnder the 2024 Tomales Point Area Plan and the 2025 revised General Management Plan Amendment\, the PRNS approach to managing tule elk\, which now number over 700 individuals\, is undergoing important changes. Dave Press will share information on monitoring strategies\, management techniques and goals\, and how tule elk fit into the ever-changing grasslands at Point Reyes.  \nNorth Bay Bear Collaborative: Learning to Coexist with Black Bears \nJohn Roney\, Sonoma Ecology Center Park Manager for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park\, will present on the North Bay Bear Collaborative’s work to monitor black bear populations in the north bay and proactively address bear-human conflict. \nOver the last decade\, black bears have been moving into the north bay in increasing numbers. Historically\, this area was home to the California grizzly\, a subspecies of brown bear. Over a hundred years after brown bears were extirpated from California\, black bears are starting to fill that ecological niche.  Black bears are omnivores and will eat whatever is available\, from fruit\, to salmon\, to cat food left unattended. They are also an important part of ecosystems\, spreading seed in their scat\, marine-derived nitrogen into the forest surrounding salmon streams\, and maintaining populations of deer through predation. While many are excited to see bears returning to open spaces and natural areas\, an increasing bear population has the potential to increase conflict with humans from property damage\, vehicle collisions\, trash storage break-ins\, pet or livestock predation\, and raids of beehives\, orchards\, and vineyards. \nThe North Bay Bear Collaborative (NBBC) was formed in response to increasing bear activity in the north bay. It is a working group of public agencies\, non-profit conservation groups\, landowners\, and individuals committed to research\, community outreach\, and infrastructure improvements to keep human and bear populations safe and resilient. The NBBC\, hosted by the Sonoma Ecology Center\, aims to mitigate future challenges that may arise from an increasing black bear population. \nThe NBBC provides education and outreach to teach people how to live among bears safely\, including guidance on how to avoid attracting wild animals into neighborhoods. They work with communities to be better open space stewards\, with the goal of building resilient and biodiverse habitats to help bears stay in open spaces and away from communities. NBBC is also improving park infrastructure by installing bear-proof trash cans and food storage containers to reduce bear-human interactions. In addition\, NBBC collects data\, including images from wildlife cameras and DNA from bear scat\, to map the range of black bears and better understand their dispersal patterns. John Roney will update us on how the NBBC functions\, their research and outreach programs\, and things we can all do to mitigate bear-human conflict. \nBowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration Public Comment Period Open \nMarin County Open Space District has released the Draft IS/MND for the Bowman Canyon Habitat Protection and Public Access Improvement Project at Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve in Novato. The public comment period ends on July 17\, 2026. \nThe private Bowman Canyon Ranch land was a long-sought target for acquisition in the Novato area adjacent to Mt. Burdell Open Space Preserve (OSP).  Its recent acquisition was a victory in itself; 409 acres were acquired by the County in two phases in 2018 and 2020. Soon after\, County Open Space District (OSD) staff began conducting surveys and studies to understand what they had acquired. \nBowman Canyon was used for cattle grazing for many years\, and the ranch road system includes steep roads experiencing erosion and contributing sediment to Bowman Canyon Creek.  The site also contains social trails and minimally constructed bike trails which the previous private owner allowed to be installed. Thorough biological surveys found sensitive serpentine grassland habitat\, several rare plants species\, and a high concentration of badger burrows\, as well as other sensitive habitats and special-status wildlife. \nAfter completing studies to assess the site\, the next question was where and how to connect trails from Bowman Canyon area with existing trails on Mount Burdell\, already a very popular OSP for hiking\, biking\, and some horseback riding. Concerns about impacts of recreation on sensitive wildlife on Mount Burdell have already surfaced at MCL meetings of the POSC. \nIn recent years\, MCL members of the County’s Environmental Roundtable were given a tour of Bowman Canyon\, studied maps\, and discussed sensitive areas with County OSD staff.  The MCL POSC also had a digital tour and presentation. When it came time to determine how and where to link new trails to the existing trails on Mount Burdell\, we were included in the decision process\, as were cyclists\, who were eager to connect. The problem was how to build new trail connections without damaging or compromising these habitats. The Draft IS/MND details a new trail plan which includes two connections from Mt. Burdell to Bowman Canyon\, one a multi-use trail connecting to San Andreas Fire Road\, and the other a hiker/equestrian trail connecting to the Dwarf Oak Trail. In this plan\, the existing road through the serpentine grassland is slated for decommissioning\, and new trail alignments are designed to avoid the serpentine grassland\, rare plant populations\, and the area of highest badger burrows density. \nThe Draft IS/MND\, out for 30-day review\, details the project as an opportunity not only to build trail connection but also to protect habitats from future impacts.  The public comment period is MCL’s opportunity to comment on whether the County OSD has been successful in avoiding sensitive areas and mitigating any possible impacts.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-parks-and-open-space-committee-meeting-4-4-6-2-2/2026-11-12/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Parks and Open Space
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261118T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261118T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002518-1794996000-1795003200@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2026-11-18/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261202T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261202T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002564-1796205600-1796212800@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2026-12-02/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261210T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261210T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T190847Z
CREATED:20260626T185107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260626T190847Z
UID:10002610-1796913000-1796920200@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Parks and Open Space Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nParks and Open Space Committee\n3:00- 5:00 pm\nIn-person/Zoom hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcOmgrD4vG9XtnkUk-dxDuEZFSvAuGyhD \nJuly 9: Wildlife Monitoring and Management \nAt the July 9 meeting we will learn about two continually-evolving efforts to monitor and manage wildlife in the north bay. Both species\, tule elk and black bear\, play an important role in ecosystem function\, and both are occasionally in conflict with human communities. However\, with research\, thoughtful planning\, and a willingness to try new approaches\, we can find ways to live in balance with these species and the habitat they require. We will also have a discussion on the Bowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration released for public comment. \nTule Elk History\, Monitoring\, & Management at Point Reyes National Seashore \nDave Press\, Program Lead for Integrated Resources Management at Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS)\, will briefly review the history of tule elk since their reintroduction to PRNS\, describe tule elk monitoring strategies\, and focus on recent changes in tule elk management approaches. \nTule elk are one of three subspecies of elk native to California and the only California endemic elk species. By the mid-1800s\, tule elk populations had been severely reduced by hunting\, introduction of cattle\, and loss of habitat. Tule elk were thought to be extinct until a rancher found a small remnant herd on his land in 1874. All tule elk in California today\, roughly 6\,000\, are descendants of that small herd. \nTule elk were historically found on the grasslands of what is now PRNS and were grazers important for balancing the coastal prairie ecosystem. By the 1850s they had been extirpated from the peninsula. A small population of ten tule elk\, two bulls and eight cows\, were reintroduced to a fenced Tule Elk Reserve on Tomales Point in 1978. The PRNS tule elk population has grown significantly over the years\, though with annual fluctuations\, and has experienced challenges related to overpopulation in the Tule Elk Reserve\, disease\, and limited forage availability during dry years.  In 1999 a small group of elk was released in the Limantour area and established a free-ranging herd here as well as a subsequent free-ranging sub-herd at Drake’s Beach.  These free-ranging herds have continued to grow and shape the landscape. \nUnder the 2024 Tomales Point Area Plan and the 2025 revised General Management Plan Amendment\, the PRNS approach to managing tule elk\, which now number over 700 individuals\, is undergoing important changes. Dave Press will share information on monitoring strategies\, management techniques and goals\, and how tule elk fit into the ever-changing grasslands at Point Reyes.  \nNorth Bay Bear Collaborative: Learning to Coexist with Black Bears \nJohn Roney\, Sonoma Ecology Center Park Manager for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park\, will present on the North Bay Bear Collaborative’s work to monitor black bear populations in the north bay and proactively address bear-human conflict. \nOver the last decade\, black bears have been moving into the north bay in increasing numbers. Historically\, this area was home to the California grizzly\, a subspecies of brown bear. Over a hundred years after brown bears were extirpated from California\, black bears are starting to fill that ecological niche.  Black bears are omnivores and will eat whatever is available\, from fruit\, to salmon\, to cat food left unattended. They are also an important part of ecosystems\, spreading seed in their scat\, marine-derived nitrogen into the forest surrounding salmon streams\, and maintaining populations of deer through predation. While many are excited to see bears returning to open spaces and natural areas\, an increasing bear population has the potential to increase conflict with humans from property damage\, vehicle collisions\, trash storage break-ins\, pet or livestock predation\, and raids of beehives\, orchards\, and vineyards. \nThe North Bay Bear Collaborative (NBBC) was formed in response to increasing bear activity in the north bay. It is a working group of public agencies\, non-profit conservation groups\, landowners\, and individuals committed to research\, community outreach\, and infrastructure improvements to keep human and bear populations safe and resilient. The NBBC\, hosted by the Sonoma Ecology Center\, aims to mitigate future challenges that may arise from an increasing black bear population. \nThe NBBC provides education and outreach to teach people how to live among bears safely\, including guidance on how to avoid attracting wild animals into neighborhoods. They work with communities to be better open space stewards\, with the goal of building resilient and biodiverse habitats to help bears stay in open spaces and away from communities. NBBC is also improving park infrastructure by installing bear-proof trash cans and food storage containers to reduce bear-human interactions. In addition\, NBBC collects data\, including images from wildlife cameras and DNA from bear scat\, to map the range of black bears and better understand their dispersal patterns. John Roney will update us on how the NBBC functions\, their research and outreach programs\, and things we can all do to mitigate bear-human conflict. \nBowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration Public Comment Period Open \nMarin County Open Space District has released the Draft IS/MND for the Bowman Canyon Habitat Protection and Public Access Improvement Project at Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve in Novato. The public comment period ends on July 17\, 2026. \nThe private Bowman Canyon Ranch land was a long-sought target for acquisition in the Novato area adjacent to Mt. Burdell Open Space Preserve (OSP).  Its recent acquisition was a victory in itself; 409 acres were acquired by the County in two phases in 2018 and 2020. Soon after\, County Open Space District (OSD) staff began conducting surveys and studies to understand what they had acquired. \nBowman Canyon was used for cattle grazing for many years\, and the ranch road system includes steep roads experiencing erosion and contributing sediment to Bowman Canyon Creek.  The site also contains social trails and minimally constructed bike trails which the previous private owner allowed to be installed. Thorough biological surveys found sensitive serpentine grassland habitat\, several rare plants species\, and a high concentration of badger burrows\, as well as other sensitive habitats and special-status wildlife. \nAfter completing studies to assess the site\, the next question was where and how to connect trails from Bowman Canyon area with existing trails on Mount Burdell\, already a very popular OSP for hiking\, biking\, and some horseback riding. Concerns about impacts of recreation on sensitive wildlife on Mount Burdell have already surfaced at MCL meetings of the POSC. \nIn recent years\, MCL members of the County’s Environmental Roundtable were given a tour of Bowman Canyon\, studied maps\, and discussed sensitive areas with County OSD staff.  The MCL POSC also had a digital tour and presentation. When it came time to determine how and where to link new trails to the existing trails on Mount Burdell\, we were included in the decision process\, as were cyclists\, who were eager to connect. The problem was how to build new trail connections without damaging or compromising these habitats. The Draft IS/MND details a new trail plan which includes two connections from Mt. Burdell to Bowman Canyon\, one a multi-use trail connecting to San Andreas Fire Road\, and the other a hiker/equestrian trail connecting to the Dwarf Oak Trail. In this plan\, the existing road through the serpentine grassland is slated for decommissioning\, and new trail alignments are designed to avoid the serpentine grassland\, rare plant populations\, and the area of highest badger burrows density. \nThe Draft IS/MND\, out for 30-day review\, details the project as an opportunity not only to build trail connection but also to protect habitats from future impacts.  The public comment period is MCL’s opportunity to comment on whether the County OSD has been successful in avoiding sensitive areas and mitigating any possible impacts.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-parks-and-open-space-committee-meeting-4-4-6-2-2/2026-12-10/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Parks and Open Space
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261216T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20261216T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002519-1797415200-1797422400@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2026-12-16/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270106T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270106T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002565-1799229600-1799236800@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-01-06/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270114T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270114T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T190847Z
CREATED:20260626T185107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260626T190847Z
UID:10002611-1799937000-1799944200@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Parks and Open Space Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nParks and Open Space Committee\n3:00- 5:00 pm\nIn-person/Zoom hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcOmgrD4vG9XtnkUk-dxDuEZFSvAuGyhD \nJuly 9: Wildlife Monitoring and Management \nAt the July 9 meeting we will learn about two continually-evolving efforts to monitor and manage wildlife in the north bay. Both species\, tule elk and black bear\, play an important role in ecosystem function\, and both are occasionally in conflict with human communities. However\, with research\, thoughtful planning\, and a willingness to try new approaches\, we can find ways to live in balance with these species and the habitat they require. We will also have a discussion on the Bowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration released for public comment. \nTule Elk History\, Monitoring\, & Management at Point Reyes National Seashore \nDave Press\, Program Lead for Integrated Resources Management at Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS)\, will briefly review the history of tule elk since their reintroduction to PRNS\, describe tule elk monitoring strategies\, and focus on recent changes in tule elk management approaches. \nTule elk are one of three subspecies of elk native to California and the only California endemic elk species. By the mid-1800s\, tule elk populations had been severely reduced by hunting\, introduction of cattle\, and loss of habitat. Tule elk were thought to be extinct until a rancher found a small remnant herd on his land in 1874. All tule elk in California today\, roughly 6\,000\, are descendants of that small herd. \nTule elk were historically found on the grasslands of what is now PRNS and were grazers important for balancing the coastal prairie ecosystem. By the 1850s they had been extirpated from the peninsula. A small population of ten tule elk\, two bulls and eight cows\, were reintroduced to a fenced Tule Elk Reserve on Tomales Point in 1978. The PRNS tule elk population has grown significantly over the years\, though with annual fluctuations\, and has experienced challenges related to overpopulation in the Tule Elk Reserve\, disease\, and limited forage availability during dry years.  In 1999 a small group of elk was released in the Limantour area and established a free-ranging herd here as well as a subsequent free-ranging sub-herd at Drake’s Beach.  These free-ranging herds have continued to grow and shape the landscape. \nUnder the 2024 Tomales Point Area Plan and the 2025 revised General Management Plan Amendment\, the PRNS approach to managing tule elk\, which now number over 700 individuals\, is undergoing important changes. Dave Press will share information on monitoring strategies\, management techniques and goals\, and how tule elk fit into the ever-changing grasslands at Point Reyes.  \nNorth Bay Bear Collaborative: Learning to Coexist with Black Bears \nJohn Roney\, Sonoma Ecology Center Park Manager for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park\, will present on the North Bay Bear Collaborative’s work to monitor black bear populations in the north bay and proactively address bear-human conflict. \nOver the last decade\, black bears have been moving into the north bay in increasing numbers. Historically\, this area was home to the California grizzly\, a subspecies of brown bear. Over a hundred years after brown bears were extirpated from California\, black bears are starting to fill that ecological niche.  Black bears are omnivores and will eat whatever is available\, from fruit\, to salmon\, to cat food left unattended. They are also an important part of ecosystems\, spreading seed in their scat\, marine-derived nitrogen into the forest surrounding salmon streams\, and maintaining populations of deer through predation. While many are excited to see bears returning to open spaces and natural areas\, an increasing bear population has the potential to increase conflict with humans from property damage\, vehicle collisions\, trash storage break-ins\, pet or livestock predation\, and raids of beehives\, orchards\, and vineyards. \nThe North Bay Bear Collaborative (NBBC) was formed in response to increasing bear activity in the north bay. It is a working group of public agencies\, non-profit conservation groups\, landowners\, and individuals committed to research\, community outreach\, and infrastructure improvements to keep human and bear populations safe and resilient. The NBBC\, hosted by the Sonoma Ecology Center\, aims to mitigate future challenges that may arise from an increasing black bear population. \nThe NBBC provides education and outreach to teach people how to live among bears safely\, including guidance on how to avoid attracting wild animals into neighborhoods. They work with communities to be better open space stewards\, with the goal of building resilient and biodiverse habitats to help bears stay in open spaces and away from communities. NBBC is also improving park infrastructure by installing bear-proof trash cans and food storage containers to reduce bear-human interactions. In addition\, NBBC collects data\, including images from wildlife cameras and DNA from bear scat\, to map the range of black bears and better understand their dispersal patterns. John Roney will update us on how the NBBC functions\, their research and outreach programs\, and things we can all do to mitigate bear-human conflict. \nBowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration Public Comment Period Open \nMarin County Open Space District has released the Draft IS/MND for the Bowman Canyon Habitat Protection and Public Access Improvement Project at Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve in Novato. The public comment period ends on July 17\, 2026. \nThe private Bowman Canyon Ranch land was a long-sought target for acquisition in the Novato area adjacent to Mt. Burdell Open Space Preserve (OSP).  Its recent acquisition was a victory in itself; 409 acres were acquired by the County in two phases in 2018 and 2020. Soon after\, County Open Space District (OSD) staff began conducting surveys and studies to understand what they had acquired. \nBowman Canyon was used for cattle grazing for many years\, and the ranch road system includes steep roads experiencing erosion and contributing sediment to Bowman Canyon Creek.  The site also contains social trails and minimally constructed bike trails which the previous private owner allowed to be installed. Thorough biological surveys found sensitive serpentine grassland habitat\, several rare plants species\, and a high concentration of badger burrows\, as well as other sensitive habitats and special-status wildlife. \nAfter completing studies to assess the site\, the next question was where and how to connect trails from Bowman Canyon area with existing trails on Mount Burdell\, already a very popular OSP for hiking\, biking\, and some horseback riding. Concerns about impacts of recreation on sensitive wildlife on Mount Burdell have already surfaced at MCL meetings of the POSC. \nIn recent years\, MCL members of the County’s Environmental Roundtable were given a tour of Bowman Canyon\, studied maps\, and discussed sensitive areas with County OSD staff.  The MCL POSC also had a digital tour and presentation. When it came time to determine how and where to link new trails to the existing trails on Mount Burdell\, we were included in the decision process\, as were cyclists\, who were eager to connect. The problem was how to build new trail connections without damaging or compromising these habitats. The Draft IS/MND details a new trail plan which includes two connections from Mt. Burdell to Bowman Canyon\, one a multi-use trail connecting to San Andreas Fire Road\, and the other a hiker/equestrian trail connecting to the Dwarf Oak Trail. In this plan\, the existing road through the serpentine grassland is slated for decommissioning\, and new trail alignments are designed to avoid the serpentine grassland\, rare plant populations\, and the area of highest badger burrows density. \nThe Draft IS/MND\, out for 30-day review\, details the project as an opportunity not only to build trail connection but also to protect habitats from future impacts.  The public comment period is MCL’s opportunity to comment on whether the County OSD has been successful in avoiding sensitive areas and mitigating any possible impacts.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-parks-and-open-space-committee-meeting-4-4-6-2-2/2027-01-14/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Parks and Open Space
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270120T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270120T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002520-1800439200-1800446400@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2027-01-20/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270203T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270203T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002566-1801648800-1801656000@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-02-03/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270211T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270211T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T190847Z
CREATED:20260626T185107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260626T190847Z
UID:10002612-1802356200-1802363400@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Parks and Open Space Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nParks and Open Space Committee\n3:00- 5:00 pm\nIn-person/Zoom hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcOmgrD4vG9XtnkUk-dxDuEZFSvAuGyhD \nJuly 9: Wildlife Monitoring and Management \nAt the July 9 meeting we will learn about two continually-evolving efforts to monitor and manage wildlife in the north bay. Both species\, tule elk and black bear\, play an important role in ecosystem function\, and both are occasionally in conflict with human communities. However\, with research\, thoughtful planning\, and a willingness to try new approaches\, we can find ways to live in balance with these species and the habitat they require. We will also have a discussion on the Bowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration released for public comment. \nTule Elk History\, Monitoring\, & Management at Point Reyes National Seashore \nDave Press\, Program Lead for Integrated Resources Management at Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS)\, will briefly review the history of tule elk since their reintroduction to PRNS\, describe tule elk monitoring strategies\, and focus on recent changes in tule elk management approaches. \nTule elk are one of three subspecies of elk native to California and the only California endemic elk species. By the mid-1800s\, tule elk populations had been severely reduced by hunting\, introduction of cattle\, and loss of habitat. Tule elk were thought to be extinct until a rancher found a small remnant herd on his land in 1874. All tule elk in California today\, roughly 6\,000\, are descendants of that small herd. \nTule elk were historically found on the grasslands of what is now PRNS and were grazers important for balancing the coastal prairie ecosystem. By the 1850s they had been extirpated from the peninsula. A small population of ten tule elk\, two bulls and eight cows\, were reintroduced to a fenced Tule Elk Reserve on Tomales Point in 1978. The PRNS tule elk population has grown significantly over the years\, though with annual fluctuations\, and has experienced challenges related to overpopulation in the Tule Elk Reserve\, disease\, and limited forage availability during dry years.  In 1999 a small group of elk was released in the Limantour area and established a free-ranging herd here as well as a subsequent free-ranging sub-herd at Drake’s Beach.  These free-ranging herds have continued to grow and shape the landscape. \nUnder the 2024 Tomales Point Area Plan and the 2025 revised General Management Plan Amendment\, the PRNS approach to managing tule elk\, which now number over 700 individuals\, is undergoing important changes. Dave Press will share information on monitoring strategies\, management techniques and goals\, and how tule elk fit into the ever-changing grasslands at Point Reyes.  \nNorth Bay Bear Collaborative: Learning to Coexist with Black Bears \nJohn Roney\, Sonoma Ecology Center Park Manager for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park\, will present on the North Bay Bear Collaborative’s work to monitor black bear populations in the north bay and proactively address bear-human conflict. \nOver the last decade\, black bears have been moving into the north bay in increasing numbers. Historically\, this area was home to the California grizzly\, a subspecies of brown bear. Over a hundred years after brown bears were extirpated from California\, black bears are starting to fill that ecological niche.  Black bears are omnivores and will eat whatever is available\, from fruit\, to salmon\, to cat food left unattended. They are also an important part of ecosystems\, spreading seed in their scat\, marine-derived nitrogen into the forest surrounding salmon streams\, and maintaining populations of deer through predation. While many are excited to see bears returning to open spaces and natural areas\, an increasing bear population has the potential to increase conflict with humans from property damage\, vehicle collisions\, trash storage break-ins\, pet or livestock predation\, and raids of beehives\, orchards\, and vineyards. \nThe North Bay Bear Collaborative (NBBC) was formed in response to increasing bear activity in the north bay. It is a working group of public agencies\, non-profit conservation groups\, landowners\, and individuals committed to research\, community outreach\, and infrastructure improvements to keep human and bear populations safe and resilient. The NBBC\, hosted by the Sonoma Ecology Center\, aims to mitigate future challenges that may arise from an increasing black bear population. \nThe NBBC provides education and outreach to teach people how to live among bears safely\, including guidance on how to avoid attracting wild animals into neighborhoods. They work with communities to be better open space stewards\, with the goal of building resilient and biodiverse habitats to help bears stay in open spaces and away from communities. NBBC is also improving park infrastructure by installing bear-proof trash cans and food storage containers to reduce bear-human interactions. In addition\, NBBC collects data\, including images from wildlife cameras and DNA from bear scat\, to map the range of black bears and better understand their dispersal patterns. John Roney will update us on how the NBBC functions\, their research and outreach programs\, and things we can all do to mitigate bear-human conflict. \nBowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration Public Comment Period Open \nMarin County Open Space District has released the Draft IS/MND for the Bowman Canyon Habitat Protection and Public Access Improvement Project at Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve in Novato. The public comment period ends on July 17\, 2026. \nThe private Bowman Canyon Ranch land was a long-sought target for acquisition in the Novato area adjacent to Mt. Burdell Open Space Preserve (OSP).  Its recent acquisition was a victory in itself; 409 acres were acquired by the County in two phases in 2018 and 2020. Soon after\, County Open Space District (OSD) staff began conducting surveys and studies to understand what they had acquired. \nBowman Canyon was used for cattle grazing for many years\, and the ranch road system includes steep roads experiencing erosion and contributing sediment to Bowman Canyon Creek.  The site also contains social trails and minimally constructed bike trails which the previous private owner allowed to be installed. Thorough biological surveys found sensitive serpentine grassland habitat\, several rare plants species\, and a high concentration of badger burrows\, as well as other sensitive habitats and special-status wildlife. \nAfter completing studies to assess the site\, the next question was where and how to connect trails from Bowman Canyon area with existing trails on Mount Burdell\, already a very popular OSP for hiking\, biking\, and some horseback riding. Concerns about impacts of recreation on sensitive wildlife on Mount Burdell have already surfaced at MCL meetings of the POSC. \nIn recent years\, MCL members of the County’s Environmental Roundtable were given a tour of Bowman Canyon\, studied maps\, and discussed sensitive areas with County OSD staff.  The MCL POSC also had a digital tour and presentation. When it came time to determine how and where to link new trails to the existing trails on Mount Burdell\, we were included in the decision process\, as were cyclists\, who were eager to connect. The problem was how to build new trail connections without damaging or compromising these habitats. The Draft IS/MND details a new trail plan which includes two connections from Mt. Burdell to Bowman Canyon\, one a multi-use trail connecting to San Andreas Fire Road\, and the other a hiker/equestrian trail connecting to the Dwarf Oak Trail. In this plan\, the existing road through the serpentine grassland is slated for decommissioning\, and new trail alignments are designed to avoid the serpentine grassland\, rare plant populations\, and the area of highest badger burrows density. \nThe Draft IS/MND\, out for 30-day review\, details the project as an opportunity not only to build trail connection but also to protect habitats from future impacts.  The public comment period is MCL’s opportunity to comment on whether the County OSD has been successful in avoiding sensitive areas and mitigating any possible impacts.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-parks-and-open-space-committee-meeting-4-4-6-2-2/2027-02-11/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Parks and Open Space
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270217T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270217T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002521-1802858400-1802865600@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2027-02-17/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270303T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270303T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002567-1804068000-1804075200@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-03-03/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270311T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270311T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T190847Z
CREATED:20260626T185107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260626T190847Z
UID:10002613-1804775400-1804782600@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Parks and Open Space Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nParks and Open Space Committee\n3:00- 5:00 pm\nIn-person/Zoom hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcOmgrD4vG9XtnkUk-dxDuEZFSvAuGyhD \nJuly 9: Wildlife Monitoring and Management \nAt the July 9 meeting we will learn about two continually-evolving efforts to monitor and manage wildlife in the north bay. Both species\, tule elk and black bear\, play an important role in ecosystem function\, and both are occasionally in conflict with human communities. However\, with research\, thoughtful planning\, and a willingness to try new approaches\, we can find ways to live in balance with these species and the habitat they require. We will also have a discussion on the Bowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration released for public comment. \nTule Elk History\, Monitoring\, & Management at Point Reyes National Seashore \nDave Press\, Program Lead for Integrated Resources Management at Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS)\, will briefly review the history of tule elk since their reintroduction to PRNS\, describe tule elk monitoring strategies\, and focus on recent changes in tule elk management approaches. \nTule elk are one of three subspecies of elk native to California and the only California endemic elk species. By the mid-1800s\, tule elk populations had been severely reduced by hunting\, introduction of cattle\, and loss of habitat. Tule elk were thought to be extinct until a rancher found a small remnant herd on his land in 1874. All tule elk in California today\, roughly 6\,000\, are descendants of that small herd. \nTule elk were historically found on the grasslands of what is now PRNS and were grazers important for balancing the coastal prairie ecosystem. By the 1850s they had been extirpated from the peninsula. A small population of ten tule elk\, two bulls and eight cows\, were reintroduced to a fenced Tule Elk Reserve on Tomales Point in 1978. The PRNS tule elk population has grown significantly over the years\, though with annual fluctuations\, and has experienced challenges related to overpopulation in the Tule Elk Reserve\, disease\, and limited forage availability during dry years.  In 1999 a small group of elk was released in the Limantour area and established a free-ranging herd here as well as a subsequent free-ranging sub-herd at Drake’s Beach.  These free-ranging herds have continued to grow and shape the landscape. \nUnder the 2024 Tomales Point Area Plan and the 2025 revised General Management Plan Amendment\, the PRNS approach to managing tule elk\, which now number over 700 individuals\, is undergoing important changes. Dave Press will share information on monitoring strategies\, management techniques and goals\, and how tule elk fit into the ever-changing grasslands at Point Reyes.  \nNorth Bay Bear Collaborative: Learning to Coexist with Black Bears \nJohn Roney\, Sonoma Ecology Center Park Manager for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park\, will present on the North Bay Bear Collaborative’s work to monitor black bear populations in the north bay and proactively address bear-human conflict. \nOver the last decade\, black bears have been moving into the north bay in increasing numbers. Historically\, this area was home to the California grizzly\, a subspecies of brown bear. Over a hundred years after brown bears were extirpated from California\, black bears are starting to fill that ecological niche.  Black bears are omnivores and will eat whatever is available\, from fruit\, to salmon\, to cat food left unattended. They are also an important part of ecosystems\, spreading seed in their scat\, marine-derived nitrogen into the forest surrounding salmon streams\, and maintaining populations of deer through predation. While many are excited to see bears returning to open spaces and natural areas\, an increasing bear population has the potential to increase conflict with humans from property damage\, vehicle collisions\, trash storage break-ins\, pet or livestock predation\, and raids of beehives\, orchards\, and vineyards. \nThe North Bay Bear Collaborative (NBBC) was formed in response to increasing bear activity in the north bay. It is a working group of public agencies\, non-profit conservation groups\, landowners\, and individuals committed to research\, community outreach\, and infrastructure improvements to keep human and bear populations safe and resilient. The NBBC\, hosted by the Sonoma Ecology Center\, aims to mitigate future challenges that may arise from an increasing black bear population. \nThe NBBC provides education and outreach to teach people how to live among bears safely\, including guidance on how to avoid attracting wild animals into neighborhoods. They work with communities to be better open space stewards\, with the goal of building resilient and biodiverse habitats to help bears stay in open spaces and away from communities. NBBC is also improving park infrastructure by installing bear-proof trash cans and food storage containers to reduce bear-human interactions. In addition\, NBBC collects data\, including images from wildlife cameras and DNA from bear scat\, to map the range of black bears and better understand their dispersal patterns. John Roney will update us on how the NBBC functions\, their research and outreach programs\, and things we can all do to mitigate bear-human conflict. \nBowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration Public Comment Period Open \nMarin County Open Space District has released the Draft IS/MND for the Bowman Canyon Habitat Protection and Public Access Improvement Project at Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve in Novato. The public comment period ends on July 17\, 2026. \nThe private Bowman Canyon Ranch land was a long-sought target for acquisition in the Novato area adjacent to Mt. Burdell Open Space Preserve (OSP).  Its recent acquisition was a victory in itself; 409 acres were acquired by the County in two phases in 2018 and 2020. Soon after\, County Open Space District (OSD) staff began conducting surveys and studies to understand what they had acquired. \nBowman Canyon was used for cattle grazing for many years\, and the ranch road system includes steep roads experiencing erosion and contributing sediment to Bowman Canyon Creek.  The site also contains social trails and minimally constructed bike trails which the previous private owner allowed to be installed. Thorough biological surveys found sensitive serpentine grassland habitat\, several rare plants species\, and a high concentration of badger burrows\, as well as other sensitive habitats and special-status wildlife. \nAfter completing studies to assess the site\, the next question was where and how to connect trails from Bowman Canyon area with existing trails on Mount Burdell\, already a very popular OSP for hiking\, biking\, and some horseback riding. Concerns about impacts of recreation on sensitive wildlife on Mount Burdell have already surfaced at MCL meetings of the POSC. \nIn recent years\, MCL members of the County’s Environmental Roundtable were given a tour of Bowman Canyon\, studied maps\, and discussed sensitive areas with County OSD staff.  The MCL POSC also had a digital tour and presentation. When it came time to determine how and where to link new trails to the existing trails on Mount Burdell\, we were included in the decision process\, as were cyclists\, who were eager to connect. The problem was how to build new trail connections without damaging or compromising these habitats. The Draft IS/MND details a new trail plan which includes two connections from Mt. Burdell to Bowman Canyon\, one a multi-use trail connecting to San Andreas Fire Road\, and the other a hiker/equestrian trail connecting to the Dwarf Oak Trail. In this plan\, the existing road through the serpentine grassland is slated for decommissioning\, and new trail alignments are designed to avoid the serpentine grassland\, rare plant populations\, and the area of highest badger burrows density. \nThe Draft IS/MND\, out for 30-day review\, details the project as an opportunity not only to build trail connection but also to protect habitats from future impacts.  The public comment period is MCL’s opportunity to comment on whether the County OSD has been successful in avoiding sensitive areas and mitigating any possible impacts.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-parks-and-open-space-committee-meeting-4-4-6-2-2/2027-03-11/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Parks and Open Space
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270317T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270317T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002522-1805277600-1805284800@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2027-03-17/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270407T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270407T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002568-1807092000-1807099200@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-04-07/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270408T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270408T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T190847Z
CREATED:20260626T185107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260626T190847Z
UID:10002614-1807194600-1807201800@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Parks and Open Space Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nParks and Open Space Committee\n3:00- 5:00 pm\nIn-person/Zoom hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcOmgrD4vG9XtnkUk-dxDuEZFSvAuGyhD \nJuly 9: Wildlife Monitoring and Management \nAt the July 9 meeting we will learn about two continually-evolving efforts to monitor and manage wildlife in the north bay. Both species\, tule elk and black bear\, play an important role in ecosystem function\, and both are occasionally in conflict with human communities. However\, with research\, thoughtful planning\, and a willingness to try new approaches\, we can find ways to live in balance with these species and the habitat they require. We will also have a discussion on the Bowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration released for public comment. \nTule Elk History\, Monitoring\, & Management at Point Reyes National Seashore \nDave Press\, Program Lead for Integrated Resources Management at Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS)\, will briefly review the history of tule elk since their reintroduction to PRNS\, describe tule elk monitoring strategies\, and focus on recent changes in tule elk management approaches. \nTule elk are one of three subspecies of elk native to California and the only California endemic elk species. By the mid-1800s\, tule elk populations had been severely reduced by hunting\, introduction of cattle\, and loss of habitat. Tule elk were thought to be extinct until a rancher found a small remnant herd on his land in 1874. All tule elk in California today\, roughly 6\,000\, are descendants of that small herd. \nTule elk were historically found on the grasslands of what is now PRNS and were grazers important for balancing the coastal prairie ecosystem. By the 1850s they had been extirpated from the peninsula. A small population of ten tule elk\, two bulls and eight cows\, were reintroduced to a fenced Tule Elk Reserve on Tomales Point in 1978. The PRNS tule elk population has grown significantly over the years\, though with annual fluctuations\, and has experienced challenges related to overpopulation in the Tule Elk Reserve\, disease\, and limited forage availability during dry years.  In 1999 a small group of elk was released in the Limantour area and established a free-ranging herd here as well as a subsequent free-ranging sub-herd at Drake’s Beach.  These free-ranging herds have continued to grow and shape the landscape. \nUnder the 2024 Tomales Point Area Plan and the 2025 revised General Management Plan Amendment\, the PRNS approach to managing tule elk\, which now number over 700 individuals\, is undergoing important changes. Dave Press will share information on monitoring strategies\, management techniques and goals\, and how tule elk fit into the ever-changing grasslands at Point Reyes.  \nNorth Bay Bear Collaborative: Learning to Coexist with Black Bears \nJohn Roney\, Sonoma Ecology Center Park Manager for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park\, will present on the North Bay Bear Collaborative’s work to monitor black bear populations in the north bay and proactively address bear-human conflict. \nOver the last decade\, black bears have been moving into the north bay in increasing numbers. Historically\, this area was home to the California grizzly\, a subspecies of brown bear. Over a hundred years after brown bears were extirpated from California\, black bears are starting to fill that ecological niche.  Black bears are omnivores and will eat whatever is available\, from fruit\, to salmon\, to cat food left unattended. They are also an important part of ecosystems\, spreading seed in their scat\, marine-derived nitrogen into the forest surrounding salmon streams\, and maintaining populations of deer through predation. While many are excited to see bears returning to open spaces and natural areas\, an increasing bear population has the potential to increase conflict with humans from property damage\, vehicle collisions\, trash storage break-ins\, pet or livestock predation\, and raids of beehives\, orchards\, and vineyards. \nThe North Bay Bear Collaborative (NBBC) was formed in response to increasing bear activity in the north bay. It is a working group of public agencies\, non-profit conservation groups\, landowners\, and individuals committed to research\, community outreach\, and infrastructure improvements to keep human and bear populations safe and resilient. The NBBC\, hosted by the Sonoma Ecology Center\, aims to mitigate future challenges that may arise from an increasing black bear population. \nThe NBBC provides education and outreach to teach people how to live among bears safely\, including guidance on how to avoid attracting wild animals into neighborhoods. They work with communities to be better open space stewards\, with the goal of building resilient and biodiverse habitats to help bears stay in open spaces and away from communities. NBBC is also improving park infrastructure by installing bear-proof trash cans and food storage containers to reduce bear-human interactions. In addition\, NBBC collects data\, including images from wildlife cameras and DNA from bear scat\, to map the range of black bears and better understand their dispersal patterns. John Roney will update us on how the NBBC functions\, their research and outreach programs\, and things we can all do to mitigate bear-human conflict. \nBowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration Public Comment Period Open \nMarin County Open Space District has released the Draft IS/MND for the Bowman Canyon Habitat Protection and Public Access Improvement Project at Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve in Novato. The public comment period ends on July 17\, 2026. \nThe private Bowman Canyon Ranch land was a long-sought target for acquisition in the Novato area adjacent to Mt. Burdell Open Space Preserve (OSP).  Its recent acquisition was a victory in itself; 409 acres were acquired by the County in two phases in 2018 and 2020. Soon after\, County Open Space District (OSD) staff began conducting surveys and studies to understand what they had acquired. \nBowman Canyon was used for cattle grazing for many years\, and the ranch road system includes steep roads experiencing erosion and contributing sediment to Bowman Canyon Creek.  The site also contains social trails and minimally constructed bike trails which the previous private owner allowed to be installed. Thorough biological surveys found sensitive serpentine grassland habitat\, several rare plants species\, and a high concentration of badger burrows\, as well as other sensitive habitats and special-status wildlife. \nAfter completing studies to assess the site\, the next question was where and how to connect trails from Bowman Canyon area with existing trails on Mount Burdell\, already a very popular OSP for hiking\, biking\, and some horseback riding. Concerns about impacts of recreation on sensitive wildlife on Mount Burdell have already surfaced at MCL meetings of the POSC. \nIn recent years\, MCL members of the County’s Environmental Roundtable were given a tour of Bowman Canyon\, studied maps\, and discussed sensitive areas with County OSD staff.  The MCL POSC also had a digital tour and presentation. When it came time to determine how and where to link new trails to the existing trails on Mount Burdell\, we were included in the decision process\, as were cyclists\, who were eager to connect. The problem was how to build new trail connections without damaging or compromising these habitats. The Draft IS/MND details a new trail plan which includes two connections from Mt. Burdell to Bowman Canyon\, one a multi-use trail connecting to San Andreas Fire Road\, and the other a hiker/equestrian trail connecting to the Dwarf Oak Trail. In this plan\, the existing road through the serpentine grassland is slated for decommissioning\, and new trail alignments are designed to avoid the serpentine grassland\, rare plant populations\, and the area of highest badger burrows density. \nThe Draft IS/MND\, out for 30-day review\, details the project as an opportunity not only to build trail connection but also to protect habitats from future impacts.  The public comment period is MCL’s opportunity to comment on whether the County OSD has been successful in avoiding sensitive areas and mitigating any possible impacts.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-parks-and-open-space-committee-meeting-4-4-6-2-2/2027-04-08/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Parks and Open Space
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270421T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270421T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002523-1808301600-1808308800@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2027-04-21/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270505T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270505T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002569-1809511200-1809518400@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-05-05/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270513T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270513T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T190847Z
CREATED:20260626T185107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260626T190847Z
UID:10002615-1810218600-1810225800@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Parks and Open Space Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nParks and Open Space Committee\n3:00- 5:00 pm\nIn-person/Zoom hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcOmgrD4vG9XtnkUk-dxDuEZFSvAuGyhD \nJuly 9: Wildlife Monitoring and Management \nAt the July 9 meeting we will learn about two continually-evolving efforts to monitor and manage wildlife in the north bay. Both species\, tule elk and black bear\, play an important role in ecosystem function\, and both are occasionally in conflict with human communities. However\, with research\, thoughtful planning\, and a willingness to try new approaches\, we can find ways to live in balance with these species and the habitat they require. We will also have a discussion on the Bowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration released for public comment. \nTule Elk History\, Monitoring\, & Management at Point Reyes National Seashore \nDave Press\, Program Lead for Integrated Resources Management at Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS)\, will briefly review the history of tule elk since their reintroduction to PRNS\, describe tule elk monitoring strategies\, and focus on recent changes in tule elk management approaches. \nTule elk are one of three subspecies of elk native to California and the only California endemic elk species. By the mid-1800s\, tule elk populations had been severely reduced by hunting\, introduction of cattle\, and loss of habitat. Tule elk were thought to be extinct until a rancher found a small remnant herd on his land in 1874. All tule elk in California today\, roughly 6\,000\, are descendants of that small herd. \nTule elk were historically found on the grasslands of what is now PRNS and were grazers important for balancing the coastal prairie ecosystem. By the 1850s they had been extirpated from the peninsula. A small population of ten tule elk\, two bulls and eight cows\, were reintroduced to a fenced Tule Elk Reserve on Tomales Point in 1978. The PRNS tule elk population has grown significantly over the years\, though with annual fluctuations\, and has experienced challenges related to overpopulation in the Tule Elk Reserve\, disease\, and limited forage availability during dry years.  In 1999 a small group of elk was released in the Limantour area and established a free-ranging herd here as well as a subsequent free-ranging sub-herd at Drake’s Beach.  These free-ranging herds have continued to grow and shape the landscape. \nUnder the 2024 Tomales Point Area Plan and the 2025 revised General Management Plan Amendment\, the PRNS approach to managing tule elk\, which now number over 700 individuals\, is undergoing important changes. Dave Press will share information on monitoring strategies\, management techniques and goals\, and how tule elk fit into the ever-changing grasslands at Point Reyes.  \nNorth Bay Bear Collaborative: Learning to Coexist with Black Bears \nJohn Roney\, Sonoma Ecology Center Park Manager for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park\, will present on the North Bay Bear Collaborative’s work to monitor black bear populations in the north bay and proactively address bear-human conflict. \nOver the last decade\, black bears have been moving into the north bay in increasing numbers. Historically\, this area was home to the California grizzly\, a subspecies of brown bear. Over a hundred years after brown bears were extirpated from California\, black bears are starting to fill that ecological niche.  Black bears are omnivores and will eat whatever is available\, from fruit\, to salmon\, to cat food left unattended. They are also an important part of ecosystems\, spreading seed in their scat\, marine-derived nitrogen into the forest surrounding salmon streams\, and maintaining populations of deer through predation. While many are excited to see bears returning to open spaces and natural areas\, an increasing bear population has the potential to increase conflict with humans from property damage\, vehicle collisions\, trash storage break-ins\, pet or livestock predation\, and raids of beehives\, orchards\, and vineyards. \nThe North Bay Bear Collaborative (NBBC) was formed in response to increasing bear activity in the north bay. It is a working group of public agencies\, non-profit conservation groups\, landowners\, and individuals committed to research\, community outreach\, and infrastructure improvements to keep human and bear populations safe and resilient. The NBBC\, hosted by the Sonoma Ecology Center\, aims to mitigate future challenges that may arise from an increasing black bear population. \nThe NBBC provides education and outreach to teach people how to live among bears safely\, including guidance on how to avoid attracting wild animals into neighborhoods. They work with communities to be better open space stewards\, with the goal of building resilient and biodiverse habitats to help bears stay in open spaces and away from communities. NBBC is also improving park infrastructure by installing bear-proof trash cans and food storage containers to reduce bear-human interactions. In addition\, NBBC collects data\, including images from wildlife cameras and DNA from bear scat\, to map the range of black bears and better understand their dispersal patterns. John Roney will update us on how the NBBC functions\, their research and outreach programs\, and things we can all do to mitigate bear-human conflict. \nBowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration Public Comment Period Open \nMarin County Open Space District has released the Draft IS/MND for the Bowman Canyon Habitat Protection and Public Access Improvement Project at Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve in Novato. The public comment period ends on July 17\, 2026. \nThe private Bowman Canyon Ranch land was a long-sought target for acquisition in the Novato area adjacent to Mt. Burdell Open Space Preserve (OSP).  Its recent acquisition was a victory in itself; 409 acres were acquired by the County in two phases in 2018 and 2020. Soon after\, County Open Space District (OSD) staff began conducting surveys and studies to understand what they had acquired. \nBowman Canyon was used for cattle grazing for many years\, and the ranch road system includes steep roads experiencing erosion and contributing sediment to Bowman Canyon Creek.  The site also contains social trails and minimally constructed bike trails which the previous private owner allowed to be installed. Thorough biological surveys found sensitive serpentine grassland habitat\, several rare plants species\, and a high concentration of badger burrows\, as well as other sensitive habitats and special-status wildlife. \nAfter completing studies to assess the site\, the next question was where and how to connect trails from Bowman Canyon area with existing trails on Mount Burdell\, already a very popular OSP for hiking\, biking\, and some horseback riding. Concerns about impacts of recreation on sensitive wildlife on Mount Burdell have already surfaced at MCL meetings of the POSC. \nIn recent years\, MCL members of the County’s Environmental Roundtable were given a tour of Bowman Canyon\, studied maps\, and discussed sensitive areas with County OSD staff.  The MCL POSC also had a digital tour and presentation. When it came time to determine how and where to link new trails to the existing trails on Mount Burdell\, we were included in the decision process\, as were cyclists\, who were eager to connect. The problem was how to build new trail connections without damaging or compromising these habitats. The Draft IS/MND details a new trail plan which includes two connections from Mt. Burdell to Bowman Canyon\, one a multi-use trail connecting to San Andreas Fire Road\, and the other a hiker/equestrian trail connecting to the Dwarf Oak Trail. In this plan\, the existing road through the serpentine grassland is slated for decommissioning\, and new trail alignments are designed to avoid the serpentine grassland\, rare plant populations\, and the area of highest badger burrows density. \nThe Draft IS/MND\, out for 30-day review\, details the project as an opportunity not only to build trail connection but also to protect habitats from future impacts.  The public comment period is MCL’s opportunity to comment on whether the County OSD has been successful in avoiding sensitive areas and mitigating any possible impacts.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-parks-and-open-space-committee-meeting-4-4-6-2-2/2027-05-13/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Parks and Open Space
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270519T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270519T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002524-1810720800-1810728000@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2027-05-19/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270602T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270602T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002570-1811930400-1811937600@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-06-02/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270610T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270610T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T190847Z
CREATED:20260626T185107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260626T190847Z
UID:10002616-1812637800-1812645000@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Parks and Open Space Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nParks and Open Space Committee\n3:00- 5:00 pm\nIn-person/Zoom hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0pcOmgrD4vG9XtnkUk-dxDuEZFSvAuGyhD \nJuly 9: Wildlife Monitoring and Management \nAt the July 9 meeting we will learn about two continually-evolving efforts to monitor and manage wildlife in the north bay. Both species\, tule elk and black bear\, play an important role in ecosystem function\, and both are occasionally in conflict with human communities. However\, with research\, thoughtful planning\, and a willingness to try new approaches\, we can find ways to live in balance with these species and the habitat they require. We will also have a discussion on the Bowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration released for public comment. \nTule Elk History\, Monitoring\, & Management at Point Reyes National Seashore \nDave Press\, Program Lead for Integrated Resources Management at Point Reyes National Seashore (PRNS)\, will briefly review the history of tule elk since their reintroduction to PRNS\, describe tule elk monitoring strategies\, and focus on recent changes in tule elk management approaches. \nTule elk are one of three subspecies of elk native to California and the only California endemic elk species. By the mid-1800s\, tule elk populations had been severely reduced by hunting\, introduction of cattle\, and loss of habitat. Tule elk were thought to be extinct until a rancher found a small remnant herd on his land in 1874. All tule elk in California today\, roughly 6\,000\, are descendants of that small herd. \nTule elk were historically found on the grasslands of what is now PRNS and were grazers important for balancing the coastal prairie ecosystem. By the 1850s they had been extirpated from the peninsula. A small population of ten tule elk\, two bulls and eight cows\, were reintroduced to a fenced Tule Elk Reserve on Tomales Point in 1978. The PRNS tule elk population has grown significantly over the years\, though with annual fluctuations\, and has experienced challenges related to overpopulation in the Tule Elk Reserve\, disease\, and limited forage availability during dry years.  In 1999 a small group of elk was released in the Limantour area and established a free-ranging herd here as well as a subsequent free-ranging sub-herd at Drake’s Beach.  These free-ranging herds have continued to grow and shape the landscape. \nUnder the 2024 Tomales Point Area Plan and the 2025 revised General Management Plan Amendment\, the PRNS approach to managing tule elk\, which now number over 700 individuals\, is undergoing important changes. Dave Press will share information on monitoring strategies\, management techniques and goals\, and how tule elk fit into the ever-changing grasslands at Point Reyes.  \nNorth Bay Bear Collaborative: Learning to Coexist with Black Bears \nJohn Roney\, Sonoma Ecology Center Park Manager for Sugarloaf Ridge State Park\, will present on the North Bay Bear Collaborative’s work to monitor black bear populations in the north bay and proactively address bear-human conflict. \nOver the last decade\, black bears have been moving into the north bay in increasing numbers. Historically\, this area was home to the California grizzly\, a subspecies of brown bear. Over a hundred years after brown bears were extirpated from California\, black bears are starting to fill that ecological niche.  Black bears are omnivores and will eat whatever is available\, from fruit\, to salmon\, to cat food left unattended. They are also an important part of ecosystems\, spreading seed in their scat\, marine-derived nitrogen into the forest surrounding salmon streams\, and maintaining populations of deer through predation. While many are excited to see bears returning to open spaces and natural areas\, an increasing bear population has the potential to increase conflict with humans from property damage\, vehicle collisions\, trash storage break-ins\, pet or livestock predation\, and raids of beehives\, orchards\, and vineyards. \nThe North Bay Bear Collaborative (NBBC) was formed in response to increasing bear activity in the north bay. It is a working group of public agencies\, non-profit conservation groups\, landowners\, and individuals committed to research\, community outreach\, and infrastructure improvements to keep human and bear populations safe and resilient. The NBBC\, hosted by the Sonoma Ecology Center\, aims to mitigate future challenges that may arise from an increasing black bear population. \nThe NBBC provides education and outreach to teach people how to live among bears safely\, including guidance on how to avoid attracting wild animals into neighborhoods. They work with communities to be better open space stewards\, with the goal of building resilient and biodiverse habitats to help bears stay in open spaces and away from communities. NBBC is also improving park infrastructure by installing bear-proof trash cans and food storage containers to reduce bear-human interactions. In addition\, NBBC collects data\, including images from wildlife cameras and DNA from bear scat\, to map the range of black bears and better understand their dispersal patterns. John Roney will update us on how the NBBC functions\, their research and outreach programs\, and things we can all do to mitigate bear-human conflict. \nBowman Canyon Draft Initial Study/ Mitigated Negative Declaration Public Comment Period Open \nMarin County Open Space District has released the Draft IS/MND for the Bowman Canyon Habitat Protection and Public Access Improvement Project at Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve in Novato. The public comment period ends on July 17\, 2026. \nThe private Bowman Canyon Ranch land was a long-sought target for acquisition in the Novato area adjacent to Mt. Burdell Open Space Preserve (OSP).  Its recent acquisition was a victory in itself; 409 acres were acquired by the County in two phases in 2018 and 2020. Soon after\, County Open Space District (OSD) staff began conducting surveys and studies to understand what they had acquired. \nBowman Canyon was used for cattle grazing for many years\, and the ranch road system includes steep roads experiencing erosion and contributing sediment to Bowman Canyon Creek.  The site also contains social trails and minimally constructed bike trails which the previous private owner allowed to be installed. Thorough biological surveys found sensitive serpentine grassland habitat\, several rare plants species\, and a high concentration of badger burrows\, as well as other sensitive habitats and special-status wildlife. \nAfter completing studies to assess the site\, the next question was where and how to connect trails from Bowman Canyon area with existing trails on Mount Burdell\, already a very popular OSP for hiking\, biking\, and some horseback riding. Concerns about impacts of recreation on sensitive wildlife on Mount Burdell have already surfaced at MCL meetings of the POSC. \nIn recent years\, MCL members of the County’s Environmental Roundtable were given a tour of Bowman Canyon\, studied maps\, and discussed sensitive areas with County OSD staff.  The MCL POSC also had a digital tour and presentation. When it came time to determine how and where to link new trails to the existing trails on Mount Burdell\, we were included in the decision process\, as were cyclists\, who were eager to connect. The problem was how to build new trail connections without damaging or compromising these habitats. The Draft IS/MND details a new trail plan which includes two connections from Mt. Burdell to Bowman Canyon\, one a multi-use trail connecting to San Andreas Fire Road\, and the other a hiker/equestrian trail connecting to the Dwarf Oak Trail. In this plan\, the existing road through the serpentine grassland is slated for decommissioning\, and new trail alignments are designed to avoid the serpentine grassland\, rare plant populations\, and the area of highest badger burrows density. \nThe Draft IS/MND\, out for 30-day review\, details the project as an opportunity not only to build trail connection but also to protect habitats from future impacts.  The public comment period is MCL’s opportunity to comment on whether the County OSD has been successful in avoiding sensitive areas and mitigating any possible impacts.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-parks-and-open-space-committee-meeting-4-4-6-2-2/2027-06-10/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Parks and Open Space
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270616T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270616T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002525-1813140000-1813147200@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2027-06-16/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270707T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270707T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002571-1814954400-1814961600@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-07-07/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270721T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270721T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002526-1816164000-1816171200@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2027-07-21/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270804T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270804T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002572-1817373600-1817380800@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-08-04/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270818T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270818T120000
DTSTAMP:20260513T192006Z
CREATED:20260325T001219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T192006Z
UID:10002527-1818583200-1818590400@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Climate Action Working Group Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nClimate Action Working Group Meeting\nWednesday 10:00 am – 12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid \nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwoduysrDMsGt16JMYC3r6_mA1R0EYqLgKn \nMay 20th- California’s Climate Future: The Climate Center’s 2026 priorities \n \nAs California confronts worsening wildfire risk\, grid instability\, extreme heat\, and the challenge of reducing carbon emissions\, many of the decisions being made in Sacramento right now will shape how Californians power their homes\, charge their vehicles\, and manage land for decades. \nFew organizations have been more deeply involved in shaping those conversations than The Climate Center\, and few people have been more central to those efforts than Barry Vesser\, the organization’s Chief Program Officer. Barry has worked on California climate and clean energy policy for more than two decades and helped lead the Climate Center’s Community Energy Resilience initiative\, which secured $170 million in California Energy Commission investment in community-scale energy projects. \nAt the May 20 Climate Action Working Group meeting\, Barry will discuss several of The Climate Center’s major policy priorities for 2026. One of the most consequential is the future of California’s Cap-and-Invest program\, the carbon pricing system that generates billions annually for climate programs statewide. How that money gets raised\, allocated\, and spent is one of the central climate fights in Sacramento right now. \nBarry will also discuss efforts to use electric vehicles as backup power sources that could help stabilize the grid during heat waves and outages\, along with the growing movement to treat forests\, wetlands\, grasslands\, and working farmland as carbon infrastructure that can store carbon while reducing wildfire risk and protecting water supplies. \nHe will also touch on enhanced geothermal energy\, a promising source of around-the-clock clean power that could complement solar and wind. \nFor anyone trying to make sense of where California climate and energy policy is heading next\, this is a rare opportunity to hear directly from someone helping shape it. \nPlease register here to join us.
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-climate-action-working-group-meeting-4-9/2027-08-18/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Climate Action Working Group
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Martha-Co-WH14B-scaled-1.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270901T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20270901T120000
DTSTAMP:20260424T200013Z
CREATED:20260402T224412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260424T200013Z
UID:10002573-1819792800-1819800000@www.marinconservationleague.org
SUMMARY:MCL Land Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Marin Conservation League\nLand Use\, Transportation\, & Water Committee\n10:00 am-12:00 pm\nIn-person/ Zoom Hybrid\nRegister: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMsdeuprjgqH9XMXRT0ZVWwTUjD-JW0QNlJ \nMAY 6: LEARN HOW GREENBELT ALLIANCE IS TAKING ON HOUSING AS AN ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE SOLUTION   \nJessie Rountree from Greenbelt Alliance will be our guest speaker. Jessie will share how Greenbelt Alliance is encouraging Climate SMART housing in the Bay Area to reduce greenhouse gas emissions\, increase our resilience to climate-related risks\, and avoid habitat disruption through sprawl. She will introduce us to their Endorsement Program which applies criteria and expert review to housing across the Bay Area. Together\, we will also explore ways to improve future projects like local ordinance requirements for addressing sea level rise and wildfire hazards\, as well as how to better integrate transportation and infrastructure improvements needed to support new housing. \nJessie Rountree is the Marin Resilience Manager at Greenbelt Alliance. Jessie works alongside partners and communities to create a shared vision for resilience\, one that brings together equity\, conservation\, and abundant climate-SMART housing. Jessie is a Marin County resident\, nature enthusiast\, and an active member of MCL. \nLIGHT POLLUTION – INTRODUCTION OF DRAFT “DARK SKIES” POLICY POSITION \nNighttime lighting can create damaging pollution from ambient light (glow) and excessive glare. Light pollution has many environmental consequences including direct impacts to bird movement and human quality of life. MCL has been studying this issue and has found that there are ways and means to minimize night lighting while maintaining needed safety. MCL has developed a draft policy position statement that advocates for “dark skies.” This draft policy statement will be introduced for discussion at this meeting.  Join us to learn more and to participate in this discussion. \nPlease register above to join us!
URL:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/event/mcl-land-use-transportation-and-water-committee-meeting/2027-09-01/
LOCATION:Marin Conservation League\, 175 N. Redwood Dr\, San Rafael\, CA\, 94903\, United States
CATEGORIES:Land Use, Water and Transportation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.marinconservationleague.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Parks-and-Open-Space-Committee-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR