Laserfiche WebLink
�, �� � <br /> CONCLUSION <br /> The City of Redwood City and we as a community, have a unique opportunity. <br /> We have been given the opportunity to accept a National Wildlife Refuge where once <br /> there was only an open place. Shell mounds on Outer Bair Island indicate man's pre- <br /> historic use of the Islands. Bair Island has been home to all of us here on the Ba}T for <br /> a very long time. As we accept the Refuge we hope the I�NURS and the FWS can <br /> accept that this Refuge is in our City — and integral part of what we consider our <br /> homes. <br /> We have all, through the years and through this process, changed the way we <br /> look at the Bair Island complex (I use the word complex because the majority of <br /> people don't know there are separate islands so it depends on who we want to target). <br /> We took the goal of protecting these ueasured national assets, the endangered species <br /> of the Islands, and we redefined the true nature of protection of the species. Fence <br /> off the landward boundary; and do not maintain open pathways for invasive species <br /> which do not contribute to recovery. Make citizen access to the Refuge easy, and use <br /> that access to further control access by threats. Increase human use and decrease <br /> human intrusion. Contour the land to create habitat and instructive views of nature's <br /> operation. <br /> We have seen this Refuge; all that it is and all that it can be. Once we adopt <br /> the strictures of wise use and conservation we can use the Refuge to teach our <br /> children and ourselves. We can bring a higher quality of life to those who need those <br /> margins of improvement the most. We can bring this lesson of acceptance and <br /> responsibility to other communities. <br /> We have seen that the power of the City's approach is in how it welcomes the <br /> Refuge and how it says goodbye to that use which has come before it. The Bair <br /> Islands and Bird Island are part of the same future stable system. It is a fortunate <br /> oasis in an urban paradise on the San Francisco Bay. But, it is an oasis that must be <br /> adaptively managed. Use of the Refuge beyond the passive, instructive use <br /> envisioned by the City, must be monitored and it must be measured to ensure it <br /> meets the Refuge's purpose. <br /> Adaprive management means acrive management. The Ciry offers the Refuge <br /> its good offices to facilitate wise use and incorporate the communiry into the care of <br /> the Refuge. The City of Redwood City offers as well to facilitate the Refuge's quest <br /> for a place in our homes. <br /> 22 <br />