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Facts here are interpreted through a lens of community goals and principles. The <br /> preservation of the endangered species within the boundaries of Redwood City and <br /> the rehabilitation of thei� habitat is the most important goal of this plan. It is also <br /> ethically our most important principle. The current Redwood City Mayor and <br /> Council, and the management of the City, have shown extraordinary concern with <br /> protecting endangered species on Bair and Bird Islands while at the same time <br /> striking a reasonable balance between those needs and the continuing interests of <br /> their citizens. The observations and preferences embodied in the instant report have <br /> also had the benefit of input from various City agencies and community advocates. <br /> The City also must balance its comments between over-restriction of public use and <br /> the great sensitivity to long-held regional governance concerns, such as Bay Trails. <br /> We should begin to interpret the plan put forward by the NWRS in Alternative A <br /> where all activity begins for the refuge: in the Bair Island parking lot as identified in <br /> Alternative A. The Bai� Island parking lot was built by the NWRS for access to Bai� <br /> Island. The intent was to divert citizen parking from the Whipple Street access. <br /> The NWRS lot, maintained by Redwood City, has approximately 20 parking <br /> spaces. The City believes that the number of parking spaces reserved by the NWRS <br /> for the Bair Island refuge should be increased, especially for weekend use. A San <br /> Francisco Bay Trail l�ildl fe and PublicAccess Study shows a predictable increase for trail <br /> users on weekend days. It is important to emphasize that visitor use of trails in <br /> Redwood City is well below visitor use at similar trails in the San Francisco Bay in <br /> habitat with the same endangered species. Although it is impossible to predict refuge <br /> use, visitors to the completed Bair Island Wildlife Refuge in Redwood City should <br /> exceed current casual use of existing Bay Trails. Coupling that with the complete <br /> elimination of Whipple Street parking �� �.�;�r� ��. � ��.�,��,,�.���„r�...,� <br /> ,,,� .. �._ ,' � ; � ` ( �� � �' .``� �'- �� ��� 1 �� <br /> and it is evident that more parking � r--�� � �� �' <br /> should be made available. Similarl�, �'� �._ �' °��'" ��� <br /> _. �� <br /> ru w� �� <br /> �� � "S <br /> school classes or or nized ex editions � �����`' � �� <br /> � P a� �. <br /> that would logically travel to the refuge _� k ��`�" ,���'��r�,,,�� � p " at'� ,,�� �� <br /> in groups have no bus parking � . � �` '�� ����'`"�� � � <br /> available in the NWRS lot. �� � ���� � <br /> �� �� <br /> ��� ° <br /> �� <br /> -�'` x <br /> Exiting the parking lot, according ' �xt L �� <br /> to the NWRS plan, a refuge visitor ��<.�� ,'� �' �` �� <br /> ° ° <br /> must then walk 0.5 miles along the �:� :.tr. ��" -"` ��� � <br /> Bai� Island parking lot access trail to � ,� � �"` � � ��-� .� � <br /> reach the Whipple Street entrance to �; �, ��� °� <br /> the refuge. While traveling to the ` ��'` '� <br /> refuge entrance this higher level of Unprotected Pickleweed Habitat <br /> pedestrian traffic will use an Outside of Refuge boundaries. <br /> unimproved path between residential <br /> 20 <br />