Monday, April 23, 2012

Govt. Pays $200,000 to move Shrub



The government doled out more than $200,000 in 2010 to 
"translocate" a bush that was blocking the path of San 
Francisco’s $1.05-billion highway project — partially 
funded by President Obama’s 2009 economic stimulus
 law — adding to the laundry list of "shovel-ready" projects 
that resulted in a cesspool of taxpayer waste.
"In October 2009, an ecologist identified a plant growing
in a concrete-bound median strip along Doyle Drive in the 
Presidio as Arctostaphylos franciscana," (pictured at left) 
the U.S. Department of Interior wrote in an Aug. 10, 2010 
Federal Register journal entry. "The plant’s location was 
directly in the footprint of a roadway improvement project 
designed to upgrade the seismic and structural integrity 
of the south access to the Golden Gate Bridge."
"The translocation of the Arctostaphylos franciscana plant 
to an active native plant management area of the Presidio 
was accomplished, apparently successfully and according 
to plan, on January 23, 2010," the agency added. 
CNSNews.com explained the purported "significance" 
of this particular plant:


The bush — a Franciscan manzanita — as a specimen 
of a commercially cultivated species of shrub that can be 
purchased from nurseries for as little as $15.98 per plant. 
The particular plant in question, however, was discovered 
in the midst of the City of San Francisco, in the median 
strip of a highway, and was deemed to be the last example 
of the species in the "wild."


Prior to the discovery of this "wild" Franciscan manzanita, 
the plant had been considered extinct for as long as 62 years
 — extinct, that is, outside of people’s yards and botanical 
gardens.
Previously, the shrub was located in two cemeteries 
in the city’s Richmond District. The Interior Department 
also said there had been "unconfirmed sightings" of the 
plant in the Haight-Ashbury District, and that the district’s 
population of these particular shrubs has been "lost to 
urbanization."
On October 16, 2009, a botanist by the name of Daniel 
Gluesenkamp identified the bush along Doyle Drive, 
the highway that leads to the Golden Gate Bridge that 
is currently under renovation. Further examination from 
an ecologist and the Presidio Trust — which helps to 
 preserve the Presidio public park site — concluded 
that the shrub was a Franciscan Manzanita.
Consequently, on December 21, 2009, the Presidio 
Trust, the National Park Service, the California 
Department of  Transportation (Caltrans), the U.S. Fish 
and Wildlife Service, and the California Department of 
Fish and Game collectively drafted an agreement — 
 "Memorandum of Agreement Regarding Planning, 
Development, and Implementation of the Conservation 
Plan for Franciscan Manzanita" (MOA) — which detailed 
how, why, and when the shrub would be relocated.
The MOA called for a nearly $80,000 transfer to the 
Presidio Trust "to fund the establishment, nurturing, 
 and monitoring of the Mother Plant in its new location 
for a period not to exceed ten (10) years following 
relocation and two (2) years for salvaged rooted 
layers and cuttings according to the activities outlined 
in the Conservation Plan."
The agreement also called for $100,000 to finance 
the "hard removal" of the plant and $25,605 to fund 
the "reporting requirements" for the decade following 
the removal. Combined with the $79,470 transfer to 
the Presidio Trust, the overall cost for "translocating" 
the Franciscan Manzanita bush calculated to a 
 whopping $205,075. Other costs the project included, 
according to the memorandum:
"Contract for and provide funding not to exceed 
$7,025.00 for initial genetic or chromosomal testing of 
the Mother Plant by a qualified expert to be selected 
at Caltrans’ sole discretion." 

"Contract for and fund the input, guidance, and advice 

of a qualified Manzanita expert on an as-needed basis 
to support the tending of the Mother Plant for a period 
not to exceed five (5) years, provided that said expert 
 selection, retention and replacement at any point after 
hiring rests in the sole discretion of Caltrans."

"Provide funding not to exceed $5,000.00 to each of 

3 botanical gardens (Strybing, UC, and Tilden) to 
nurture salvaged rooted layers and to monitor and 
report findings as outlined in the Conservation Plan."

"Provide funding not to exceed $1,500.00 for the 

long-term seed storage of 300 seeds collected around 
the Mother Plant in November 2009 as outlined in the 
Conservation Plan."
The plant is now being guarded at an undisclosed 
location, partly because a fear that the "wild plant" 
 might be trampled by nature-lovers and other 
onlookers. "[A] single trampling event could result 
in damage or the death of the wild plant," the 
Interior Department wrote in a Sept. 8, 2011 
Federal Register entry. "As noted the Presidio 
Trust and NPS have made continuous efforts not 
 to reveal the location of Arctostaphylos franciscana. 
They are concerned that  public knowledge of the 
A. franciscana location would attract large numbers
of plant enthusiasts who may damage the A.
franciscana and compact the soil."
According to the 2011 Federal Register entry, 
because the plant has been relocated to an 
undeveloped area in the Presidio and is not 
benefiting from the level of protection and 
nutrients that other plants enjoy, it must be 
considered "wild."
But still, however "wild" Franciscan Manzanitas 
may be, one California nursery currently sells 
them online for only $15.98 per bush.
Source: New American via The Patriot Update, 4/13/12

Comments:
Our versions of the $200 thousand dollar shrub move 
are the price tags for a 3.5 mile re-do of Mt Vernon for 
$12 million and the 1/2 mile re-do of Dunwoody Village 
Parkway for $2.4 million.

Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader  

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