Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE Architecture in Big Sur 1 What is the center of Big Sur? 6 Big Sur Vision Project update 11 The High Price of land use planning 12 Has ‘slow growth’ come at a cost? 13 Photo: Michael Standaert VO LUM E 2 N UM B ER 1 SUMM ER 20 0 6 The Big Sur Voice, by and for the Big Sur community, is a venture of the KL Felicitas Foundation, a private non-profit foundation dedicated to proactively supporting rural community/environment initiatives and social entrepreneurship worldwide. Architecture in Big Sur For this issue of the Big Sur Voice, we interviewed several architects and designers who have worked on projects in Big Sur. We explored the possible existence of a “Big Sur style,” their philosophy of architecture, how working in Big Sur has influenced their work, and what they think is an appropriate type of architecture for this unique coastal zone. Photo: Lisa Kleissner The Big Sur Voice Editor · Lisa Kleissner Writer/Reporter/Photographer · Michael Standaert (unless otherwise noted) You can contact us by e-mail at: [email protected] Alternatively, you can call our writer Michael Standaert at 831-227-8363, and faxes can be sent to 831-646-1244. Back issues of the Big Sur Voice can be found in pdf format at: http://www.bigsurvoice.org/files. In September, we will look at the particular issues businesses face in Big Sur. If you would like to voice your opinion or suggest topics for future issues, we would love to hear from you. The Big Sur Voice P. O. Box 218 Big Sur, CA 93920 PRSRT STANDARD US POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO. 75 MONTEREY, CA O Is there a Big Sur style? n one ridge a house sits shrouded in fog. On the next ridge the siding of a home is sun bleached and dry as a bone. In the valley below a dwelling is nestled in the woods, the surroundings cool, damp and studded with redwood trees. Here a point juts out on the west side of Highway 1 and you see a few windows, maybe the outline of the sod and vines creeping along the roof, a home blasted by wind, salt and surf. A thousand feet inland stands a shelter in a meadow, the trees alive with birds, the wildflowers attended to by bees. The weather, ecosystems, and landscape of Big Sur are as various as its ridges. The mixture of beauty, tranquility, remoteness and raw natural power draws thousands of visitors each year. Some of them stay on to stake their own claim Continued on page 3 … The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 What does it take to survive as a business in a remote rural coastal area fraught with road closures in the winter, volatile seasonal swings in customer visits, a growing community of part-time residents, employee retention challenges, restrictive governmental regulations, and very limited, almost non-existent affordable housing? These are the topics we’ll be exploring in our Fall issue. If you are a business owner with a story to share, please contact us at [email protected] or call our writer, Michael Standaert at 831-227-8363. Kim Theobald, owner of the new ARS art gallery in Big Sur, taking on the Big Sur challenge Photo: Lisa Kleissner Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE Ned Callihan, Architect Architecture in Big Sur Continued from front cover … on paradise. Others have been here for generations. All are challenged by the land, the climate, the community and the bureaucracy that rules the built environment. With the ever shrinking amount of private land available in the area, as well as the myriad of laws meant to protect the natural beauty, habitat, and views for those who live and visit Big Sur, the ability of architects to create is heavily influenced by the land, the ecosystems, and habitat surrounding a site. While there may be no agreement on a Big Sur style of architecture, no obvious overarching philosophy or ethic that has emerged from speaking with architects that work in the area, one thing that all agree on is that the land itself is the largest influence in any design, trumping input from any client or county. “The place enforces its own rules, or should anyway,” said Ned Callihan, who has worked as an architect in Big Sur for the past several years. “Letting a design grow out of a site here, I’m automatically led to green concepts. Starting from the basis of passive design, orientation, dealing with wind, sun and rain in passive ways. “If you go back far enough, before we had the power to overcome or fight nature, everything was ‘green’ at that point. Here, the forces of nature are strong enough, that if you don’t do those things, you create problems.” Callihan’s experience as an architect goes back to when he worked as an urban designer in Cincinnati, Ohio in the 70s. Tired of the politics in his work and the lack of government support for infrastructure projects, Callihan quit his job in the mid 70s and began traveling the country. Like many people, when he came here he had his “Big Sur” epiphany and decided to stay on. From the early 80s to mid 90s he was a body worker at Esalen, doing minor architecture and design projects on the side. Eventually several clients were referred to him from an overloaded architect, which led to more projects, which led to restarting his career. “I love what I do,” he said. So do the other architects who work in Big Sur. Mickey Muennig is perhaps the most well-known of these. Since 1971 he has lived and worked in Big Sur, creating his own style and one that’s often seen from the outside as synonymous with Big Sur itself. He calls himself an organic architect, in the family of architects Frank Lloyd Wright, Bruce Goff and Lewis Sullivan. He studied under Goff at Oklahoma University in the mid 1950s, moving back to his home state of Missouri after graduating, and after several years there, found his way to Big Sur. While he has his own unique style, Muennig has been heavily influenced by the land in the area. “I try to merge the vision of the client with the land,” he said. “I try to merge the land with the client, that’s basically what I do.” O ne of his latest works is the Wavecrest Complex, or the Half Moon Bay Ecology Center. This is currently in the planning phase, and has yet to be approved by the California Coastal Commission or the Half Moon Bay local government. Looking at the designs of the Wavecrest Complex, it is hard to fathom how it would not eventually be approved and built. In fact, this design could be revolutionary for low impact coastal building in the future. The structures of the design are shaped like waves rising out of the earth in smooth, integrated building envelopes. From Highway 1 you would not be able to see any “building” at all, only small hillocks and a walkway passing between them. The complex aspires to be a place for high school students to learn about coastal habitat; complete with 160 dormitory beds, three learning centers, living space for teachers, an amphitheater, and a raised walkway over the habitat. Buildings would be warmed by solar hot water panels, powered by photovoltaic solar panels, a wind mill, a biogas generator, with water supplied through recycled rain water and a grey water system. Continued on page 4 … The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 Proposed future plans for the Wavecrest Complex, Half Moon Bay. Provided by Thomas Rettenwender. Architecture in Big Sur Continued from page 3 … Thomas Rettenwender, who was contracted by Muennig to design the Half Moon Bay Ecology Center, believes it will be a magical environment for the Half Moon Bay community. “It serves as a good model of sustainable community development that may be an inspiration for us in Big Sur,” he said. Wavecrest was designed for the Open Space Association (OSA) in Half Moon Bay, said Rettenwender. The idea was that it would be a way for the OSA to generate an income to purchase neighboring land in the area, though it has been a difficult political process to do any development there, he said. The site lies next to the Ritz Carlton Hotel which has been heavily developed with housing and a golf course. “So people don’t want to see any development at all,” said Rettenwender. “But this is not your usual development.” Rettenwender is into unusual development. He recently created a nonprofit group called Realitree, and hopes to use the profits made through its projects to invest back into the Big Sur community and promote environmental design and sustainable architecture. “Realitree was an idea born during a project we were working on for Save the Redwoods League,” he said. “The project was to design a lightweight tree structure that is fully suspended from the redwood tree canopy to let visitors fully experience the world up in the trees. During that process we were measuring all the trees and their location and size and we came up with the idea that trees are so much a part of our world and survival here that it should be really incorporated into our idea of reality, which is where the term Realitree came from.” As for building and creating, Rettenwender says it all starts with the design process. “The integrated design process involves many people from the very beginning,” he said. “[It’s] the idea of architecture being a gift, a social process, rather than a genius idea. It starts in the design process and in the decisions about use of materials, and the amount of energy costs that go into producing materials and getting them to the site. Ideally you would use materials that are on the site already, as far as how you actually design the house, taking into consideration the bioclimatic factors and using vegetation and landscape to help integrate the building with the land.” What is appropriate architecture for Big Sur? A ll the architects we spoke to voiced similar responses, whether discussing how a building is placed on the site, their devotion to using and exploring new uses of recycled, local, ecological, and green materials and technologies, as well as being considerate of viewshed and aesthetic impacts. “The Big Sur landscape and attitude of the culture aligns closely with our beliefs about building design and technology, meaning buildings that speak to the land,” said Michelle Kaufmann, who has worked on many projects in Big Sur and is now working with the New Camadoli Hermitage on upgrading its buildings. “This approach of having the buildings speak to the land is manifested in a number of ways, such as being thoughtful of how the buildings are designed and built to use the least amount of resources from the earth. Also, designing buildings with roof lines that relate to the surroundings, either ‘folded’ roofs that blend with the hillside and mountains or curved roofs that do the same, making the buildings blend with the environment as much as possible.” Using earthy materials that blend with the environment, from the local environment, is also an important aspect of her work, explained Kaufmann. “For example, for the New Camaldoli Hermitage monastery project, we are taking samples from the earth on the site, to use in the mixture of the smooth trowel stucco and sprayed earth facades for the buildings,” she said. “As the monastery buildings are rebuilt to be more healthy and more functional than their current buildings, we are recycling the existing buildings to become a part of the new project, using crushed concrete blocks from the existing buildings to make the walkway areas for the new buildings, and recycling the wood in the existing buildings for landscape elements and seating areas. It is also important that we’re doing as much of the work off-site as possible, to reduce the amount of impact on the Big Sur landscape.” Rob Carver, who has been building in the area since 1974, has seen many changes, from booms to busts to the current client base, which he sees as more sophisticated. “I think the property values have jumped several times over the last thirty years,” he said. “There are fewer people who can afford to live in Big Sur every year.” Carver is a partner with his wife Mary Ann Schicketanz in their architecture and design firm. Schicketanz has been working in Big Sur since the later part of the 80s. “We just love working here,” said Carver. “Our philosophy has always been to be subordinate to the landscape and to blend in. Not to be a burden to other people’s views, but to blend in even when you don’t have to. The first house I ever did was a sod roof house, with sod on the third story. It’s the idea of picking up the land and putting the house under it. You’re replacing the footprint that you’re disturbing, to where you’re really not disturbing anything.” Both of them have been influenced greatly by being in Big Sur. “I think everybody grows over their life span and their career,” said Schicketanz. “Living here and building in this fabulous landscape influences you. If we were in New York City or San Francisco it would be different, so our architecture relates more to the land, is less urban. Architecture that is subordinate to its surroundings versus architecture that is sculptural. Both have their place and are valid, but we are really trying to be in the category that it is subordinate to its surroundings. Therefore you don’t develop a recognizable style. You don’t open the pages, and say, oh, that’s Richard Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE Meier, he’s a classic example of the white cubes sitting in the middle of Midwestern lawns. Or Gehry is the same, where you have a sculpture sitting in the middle of the landscape and it happens to be a house. That’s definitely not what we are after.” S ubordinating architecture to the natural landscape, as opposed to creating works of art that may not fit in, was a common desire expressed by all of the designers and architects we spoke with. “It’s really all about the site, and combining the nature of the site with the needs of the client, that’s what our mission statement is,” said Carver. “We’ve lived here long enough and walked the area enough that we know the microclimates and how different each area is, not only in Big Sur, but on the peninsula too. Just by having been here and observing, we have a good sense going in of what is appropriate to a specific site.” While this seems easy in theory, many people who move to Big Sur have their own ideas of what they want. Sometimes it just won’t work. “You have to teach and be diplomatic and you have to try to bring people along and open them up to new ideas,” said Carver. “Most people are very receptive to that.” In the end, it is about mixing diplomacy and educating clients about what works and what doesn’t, and blending that vision with the vision a client has coming into the relationship. “The concepts of interrelationship between open plan, simple detailing, geometric relationships between things, is what I work with,” said Callihan. “None of my clients have come and said, do whatever you want. It would be exciting for me to do that, but for the client, I like to draw out what the client wants. The site is essential. Sometimes a client brings their ideas from the East coast, or the Midwest, or from Modesto, and tries to put it here. The best buildings grow out of where they are, both from the form of the land, the orientation of the site, how the weather treats the place, local materials, local skills, local craftspeople, and what you can assemble from around you.” As far as “green” architecture goes, what most excites these architects is the increasing availability of materials which they can draw from, especially the many recycled materials. Strides are being made in efficient and ecologically sustainable materials, many said, that weren’t mainstreamed until recently. “The survival of the Western world really depends on us being efficient and conserving our resources,” said Rettenwender. “We Carver Schicketanz Architects should be moving toward living in sustainable communities.” Carver said that he thinks it is only a matter of time before more and more sustainable materials are incorporated in everyday building. “I think in the 70s, there were a lot of individuals doing things with recycled That shift has allowed us to have so many more materials, building houses with bottles, insulating options. There are so many options it’s really with old blue jeans and newspapers,” he said. “Now, hard to categorize and to find out what works, from a company, you can get old blue jeans that what doesn’t, in an efficient way, it is almost an are shredded, sterilized and packaged. Enterprising overload now. It’s a different kind of problem, but entrepreneurs have taken the ideas of the 70s and I think it’s wonderful what’s happening. Fixtures started companies around them and perfected the can be both good looking and super efficient. materials. Now we have this amazing array of Products made of organic materials that aren’t materials in our palette to work with. It was a long harmful to your health are coming on the market. time coming. In the 70s it was pretty bleak, people Wall to wall carpet that doesn’t give off toxic just doing it by hand, little start up cottage industries. chemicals is a significant development. So are programs by carpet companies to pick-up and recycle 100 percent of the old carpets when they install the new one.” Some materials are expensive right now, and costs do fluctuate, especially on ecological and “green” products that are coming into the market. Still, according to Carver, the price of these can raise the up-front cost of a project by about 5 to 20 percent. He’s hopeful that people realize the benefits of these products, even if they are slightly more expensive in the building stage. “If you make something more efficient, you may have a higher upfront cost, but you’ll have a lower cost over the long run – energy savings can be huge,” said Carver. “You’ll also have the benefit of things we aren’t really putting dollar values on now, but should, like are we going to kill the planet? How can you put a dollar value on that? I’m not a doomsday guy, but there may be a tipping point where maybe we can’t turn things around anymore. More and more people The integrated design process involves many people from the very beginning,” he said. “[It’s] the idea of architecture being a gift, a social process, rather than a genius idea.” Thomas Rettenwender Continued on page 18 … The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 What is the center of Big Sur? Envisioning the future of Big Sur there is one shared déjà vu experience for locals here to single out, it could be the one where a tourist stops you and asks how far it is to Big Sur. “I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been here and folks passing through stop to ask for directions, and they’re wondering if they’ve passed Big Sur, or haven’t yet got to it,” said Theodore Schink. “So they’re dismayed once they find they are in the heart, that they are on Main Street.” So where is the center of Big Sur exactly? Is it next to the Post Office where the large sign says Center? Or is it in the multitude of other “centers” of the area: Esalen, Nepenthe, the Big Sur Lodge, the Grange, Loma Vista and the Big Sur Bakery, the five-to-ten mile long “main street” business district, the Henry Miller Library, Deetjen’s, or even all the way down in Pacific Valley? ¿Cuál es el centro de Big Sur? Viendo el futuro de Big Sur Si existe alguna experiencia de déjà vu que han compartido los vecinos de Big Sur, sería aquella en la que un turista le detiene y le pregunta cuánto se tarda para llegar a Big Sur. “No le podría contar la cantidad de veces que gente pasa por aquí y pide direcciones, pensando que ya han pasado Big Sur o que no han llegado aún,” contó Theodore Schink. “Así que están decepcionados una vez que se enteran que están en el centro del pueblo, que están en Main Street. ¿Así que dónde exactamente se encuentra el centro de Big Sur? ¿Está ubicado al lado de la oficina de correos donde un gran letrero anuncia en inglés “Center.” ¿O se encuentra entre los diferentes “centros” de la localidad: Esalen, Nepenthe, el Big Sur Lodge, el Grange, Loma Vista y la Big Sur Bakery, la zona comercial que consta de una “calle principal” de cinco a diez millas de largo, la biblioteca Henry Miller, Deetjen, o incluso Pacific Valley? ¿Realmente importa? Desde un punto de vista geográfico, el punto medio de esa extensión litoral de 90 millas quizás se aproxime más a Lucia que a cualquier otro lugar. ¿Ese es el centro de Big Sur? Recientemente, la Big Sur Voice (la voz de Big Sur) planteó estas preguntas a cuatro residentes: ¿dónde se ubica el centro urbano?, ¿y si eso significa algo, qué es?, ¿y por último cómo se vería un centro para la localidad en el futuro? Does it even matter? Geographically, the mid-point of the 90 mile stretch of coastline is probably closer to Lucia than anything. Is that the center of Big Sur? The Big Sur Voice recently raised this question to four residents, asking them where they thought the center of Big Sur is, what that means, if anything, and how a “center” of Big Sur could be envisioned. This was largely an exercise in visioning possibilities for the future of Big Sur, something which is being done at the group level in the Big Sur “Vision Project.” Our intent was to take that process outside of group discussion which many see bogged down in conflicts over land use issues, into a more freeform and loose brainstorming of ideas about what community needs could be fulfilled by either a virtual or actual “center.” Our four interviewees shared their thoughts about a wide range of “center” observations and dreams ranging from the spiritual, to the long-term sustainability of the resident community in Big Sur. Surprisingly, though these four had not come together to discuss their ideas in depth before, what came to the surface in each of the conversations was the similar desire to see Big Sur become a sustainable, affordable and independent community for the residents who live here, and also, perhaps an example to the world at large. Esto en gran parte fue un ejercicio de ver posibilidades para el futuro de Big Sur, algo que se está llevando a cabo a nivel del grupo con el “Vision Project” (proyecto de visión) de Big Sur. Nuestra intención fue de sacar el proceso de los debates del grupo donde muchos lo veían estancado debido a conflictos de asuntos relacionados con el uso de la tierra, e incorporarlo en un ámbito más libre y centrado en buscar ideas sobre qué necesidades de la comunidad podrían ser atendidas a través de un centro virtual o real. Los cuatro entrevistados compartieron una amplia gama de observaciones acerca de un “centro” y sus sueños, desde lo espiritual hasta cómo hacer que sea sostenible la comunidad residencial en Big Sur a largo plazo. Sorprendentemente, aunque estas cuatro personas no se habían reunido anteriormente para hablar más detalladamente de sus ideas, el fondo de cada conversación revelaba un deseo común de que Big Sur se convirtiera en una comunidad sostenible, Continuó página 8 … Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE What came out of all the discussions was that the community of Big Sur could possibly use a place to call its own, where it could share best practices, work together to solve everyday as well as larger systemic problems, and where it could build community spirit as well as create a self-sustaining enterprise. The most concrete idea came from Michael Gilson, and to a lesser, though similar, extent from Theodore Schink and Jason Fann. Magnus Toren was less enthusiastic for any kind of new construction, believing that the current Big Sur in its multi-centeredness didn’t need any new structures, though he did say there was a need for greater cooperation. t hough he has only been a resident in Big Sur since 2002, Theodore Schink has been profoundly influenced by the area. “Big Sur is a blessing and a joy,” Schink said. “It’s really a wonderful and magical place.” The 27-year-old currently splits his time between Big Sur and the Bay Area due to his work further north with the MERU Foundation and the Creative Awareness Project, and involvement in programs related to the exploration of consciousness, personal development and self-awareness. Recently much of his time in Big Sur has been dedicated to helping orchestrate his local water company on Pfeiffer Ridge and other volunteer work. “Perhaps the center of Big Sur is the spiritual heart of Big Sur,” said Schink. “That lies in each and every one of us. I’m thinking primarily of the residents of Big Sur, but that also extends to those who visit Big Sur. For me, living on Pfeiffer Ridge, the physical center of Big Sur would be around Loma Vista, the Big Sur Bakery, and the whole aggregate of businesses that extend along this several miles. As a whole, Big Sur is rather diffuse. That’s not to disregard the whole southern aspect of Big Sur. While topographically, geographically, this is perhaps the physical center of Big Sur, any real center of Big Sur exists for the most part in what some might call the dream time, to put it poetically, in the heart, the collective heart of Big Sur.” After discussing issues relating to the world economy, ecological collapse, and several other dour topics, Schink discussed his hope that Big Sur could use the assets of the community already in place, with an increased potential for self-reliance, self-sufficiency, and turn that into something more sustainable. “I think a benefit to the community would be if we could organize around providing, to a certain extent, the produce, fruits and vegetables, possibly seafood and meat, the foodstuffs we rely upon, and produce that locally,” said Schink. “Big Sur could be, and already is in many ways, a model community for the world. We have our work cut out for us, and perhaps a lot of people aren’t interested in participating in it, and that’s fine. But there does exist a possibility, if we focused on it, Photo: Michael Standaert to create a model for the next generation and beyond. Self-reliant, self-sustaining; not cut off from the rest of the world, but inclusive of the rest of the world. Whether we want it or not, the main source of income is tourism. We’re heavily reliant on the ebb and flow of seasonal tourism. In my heart and dreams, I can imagine a potential future Big Sur that met and exceeded all of our wildest dreams.” m ichael Gilson, co-owner of the Big Sur Bakery has remarkably similar ideas to those of Schink. Largely these thoughts centered around the idea of a community garden and possibly a community meeting place. “Since I’ve been here, people are always talking about a community center,” said Gilson. “The overriding problem in creating something like this is that ultimately the profit motive comes in – just to pay the bills. It would need to be a space not infected by a profit motive, something to spawn a lot of great ideas for this community. Begin to address the inefficiencies of a car based culture in a community like this, and how the community could ultimately move towards a more sustainable solution, whether or not the road goes down. How do we make that happen?” Gilson is interested in finding out what a center for Big Sur could be, what a future center could look like. “That raises questions about what is the soul of Big Sur, and what are the priorities of the soul of Big Sur,” he said. “Are those, or could those possibly be reflected in some center of Big Sur? There’s such an amazing group of rugged individualists out here. What are some of the things we all agree upon and all need?” A lot of young people come through the bakery looking for a job, said Gilson, but what they are really looking for is a Big Sur experience. These people, who often have trouble finding places to live while they are here, could possibly be tapped for both affordable housing that supports area businesses, as well as to help tend a community garden. “They’re looking to be part of the Big Sur human community for a year or so before going back to school, whatever it is. I think affordable housing next to something like this could be important, perhaps crucial, for providing people to do this type of work.” Most community meetings, Gilson said, usually turn into discussions about how the community is losing Big Sur bit by bit, and he’d like to see something address more the everyday aspect of what it takes to live here. “It goes on and on,” he said of those discussions. “I respect it. It’s just that it’s frustrating. There’s not so much attention on our day-to-day lives. That is a huge issue, the protection, the preservation. That’s what everyone agrees upon here. The preservation of this environment is crucial and so important, and why we’re all here.” Continued on page 9 … The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 ¿Cuál es el centro de Big Sur? Continado de la página 6 … asequible e independiente para los residentes, y quizás también en un ejemplo para el mundo entero. La conclusión que surgió de todas las entrevistas era que la comunidad de Big Sur podría tener un lugar en donde compartiría las mejores prácticas, trabajaría unida para resolver problemas cotidianos así como sistémicos, y donde podría infundir un sentimiento de comunidad y crear una iniciativa auto sostenible. La idea más concreta vino de Michael Gilson, y aunque de un menor grado, fue similar a la de Theodore Schink y Jason Fann. Magnus Toren mostró menos entusiasmo hacia cualquier construcción nueva, porque cree que la actual Big Sur con sus variedad de centros no necesita una nueva estructura, aunque si reconoció la necesidad de mayor cooperación. A continuación exponemos algunas de sus ideas. Aunque Theodore Schink lleva desde 2002 como residente en Big Sur, la localidad lo ha influido profundamente. “Big Sur es una bendición y una alegría,” expresa Schink. “Realmente es un lugar mágico y especial.” Este veintisiete añero actualmente comparte su tiempo entre Big Sur y la zona de la bahía debido a su trabajo en el norte con la Fundación MERU y el Creative Awareness Project\ y su participación en programas relacionados con la exploración de la consciencia, el desarrollo personal y el auto conocimiento. Últimamente ha dedicado mucho de su tiempo ayudando a dirigir su empresa de agua ubicada en Pfeiffer Ridge además llevar a cabo otras obras voluntarias. “Quizás el centro de Big Sur sea el seno espiritual de la localidad,” dijo Schink. “El que se encuentra en todos nosotros. Me refiero principalmente a los residentes de la localidad pero también se extiende a los que visitan la zona. En mi opinión, como una persona que vive en Pfeiffer Ridge, el centro físico de Big Sur se ubica en los alrededores de Loma Vista, la panadería de Big Sur y el conjunto de negocios a lo largo de esas millas. En su totalidad, Big Sur es más bien un lugar extenso sin olvidar toda la parte sur de la localidad. Aunque desde un punto de vista topográfico, geográfico, esto quizás sea el centro físico de la zona, cualquier centro real de Big Sur existe mayormente en lo que algunos llaman un momento de sueño, para decirlo de una forma poética, en el corazón, en el corazón colectivo de Big Sur.” Después de platicar sobre temas relacionados con la economía mundial, el colapso ecológico y otros temas serios, Schink dijo que esperaba que Big Sur pudiera aprovechar mejor los recursos de la comunidad ya existentes para conseguir autonomía, auto suficiencia y convertirlo en un lugar algo más sostenible. “Creo que si pudiéramos organizarnos para conseguir, hasta cierto punto, los productos agrícolas, frutas, verduras, posiblemente mariscos y carne, básicamente los alimentos de los cuales dependemos, con el fin de producirlos en nuestra localidad, se beneficiaría la comunidad,” contó Schink. “Big Sur podría ser, y de hecho ya lo es en muchos sentidos, una comunidad modelo para el mundo. Tenemos mucho trabajo por delante, y quizás a muchas personas no les interesa participar en la tarea, y eso está bien. Pero sí que es posible, si nos centráramos en ello para crear un modelo para la siguiente generación y el futuro lejano. Auto suficiente, sostenible; no desconectado del resto del mundo sino incluido en el mundo. Que lo queramos aceptar o no, la realidad es que la mayor fuente de ingresos proviene del turismo. Dependemos en gran parte del la entrada y del flujo de turismo estacional. En mi corazón y en mis sueños, imagino un Big Sur en el futuro que alcanza y excede nuestros sueños más aspirantes.” Michael Gilson, co propietario de la panadería de Big Sur, tiene ideas sorprendentemente similares a las de Schink. Estas ideas se centraban principalmente en un jardín comunitario y posiblemente en un lugar de encuentro para la comunidad. “La gente lleva hablando de un centro comunitario desde que estoy aquí,” contó Gilson. “El problema primordial a la hora de crear algo parecido es que al fin y al cabo siempre surge la cuestión económica para sacar beneficios simplemente para pagar las facturas. Tendría que ser un espacio que no esté contaminado por motivos de ganancias, un sitio que generaría muchas grandes ideas para la comunidad. Hay que empezar a abordar las ineficiencias de una cultura basada en los autos en una comunidad como ésta, y ver como se podría encontrar una solución más sostenible para la comunidad con o sin la carretera. ¿Cómo hacemos que se convierta en realidad?” Gilson se pregunta cómo podría ser un centro para Big Sur en el futuro, y a qué se parecería. “Y eso plantea la cuestión de ¿cuál es el alma de Big Sur, y asimismo cuáles son las prioridades de esa alma?” sigue contando. “¿Se reflejan o podrían reflejarse en algún centro en Big Sur? Aquí existe un grupo tan asombroso de individualistas fuertes. ¿Cuáles son esas cosas que todos tenemos en común y necesitamos?” Muchos jóvenes vienen a la panadería en busca de un empleo, cuenta Gilson, pero lo que realmente buscan es una experiencia en Big Sur. Se podría aprovechar a estas personas, que a menudo pasan por grandes dificultades para encontrar una vivienda cuando están aquí, para la construcción de viviendas asequibles que apoyan los negocios de la zona así como para cuidar de un jardín comunitario. Quieren formar parte de la comunidad humana de Big Sur durante aproximadamente un año antes de volver a los estudios o seguir con su vida. Creo que viviendas asequibles cerca de algo así podría ser importante, quizás esencial, para conseguir personas que pueden hacer este tipo de trabajo.” Según Gilson, la mayoría de las reuniones comunitarias suelen convertirse en una discusión sobre cómo Big Sur se está perdiendo a cachitos, y le gustaría ver algo que abordara los aspectos cotidianos que implican vivir en esta zona. “Siguen y siguen,” dijo hablando de aquellas discusiones. “Las respeto. Sólo que es frustrante. Pero no se centran en nuestras vidas cotidianas. Y esos son temas importantes: la protección y la conservación. Este es el punto común para todos aquí. La conservación de este entorno es crucial y de suma importancia, y por eso estamos todos aquí.” “Aunque somos todos fuertes individualistas,” reconoce Schink, Hay algo que nos une a todos. Existe algo que nos vincula a Big Sur. Todos valoramos la privacidad que se disfruta aquí, y hasta cierto punto, la seguridad que se recibe viviendo en un paisaje apartado, verde y frondoso con agua que florece de la tierra en los abundantes manantiales. La inmobiliaria está muy solicitada, y no sólo me refiero a los altos precios. Escasea el espacio disponible, y el que existe está muy lejos, y esta tendencia sigue acentuándose. Queda muy poco espacio de inmediato disponible a lo largo de la carretera. Dejando de lado la preocupación de la gente por el exceso de urbanización, pero sin restarle importancia, podría existir en algún momento en el futuro un centro real en Big Sur y podría ser una obra arquitectónica que se concretizara a través del empleo de una combinación de técnicas tradicionales de construcción y tecnologías y diseños de vanguardia y sostenibles.” Gilson ve como un futuro centro en Big Sur podría desempeñar varias funciones, como un jardín comunitario, un centro de información, un lugar para resolver temas relacionados con el uso de la tierra, e incluso, un medio que genera ingresos para conservar la tierra en Big Sur. “Precisa de un edificio, un lugar de reunión en donde podemos trabajar sobre todas estas ideas,” contó. “Un centro educativo donde la gente puede informarse sobre todos los temas comunitarios relacionados al uso de la tierra, con el fin de tener toda la información ahí.” “Si lo miramos como una situación que beneficia a todos, acercándonos a prácticas sostenibles de construcción comunitaria, se podría enfocar como un ingreso sin ánimo a lucro que a su vez podría contribuir a una cuenta bancaria para la comunidad de Big Sur, que tendría como objetivo final servir como fondos para un fideicomiso para la tierra que pertenece a la comunidad. Algo de ese estilo podría encontrar formas de recaudar fondos y adquirir propiedades estratégicas, tales como la del jardín, para empezar a comprar de nuevo parte de la comunidad y no sentir la amenaza a largo plazo de perderla. Debe ser una organización sin ánimo a lucro con la misión de conservar Big Sur. No creo que nadie quiera perder más tierra, tierra estratégica. [Necesitamos] guardar terrenos que son esenciales para la comunidad, como para el jardín comunitario, el Centro de Salud, viviendas asequibles, por lo menos protegiéndolos a través de alquileres a largo plazo.” Schink ve para Big Sur un tipo de lugar central de reuniones, ciber tribu, organizado en torno a la agricultura de pequeña escala que tiene como objetivo apoyar y ofrecer información a la comunidad. “Lo más valioso para nosotros sería un jardín comunitario, ya sea un terreno de propiedad privada, o algo fruto de un esContinuó página 15 … Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE What is the center of Big Sur? Continued from page 7 … For all that divides those rugged individualists, said Schink, there is some way in which we are all linked. “There’s something that binds us to Big Sur,” he said. “We all value the privacy that we get from living in Big Sur, and to a certain extent the safety gained from living in a remote, lush, verdant landscape with water emerging from the earth in the abundant springs. Real estate is at a premium, and I don’t just mean the high prices. Available space is few and far between, and ever increasingly so. There’s very little room immediately available right off the highway. People’s concerns about overdevelopment aside, not ignored, there could exist at some point a real and actual center to Big Sur, if it existed in architecture, concretized in reality to make use of a blend of traditional building techniques and cutting edge, high tech, sustainable technologies and design concepts.” Gilson envisions that a center of Big Sur could serve many functions, from a community garden, to an information center, to helping solve land use issues, to creating revenue for preserving land in Big Sur. “It has to have a building, a place, a meeting place where we can work on all these ideas,” he said. “An educational center where people can learn about all the community issues about land use, so we have the information all right there. “If we look at it as a win-win situation, by working toward sustainable community building practices, that could be looked at as a not-for profit revenue stream that could go toward serving a Big Sur community bank account, ultimately geared toward providing seed money that could go toward forming something like a community land trust that is owned by the community. Something like that could find ways to raise money and acquire strategic properties, such as the one the garden would be on, to begin to literally buy back some of this community and not be threatened long term about losing it. Ultimately it has to be a non-profit with a mission of preserving Big Sur. I don’t think anyone wants to lose any more land, strategic lands. [We need to] keep pieces of land that are crucial to the community, like for a community garden, for the Health Center, for affordable housing, at least protecting them through long term leases.” What Schink envisions for Big Sur is a kind of cyber-tribal, central meeting place, organized around small scale micro-farming that focuses on supporting the community and providing community information. “Of central value to us would be a community garden, whether a privately owned plot of land, or a community effort with rented lots,” said Schink. “A space that would provide gardening and the fruits of that labor to both individuals as well as the community at large. What if we as a community could provide guaranteed organic, non-GMO produce and foodstuffs to the restaurants, or some of the restaurants, as part of creating a model community to the rest of the world? It could be low impact and a high return on invest- ment. I can’t overstate how that could help sustain the community. There is a growing network of people interested in this. I think it’s in everyone’s best interest, and I think there is a common dream or goal we could organize around and serve to influence the larger community, including, in fact, the global community.” For Schink, that collective heart of Big Sur remains conducive to an increased spiritual experience, an increased relationship to the artistic experience. “In my experience, what I’ve witnessed, for all those things that seemingly divide every one of us, our own individual identities, there is something larger that I know exists, something larger and deeper, though perhaps ephemeral and subtle, a very real tie that binds us all together,” said Schink. “There’s a way we’re inexorably linked as a community. I think those ties are strong and meaningful, though I can’t say for sure if I could name them. Speaking for myself though, I’m very aware of that connection, why we are all here, what led us here and why we all stay here. I think that’s a very beautiful and meaningful and powerful thing for us to identity with. In light of the current social-political situation, globally and nationally, finding ourselves ever increasingly divided and with Continued on page 10 … 10 The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 What is the center of Big Sur? Continued from page 9 … an increasing turning away from community and a sense of neighborhood, there’s something really special here.” While Magnus Toren of the Henry Miller Library stressed that he saw no need for some kind of new “center” for Big Sur, stressing a multi-centered approach that already exists, he did remark that there was a need for more cooperation, especially in reducing the amount of traffic on the roads. With high gas prices and the pollution from the millions of cars coming up and down Highway 1, he’d like to see some kind of community organizing around sustainable transportation. “We need to enhance the use of public transportation more and more in the future,” he said. “If something, some kind of organized ride sharing program, was developed in a user friendly and attractive way, I think it would work.” Currently, people who use the Monterey Transit system to get out to Henry Miller Library get a 25% discount on anything they purchase there, but Toren said there were only a handful of people each year who took advantage of this. Another problem is that the bus from Monterey only operates six months out of the year, from Memorial Day to Labor Day, and now only two times a day during that period. “Perhaps Monterey County should just bite the bullet and run a bus down here five times a day and have it come to all the regular stops,” he said. Gilson agreed, and said he could envision possibilities for the area gas stations, where most gasoline is about $5 a gallon, offering alterative fuels such as bio-diesel and hookups for electric cars. He also believes a community garden could help cut down on pollution from frequent trips locals have to take to the north for produce. “I do think that a key goal that I hope people would want to line up behind, would to be able to provide more and more information on how Big Sur could become a zero emission, completely sustainable model of how to live, creating as little impact on the environment as much as possible,” he said. “In a place of such natural wonder as this, most of us are still living a car culture here,” said Gilson. “You’ve got to drive forty miles at five dollars a gallon to buy vegetables and fruits that were grown hundred or thousands of miles away, often with pesticides. It’s so far away from the quality of a vegetable that’s grown here in Big Sur, the quality of the soil being tasted in a carrot from here. Which is kind of why we’re here, the quality of life this place gives. This goes into the whole big issue of whether it is realistic for people to live here if you don’t have a ton of money, and are not able to afford the vehicles that can withstand the roads, or the fuel to get around here.” For Gilson, this raises the question of if there is such a thing as an affordable lifestyle in Big Sur anymore. “If there is no affordable way to live here, are we going to lose the artists, the freethinker community?” he asked. “We’ve lost a lot already, and will continue to lose more, at least the ones that don’t have big incomes. One thing we know is we want to protect this area environmentally, and I think we need to move toward sustainable, affordable lifestyle. A community center would help those who don’t have a lot of money, could help people learn how to live affordably in Big Sur. A community garden is the perfect metaphor for that, not just a garden, but a community center meeting space that’s either in the center of the garden, or at least next to it. It would reflect the state of the soul of this community, whether it is providing for itself on that level. If we’re growing food and making it available, it will mean that people are really working together.” While a lot of this is all currently just speculation, one person is creating another “center” for Big Sur in actuality. Artist, musician and 17-year resident Jason Fann, who has been the creative director for the Esalen Arts Festival the past three years, is in the process of unveiling a “Center for the Arts” in Big Sur, at Loma Vista where his mother Rachel has a shop selling art, plants, jewelry and hipster nick-knacks. Over the next several months, this new arts center will function as something like a zocolo, Fann says, which is a Latin American village square or meeting place, dedicated to art and music. “It’s a place where people gather,” he said. “The idea here is to create a space like that. In Big Sur you have each of these businesses where people go when they come through here, but there’s not much of a place for local people or people who are just traveling through to just come and spend some time in an environment that’s not a business.” While there will still be a retail business on the property selling botanicals, succulents, exotic plants, native drought resistant plants, the grander function of the site will be as a place for multicultural programs for the community, including music, theatre, classes, and art exhibitions. Over the next five months, Fann will produce something called the Celebrando du Cultura (Celebration of Culture) which will culminate with a three-day festival on the Day of the Dead, from November 1st to 3rd. “The idea is to really acknowledge the Latino community here, particularly in light of everything that’s been happening politically in the country, and to recognize that every business in Big Sur is supported by this [Latino] community,” said Fann. “We really don’t have anything that provides for that community.” The first aspect of the Celebration of Culture, Fann said, will be a language program that brings together twelve Spanish-only speakers from the community with twelve English-only speakers to teach each other their languages and about their cultures. “This will help bring people who normally wouldn’t be in that environment together, teaching each other,” Fann said. “You want to be able to educate people with language, but in order to look at some of the other cultural and economic issues that face our community, you have to be able to communicate. We’ll do that through language, arts, and culinary programs.” a t Captain Cooper, the children will be creating something called an oferenda, said Fann, an offering, or an alter as a way to pay homage to their ancestors, to learn about each other, learn about their own families, to celebrate their own cultures and the cultures of others. The Esselen tribal council has been invited to build an alter dedicated to their ancestors. The Chinese Cultural Center is going to create a historical display about the Chinese community in Big Sur. “As far as I know, there are no Chinese residents,” said Fann. “But if you look at the history of Big Sur, and you look at who built Highway 1 and lived in motel row at Esalen Institute, it was the Chinese workers. So, these are the kinds of programs we want to do that weave all these things together. You have education, art, bridging communities. There will be an exhibit in the garden with all of the alters. We’ll have a mural project that is part of that. Every month we’ll have a different artist in the garden teaching people. We will have artists from Mexico coming to stay here.” Other upcoming pieces of this artistic mosaic include an exhibition of twelve artists who lost their homes in New Orleans, visiting artists from the African community in Brooklyn, New York will display and give classes, and Tibetan monks will perform a seven day mandala ceremony. There will be classes in painting, ceramics, mosaic, African and Brazilian percussion classes. A flamenco dance teacher and a guitarist will be in residence this September, as well as ongoing exhibits of arts and artists from around the world. “A lot of the work I want to do is use art and culture to bring awareness to different social issues,” said Fann. “I really want to provide programs that are educational, so people can really understand other cultures and understand who we are as a planet, as a country and as a Big Sur community.” Another project which is separate but coexists with the Celebration of Culture project will be the display of the Hands for Peace exhibit, which Fann was commissioned to produce by the mayor of Salinas for the International Peace Summit. “The idea began as a theme of forgiveness,” he said. “They brought together rival gang members, school teachers, police officers. Artists from 20 different countries have contributed to this. Another part of this is to do works of art out in the greater community that involve artists from all different cultures. As part of that there will be a photo exhibit. It will be part of the Yoga Festival at Esalen, with 1200 prayer flags added to it and after that it will go on tour to rock concerts and festivals around the country.” Schink reiterated his idea that these are all simply dreams, and that any center of Big Sur, he believes, is shared inside each of its residents. “It’s an underlying foundational dream we all share, and perhaps exists in the future yet to be discovered,” he said. “There are certain forces at play in molding Big Sur, with the intention of preserving the planet and various locales, potentially at the expense of people’s livelihood and communities in some instances. There is a merging of interests, so we need to organize around our common dream and create a sustainable vision of Big Sur that we can carry into the future. It’s a big challenge.” Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE 11 Big Sur Vision Project update f or well over a year, the Big Sur Vision Project has met once a month to attempt to come to a consensus about what the vision should be for the Big Sur community for the next 50 years. What this entails is finding out how to preserve the spirit, environment, culture, economy and community of Big Sur for the future. For more than half of this time, the group has been stuck in a discussion over the final three points of the Vision Mission Statement, largely centered around whether or not public agencies and NGOs should or should not be able to continue to acquire private land in Big Sur. There appears to be a lack of consensus within the group between those very concerned about public acquisition of private land, and those who feel that continued acquisition is not necessarily a detriment to the community. Attendance has ranged from around 20 to 30 people per meeting during the past few months. Some Photo: Michael Standaert members of the group have privately voiced concerns that up to half of the people attending the meetings are representatives of public agencies, and therefore are not members of the Big Sur residential community. Originally the Vision Project stipulated that people representing public agencies were not to participate unless they were there as individual residents of Big Sur. That changed later when the agency representatives were invited to become involved with the group in order to help come to consensus about continued acquisition of private land. This participation led to a series of meetings where the agencies shared their goals and philosophies and produced maps and data of past acquisitions. The Vision Mission Statement committee requested, and it was agreed by the group at large, that the mission statement would be sent out to the community in the form of a survey to solicit feedback. A separate subcommittee called the Outreach Committee was formed by co-chairs Alan Perlmutter and Martha Diehl to determine how best to write an introduction for this survey and draft mission statement. This committee could not achieve consensus on the wording of this introduction prior to the BSV deadline. The Vision Group also requested that the drafts of Vision Statement’s 8, 9 and 10 not be printed here before this introduction was released, so we have honored that request. However, public minutes of the meetings as well as the draft of the Vision Mission Statement have been freely available at the Vision meetings, and can be obtained by contacting the co-chairs of the Vision Project, Perlmutter and Diehl. Steve Schindler, who heads the subcommittee developing the Vision Mission Statement, and who presented the final three points of the statement at the May meeting, remarked that the primary controversy over the wording of Vision Mission Statement Number 8 came from the agencies and not the residents attending the meeting. Some participants are concerned that the guest role of the agencies has now morphed into their participation Continued on page 17 … 12 The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 Reprinted with permission of the Independent Institute in Oakland, California. This piece was also reprinted in the San Francisco Chronicle. The high price of land-use planning OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA Open Forum By Randal O’Toole The Independent Institute Published May 22, 2006 Most people know that the San Francisco Bay Area has one of the most expensive housing markets in the nation. However, not everyone realizes that, as recently as 1970, Bay Area housing was as affordable as housing in many other parts of the country. Data from the 1970 census shows that a median-income Bay Area family could dedicate a quarter of their income to housing and pay off their mortgage on a median-priced home in just 13 years. By 1980, a family had to spend 40 percent of their income to pay off a home mortgage in 30 years; today, it requires 50 percent. What happened in the 1970s to make Bay Area housing so unaffordable? In a nutshell: land-use planning. During the 1970s, Bay Area cities and counties imposed a variety of land-use restrictions intended to make the region more livable. These restrictions included urban-growth boundaries, purchases of regional parks and open spaces and various limits on building permits. These regulations created artificial land shortages that drove housing prices to extreme levels. Today, residents of Houston, Texas, can buy a brand-new four-bedroom, two-andone-half bath home on a quarter-acre lot for less than $160,000. That same house would cost you more than five times as much in Marin or Contra Costa counties, seven times as much in Alameda County, and eight to nine times as much in Santa Clara, San Mateo, or San Francisco counties. In fact, planning-induced housing shortages added $30 billion to the cost of homes that Bay Area homebuyers purchased in 2005. This dwarfs any benefits from land-use restrictions; after all, how livable is a place if you can’t afford to live there? The benefits of protecting open space are particularly questionable. The 2000 census found that nearly 95 percent of Californians live in cities and towns that occupy just 5 percent of its land. Many San Francisco Bay Area counties have permanently protected more acres as open space than they have made available for urban development. When such actions make it impossible for middle-class families, much less low-income families, to afford their own homes, they represent a sad distortion of social priorities. Moreover, as in the 1980s, California’s fastrising home prices have attracted speculators who have created huge bubbles in the state’s housing markets. Bay Area prices fell by 10 percent in the early 1980s, 20 percent in the early 1990s, and are likely to fall even more as the bubble deflates in the next few years. The impacts of high housing prices are also reverberating throughout the region’s economy. First, economic growth has slowed as businesses look elsewhere to locate offices and factories. High housing costs have also increased prices for food and other consumer goods; retailers now pay $1 million per acre or more for store locations. Far from reducing driving as planners “Homeonwnership is more than just a dream, it is a vital part of America’s economic mobility. Most small businesses get their original financing from a loan secured by the business owner’s home. Children in low-income families who own their own homes do better on educational tests than those who live in rental housing. Barriers to home ownership reduce this mobility and help keep low-income people poor.” Randal O’Toole desire, high housing prices force many commuters to live farther away from their jobs, forcing more cars onto the roads. Ironically, an obsessive focus on protecting Bay Area “farmlands” (in fact, mostly marginal pasturelands) forces people to move inland and more rapidly develop the highly productive croplands in California’s notyet-so-unaffordable Central Valley. The people most enthused about all these planning rules like to call themselves ‘’progressive.’’ But the effects of planning on home prices are entirely regressive. Planning-induced housing shortages place enormous burdens on low-income families but create windfall profits for wealthy homeowners. Does this steal-from-thepoor, give-to-the-rich policy reflect the Bay Area’s true attitudes? Homeownership is more than just a dream, it is a vital part of America’s economic mobility. Most small businesses get their original financing from a loan secured by the business owner’s home. Children in low-income families who own their own homes do better on educational tests than those who live in rental housing. Barriers to home ownership reduce this mobility and help keep low-income people poor. Predictably, planners’ solutions to the housing affordability problem often make the problem worse. Planners typically require that homebuilders sell or rent 15 percent of their homes at below-market rates to low-income families. The homebuilders simply pass that cost on to the buyers of the other 85 percent of the homes they sell. Existing homeowners, seeing that new homes suddenly cost more, raise the price of their homes when they sell. The result: A few people benefit and everyone else pays more. The solution to the Bay Area’s housing affordability crisis is not a few units of affordable housing, but widespread land-use deregulation that will make housing more affordable for everyone. Randal O’Toole ([email protected]) is a research fellow with the Independent Institute, an Oakland-based think tank, and director of the American Dream Coalition (americandreamcoalition.org). His recent report, “The Planning Penalty: How Smart Growth Makes Housing Unaffordable,” is available at www.independnet.org. Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE 13 Has ‘Slow Growth’ come at a cost in Monterey County as well? Recently the Big Sur Voice sent an article from the Los Angeles Times to about 20 residents and asked them to respond in writing, looking at similarities and differences between Monterey County and Santa Barbara County. The article, “Slow Growth has come at a cost in Santa Barbara” by Jeffery L. Rabin and Daryl Kelley is dated 3/6/06 and can be read on the L.A. Times website. In 2005, according to a recent story in the New York Times, the least affordable place to live in the U.S. is Salinas, measured by percentage of income going toward mortgage payments. Second on the list is the Santa Cruz-Watsonville area, and eleven of the least affordable metropolitan areas in the country are in California. You can find it at the New York Times website under the title: “Least affordable place to live? Try Salinas” (please see URL’s to both stories at bottom of the following article). B riefly, the Los Angeles Times article addresses how efforts to institute ‘slow growth’ in Santa Barbara County have backfired. Housing prices have soared so much that the median price of a single-family home is now $1.1 million there. Traffic congestion, air pollution and energy consumption have increased due to the number of commuters who can’t afford to live near where they work. Big employers have left the county, including half-a-dozen Fortune 500 companies, and businesses and government agen- cies find it increasingly difficult to recruit and retain workers due to living costs. Poor families have been forced to double and triple up in rental housing. Middle class families who can’t afford to buy homes leave for other areas. The community has been divided between very wealthy homeowners and very poor renters, second home owners and retirees. Other areas of Santa Barbara County have seen growth encroaching on farmland as restrictions limit growth in other areas of the county. Santa Maria will soon be more populous than Santa Barbara, though home prices there are now soaring as well. What are the similarities? In Monterey County, the median price of a single-family home in February was $700,000, though that has dipped recently to $670,000.Between 2000 and 2004, the population of Monterey County grew at a rate of 3.2%, half that of the rate of California as a whole. Yet, by 2020, it is projected that there will be nearly 100,000 more people living in Monterey County, comparable to adding three cities the size of Monterey to the county. Due to the amount of public land in Monterey County, there is limited private developable space. Geographic factors such as steep slopes, as well as rich agricultural land, limit the space even further. What is left remains mostly in the North County and the Fort Ord areas. Traffic congestion, air pollution and energy consumption from the numbers of commuters is also an obvious problem in Monterey County, though increases in gas prices recently have perhaps dampened those figures. Due to the high cost of living in Monterey County it is difficult to Continued on page 14 … 14 The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 Slow growth Continued from page 13 … retain and recruit workers due to high rental unit costs and the high costs of purchasing a home. This is especially significant in the planning department, where high turnover has added to the glut of projects that planners have to take on. That glut snowballs into pushing projects out months or years, further complicating the already tight housing market for moderate and low income families. Recently the County posted public review draft of the Monterey County 21st Century General Plan Update on its website: http://www.co.monterey. ca.us/gpu/Reports/0104/ In late May, the Planning Commission established a review schedule for the newest version of a draft General Plan Update. In mid-July it is expected that a draft environmental impact report (EIR) will be released and in August the Planning Commission will start to hold workshops on this draft of the GPU. In October the final EIR is expected to be ready for formal hearings. Later in the year, the GPU draft will then go before the Board of Supervisors for their review. The following is from the Monterey County 21st Century General Plan Update, about factors that influence the balance of jobs and housing in the county: Silicon Valley workers and telecommuters. Almost half of new homes purchased in Salinas are bought by people that work in Silicon Valley. Housing demand is beginning to exceed supply. It is anticipated that in the near future, more and more workers will be willing to tolerate a one and a half to two hour commute to work in order to own their own home. Job growth in lower end jobs. Monterey County has traditionally had a relatively small base of high-paying jobs. In one study, 78 percent of 1,600 jobs were entry level, paying no more than $9.99 an hour. By comparison, during the same period, 69 percent of the jobs in the Bay Area were entry level. Workers filling these entry level positions need affordable housing. Seasonal employment from agriculture.An estimated 39,000 farm workers in Monterey County, many making between $8,000 to $18,000 a year, cannot afford most of the housing available in the county. Second homes and vacation properties. Although they are counted as residential units, these houses are not available for workers in the county. These units account for 30% of homes in Carmel and are prevalent throughout various other parts of the county. Below are the responses of some residents to the article on Santa Barbara county, comparing it to the situation in Monterey County, specifically in regards to Big Sur. Photos: Michael Standaert Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE 15 From Kenneth Harlan: “Very interesting article. The comparison between Santa Barbara /Goleta and the Big Sur coast is difficult. The remote aspect of most of the Big Sur coast lends itself to a much different type of permanent resident than would be found around Santa Barbara. I suspect that not very many Santa Barbara residents would be interested in living there if they had no electricity and the nearest grocery store was a 50 mile, 1-1/2 hour drive away. That remoteness has likely been just as significant in limiting growth on the coast as has the regulations under the Local Coastal Plan (LCP). Those areas closer to Monterey probably share more development factors with Santa Barbara – primary that the process is so arduous and expensive that only very high-end projects make sense. In general, however, your article speaks to the larger problem that we seem to be skirting around throughout this country with regard to housing, energy, agriculture and manufacturing. We all want each of these parts of our lives to be readily available and inexpensive. With regard to energy, agriculture and manufacturing, we also want them to be invisible, nonpolluting and in the backyard of someone else. While I would not support significant changes in the LCP, we must recognize that a growing population requires resources. It is not practical to imagine that only the very wealthy should live in all of the choicest spots and that all others must commute to serve them. In a world of rapidly growing competition for energy and resources, something will have to give. It is better that we should recognize that eventuality and plan for it, rather than living with a correction that is forced upon us.” From Andy Nusbaum: “In comparing areas, it’s easy to fall into the trap of lumping a lot of areas together. Monterey County is pretty diverse. There are obviously some similarities. What’s happening in Santa Barbara is similar to what is happening here. The costs have been driven up to where affordable housing is almost non-existent. Energy costs go up and people drive more, there’s more energy being used, more time being spent on the highways, which pollutes more. People are away from their families more. There’s sort of a vicious cycle. Well intentioned policies that attract people to a place, creates a situation that makes it harder for people to live in that place. You kind of end up defeating the purpose of your initial intentions. What I’m sort of stuck on is what does that mean and how do we correct it. How do we slow that cycle down? One of the subgroups of the Vision group is affordable housing, which is a key issue for Big Sur and Monterey County. There aren’t a lot of people who work in Big Sur, which depends on tourism, who can live there. They have to drive from the north from Salinas or from the south. It’s not so much the supply and demand, it’s the restrictions. People can’t afford to go through the process to own their own home because of the roadblocks that are put in the way. There are ways to revise the planning. The GPU is being rewritten and it’s undecided how the Big Sur Local Coastal Plan will be revised if at all. Be- cause of the diversity of Monterey County, what works in the peninsula, and what works in the agricultural areas, doesn’t necessarily work in Big Sur. To a large extent, the people in Big Sur have a passion for the land, the environment, that is unique. Because it’s a small population, it’s not often heard. They can maintain and preserve the area possibly better than the bureaucrats sitting somewhere else. The Vision group and the CPOA are valuable tools, and both of them need to be objective, rational and inclusive. The intentions are correct, but over time the intentions grow into this monster of restrictions that end up backfiring into unintended consequences that go against what you were trying to do in the first place.” From Kenny Camello: “I just recently retired the Big Sur Volunteer Fire Brigade after 20 years of service. In my last year of attending officer’s meetings I brought up the subject of the Brigade going to a paid service. I had been proud to have been part of the Brigade for the years I was but I also thought I saw that the Brigade could not continue, depending on the local population to supply the needs of fire, medical and cliff rescue services to our 100 mile long response zone. I’m a 35 year resident and I’ve seen the shrinking of the so-called “middle class” of Big Sur. I’ve seen the available housing shrink to maybe half of what it was 20 or so years ago and of course what housing remains available is so much Continued on page 20 … “I’m a 35-year resident and I’ve seen the shrinking of he so-called ‘middle class’ of Big Sur. I’ve seen the available housing shrink to maybe half of what it was 20 or so years ago and of course what housing remains available is so much more expensive! Property is not affordable to my sons on this coast.” Kenny Camello 16 The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 Foto: Michael Standaert ¿Cuál es el centro de Big Sur? Continado de la página 8 … fuerzo comunitario con partes alquiladas,” dijo Schink. “Un espacio que ofrecería la posibilidad de trabajar en él y de distribuir los frutos del trabajo a toda la comunidad. ¿Y si nosotros como comunidad pidiéramos ofrecer productos agrícolas biológicos sin organismos genéticamente manipulados y alimentos a los restaurantes de la zona, o a algunos de los restaurantes como parte de la creación de un modelo para el resto del mundo? Podría tener un impacto mínimo y un alto rendimiento en las inversiones. Ayudaría enormemente a sostener la comunidad. A cada vez más personas les interesan esto. Creo que es para el bien de todos y creo que existe un sueño u objetivo común alrededor del cual nos podemos organizar y que serviría para influir en el resto de la comunidad, incluyendo, de hecho, la comunidad global.” Para Schink, ese corazón colectivo de Big Sur permanece como algo propicio a una mayor experiencia espiritual, una mayor relación a la experiencia artística. “Para mi, lo que he visto, entre todas aquellas cosas que aparentemente nos dividen, nuestras identidades individuales, sé que existe algo más grande, algo más grande y más profundo, aunque quizás efímera y sutil, un vínculo real que nos une a todos,” dijo Schink. “Estamos de alguna manera inextricablemente unidos como comunidad. Creo que esos vínculos son fuertes y significativos, aunque no sabría con seguridad lo que son. Pero, hablando por mí, soy muy consciente de esa conexión, del motivo por el cual estamos todos aquí, lo que nos llevó hasta aquí y porque nos quedamos en este lugar. Creo que es algo significativo, bello y poderoso con lo que nos podemos identificar. En vistas de la situación sociopolítica actual, a nivel mundial y nacional, estamos cada vez más divididos y nos alejamos cada vez más de la comunidad y del sentimiento de vecindario, hay algo realmente especial aquí.” Aunque Magnus Toren de la biblioteca Henry Miller destacó que no veía ninguna necesidad para un nuevo “centro” en Big Sur, fijándose en el enfoque multi-céntrico que ya existe, si que reconoció la necesidad de más cooperación, en particular para disminuir la cantidad de circulación en las carreteras. Con los elevados precios de gasolina y la contaminación que generan los millones de autos que circulan por Highway 1, le gustaría ver algún tipo de organización comunitaria para conseguir transporte sostenible. “Debemos mejorar el uso del trans- porte público más y más en el futuro,” acierta. “Si algo como un programa para compartir autos, se desarrollara para que fuera fácil y atractivo, creo que funcionaría.” Actualmente, las personas que usan el sistema del Monterey Transit para venir a la biblioteca de Henry Miller reciben un descuento del 25% sobre cualquier compra que se efectué aquí, pero según Toren sólo una decena de personas aprovechan esta oportunidad al año. Otro problema es que el autobús de Monterey circula la mitad del año desde el Día Memorial hasta el Día del Trabajo, y ahora sólo dos veces al día durante ese periodo. “Quizás el Condado de Monterey simplemente debería aceptar el sacrificio y mandar autobuses hasta aquí que paren en todas las paradas normales cinco veces al día,” explica. Gilson estaba de acuerdo con esto y dijo que vería la posibilidad de que las gasolineras de la zona que venden gasolina a $5 el galón, ofrecieran combustibles alternativos como la bio-diesel y tomas eléctricas para autos eléctricos. También opina que un jardín comunitario ayudaría a disminuir la contaminación que producen los vecinos al ir y venir del norte con el fin de comprar productos agrícolas. “Creo que un objetivo claro al que espero que se apunte mucha gente sería ofrecer más información sobre como Big Sur se puede convertir en una zona libre de emisiones, un lugar modelo para vivir, teniendo un impacto cada vez menos importante en el medio ambiente,” agregó. “En un lugar tan maravilloso como este la mayoría de nosotros vivimos en una cultura basada en el auto,” admite Gilson. “Para comprar frutas y verduras que se cultivaron cientos o incluso miles de millas de aquí, y que encima suelen tener pesticidas, uno tiene que conducir 40 millas pagando $5 el galón de gasolina. La calidad de verduras no tiene nada que ver con la de las verduras que cultivamos aquí, se saborea la calidad de la tierra en una zanahoria de esta zona. Y en parte, por eso estamos aquí, por la calidad de vida que ofrece este lugar. Esto nos lleva al tema principal que es si es realista vivir en este sitio si uno no tiene muchísimo dinero y no puede permitirse autos que aguanten las carreteras ni el combustible para desplazarse.” De hecho, Gilson se plantea si hoy día todavía existe un estilo de vida asequible en Big Sur. “Si no es asequible vivir aquí, ¿significa que vamos a perder a los artistas y la comunidad de pensadores libres?” preguntó. “Ya hemos perdido a muchas de estas personas, y seguirán yéndose, por lo menos aquellas que no reciben altos ingresos económicos. Lo que sí sabemos es que queremos proteger al medio ambiente de este entorno y en mi opinión debemos acercarnos más a un estilo de vida más asequible y sostenible. Un centro comunitario Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE 17 ayudaría a aquellos que no disponen de muchos medios económicos, les ayudaría a aprender a vivir de una forma más económica en Big Sur. Y una metáfora perfecta para esa idea es un jardín comunitario, no sólo un jardín, sino un centro comunitario para reuniones que esté en el centro del jardín o al menos cerca de él. Reflejaría el estado del alma de esta comunidad amen de lo que produzca. Si estamos cultivando alimentos y facilitando esa tarea, entonces significará que la gente realmente esta trabajando unida.” Aunque todo esto son simplemente ideas, una persona está realmente creando otro “centro” para Big Sur. Jason Fann, artista, músico y residente de Big Sur desde hace 17 años y director creativo del Festival de Arte en Esalen para los últimos tres años, está en el proceso de presentar el “Center of the Arts” (centro de las artes) en Loma Vista donde su madre Rachel tiene una tienda en donde vende arte, plantas, joyas y otros recuerdos curiosos. A lo largo de los próximos meses, este nuevo centro de artes será como un zócalo, lo cual es una plaza o lugar de reunión en los pueblos latinoamericanos, que se empleará para el arte y la música. “Es un lugar en donde se reúne la gente,” explicó. “La idea con este sitio es crear un espacio similar a eso. En Big Sur existen muchos comerciales a donde van los visitantes, pero no hay un lugar para los vecinos o las personas que pasan por aquí para estar sin estar en un negocio.” Aunque seguirá existiendo un negocio de ventas en la propiedad que venda botánicos, suculentos, plantas exóticas y plantas autóctonas resistentes a las sequías, la función principal del lugar será un para programas multiculturales para la comunidad, además de música, teatro, cursos y exposiciones de arte. En los próximos cinco meses, Fann creará algo llamado Celebración de Culturas que culminará con un festival de tres días en el Día de los Muertos, del 1 al 3 de noviembre. “La idea es de realmente reconocer la comunidad latina en esta zona, especialmente si tenemos en cuenta todo lo que ha sucedido a nivel político en este país, y se trata de reconocer que todos los negocios aquí en Big Sur lo apoya esta comunidad [latina],”dijo Fann. “Realmente no ofrecemos nada a esa comunidad.” El primer aspecto de la Celebración de Culturas, contó Fann, será un programa de idiomas que reunirá a 12 personas que únicamente hablen español con 12 personas que únicamente hablen inglés para que se enseñen sus idiomas y culturas. “Esto permitirá que se reúna gente que normalmente no se encontrarían en ese entorno, y lo harán enseñándose,” explicó Fann. “Por un lado se trata de que la gente aprenda idiomas, pero también para poder ver los otros temas culturales y económicos a los que se enfrenta nuestra comunidad, primero debe haber comunicación. Eso lo haremos a través de programas de idiomas, artes y la cocina.” En la Escuela Captain Cooper, los niños van a hacer ofrendas o altares, cuenta Fann, para reconocer y recordar sus ancestros, para aprender el uno del otro y de sus familias, para celebrar sus culturas y las de otros. El consejo de tribu de Esalen ha sido invitado para hacer su propio altar en dedicación a sus ancestros. El Centro Cultural Chino va a crear una exhibición histórica sobre la comunidad china en Big Sur. “Que sepa yo, no hay residentes chinos en Big Sur, pero si uno mira la historia de Big Sur y averigua quien construyó Highway 1 y vivió en “motel row” en el instituto Esalen, verá que fueron los trabajadores chinos. Así que son estos los tipos de programas que queremos llevar a cabo para conectar a todos. Tenemos educación y arte uniendo comunidades. Expondremos todos los altares en el jardín. Y también habrá un mural que formará parte de todo esto. Todos los meses tendremos un artista diferente enseñando a la gente en el jardín. Vendrán artistas de Mexico.” Entre otros elementos de este mosaico artístico se incluyen una exposición de doce artistas que perdieron sus casas en Nueva Orleáns, artistas que visitan de la comunidad africana en Brooklyn, Nueva Cork que expondrán y darán clases, y monjes tibetanos que celebrarán una ceremonia mandala de siete dias. Habrá clases de pintura, cerámica, mosaico y percusión africano y brasileño. Habrá un maestro de baile flamenco y guitarrista en Septiembre, así como exposiciones continuas de arte y artistas de todo el mundo. “Mucho de lo que quiero hacer es usar el arte y la cultura para concienciar a la gente sobre diferentes asuntos sociales,” contó Fann. “Quiero ofrecer programas educativos para que la gente entienda otras culturas y quienes somos como planeta, como país y como comunidad de Big Sur.” Otro proyecto aparte pero coexistente con la Celebración de las Culturas será la exposición de Hands for Peace (manos para la paz), lo cual el alcalde de Salinas comisionó a Fann y que fue decidido en la Cumbre Internacional de la Paz. “La idea surgió como tema para el perdón,” contó. Unieron a miembros de bandas rivales, maestros de escuelas, policías y artistas de 20 países diferentes que han contribuido a este proyecto. Otra parte de esto es hacer obras de arte de todo el mundo e involucrar a artistas de diferentes culturas. Como parte de ello habrá una exposición de fotos. Formará parte del Festival de Yoga en Esalen, con banderas de oraciones y después ira de gira con grupo de rock y festivales en todo el país.” Schink reiteró que estos simplemente eran sueños, y que cualquier centro en Big Sur, según él, está dentro de cada uno de los residentes. “Es un sueño subyacente principal que todos compartimos, y quizás es algo que queda por descubrir en el futuro,”explicó. Existen diferentes fuerzas que moldean Big Sur, con la intención de conservar el planeta y los diferentes lugares de la zona, posiblemente a costas de los medios de vida de las personas y a veces de las comunidades. Existe una unión de intereses, así que debemos organizarnos en torno a nuestro sueño común y crear una visión sostenible de Big Sur que podemos seguir en el futuro. Es un gran reto.” Vision plan update Continued from page 11 … in approval of communication documents distributed to the larger community and that the original intent of creating a residential community vision has been sidetracked. “It comes down to the question of whether we are independent of the agency people, or whether they are allowed input on that wording,” said Schindler. Others say they are happy to have the agency representatives there to discuss these issues since it helps reduce misinformation, and moves discussions into more in-depth, substantive directions. Public agency representatives themselves, some who are also residents of Big Sur, claim they should be part of the discussions about its future. Some members of the Vision Project say privately that there has already been a significant change in how agencies and organizations approach conservation in Big Sur through their participation in the Vision Project, and that they are open to the concerns raised by those who oppose continued acquisition. In terms of subcommittee participation, the subcommittee tasked with drafting the Mission Statement does not have agency representatives on it, nor does the Outreach subcommittee. Other subcommittees looking at issues such as affordable housing, conservation and the future process of the Vision Project do have representatives from various agencies and NGOs. Vision Project meetings have been regularly scheduled for the 3rd Friday of each month, usually held at 9:30am at the Grange. The next Vision Project meeting will be held on Friday August 18th from 9:30 to12:30 at the Grange. There will be no July meeting. Schedule changes in the future may involve alternate times and locations. For those wanting more information about the Vision Project, how to participate, or past minutes of the meetings, please contact Martha Diehl. Martha Diehl Garrapata Trout Farm 35811 Hwy 1 Monterey, CA 93940 831.625.9621 (voice) 831.625.1468 (fax) [email protected] 18 The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 Carver Schicketanz Architects Architecture in Big Sur Continued from page 5 … are thinking along these lines and are concerned.” “Green” Community Housing Hopes and Dilemmas One thing all the architects were interested in doing was finding solutions for the affordable housing situation in Big Sur, and doing it in a sustainable manner that could use many of these new materials as well as old, simple design practices that tap into passive elements, such as sun, wind and rain. Realitree is hoping it can join forces with those looking for an affordable housing solution by providing expertise on where to get materials for lower cost, how they can facilitate grants and loans from environmental organizations to mitigate higher costs, and to help vision what a project or series of projects might look like. “The goal is to make it affordable to people who don’t think it is affordable,” said Laura Doherty, co-founder of Realitree. “So for us to come in and say, ‘You’re doing this project, how can we contribute to make this affordable? Can we get donations, how can we make this ‘green’ housing after all?’ Part of our goal is to be able to help with that. I think it requires a lot of working with different organizations. It’s going to be through relationships and through people that want to do it. With the non-profit status it makes it easier for people to contribute. “There are some [subsidies] out there for appropriate technology, for solar and whatnot,” Doherty said. “We need to really research what is available and find out what other people are doing on that and be active in seeing what we can make available in the future.” Callihan believes the interest is there to do something, but now it is about getting the right people together to come up with a number of ideas, get the political and government support behind it, and finding the right piece or pieces of land. “I think the next step is to get somebody on line to develop their property that way and begin applying what the non-profit housing organizations have offered to do, which is bring together grants and put together a package which would allow an individual owner to do a number of things, depending on what is appropriate on the property,” he said. “You could develop a cluster, or develop one or two buildings. There are a number of ways to approach this. There are larger scale things that could be possible if you get the right piece of property. It will all require the approval of authorities, because it would require rezoning.” A current dilemma is where that land might come from. “What it would take down here is a land donation,” said Schicketanz. “There is no way you can have affordable housing without either a private party or the government donating the land, you have to have free land to get the construction cost to where it needs to be to be affordable housing.” Carver sees the need for affordable housing every day when he drives to work. “We work at the mouth of the Carmel Valley because we outgrew our office in Big Sur. We would love to have it at our house, but the zoning ordinance limits cottage industries to 2 employees, and we have 20. We see all the traffic of the people who drive down the coast every day, the same people going to work, and the people from Palo Colorado going north to work,” he said. “It obviously makes more sense to have people living closer to where they work. There are a lot of people who live in cars, which is a real problem. We see an opportunity for combining the affordable with the sustainable. Get rid of the stigma of sustainable being more expensive. I think you can do it with good design to where it is not more expensive, especially in the long run, and lessens energy costs over time.” There are a number of issues which contribute to the lack of housing in Big Sur for working people, as well as a variety of debates over which issues factor in the most. Obviously limited availability of land is one. However, nation-wide, most affordable housing projects take place on government land and 70% of Big Sur is owned by either the State or the Federal Government. Zoning is another – the current land use plan does not allow affordable housing. Any project would require rezoning. And there is the push back that will inevitably come from some members of the community who do not want to see this type of development in their backyard, something both South County Housing and CHISPA, affordable housing non-profits working in Monterey County, say they run into all the time. “It’s clear to me that this community wants to find a solution,” said Doherty. “I think they need a couple people who are in charge. I think if there was a committee that was formed [BSV: The Big Sur Vision Group has a committee for those interested in joining this discussion] and that was their job, and maybe somehow the community contributed toward that. I think if Big Sur has one voice, then we can go out and do this. I completely believe we can do that, but without the one voice it can’t be done. “The idea of putting communities together that are sustainable, that’s really what our main intention is,” she said. “Also to educate people. We’ll be a resource for people if they want to do these things, and we’d be able to supply them with resources and people to help do their projects. Just to get people involved. To me the big dream would be to see the housing solution in Big Sur and for us to be a part of that.” Summer 2006 The Big Sur VOICE 19 Another issue is that there may actually be a lot of housing out there that could fit the needs for workers; be it rentals on private property, or caretaker units. Currently there are some illegal units on properties that are being rented out, often with high rents, though there are also those who have taken their units off the market for fear of being red-tagged. Then there is the perception that more and more people, especially new second home owners, are not employing caretakers like they used to, thereby taking existing caretaking units out of the market. To complicate this, it is illegal to have a caretaker unit for someone who is not a full-time caretaker. Callihan wonders if something can be done, similar to the amnesty program in Pacific Grove, where private property owners who have illegal rentals turn them over as long as they agree to use the rental for affordable housing. A big problem with this though, is that what might work in Big Sur (and for some, that means the backseat of a car), often does not meet code for the County. “The problem is that most of it doesn’t meet building code or health code standards, so you might have someone who might want to legitimize what they’ve got, but it might cost them $100,000 or more to bring it up,” said Callihan. “So we need to find some way to fund that, whether it is through loans, grants or ways to make it legitimate.” Callihan said recent developments as far as red-tagging illegal rental units are causing concern. He told of a situation where the county assessor’s office sent an appraiser out to a property where the previous owner had been red-tagged for a housing violation. The assessor’s office believes the property may have had illegal rental units on it for decades, meaning the office would have the right to go back and reassess the property. Illegal rentals are taxable even though they are illegal. “It’s like not paying your income tax, so they could go back and assess, charge seventy percent of the market rental value, and charge interest,” said Callihan. “There are a lot of present owners, particularly long term community people, who may have inherited their property, may have been here three generations, and may have had rentals forever on their property, but don’t declare [rental units] because they’re illegal,” he said. “It’s scary that they could begin to harass people on that level, about something that is so essential to the community, and literally threaten people’s ability to keep their property. I know another owner who was approached similarly. Luckily he didn’t have anything he was hiding. The County is seeking it out.” In Monterey County, another contribution to the lack of housing is a bureaucratic juggernaut in the Planning Department, where planners quit with alarming frequency. This often means an individual planner has dozens of cases to work on, a workload added to every time a planner Carver Schicketanz Architects quits, and building projects take months and more often years to move through the planning process. Also, the high cost of permitting and the cumbersome approval process, that treats all projects alike regardless of size, keeps many projects like caretaker units from ever seeing the light of day as owners bail from the process out of frustration. There are currently over 25 governmental agencies that may have say over any given project. Additionally, neighbor opposition to projects is all too common resulting in additional burdens for the planner who must respond and the owner who must defend his project. After the recent departure of the planning director Scott Hennessey and the publishing of a scathing grand jury investigation (there have been 15 grand jury investigations of the Monterey County Planning Department in the past 29 years), the Board of Supervisors formed a subcommittee comprised of architects from all over Monterey County to work together on Continued on page 20 … Carver Schicketanz Architects 20 The Big Sur VOICE Summer 2006 Slow growth Continued from page 15 … more expensive!! Property is not affordable to my sons on this coast. But that is reality!! It’s hard to find an honorable job in the Big Sur for many! But what is the answer? More and more it is the ones who own the property and those who work for them, again, the “middle class” of Big Sur are an endangered species! Big Sur is going to be affected even more so because of its remoteness. In a perfect world the building and health people would make allowances for our remoteness and allow sub-standard housing to exist because it was necessary. In fact, that is what has been happening anyway. To sanction what is already a reality is not likely though. I can only foresee that many compromises must be made in the next 50 and 100 years for us to exist and not become outlaws of one sort or another. Because the more blanket rules and laws that we make will only create more people, that for one reason or another have to break them!!” Stories mentioned in this article: “Slow growth has come at a cost in Santa Barbara” http://www.envirovaluation.org/index. php?title=the_los_angeles_times_latimes_com &more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1 Carver Schicketanz Architects ”Least affordable place to live? Try Salinas.” http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/07/ realestate/07california.html?ex=1304654400&en =782de89a564e7282&ei=5090&partner=rssuserl and&emc=rss Architecture in Big Sur Continued from page 19 … finding solutions to inefficiencies in the planning department and create best practices that might eventually lead, they hope, to Monterey County being a showcase for planning. As of early May, the Planning Department had just over 200 projects it was reviewing and processing, as well as around 250 active subdivision applications. Regardless of all the pressures, uncertainties and roadblocks, architects and concerned members of the Big Sur community have begun to join forces and find solutions to community housing challenges as well as development issues in general. Can the Big Sur community, through a grassroots effort, define and live a “Big Sur ethic” that sets an example to other communities? If the community unites to achieve this, the architects and designers who work in Big Sur believe that an informal “Big Sur ethic” which incorporates sustainable, affordable, and “green” practices is possible. For further information, contact these architects directly at: Callihan Ned Village Shops Big Sur, CA 93920 (831) 667-2890 Mickey Muennig P.O.box 92 Big Sur, CA 93920 [email protected] http://www.mickeymuennig.com Thomas Rettenwender P.O. Box 92, Big Sur, CA 93920 Realitree: http://www.realitree.com [email protected] Michelle Kaufmann Michelle Kaufmann Designs http://www.mkd-arc.com Carver & Schicketanz Architects P.O. Box 2684 Carmel, CA 93921 (831) 624-2304 http://www.carverschicketanz.com It is also worth mentioning here that Martha Diehl, co-chair of the Big Sur Vision Group and Planning Commissioner, has finished her Master’s Thesis for the Leon Panetta Institute at CSUMB, called, “Land Use in Big Sur: In search of Sustainable Balance between Community Needs and Resource Protection.” It can be found here in pdf, and is 70 pages long (as a warning to those on dial-up): http:// fp2k.redshift.com/kenekelund/MDiehl_051606. pdf The abstract reads as follows: “The Big Sur Local Coastal Plan (LCP) was certified in 1986 by the California Coastal Commission to implement of the 1972 federal Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA). The LCP was intended to provide comprehensive policy guidance to balance the development needs of area property owners and the local community with resource protection and public recreation over time. This study examines the observable results of twenty years experience with these policies in terms of stakeholder concerns about population, housing, community and civic activities, economics, land use, aesthetics, recreation, biodiversity and natural systems, and evaluates the potential effects of changing or updating the LCP.”