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VIDEO. From the Granada Community Services District (GCSD) Director’s meeting Agenda on Thursday, September 21st, 2023 at 7:30pm, as a remote meeting.
Granada Community Park and Recreation Center Report
LIBRARY OUTPOST – San Mateo County Libraries Director, Anne Marie Despain, reached out to the District regarding possible installation of a library outpost at the Granada Community Park or Recreation Center.
Granada was specifically identified by the Library System as an ideal geographic location to help serve the mid-Coast.
This outpost – much like a vending machine – is an external, stand-alone facility that would allow community members to access holds, download books, and browse the the library catalog without traveling to a library branch.
While the location and size of such an outpost will need to be further reviewed, Staff is asking that the Board consider conceptual approval of such an outpost so that it can be included in the project description and future studies.
Granada Community Services District (GCSD) Meetings ~ 3rd Thursday @ 7:30pm
Watch remotely. Comments and questions by email.
Granada Community Services District (GCSD) Agendas and Zoom Links
Granada Community Services District (GCSD) PCTV Videos
The District is responsible for parks, recreation, garbage and recycling services in the unincorporated areas of El Granada, Princeton, Princeton-by-the-Sea, Clipper Ridge, and Miramar.
GCSD Regular Board Meetings are held on the third Thursday of each month at 7:30 pm in the District’s meeting room, and are normally shown on Pacific Coast TV (PCT) (Cable channel 27) at 6:00 am on Wednesday and at 11:00 am Saturday following the meeting (but check the schedule as show times can vary).
Mission Statement
To protect public health and safety, preserve our environment, and maintain fiscal soundness by providing high quality service for wastewater, solid waste collection, recycling, and serving the community’s needs for parks and recreation, through responsible operations and management.
The Granada Sanitary District was formed in 1958 under the California Sanitary District Act of 1923. In October of 2014, the District was reorganized as the Granada Community Services District under California Government Code 61000 et seq. The District is responsible for parks, recreation, garbage and recycling services in the unincorporated areas of El Granada, Princeton, Princeton-by-the-Sea, Clipper Ridge, and Miramar. The District is also responsible for the sewage collection system and disposal for approximately 2,500 residences and businesses in these same unincorporated areas as well as the northern portion of the City of Half Moon Bay. Garbage and recycling services are provided by Recology of the Coast under a franchise agreement with the Granada Community Services District.
The District office is open Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and is located on the third floor of 504 Avenue Alhambra, El Granada. To contact the District please call (650) 726-7093. Regular board meetings are held on the third Thursday of each month at 7:30 p.m.
2023 Board of Directors
Board members serve four year terms, and are elected on a staggered two year basis in even numbered years. Board members receive $145 per meeting as compensation for their service on the board.
Barbara Dye – President
Nancy Marsh – Vice President
Jen Randle – Director
Matthew Clark – Director
Jill M. Grant – Director
Board members serve four year terms, and are elected on a staggered two year basis in even numbered years. Board members receive $145 per meeting as compensation for their service on the board.
Staff
General Manager: Chuck Duffy, Dudek & Associates
Assistant General Manager: Delia Comito
Legal Counsel: William Parkin, Wittwer Parkin LLP
District Engineer: John Rayner, Kennedy/Jenks Consultants
Administrative Assistant: Nora Mayen
Sewer Authority Mid-Coastside
The Sewer Authority Mid-Coastside (SAM) is a Joint Powers Authority created by an agreement between the Granada Sanitary District, the Montara Sanitary District, and the City of Half Moon Bay in 1976. The agreement called for the creation of the Authority to build and operate a commonly owned sewer treatment plant for the benefit of all three agencies. All sewage generated by the three agencies is pumped and piped to the treatment plant for treatment and eventual disposal. For more information on SAM, please visit their website at samcleanswater.org.
Links to previous GCSD meetings’ videos.
The Granada Community Services District (GCSD), formerly the Granada Sanitary District, gained park and recreational jurisdiction on October 1, 2014, for the unincorporated areas of El Granada, Miramar and Princeton (i.e. the “GCSD Community”) by a positive vote of 60% of the voters in the District. This reorganization allows the district to provide parks and recreation services in addition to the sewer, solid waste and recycling services it currently provides to over 2,500 residences and businesses in the District as well as the northern portion of the City of Half Moon Bay. Solid waste and recycling services are provided by Recology of the Coast under a franchise agreement with GCSD.
The parks and recreation function is funded by utilizing a portion of GCSD’s share of San Mateo County property tax revenues, not from sewer charges. GCSD’s goal is to provide parks and recreation services that benefit the GCSD community, with a commitment to robust neighborhood outreach on new projects.
Granada Parks Advisory Committee (PAC) Agenda
GCSD owns the undeveloped “Burnham Strip” property along Obispo Street between Coronado Street and Avenue Alhambra in El Granada, which may be developed as an El Granada gateway park.
Additional potential park areas are a small GCSD-owned parcel on Capistrano Road in Princeton and the road medians in El Granada. GCSD and SMC completed a Permit Agreement in February 2018 which allows the District to make improvements to the El Granada Medians. GCSD may implement landscaping, seating, and active and passive recreational improvements on these properties, following an open and transparent community outreach process and all required permit and environmental review processes.
Yesterday I went to an art opening in the meeting room of the library in Sebastopol and walked through the rest of the library. Wow! Extensive well-maintained stacks. Special book exhibits on current topics, new titles, and favorites of the library staff. Large CD and video collections. Tables for study or to lay out materials. A very modest number of computer stations (8 or 10). A good-sized children’s area and reading program. A teen-agers only nook. People of all ages using the library on a Saturday afternoon. Sebastopol has a population of about 7,500, which is more than 3,000 fewer people than the unincorporated Midcoast.
San Mateo County puts $25 million into a new library building in Half Moon Bay and, now, for a Midcoast population roughly half the size of the population in HMB they offer a vending machine? Is this supposed to be a stationary, automated version of a bookmobile? Talk about screwed-up, upside-down priorities at the county level! And for the other half of the Midcoast population that is also roughly half the size of HMB’s population–nothing! When the new HMB library building was being planned, there were voices calling for a Midcoast facility to be included at the same time. Those voices were blown off. Now we are supposed to get excited over a vending machine? Really? My personal libraries (visited from Moss Beach) will continue to be the San Pedro Valley branch in Pacifica with occasional supplementation by the main library in Pacifica.
Some of the poorest, least populated counties in California do better.