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Welcome
to Friends of Coyote Hills
The Friends of Coyote Hills (FCH)
is a local group of concerned citizens working to
protect
520 acres of open space adjacent to Coyote Hills
Regional Park.
Mission
statement:
Friends of Coyote Hills is an
environmentally focused group serving the Tri-Cities
area. We are dedicated to the conservation and
preservation of open space and the plant and wildlife
habitats it supports, and to engaging public involvement
with local and regional environmental issues through
community outreach, education, collaborative efforts,
and advocacy.
Stop Massive Development in Coyote Hills!
You can help
stop this mistaken proposal and make your
voice heard. Please
contact the Friends of Coyote Hills. We
need your help. Please also let your friends
and email groups know about this important
issue affecting all of us by
distributing or
emailing this informative flyer.
Despite the fact that over
70% of Fremont voters surveyed want NO development in
front of the Coyote Hills Regional Park, the City of
Fremont is considering a massive development proposal.
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The proposed massive development
would add 520 housing units to the Ardenwood area.
Along with the 276 high-density housing unit Tupelo
lot development, the
project would bring in over 3,000 new residents and
add 3.2 million car trips annually to our streets. All
of this development would be right in front of our beloved Coyote Hills
Regional Park.
See pictures
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The Fremont General
Plan allows only 266 housing units on this land. The
Pattersons, which already developed 5,000+
houses in Ardenwood, also sold for $63 million the
15.5-acre Tupelo lot across the street (from Coyote
Hills), where 276 housing units are
being built.
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In an earthquake, the
Patterson Ranch project puts thousands of adults’
and children’s lives in jeopardy due to high risk of
soil liquefaction (on this floodplain and proposed
man-made fill). A public safety disaster is waiting
to happen if gas and water lines break and fires are
fueled by southeasterly winds from SF Bay less than
1 mile away.
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The Patterson Ranch
proposal will negatively impact our overcrowded
and underfunded elementary,
junior high and senior high schools.
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Current and
potential employers and residents appreciate open
space such as Coyote Hills. For example, with
foresight the city of Palo Alto has attracted many
employers because of its high-quality schools,
infrastructure, and much open space such as
Foothill Park.
What You Can Do Now to
Help
This is the wrong
development and this is the wrong time to lock ourselves
into a long-term deal. You can help stop this. We ask
you to:
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Send an email to the
Mayor and Council members, who will vote on this
proposal
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Donate to help
hire technical experts (send checks made out to
"Friends of Coyote Hills" to Ann Rice, FCH
Treasurer, 37734 Second St., Fremont, CA 94536-2925)
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Sign up for
email updates at Friends of Coyote Hills at
www.ProtectCoyoteHills.org; or contact us at:
info@fchf.org
/ (510) 793-5329
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Support growing
grassroots campaigns of two city
council candidates,
Vinnie Bacon and
Kathy McDonald who do not take any developer
contributions
Once it’s gone…it’s gone forever!
"There's
an increasing amount of evidence supporting the
contention that attaching kids early and well to nature
is effective prevention in all areas. The natural world
serves as a restorative environment, outside experiences
calming a person both physically and mentally, replacing
substance abuse and violence as strategies to deal with
stress. With nature as part of a daily routine, kids
stay in better health, and when nature is brought into
the classroom as environmentally based education,
students perform better and more enthusiastically.”
Read the
entire article,
Nature Is Good For Kids.
To watch this video, click on link and turn on
speakers:
The movement to get kids back into nature.
A parent reflects on being in nature as a
child and now raising his young child:
Kingdoms of childhood falling to urban sprawl.
Coyote Hills Regional Park was cited by the National
Geographic Society as one of several excellent locations for bird-watching in the
greater San Francisco area.
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