Developer
Bulldozing Sacred Sites in Marin County? Feb.
17, 2007 brightpathvideo.com
Marin
County has been blessed with abundant open space preserves and special
locales thanks to the hard work and dedication of teams of environmentalists,
historical preservationists and its local Native population. Still, the
forces of development must be reckoned with on a daily basis. On the east
end of San Rafael sits an area known as China Camp. The famous Frank Lloyd
Wright Civic Center building is nearby. Nestled between this and China
Camp State Park are a number of as yet undeveloped acreages of unique
beauty and historical significance. One of these, known locally as Oxford
Valley is a 30.5 acre site that local Miwok Indians believe was once the
home of a village. Two shell mounds have been identified on the site.
Oxford Valley is what some would lovingly refer to as a “secret
garden”. An air of mystery, a feeling of healing hangs over this
place quite unlike any other. A few seasonal creeks flow through the valley.
A developer named Russell Shaw wants to develop this land.
Early in 2005, he submitted a proposal to county officials calling for
the building of 26 homes, many of which would be giant big box homes of
about 6000 square feet. This triggered an environmental review that as
of today has caused the builder to scale back his plan to the building
of just one home. He has told neighborhood representatives that he plans
to re-introduce another multi-home plan for the site in the future. The
Schwartz family that sold Russell Shaw the Oxford Valley site was able
to skirt environmental review for a collection of big box homes close
by, because one of the family was in county planning and secured favorable
terms for the so called ‘piece meal’ development of about
a half dozen giant homes. Shaw seems to be echoing this strategy by initiating
his own piece meal development in Oxford Valley. He’s run into a
number of problems, one is a well funded and organized community resistance
calling itself “Friends of San Pedro Mountain”. This group
recently sprung into action when Shaw was observed last week with a crew
of workers and a bulldozer driving around the valley scraping off sections
of topsoil alarmingly close to where the midden sites are located, clearly
in violation of cultural resource statutes and building permit restrictions.
The Friends had their attorney fire off a warning letter to Shaw and sent
copies to Marin County officials and the Cultural Resource Committee of
the Indians of the Graton Rancheria who have oversight authority in this
region.
The bulldozer now sits quietly parked at the chained entrance to Oxford
Valley, a reminder that development objectives, though stalled, are nevertheless
present for the time being.
LATEST
NEWS ON OXFORD VALLEY AND RUSSELL SHAW
Residence
of Mabry McMahan from the early 20th century. His home on Oxford Valley,
now long gone, was once used as a sanatorium.
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