1258631252 Alastair Bland - Santa Cruz News http://news.santacruz.com/alastair-bland Santa Cruz News: Local news and information for Santa Cruz CA constantly updated. en allybland@yahoo.com Copyright 2009 2009-11-19T10:47:32+00:00 Reform Needed in the Court System Regarding Child Custody /2009/11/19/reform_needed_in_the_court_system_regarding_child_custody /2009/11/19/reform_needed_in_the_court_system_regarding_child_custody When an Alabama superior court judge issued an order that Amanda Hodge’s two adopted children be returned immediately to her custody out of concern for their safety following a February, 2008 state-ordained forensic interview, the family court of Monterey County, where Hodge’s children were living with their adoptive father, declined to cooperate. Instead, the custody battle seemed only to swing further out of Hodge’s favor. She lost custody entirely, was granted supervised telephone calls only and has now not see her children in two years. News 2009-11-19T10:47:32+00:00 Reports: Revenue from State Parks Exceeds Cost /2009/07/16/reports_revenue_from_state_parks_exceeds_cost /2009/07/16/reports_revenue_from_state_parks_exceeds_cost The governor’s proposal to close 220 of the state’s 279 state parks as a cost-cutting measure could shoot California’s economy in the foot. Results of two university studies have concluded that California’s state parks generate more money than they cost to operate, and local park advocates assure that tourism in Santa Cruz County will suffer if the parks go off-limits. (With slide show) News 2009-07-16T16:44:19+00:00 Big Creek Lumber Seeks Special Consideration in Salmon Rules /2009/06/19/citing_record_big_creek_lumber_seeks_special_consideration_in_salmon_rules /2009/06/19/citing_record_big_creek_lumber_seeks_special_consideration_in_salmon_rules There was surely a time when the last thing an aspiring forester ever thought he or she would be concerned with was protecting fish. Now, it seems, tiptoeing around salmon and steelhead is as natural a part of life for loggers in northern California as poison oak, and the laws that guard the state’s threatened salmonids might be about to get tougher. Environment 2009-06-19T12:23:21+00:00 Santa Cruz Group Gears Up for Life After Cheap Oil /2009/06/18/santa_cruz_group_gears_up_for_life_after_cheap_oil /2009/06/18/santa_cruz_group_gears_up_for_life_after_cheap_oil In late May, a small grassroots organization called Transition Santa Cruz convened for an evening meeting at the police station on Center Street. The subject of the hour was how the community could bolster Santa Cruz’s public transportation system and steer residents away from sprawl and dependency on cars for every outing and errand. Led in part by Micah Posner, director of the cycling advocacy group People Power, the discussion quickly veered into a debate over whether or not high-density housing would facilitate a public rail system or do the opposite and lead to more cars on the streets. Environment 2009-06-18T10:25:00+00:00 E. coli Count Soars in Local Waterways /2009/05/27/e._coli_count_soars_in_local_waterways /2009/05/27/e._coli_count_soars_in_local_waterways The results from the Coastal Watershed Council’s Snapshot Day are in, and it’s not a pretty picture. Environment 2009-05-28T01:21:06+00:00 Scientists Debate Strategy at Elkhorn /2009/05/04/scientists_debate_strategy_at_elkhorn /2009/05/04/scientists_debate_strategy_at_elkhorn The wetland system of Elkhorn Slough has undergone dramatic change for decades, but now a group of local scientists and conservationists is revving up a restoration project aimed at reversing many of these alterations and letting one of California’s largest marshlands revert back to the ecosystem it once was. However, no one quite knows what Elkhorn Slough’s truly “natural” state ever really was, and activists are at odds over precisely what treatments the slough really needs, if any at all. Environment 2009-05-04T20:54:59+00:00