8 MONTEREY COUNTY WEEKLY september 14-20, 2023 www.montereycountyweekly.com news Four months ago, the 55-unit Pueblo del Mar sober living community in Marina was at risk of closing and displacing six families after the Housing Authority of the County of Monterey lost rental support funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Officials from HACM, Monterey County Behavioral Health, Sun Street Centers—the service provider for over 25 years—and other agencies scrambled to find money to keep it open. They pinned their hopes on winning a Behavioral Health Bridge Housing Program grant from the California Department of Health Care Services, designed to create transitional housing with services for people dealing with substance abuse or mental health issues or experiencing homelessness. The money would be used to refurbish the units that had been sitting vacant for years due to disrepair. On Thursday, Sept. 6, their hopes were realized when it was announced that Monterey County Behavioral Health would receive $11.3 million. Bureau Chief Kathryn Eckert says they will issue a request for proposals in the next few weeks, inviting nonprofits to compete for a contract to provide services. They hope to move in new residents later this fall as repairs are ongoing. Sun Street’s executive director, Anna Foglia, says the nonprofit is waiting to see the RFP before deciding to apply. If the new program’s mission does not include sobriety “that’s going to be an issue for us,” Foglia says. “It would be great to continue to use [the property] to support families experiencing alcohol and drug addiction, which is worse now more than ever.” Bridge Crossing The county receives $11.3 million from the state to restore homes for people at risk. By Pam Marino In 2021, the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board issued an order, after years of public hearings and review, calling for a limitation on runoff from agricultural fields. It instantly became a matter of controversy. Agricultural groups filed a petition to the State Water Resources Control Board urging them to find the order too stringent. Environmental and public health groups also petitioned, arguing it was too weak. Now, two years later, the State Water Board is scheduled to weigh in on Wednesday, Sept. 20, at a meeting in Sacramento. In a proposed order released on Sept. 8, staff are asking the board to amend the order, weakening in significant ways. At the heart of the matter is regulating how much nitrogen growers can apply to fields, and that can run off into waterways. Excessive application of nitrogen—i.e. fertilizer that is not absorbed by crops—percolates in the soil and eventually reaches groundwater and is toxic to humans. The original version of the Central Coast Water Board’s policy was first approved in 2004. Its fourth iteration was approved in 2021. Nearly the entire county relies on groundwater for its water supply—residents and growers alike—and that pollution can put lives at risk. On the other side, however, are the agricultural interests. As the State Water Board’s report, which advises that the board weaken the Central Coast Water Board’s restrictions, states: “The issues are especially complicated because the same activities that are essential to producing a crucial, reliable food supply—e.g., pesticide use to control pests, nitrogen to fertilize crops, irrigation to water crops—also underlie many of the critical impacts.” One of the places where those critical impacts have been felt is in the San Jerardo housing cooperative south of Salinas, which is surrounded by agricultural fields. Since 1990, the community has been drilling one well, and then another and another, and since 2010, has been living off water from a fourth well, two miles uphill from the community. The reason those wells continue to be drilled is because of nitrate contamination. “It’s frustrating that the state, instead of trying to strengthen this order, it’s trying to weaken it,” says Ileana Miranda, general manager of the cooperative, where there are 64 homes. Even with the new well, she says, residents can develop rashes. “We just want people to be healthy.” Miranda says about a dozen of the cooperative’s 250 or so residents will be heading to Sacramento for the hearing to advocate for their health. Also attending will be Chelsea Tu, executive director of Monterey Waterkeeper, a nonprofit devoted to ensuring communities have drinkable and fishable waters. Tu is deeply concerned about the proposed changes. “It’s literally killing people. Without the enforceable limits, growers are not going to significantly change. The only way they’re going to change is if the State Water Board maintains these limits to protect our waters.” If approved, the changes would essentially take the teeth of the Central Coast Water Board’s 2021 version, Tu says: “The limits are like speed limits on highways, and these limits have to be enforceable. You have to understand there are real consequences—it’s like having speed limits without the cops to make sure people are really slowing down.” Ileana Miranda of San Jerardo Housing Cooperative, which joined Monterey Waterkeeper, California Sportfishing Protection Alliance and others in an appeal. Not So Well The State Water Board seeks to weaken regulation on fertilizer application. Lives are at risk. By David Schmalz Former Pueblo del Mar resident Amy Otten, seen in her old neighborhood, says the sober living community run by Sun Street Centers helped in her recovery. It may get a new operator. “We just want people to be healthy.” Daniel Dreifuss Daniel Dreifuss
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