Politics & Government

Not Safe Yet: Plans for National Wildlife Refuge

At the end of the week, if the Washington pols don't sign agreement, gates will still be locked.

Visitor services at wildlife refuges throughout the San Francisco Bay Area could still shut down Thursday night, if politicians on Capitol Hill don't sign their tentative budget agreement reached Friday soon. 

Doug Cordell, spokesman for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said that in a shutdown, only employees involved in the protection of life on the property would be asked to work at the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge.

“If the government shuts down, the gates would be locked,” Cordell said in a phone interview Friday afternoon about the refuge along Mountain View's section of the San Francisco Bay.

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“Any public access, such as hiking or biking trails or other visitors services, would be closed.”

San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory would halt its efforts to prevent an invasive gull from nesting in sensitive areas near endangered birds. Breeding season for the California gulls is in April and early May.

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"We've been notified that the lands are closed, so we won't have access to it," said Jill Demers, executive director. "We're all hoping the shutdown will be brief."

The gulls don't mix well with other birds and have been known to eat the eggs and chicks of other threatened species, such as the Western snowy plover. To keep the gulls away from the habitats of these other birds, decoys, noises and active hazing techniques may be used, said Demers. But once the birds nest, they are protected by laws under the migratory bird treaty act.

As far as a loss for the general public, Demers said, "There's so much wildlife in our bay, so it's always a shame when you can't go out and enjoy it."

If the shutdown happens, signs will go up, gates will be locked, programs to the general public canceled and all trails will be closed, said Paul Mueller, volunteer coordinator at Don Edwards.

Then only a few spots could be accessed near the refuge, he said. 

The trail that connects Coyote Hills to Don Edwards will be open to bicycle commuters who are heading to Marshland Road and the Dumbarton Bridge. 

“So, bicyclists will still have access to the bridge and Marshland Road. However, all (Don Edwards) trails off that path will be closed.”

A boat launch area on Cargill land that leads into the Newark Slough will still open be to kayakers, he said. Newark Slough winds its way through the refuge and into the bay.

Already a telescope event for families at the Environmental Educational Center in Alviso has been canceled. 

“Volunteers come out with telescopes to help kids look at the night sky in Alviso," said G.Medel Stewart, project leader. "We had to tell them that was canceled.”

“Maybe lawmakers will decide at the 11th hour that it’s not worth it,” Mueller said.

"Hopefully, if it does shut down, then it won't be for long," said Cordell, "but we'll deal with the decision being made in Washington and wait for them to arrive at a resolution."

To find out the status of Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge, call 510-792-0222.

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