Arcata Community Forest

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The Arcata Community Forest is the center piece of the parks and recreation system of the City of Arcata, California, United States. Originally created from six forest tracts of land in 1955; they include: Gannon Tract, Burns Tract, Preston Tract I, Preston Tract II, Reclamation Water Co. Tract, and Brizard Tract.[1] The main forest area covers 793 acres (3.21 km2). The park is the culmination of efforts to combine tracts of forest land located east of the city together in one continuous section of city owned second-growth coast redwood forest. Over a 50 year period, 622 acres (2.52 km2) were obtained in several purchases. In November 2006, the 171-acre (0.69 km2) Sunny Brae Forest was added to the Community Forest. The City also owns and manages the 1,200-acre (4.9 km2) Jacoby Creek Forest. The City owns a total of 2,134 acres (8.64 km2) of forest."[2]

Until 1964, this land was used as the municipal water source, obtaining its supply from Gannon Creek, Preston Creek (Jolly Giant), and Janes Creek.[3] Historically, steelhead and salmon migrated upstream into all the creeks before logging and poor water quality wiped them out.[4] It is currently used for education, recreation, wildlife habitat, and sustainable timber harvesting. Many of Arcata's small streams possess their headwaters in the Arcata Community Forest.

In 1979, the citizens of Arcata passed the "Forest Management and Parkland Initiative." The Arcata Community Forest was the first municipal forest certified in the U.S. under the Forest Stewardship Council.[5] This was intended to develop an ecologically responsible long-term forest management program to generate income to develop and acquire parkland. Generating $500,000- $700,000 of revenue per year from timber harvesting, the forest is self-supporting and excesses net revenue is used to maintain other city parkland and open space.[6]

The objectives of the current forest management are:

  1. To provide educational and recreational opportunities for the community
  2. To sustainably harvest timber
  3. To generate revenue so the city may acquire and develop new recreational facilities
  4. To maintain and enhance the fisheries, watersheds, wildlife, and plant resources

The forest is popular with hikers, birders, and has a history of (illegal) camping that remains unpopular with some locals who report being harassed or intimidated by the homeless that have ‘staked a claim’ to both public and private property. According to the Humboldt Housing and Homeless Coalition (HHHC), 74% of homeless individuals were camping in Humboldt County. Approximately 15 illegal, two- to five-person camps are cleaned up annually by the Arcata City Police and Environmental Service Departments in the community forest.[7]

Notes

  1. Kirk, Susie Van. A History of the Arcata Community Forest. Arcata, California: Publisher Not Identified, 1985. Print.
  2. City of Arcata - Arcata Community Forest
  3. Kirk, Susie Van. A History of the Arcata Community Forest. Arcata, California: Publisher Not Identified, 1985. Print.
  4. Pennisi, Sam, and Steven G. Stewart. Draft Master Plan for the Arcata Community Forest. Arcata, CA: Planning Dept., 1975. Print.
  5. Andre, Mark, and Michael McDowall. "Arcata and Jacoby Creek Community Forests, CA." N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Apr. 2015.
  6. "Acquiring and Managing A Community‐Owned Forest: A Manual for Communities." Communities Committee, 2008. Web. 28 Apr. 2015.
  7. "City of Arcata Homeless Services Plan: 2007-2016." N.p., 7 Mar. 2007. Web. 28 Apr. 2015.

External links

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