Valley at the Crossroads
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
The Central Valley is perhaps the world's greatest agricultural resource, producing about half of America's fruits, nuts and vegetables. But in many valley towns, homebuilding, not agriculture, now drives the economy. 
Two vast forces are beginning to collide, and battles have broken out in the Valley over growth. VALLEY AT THE CROSSROADS visits the frontlines of this struggle and explores the central issues involved. Included are the voices of farmers, activists, office holders, developers and others as they debate the issues and work to find a solution.
In a state that's projected to reach a population of 50 million by 2025, will the Central Valley go the way of Los Angeles and Silicon Valley — regions that only two generations ago were agricultural juggernauts themselves? 
The future of the Central Valley is arguably California's greatest 21st century decision — a decision that also has profound implications for the rest of the country. VALLEY AT THE CROSSROADS is the first film to grapple with these questions head-on.
'Takes a balanced look at the forces driving growth in [California's] Central Valley, and the threat that poorly planned growth poses for one of our country's most important agricultural resources. The film is recommended viewing for anyone interested in these issues.' Erik Vink, California Department of Conservation
'The stakes in terms of food and fiber security for the United States are high, and at some point in the near future a point of no return will be reached, so political and economic steps must be taken soon if the agricultural nature of the Central Valley is not to be changed irrevocably. Highly Recommended. ' Buzz Haughton, UC Davis, Educational Media Reviews Online
'Provides a critically needed and eloquent medium for educating Californians (and others) about the growing threat of urbanization to the earth's most productive farming region - the San Joaquin Valley. Interviews, maps, and spectacular footage of the kind of large-scale agriculture that characterizes the Valley provide city-dwellers with a much-needed reminder of where the majority of their fruits and vegetables come from, and of how that production is endangered by rising land values and encroaching development. The time for a comprehensive plan to preserve the state's best soils is long overdue; I hope that Valley at the Crossroads will spur a public debate about what we must do to assure the supply of food which is as vital to national security as petroleum reserves.' Gray Brechin, co-author (with Robert Dawson) of Farewell, Promised Land: Waking up from the California Dream 
'Clearly documents the tragic -- and unnecessary -- degradation of America's greatest agricultural region by sprawling land development.' Tom Hylton, Pulitzer Prize winning author Save Our Land, Save Our Towns 
'A well-balanced audio and visual presentation...Stunning visuals...Classes across the curriculum, especially environment and social studies, can utilize the video to launch debates and research into land use problems faced by people across America and the world.' School Library Journal
Citation
Main credits
								Doxey, John (film director)
Doxey, John (film producer)
Spies, George (film director)
Spies, George (film producer)
Morgan, Caitlin (narrator)
							
Other credits
Photographed by George Spies; edited by Rachell Antell.
Distributor subjects
Agriculture; American Studies; Environment; Sociology; Sprawl; Urban Studies; Urban and Regional Planning; Western USKeywords
WEBVTT
 
 00:00:35.290 --> 00:00:39.289
 Here we are with the most
 productive farmland in
 
 00:00:39.290 --> 00:00:43.560
 the world and we\'re painting it
 over as fast as we possibly can.
 
 00:00:43.810 --> 00:00:48.739
 How many more subdivisions how much
 more sprawl how much more traffic
 
 00:00:48.740 --> 00:00:53.554
 will we experience in the San Joaquin
 Valley and how many fields will be lost.
 
 00:00:53.555 --> 00:00:56.989
 Why don\'t we say the best farm
 ground for farming and put
 
 00:00:56.990 --> 00:01:01.564
 houses on some of that ground that can\'t be
 farmed and yet is not habitat area either.
 
 00:01:01.565 --> 00:01:04.699
 We should think about this
 before we destroy one
 
 00:01:04.700 --> 00:01:07.264
 of the last great agricultural
 areas in the world.
 
 00:01:07.265 --> 00:01:10.440
 We do have the ability to say no
 
 00:01:18.690 --> 00:01:24.324
 The Central Valley has just been an
 amazing wealth of Agricultural Resource.
 
 00:01:24.325 --> 00:01:29.754
 And first of all it\'s the soil these
 deep well-drained sands and sandy loams.
 
 00:01:29.755 --> 00:01:33.954
 Then we\'ve got the water from
 Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers.
 
 00:01:33.955 --> 00:01:36.549
 Once we put water on that soil in
 
 00:01:36.550 --> 00:01:39.954
 this heat and that dry season
 that we have all summer long.
 
 00:01:39.955 --> 00:01:44.900
 Then we\'ve got a perfect situation
 for growing just about anything.
 
 00:01:44.910 --> 00:01:50.499
 This is a region roughly
 400 miles north south
 
 00:01:50.500 --> 00:01:54.494
 which is undoubtedly the
 world\'s most productive
 
 00:01:54.495 --> 00:01:57.904
 Farmland region no other
 place in the world.
 
 00:01:57.905 --> 00:02:03.109
 Can you grow as many different
 kinds of agricultural commodities.
 
 00:02:03.110 --> 00:02:04.969
 The Valley now produces
 
 00:02:04.970 --> 00:02:10.639
 more than 250 different crops generating
 about half of America\'s fruits nuts and
 
 00:02:10.640 --> 00:02:14.478
 vegetables more walnuts almonds tomatoes
 
 00:02:14.479 --> 00:02:19.474
 grapes peaches and melons are grown
 here than anywhere else in the world.
 
 00:02:19.475 --> 00:02:24.679
 But the Central Valley is also the heartland
 of America\'s most populous state and
 
 00:02:24.680 --> 00:02:27.319
 the regions relentless population growth is
 
 00:02:27.320 --> 00:02:31.009
 rapidly consuming the
 richest farmland on earth.
 
 00:02:31.010 --> 00:02:36.889
 The conflict between sprawl and agriculture
 is being played out across America
 
 00:02:36.890 --> 00:02:41.754
 But nowhere on a greater scale than in
 the Central Valley the type of ground
 
 00:02:41.755 --> 00:02:46.714
 we have here I like it because it\'s up
 around that I can plant anything on.
 
 00:02:46.715 --> 00:02:54.715
 We have the river close by where we have
 water around out here is good for beans.
 
 00:02:56.315 --> 00:02:59.044
 And tomatoes.
 
 00:02:59.045 --> 00:03:05.794
 Rapidly sugar beets also alfalfa The
 walnut orchard that was here it\'s gone.
 
 00:03:05.795 --> 00:03:10.444
 Some of these artists were
 apricot and they\'re gone
 
 00:03:10.445 --> 00:03:18.445
 From here Clara way and see the trays
 over there and way that way here.
 
 00:03:23.500 --> 00:03:26.704
 So we\'re losing ground every day.
 
 00:03:26.705 --> 00:03:32.430
 And anybody that wants to stay five
 minutes Tracy. And I have a hard time.
 
 00:03:32.980 --> 00:03:37.459
 The agricultural industry in the
 Central Valley has a lot to answer
 
 00:03:37.460 --> 00:03:42.904
 for including environmental degradation
 and the exploitation of farm labor.
 
 00:03:42.905 --> 00:03:45.649
 But the fact remains that the valley is
 
 00:03:45.650 --> 00:03:49.770
 the nation\'s primary source
 of fruits and vegetables
 
 00:03:52.360 --> 00:03:58.279
 Kid living in the Central Valley used
 to just ride my bicycle for hours.
 
 00:03:58.280 --> 00:04:01.429
 And it was just all farmland.
 
 00:04:01.430 --> 00:04:06.724
 That sense of freedom was something
 that I found really incredible.
 
 00:04:06.725 --> 00:04:11.659
 And I know my child won\'t feel
 that same ability to just take
 
 00:04:11.660 --> 00:04:17.389
 off as the urban sprawl
 fills in the open fields.
 
 00:04:17.390 --> 00:04:19.039
 There is a sense of that freedom.
 
 00:04:19.040 --> 00:04:21.454
 That is that is being lost.
 
 00:04:21.455 --> 00:04:26.069
 And so my photographs have
 tried to in some ways educate.
 
 00:04:26.070 --> 00:04:30.679
 Most people don\'t realize that the
 Central Valley is where we get our food.
 
 00:04:30.680 --> 00:04:34.830
 And by destroying this landscape
 we\'re really hurting ourselves
 
 00:04:36.220 --> 00:04:42.289
 While the Central Valley is a wonderful
 place to grow fruits and vegetables.
 
 00:04:42.290 --> 00:04:45.184
 It\'s agriculturally rich and dynamic.
 
 00:04:45.185 --> 00:04:50.149
 It\'s changing and it\'s changing due to
 urbanization and its change that will
 
 00:04:50.150 --> 00:04:55.984
 eventually undermine agriculture
 400 miles long and 50 miles wide.
 
 00:04:55.985 --> 00:04:58.429
 The Great Central Valley is comprised of
 
 00:04:58.430 --> 00:05:01.819
 the Sacramento and San
 Joaquin Valleys which today
 
 00:05:01.820 --> 00:05:05.629
 contain about 6 million acres
 of irrigated farmland.
 
 00:05:05.630 --> 00:05:08.419
 In the 990s the valley gained
 
 00:05:08.420 --> 00:05:14.299
 almost a million new residents due largely to
 spillover from the San Francisco Bay Area.
 
 00:05:14.300 --> 00:05:17.599
 And to a lesser extent Los Angeles.
 
 00:05:17.600 --> 00:05:21.169
 Many of these new arrivals have come
 to the Valley in search of homes.
 
 00:05:21.170 --> 00:05:26.449
 They can afford. But a majority still commute
 into the states coastal Job Centers.
 
 00:05:26.450 --> 00:05:30.529
 The soaring demand for housing is
 setting the stage for a collision of
 
 00:05:30.530 --> 00:05:35.164
 enormous magnitude and towns
 like Tracy or at the epicenter.
 
 00:05:35.165 --> 00:05:37.789
 Growth will occur in the
 State of California.
 
 00:05:37.790 --> 00:05:39.979
 More children will be born every day.
 
 00:05:39.980 --> 00:05:43.924
 And their housing needs
 need to be accommodated
 
 00:05:43.925 --> 00:05:49.939
 bad public policies in the high job
 growth areas are pushing housing demand.
 
 00:05:49.940 --> 00:05:54.724
 Indeed exporting housing
 demand to the Central Valley.
 
 00:05:54.725 --> 00:05:58.309
 What you would buy 4250
 
 00:05:58.310 --> 00:06:03.634
 or 300 thousand and Tracy would cost you
 750 thousand or up in the Bay Area.
 
 00:06:03.635 --> 00:06:06.259
 So that\'s the push on
 
 00:06:06.260 --> 00:06:11.250
 the Central Valley and Tracy in particular
 we happen to be the first one over the hill.
 
 00:06:19.540 --> 00:06:23.419
 The lifestyle being sought
 by these commuters is
 
 00:06:23.420 --> 00:06:28.069
 spacious family friendly and car
 centered and American dream
 
 00:06:28.070 --> 00:06:32.029
 complete with shopping malls
 soccer fields and ample parking.
 
 00:06:32.030 --> 00:06:39.469
 But building this dream requires the sacrifice
 of vast tracts of prime farmland. Most
 
 00:06:39.470 --> 00:06:43.969
 New housing consumers prefer a
 detached single-family home
 
 00:06:43.970 --> 00:06:49.039
 with a front yard in a backyard in
 probably two side yards we get out
 
 00:06:49.040 --> 00:06:53.509
 our colouring pencils and we we we
 make pretty colors on the map where
 
 00:06:53.510 --> 00:06:55.759
 the shopping mall is going
 to be and where the
 
 00:06:55.760 --> 00:06:58.699
 school side\'s going to be and
 where the houses are going to be.
 
 00:06:58.700 --> 00:07:01.999
 And then you look out to
 the edges of that map.
 
 00:07:02.000 --> 00:07:04.534
 And typically it\'s always white.
 
 00:07:04.535 --> 00:07:06.799
 And that\'s the way that
 most planners look at
 
 00:07:06.800 --> 00:07:11.104
 agricultural land is just land
 that\'s available for development.
 
 00:07:11.105 --> 00:07:17.794
 Flatland in the Central Valley allows you
 to build many more units to the acre
 
 00:07:17.795 --> 00:07:21.179
 Then you would have in areas
 in which it\'s hilly of
 
 00:07:21.180 --> 00:07:25.024
 course the problem being without a lot of those
 flatlands your agriculturally productive.
 
 00:07:25.025 --> 00:07:29.734
 Those of us who live in cities say
 the agricultural land is open space.
 
 00:07:29.735 --> 00:07:33.799
 We ought to be able to see it as
 productive agricultural land for
 
 00:07:33.800 --> 00:07:38.490
 all of its resource
 significance to the state
 
 00:08:06.040 --> 00:08:09.439
 When the settlers came to
 the valley they settle
 
 00:08:09.440 --> 00:08:13.440
 along the creeks and rivers because
 they had a perennial source of water.
 
 00:08:14.050 --> 00:08:18.270
 Also the best and deepest soils.
 
 00:08:21.070 --> 00:08:24.679
 We built up our cities as farm centers
 
 00:08:24.680 --> 00:08:29.310
 around these really productive
 agricultural regions.
 
 00:08:29.500 --> 00:08:34.069
 Now as cities have expanded
 the threat really is
 
 00:08:34.070 --> 00:08:38.224
 apparent that we could lose our
 best soils and our best farmland.
 
 00:08:38.225 --> 00:08:40.860
 As we see these cities grow
 
 00:08:42.580 --> 00:08:46.819
 The population of the Central
 Valley is expected to triple over
 
 00:08:46.820 --> 00:08:51.979
 the next 40 years and agriculture
 faces and uncertain future.
 
 00:08:51.980 --> 00:08:55.429
 If current trends continue
 about a quarter of
 
 00:08:55.430 --> 00:09:00.109
 the valleys best farmland
 will be developed by 2040.
 
 00:09:00.110 --> 00:09:07.230
 Local farmers like Paul winger are watching
 the march of development with great concern.
 
 00:09:08.440 --> 00:09:13.369
 I still live on a 100 acres here that my
 grandfather bought when he first came here.
 
 00:09:13.370 --> 00:09:16.459
 When we get to live in the
 house and he built in 1912
 
 00:09:16.460 --> 00:09:18.964
 But I have three sons and want
 to be involved in agriculture.
 
 00:09:18.965 --> 00:09:21.079
 And we have to make sure
 that people who make
 
 00:09:21.080 --> 00:09:25.879
 a living farming especially as we get
 into more sustainable practices.
 
 00:09:25.880 --> 00:09:28.519
 You\'re using compost and you\'re
 doing things that\'s going to have
 
 00:09:28.520 --> 00:09:31.069
 long-term benefits and it\'s expensive.
 
 00:09:31.070 --> 00:09:32.419
 And the only way you can
 do that is and know
 
 00:09:32.420 --> 00:09:33.994
 that you\'re going to have
 the use of that land.
 
 00:09:33.995 --> 00:09:35.209
 I mean they\'re gonna be
 able to farm without
 
 00:09:35.210 --> 00:09:39.030
 urban infringement and all of
 those problems that go with it.
 
 00:09:41.020 --> 00:09:47.059
 Alma thirty three thousand and thirty
 eight thousand thirty three thirty three.
 
 00:09:47.060 --> 00:09:49.909
 Most farmers aren\'t really
 able to make much of
 
 00:09:49.910 --> 00:09:53.794
 a living based on the amount of
 money that\'s paid for produce.
 
 00:09:53.795 --> 00:09:56.449
 It\'s more realistic economically for people
 
 00:09:56.450 --> 00:09:59.820
 to sell their land to
 development than to farm it
 
 00:09:59.940 --> 00:10:05.199
 When their neighbor cells for $30 thousand
 an acre and if they are in a planned path
 
 00:10:05.200 --> 00:10:09.579
 for development then their values
 will begin to go up as well.
 
 00:10:09.580 --> 00:10:12.909
 And it\'s very difficult to
 resist that temptation.
 
 00:10:12.910 --> 00:10:16.869
 But if we plunk down a 40
 acre subdivision right in
 
 00:10:16.870 --> 00:10:20.334
 the middle of this that\'s just
 surrounded by nothing but agriculture.
 
 00:10:20.335 --> 00:10:23.439
 Well it threatens everybody on all
 four sides because those people are
 
 00:10:23.440 --> 00:10:26.889
 calling up about the sprain and
 they\'re complaining about the dust.
 
 00:10:26.890 --> 00:10:30.279
 And so if we have urban encroachment is
 
 00:10:30.280 --> 00:10:34.599
 extending out and fingers pool that
 threatens all to farming around it.
 
 00:10:34.600 --> 00:10:41.579
 Although farmers may espouse the
 fact that they truly love farming
 
 00:10:41.580 --> 00:10:46.024
 Loved his lifestyle and
 what to continue to do it.
 
 00:10:46.025 --> 00:10:51.889
 No farmer is going to walk for
 my $50 thousand an acre offer.
 
 00:10:51.890 --> 00:10:54.769
 We have the next generation of farmers
 coming out there would like to buy
 
 00:10:54.770 --> 00:10:58.189
 land but they cannot compete
 with the speculators.
 
 00:10:58.190 --> 00:11:01.924
 And I think that\'s very tenuous
 situation to be in agriculture
 
 00:11:01.925 --> 00:11:05.509
 where no longer is it the
 production from the land.
 
 00:11:05.510 --> 00:11:08.839
 That is the product that the
 land itself is the product.
 
 00:11:08.840 --> 00:11:12.919
 In the valley land sold for
 development is worth ten
 
 00:11:12.920 --> 00:11:16.699
 times as much as that same
 land is worth for farming.
 
 00:11:16.700 --> 00:11:22.834
 The future consequences of this imbalance
 or the subject of considerable debate
 
 00:11:22.835 --> 00:11:27.259
 I think the challenge for the region and
 really for all of California is how
 
 00:11:27.260 --> 00:11:30.889
 to learn from the development
 patterns in Los Angeles at
 
 00:11:30.890 --> 00:11:33.319
 Santa Clara County and
 Orange County and how
 
 00:11:33.320 --> 00:11:35.869
 to take those lessons and
 avoid repeating them in
 
 00:11:35.870 --> 00:11:41.539
 this region the decisions we make today
 will determine what if not our children\'s.
 
 00:11:41.540 --> 00:11:47.284
 Certainly our grandchildren experience in
 this state and by then it\'ll be too late
 
 00:11:47.285 --> 00:11:52.320
 You\'re not going to put back the
 cherry trees were santa say now is.
 
 00:11:52.900 --> 00:11:57.439
 If you go up in an airplane at night
 used to be the cities were separated.
 
 00:11:57.440 --> 00:12:01.009
 And now if you fly over the valley
 at night you see the lights are
 
 00:12:01.010 --> 00:12:06.180
 connecting in there pretty soon
 going to be one long sprawl.
 
 00:12:06.280 --> 00:12:12.274
 There\'s a complete lack of planning that\'s
 allowing stuff like this to happen.
 
 00:12:12.275 --> 00:12:15.664
 And I think our real problem
 here is that we\'re building
 
 00:12:15.665 --> 00:12:22.770
 unregulated and just vast numbers of housing
 tract on some of the richest soils honor.
 
 00:12:25.090 --> 00:12:29.659
 Those that want to stir up emotions
 
 00:12:29.660 --> 00:12:34.969
 And say that Central Valley\'s being paved
 over just need to look at the math.
 
 00:12:34.970 --> 00:12:40.894
 The math shows again a than agriculture
 in this state is doing fine.
 
 00:12:40.895 --> 00:12:43.864
 The amount of land is
 being lost to urban age.
 
 00:12:43.865 --> 00:12:49.024
 Urbanization is miniscule may become more and
 more efficient on the land that we have.
 
 00:12:49.025 --> 00:12:53.599
 But even with technology today and we
 use a lot of technology in agriculture.
 
 00:12:53.600 --> 00:12:56.959
 There\'s going to be that critical
 point where we can no longer
 
 00:12:56.960 --> 00:13:00.409
 continue to produce more food and
 fibre on diminishing landmass.
 
 00:13:00.410 --> 00:13:03.574
 It\'s never going to be about the
 last acres of farmland here.
 
 00:13:03.575 --> 00:13:06.589
 It\'s about the tipping point
 will Agriculture get to
 
 00:13:06.590 --> 00:13:10.444
 a point where they don\'t feel confident and
 their own future and begin to sell out
 
 00:13:10.445 --> 00:13:12.859
 Or will the cities decide
 that agriculture is
 
 00:13:12.860 --> 00:13:15.679
 important and that they
 have to in fact learn
 
 00:13:15.680 --> 00:13:17.509
 how to grow and accommodate growth and
 
 00:13:17.510 --> 00:13:21.154
 economic development without
 destroying agriculture.
 
 00:13:21.155 --> 00:13:25.414
 Mark Connolly is a fourth generation
 rancher in the hills of Tracy
 
 00:13:25.415 --> 00:13:30.124
 and an activist in town he\'s sorry
 to see Tracy abandoned farming.
 
 00:13:30.125 --> 00:13:32.989
 But he\'s also concerned
 that Tracy\'s focus on
 
 00:13:32.990 --> 00:13:37.099
 new housing will harm its
 economic well-being.
 
 00:13:37.100 --> 00:13:43.909
 The issue and Tracy is do we pave over
 that farmland to provide stucco houses or
 
 00:13:43.910 --> 00:13:50.970
 do we provide some kind of an economic
 infrastructure jobs tax base for years to come
 
 00:13:55.140 --> 00:13:59.049
 We were established here
 about 1872 started out as
 
 00:13:59.050 --> 00:14:03.714
 a sheep operation and then change to a
 livestock operations just cows in the forties.
 
 00:14:03.715 --> 00:14:08.604
 And in the background you can see
 Tracy moving closer and closer.
 
 00:14:08.605 --> 00:14:12.309
 We have advantages that a lot of valley
 towns don\'t have our proximity to
 
 00:14:12.310 --> 00:14:16.434
 the Bay Area is a tremendous advantage but
 we\'ve squandered it for the most part.
 
 00:14:16.435 --> 00:14:19.719
 If we don\'t slow growth and trace
 eat now what we\'re going to
 
 00:14:19.720 --> 00:14:22.959
 have is a 100% uh commuter
 community no economic
 
 00:14:22.960 --> 00:14:26.214
 base and we will have
 destroyed all of the farmland
 
 00:14:26.215 --> 00:14:29.964
 for a purpose that is not
 economically feasible.
 
 00:14:29.965 --> 00:14:33.189
 We\'ve just turned to
 residential housing and follow
 
 00:14:33.190 --> 00:14:36.519
 the philosophy that if we
 pave over farmland built
 
 00:14:36.520 --> 00:14:40.149
 Twenty five hundred square foot
 stucco houses that jobs will follow.
 
 00:14:40.150 --> 00:14:45.969
 And I think that\'s a foolish philosophy
 in a region of high unemployment and low
 
 00:14:45.970 --> 00:14:49.059
 incomes all sides in the
 valley are eager for
 
 00:14:49.060 --> 00:14:53.649
 real economic growth for new
 industries and better paying jobs.
 
 00:14:53.650 --> 00:14:56.529
 But such gains have been elusive.
 
 00:14:56.530 --> 00:15:01.019
 And Tracy We\'re working on a
 program called Tracey gateway.
 
 00:15:01.020 --> 00:15:04.599
 We hope to be the first in San
 Joaquin County to accommodate
 
 00:15:04.600 --> 00:15:09.924
 high-tech R and D class a office space.
 
 00:15:09.925 --> 00:15:15.264
 We\'re even looking at and are hopeful
 that we will see a reverse commute.
 
 00:15:15.265 --> 00:15:19.319
 As a number of these companies relocate
 
 00:15:19.320 --> 00:15:24.514
 In the near future developers come in and
 talk jobs jobs jobs and everybody wants jobs.
 
 00:15:24.515 --> 00:15:26.554
 We have a lot of houses
 here we need more industry.
 
 00:15:26.555 --> 00:15:28.129
 So you\'ll have people kinda
 say we wanna put it in
 
 00:15:28.130 --> 00:15:30.259
 an industrial park or a commercial Park.
 
 00:15:30.260 --> 00:15:32.989
 And once it gets rezone from
 agriculture into commercial
 
 00:15:32.990 --> 00:15:36.019
 industrial then the developers
 and the engineers come in
 
 00:15:36.020 --> 00:15:38.209
 and say you know what we\'d
 really like to provide
 
 00:15:38.210 --> 00:15:40.699
 the jobs but it\'s going to be 30 years to
 
 00:15:40.700 --> 00:15:46.339
 realize the full build-out we just can\'t wait
 that long we\'d like to switch to houses.
 
 00:15:46.340 --> 00:15:48.139
 And with the right input into
 
 00:15:48.140 --> 00:15:51.994
 the city councils they can usually
 get that zoning change to houses.
 
 00:15:51.995 --> 00:15:54.679
 And now you\'ve just
 exacerbated your problem.
 
 00:15:54.680 --> 00:15:59.070
 And yet they\'ll turn right back around the
 next time and do the same thing again
 
 00:16:26.890 --> 00:16:29.719
 With the region\'s future hanging in
 
 00:16:29.720 --> 00:16:31.999
 the balance local jurisdictions have
 
 00:16:32.000 --> 00:16:35.629
 almost total control over land
 use in their communities.
 
 00:16:35.630 --> 00:16:38.539
 Efforts at regional
 planning have so far been
 
 00:16:38.540 --> 00:16:42.499
 stymied as local governments
 compete for growth
 
 00:16:42.500 --> 00:16:46.999
 What we\'ve got in the valley are
 about 90 different individual cities
 
 00:16:47.000 --> 00:16:51.664
 that are making their own land
 use decisions and all growing.
 
 00:16:51.665 --> 00:16:55.399
 Without looking at the
 whole regional picture
 
 00:16:55.400 --> 00:16:58.728
 of agricultural production
 every city and county
 
 00:16:58.729 --> 00:17:06.079
 views it as its own manifest destiny to get
 bigger to have more economic activity.
 
 00:17:06.080 --> 00:17:09.169
 After all of the tax rate tax reforms and
 
 00:17:09.170 --> 00:17:13.984
 the shift of property tax by the
 state away from local governments.
 
 00:17:13.985 --> 00:17:17.749
 A generating revenue has become
 the major focus of a lot of
 
 00:17:17.750 --> 00:17:21.769
 local governments that way the tax
 structure is set up at this point.
 
 00:17:21.770 --> 00:17:24.274
 Cities have no incentive to create jobs
 
 00:17:24.275 --> 00:17:29.299
 They put them all in the mall generates sales
 tax and them all says we just need people.
 
 00:17:29.300 --> 00:17:30.409
 We don\'t care what they have schools.
 
 00:17:30.410 --> 00:17:31.639
 We don\'t know how crowded the roads are.
 
 00:17:31.640 --> 00:17:33.559
 We don\'t care how much
 farmland we pave over.
 
 00:17:33.560 --> 00:17:35.659
 We need people to buy things
 at the mall to generate
 
 00:17:35.660 --> 00:17:38.179
 the sales tax to support
 the local government.
 
 00:17:38.180 --> 00:17:40.339
 That\'s the direct argument that they made.
 
 00:17:40.340 --> 00:17:44.119
 If you don\'t continue to grow at
 this rate and get to a 160 thousand.
 
 00:17:44.120 --> 00:17:45.889
 You will destroy them all.
 
 00:17:45.890 --> 00:17:49.099
 And that translates into
 kiss the sales tax dollars.
 
 00:17:49.100 --> 00:17:52.369
 Goodbye. The valleys unchecked growth has
 
 00:17:52.370 --> 00:17:56.419
 triggered a search for solutions
 worried about their quality of life
 
 00:17:56.420 --> 00:18:00.874
 Some Valley residents are turning to
 ballot initiatives to curb local growth.
 
 00:18:00.875 --> 00:18:04.279
 Measure T here in Tracey
 would cut new housing in
 
 00:18:04.280 --> 00:18:08.839
 half the impacts that are being caused by
 this increased growth mean that every citizen
 
 00:18:08.840 --> 00:18:10.759
 of the city of Tracy is paying
 
 00:18:10.760 --> 00:18:14.239
 a silent tax to the developers
 when you sit in your car for
 
 00:18:14.240 --> 00:18:16.819
 four hours a day you are subsidizing
 
 00:18:16.820 --> 00:18:20.914
 developers because there aren\'t jobs
 here and you have to be on the street.
 
 00:18:20.915 --> 00:18:23.899
 The growth that doesn\'t occur in Tracy
 is going to happen in the county all
 
 00:18:23.900 --> 00:18:27.334
 around us because this is where the
 people from the Bay Area wanna live.
 
 00:18:27.335 --> 00:18:32.644
 650 thousand jobs are going to be created and
 the Bay area over in the next ten years.
 
 00:18:32.645 --> 00:18:34.729
 Those people have to live somewhere.
 
 00:18:34.730 --> 00:18:36.649
 And if they\'re not living
 and Tracy city limits are
 
 00:18:36.650 --> 00:18:38.734
 going to be living in the
 county all around us
 
 00:18:38.735 --> 00:18:41.509
 Measure teeth slows the
 rate of residential growth.
 
 00:18:41.510 --> 00:18:43.969
 We have provided the message
 that that needs to be
 
 00:18:43.970 --> 00:18:47.524
 done in a substantive and
 in a meaningful way.
 
 00:18:47.525 --> 00:18:50.689
 I urge all of you to vote
 yes on measure team.
 
 00:18:50.690 --> 00:18:56.404
 And I guess this concludes
 our forum for the evening.
 
 00:18:56.405 --> 00:18:58.789
 I\'d like to thank everyone
 for coming out tonight and
 
 00:18:58.790 --> 00:19:01.849
 taking your own time getting
 involved in our community.
 
 00:19:01.850 --> 00:19:05.074
 When we moved here Tracy was just under
 
 00:19:05.075 --> 00:19:08.614
 50 thousand and we thought that was
 a good size for our community.
 
 00:19:08.615 --> 00:19:11.659
 And of course we knew
 Tracey would grow you know
 
 00:19:11.660 --> 00:19:14.089
 every place growth you know our work with
 
 00:19:14.090 --> 00:19:16.684
 measure t started because they were
 talking about up and the girls.
 
 00:19:16.685 --> 00:19:20.884
 I mean we\'re already at four
 times the state average
 
 00:19:20.885 --> 00:19:23.764
 And they were talking about
 increasing it further.
 
 00:19:23.765 --> 00:19:27.529
 In this campaign the city council and
 
 00:19:27.530 --> 00:19:31.924
 the mayor have worked in
 concert with the developers.
 
 00:19:31.925 --> 00:19:36.814
 There\'s so much money to
 be made that the farms and
 
 00:19:36.815 --> 00:19:39.049
 people\'s wishes about what
 kind of community they want to
 
 00:19:39.050 --> 00:19:42.420
 live in is just gonna get
 rolled over by the money.
 
 00:19:50.710 --> 00:19:54.859
 The immediate demands of
 housing and economic growth
 
 00:19:54.860 --> 00:19:58.624
 have so far seized top priority
 in the Central Valley.
 
 00:19:58.625 --> 00:20:01.174
 But other values are also at stake
 
 00:20:01.175 --> 00:20:06.439
 Open space a connection to the land and
 the need to protect agriculture for
 
 00:20:06.440 --> 00:20:12.724
 future generations who will ensure
 that these values are considered.
 
 00:20:12.725 --> 00:20:18.589
 Historically when local
 decision-makers are unable to
 
 00:20:18.590 --> 00:20:21.049
 deal with resource questions
 that are of importance to
 
 00:20:21.050 --> 00:20:24.124
 the state then the voters of
 this state have stepped in.
 
 00:20:24.125 --> 00:20:26.269
 And that\'s why you\'ve had
 the coastal commission.
 
 00:20:26.270 --> 00:20:27.529
 That\'s why you have things like
 
 00:20:27.530 --> 00:20:31.144
 the Endangered Species Act or the
 Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.
 
 00:20:31.145 --> 00:20:34.354
 People have said these are
 resources that are too important.
 
 00:20:34.355 --> 00:20:38.059
 To be left totally to
 local decision makers.
 
 00:20:38.060 --> 00:20:43.309
 What does it take politically to bring
 about significant policy change
 
 00:20:43.310 --> 00:20:48.574
 in the area of farmland protection open space
 protection and smart growth development.
 
 00:20:48.575 --> 00:20:51.109
 We can\'t rely just on the people.
 
 00:20:51.110 --> 00:20:52.639
 We elect a public office.
 
 00:20:52.640 --> 00:20:56.629
 If we still want our communities to
 control their own destinies through
 
 00:20:56.630 --> 00:21:01.324
 their own political institutions y then
 citizens are going to have to take action.
 
 00:21:01.325 --> 00:21:04.099
 In Madeira just north of Fresno.
 
 00:21:04.100 --> 00:21:08.554
 Some concerned farmers are taking matters
 into their own hands by creating
 
 00:21:08.555 --> 00:21:14.989
 an agricultural conservation easement
 funded by state federal or private sources.
 
 00:21:14.990 --> 00:21:19.429
 Ease men\'s pay farmers to keep their
 land and agricultural production
 
 00:21:19.430 --> 00:21:22.759
 Thereby forming a barrier to urban growth.
 
 00:21:22.760 --> 00:21:25.879
 I got a call from a woman who
 said that a neighbor of hers
 
 00:21:25.880 --> 00:21:29.554
 was annex eat his branch
 into the city of Madeira and
 
 00:21:29.555 --> 00:21:34.879
 what could they do to stop it and so
 I said not much you can do here but
 
 00:21:34.880 --> 00:21:40.279
 you can get the neighbors together and start
 a petition the neighbor heard about that.
 
 00:21:40.280 --> 00:21:43.909
 And we met in he said if we
 can come up with something
 
 00:21:43.910 --> 00:21:47.974
 that provides an market-based
 alternative deciding for development.
 
 00:21:47.975 --> 00:21:52.069
 That he\'d be willing to keep this
 land and agriculture production.
 
 00:21:52.070 --> 00:21:55.999
 We\'ve started the process of having
 meetings with all the neighbors and we had
 
 00:21:56.000 --> 00:21:58.519
 everybody can contiguous block of
 
 00:21:58.520 --> 00:22:02.269
 land from western foreign service
 all the way to how a road.
 
 00:22:02.270 --> 00:22:05.329
 I think what we\'ll start today
 it\'s probably this first page
 
 00:22:05.330 --> 00:22:07.954
 that I just kinda go through
 funding commitments.
 
 00:22:07.955 --> 00:22:13.774
 The total easement value
 is $4.2 million and we had
 
 00:22:13.775 --> 00:22:17.089
 the Department of
 Conservation for 1.7 million
 
 00:22:17.090 --> 00:22:20.629
 and then we\'re going to the NRCS
 for the other one went seven.
 
 00:22:20.630 --> 00:22:26.749
 All that leaves us with the funding
 gap of close to $1.2 million.
 
 00:22:26.750 --> 00:22:28.669
 You\'re on the edge of town.
 
 00:22:28.670 --> 00:22:32.239
 Town encroaches the lands too
 valuable to farm anymore.
 
 00:22:32.240 --> 00:22:35.029
 The price of commodities goes
 down and you\'ve got no option
 
 00:22:35.030 --> 00:22:38.929
 other than to sell it for housing.
 
 00:22:38.930 --> 00:22:41.929
 What this does is basically
 pay you the difference
 
 00:22:41.930 --> 00:22:45.759
 between your commercial
 value the ANR form value.
 
 00:22:45.760 --> 00:22:50.494
 We joined ourselves all of the hip
 when we did those virtues itself
 
 00:22:50.495 --> 00:22:55.204
 was there\'s never been a growers and
 I\'ve never seen agarose get together.
 
 00:22:55.205 --> 00:23:01.219
 So it establishes a one
 mile perimeter that allows
 
 00:23:01.220 --> 00:23:08.944
 for the conservation of 40 thousand
 acres behind this one mile perimeter.
 
 00:23:08.945 --> 00:23:11.629
 We love play.
 
 00:23:11.630 --> 00:23:13.519
 I mean it sounds dumb but we really like.
 
 00:23:13.520 --> 00:23:14.869
 But we lie for me.
 
 00:23:14.870 --> 00:23:18.199
 We like our property we\'d
 like this type of lifestyle.
 
 00:23:18.200 --> 00:23:21.259
 And actually I think an awful
 lot of farmers are like me
 
 00:23:21.260 --> 00:23:23.554
 I just want to be protected.
 
 00:23:23.555 --> 00:23:29.524
 Conservation easement and growth caps
 like measure T are part of the answer.
 
 00:23:29.525 --> 00:23:33.379
 Proposals for urban growth
 boundaries for better zoning
 
 00:23:33.380 --> 00:23:38.029
 and for incentives to redirect
 growth have also been put forward.
 
 00:23:38.030 --> 00:23:41.164
 Collectively such strategies
 could accommodate
 
 00:23:41.165 --> 00:23:44.344
 urban growth while
 minimizing farmland laws.
 
 00:23:44.345 --> 00:23:48.499
 Ultimately however it will be
 up to the public as voters
 
 00:23:48.500 --> 00:23:53.790
 and consumers to take action and
 determined the valleys future.
 
 00:23:56.230 --> 00:23:59.629
 I think the expansiveness
 of the Central Valley\'s
 
 00:23:59.630 --> 00:24:03.240
 a lot like the expansiveness
 of the American West
 
 00:24:03.610 --> 00:24:08.344
 I think that that expansiveness has also
 
 00:24:08.345 --> 00:24:13.860
 some ways lead to its own demise because
 it seems to be there\'s no limits.
 
 00:24:14.350 --> 00:24:16.879
 Then we certainly can but
 
 00:24:16.880 --> 00:24:20.820
 a row houses in here because there\'s
 plenty of other fields around it.
 
 00:24:22.600 --> 00:24:25.924
 And I think what\'s changed is the hour.
 
 00:24:25.925 --> 00:24:29.190
 At the point where we\'re
 beginning to see the limit.
 
 00:24:39.340 --> 00:24:42.574
 It\'s just inevitable. That\'s what you hear.
 
 00:24:42.575 --> 00:24:44.704
 You just can\'t stop this
 
 00:24:44.705 --> 00:24:49.504
 Growth and development juggernaut from
 rolling over the entire countryside.
 
 00:24:49.505 --> 00:24:51.079
 I don\'t believe that.
 
 00:24:51.080 --> 00:24:54.319
 I don\'t think that it is inevitable.
 
 00:24:54.320 --> 00:24:56.299
 I think that if we develop
 
 00:24:56.300 --> 00:25:00.394
 sound policy and develop the right
 kinds of tools and incentives.
 
 00:25:00.395 --> 00:25:03.994
 We can have significant urban growth in
 
 00:25:03.995 --> 00:25:09.360
 population growth in the San Joaquin Valley
 and protect our agricultural resources.
 
 00:25:12.970 --> 00:25:19.099
 Urban development is changing the Central
 Valley with irreversible consequences for
 
 00:25:19.100 --> 00:25:24.079
 agriculture and for our nation\'s
 long-term food security land
 
 00:25:24.080 --> 00:25:26.674
 lost here won\'t be replaced elsewhere
 
 00:25:26.675 --> 00:25:30.319
 Rural America faces similar
 development pressures.
 
 00:25:30.320 --> 00:25:32.269
 The time to act has come.
 
 00:25:32.270 --> 00:25:36.150
 The Valley has arrived at the crossroads.
 
 00:26:08.530 --> 00:26:10.710
 Okay
