Bay Area Open Space Council
The Bay Area Open Space Council was a network of 65 nonprofits and public agencies San Francisco Bay Area.[1] Founded in 1990 by a group of land conservation practitioners, the Open Space Council provided information, tools, and connections for its members. Examples of member organizations include land conservation organizations, land trusts, water districts, and park districts.
The Open Space Council held an annual conference - typically in May - where over 400 people gather to discuss current events and topics in land conservation. They also hold smaller gatherings four times a year on topics relevant to land conservation in the Bay Area. Though the Open Space Council's office is located in Berkeley, California, member organizations represent all nine counties of the San Francisco Bay Area plus Santa Cruz County.[2]
In March 2020, a group of member organizations of the Open Space Council launched Together Bay Area to replace the former organization.[3][4]
Programs[]
Conservation Lands Network[]
One of the Open Space Council's projects is the Conservation Lands Network, a vision for the region's efforts to preserve biodiversity. Part of a five-year science-based study by over 125 organizations and individuals, the project was tasked to identify the most essential lands needed to sustain the natural infrastructure of the region. The Conservation Land Network studied over 4.3 million acres (17,000 km2) and over 1,000 variables, such as redwood forests and California red legged frog habitats. Along with the Subtidal Habitat Goals Project and the Baylands Ecosystem Goals Project, this project is part of a science-based, regional approach to protecting biodiversity of the Bay Area.[5]
Protected Areas Database[]
The Council has collaborated with Greeninfo Network to develop a GIS database of protected areas in the nine county San Francisco Bay Area called Bay Area Protected Lands Database (BPAD).[6] In 2010, Santa Cruz County was included for the first time, adding a tenth county to the nine Bay Area counties.
Native American Partnerships[]
The film Here and Now, produced by the Open Space Council with help from the Christensen Fund, Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District, and The Trust for Public Land, is a short film that combines social justice, land conservation, human history, and scientific knowledge to tell the story of four partnerships between Native Americans and land conservation organizations.[7]
Outdoor Voice[]
The Open Space Council is building a constituency for land conservation by engaging Bay Area park users in ways to get involved. The program Outdoor Voice is regional throughout all ten Bay Area counties, focusing on action, targeting Bay Area park users, and leveraging social media.[8]
Past Programs[]
Member Organizations[]
As of June 2016, member organizations of the Bay Area Open Space Council include:
- Alameda County Resource Conservation District
- Amah Mutsun Land Trust
- Bay Area Ridge Trail Council
- Brentwood Agricultural Land Trust
- California Rangeland Trust
- California State Coastal Conservancy
- California State Parks
- City of San Francisco
- City of San Jose
- City of Walnut Creek
- East Bay Regional Park District
- East Contra Costa County Habitat Conservancy
- Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy
- Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve, Stanford University
- John Muir Land Trust
- Land Trust of Napa County
- Land Trust of Santa Cruz County
- LandPaths
- Livermore Area Recreation and Park District
- Marin Agricultural Land Trust
- Marin County Parks
- Marin Municipal Water District
- Marin Open Space Trust
- Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District
- Napa County Regional Park and Open Space District
- Peninsula Open Space Trust
- Pepperwood Preserve
- Resource Conservation District of Santa Cruz County
- San Francisco Bay Trail Project
- San Francisco Public Utilities Commission
- San Mateo County Parks
- San Mateo County Resource Conservation District
- Santa Clara County Open Space Authority
- Santa Clara County Parks
- Santa Clara Valley Habitat Agency
- Santa Clara Valley Water District
- Save Mount Diablo
- Save the Redwoods League
- Sempervirens Fund
- Silicon Valley Land Conservancy
- Solano Land Trust
- Solano Open Space
- Sonoma County Agricultural Preservation and Open Space District
- Sonoma County Regional Parks
- Sonoma County Water Agency
- Sonoma Land Trust
- Sonoma Resource Conservation District
- The Nature Conservancy
- Tri-Valley Conservancy
- Trust for Public Land
- U.S. National Park Service[10]
External links[]
References[]
- ^ http://openspacecouncil.org
- ^ "Members".
- ^ "Founding and Keystone Member of TOGETHER Bay Area". Urban Bird Foundation | Birds. People. Communities. 2020-03-27. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
- ^ Burke, Annie. "Op-Ed | A New Regional Open Space Coalition - Bay Nature Magazine". Bay Nature. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
- ^ http://www.bayarealands.org
- ^ "Bay Area Lands". Archived from the original on 2016-07-07.
- ^ "Here and Now - FILM". Vimeo. Retrieved 2016-06-01.
- ^ "Bay Area Open Space Council • A regional coalition for what makes the Bay Area great". openspacecouncil.org. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
- ^ "Bay Area Open Space Council • A regional coalition for what makes the Bay Area great". openspacecouncil.org. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
- ^ "Members".
- Parks in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Organizations based in the San Francisco Bay Area