News
In the News: California Coastal Commission backs Bolinas housing initiative (Marin IJ)
The California Coastal Commission has rejected a challenge against temporary housing for about 60 people living on a Bolinas ranch.
In the News: This Bay Area surfing town is struggling to house its workers. A co-op could help. (SF Chronicle)
Since last October, roughly 60 people, including 18 children, have lived in the RV park on the Tacherra Ranch, a working family farm on Mesa Road that has provided meat, vegetables and eggs to the Bolinas community for over 100 years. Mostly laborers — on ranches, restaurants, construction sites, landscaping crews — they make up just 4% of the town’s population, but their children account for nearly 20% of the tiny K-8 Bolinas-Stinson Union School District.
In the News: Marin supervisors presented with proposed $815M budget
County managers are recommending that supervisors spend $500K of the $21M budget for new, one-time projects to address substandard rural housing.
In the News: Resolutions in Sight for Bo RV Park
The Bolinas Community Land Trust has reached a deal to purchase the Tacherra ranch, where it plans to replace 23 condemned structures with new farmworker housing. The trust and the receiver in charge of the property expect to sign a purchase-and-sale agreement within days.
Bo-Linda Vista Update
We are delighted to share that the emergency RV campground has a new name. Residents have named their home Bo-Linda Vista, “Linda” meaning beautiful. We know there is a lot of interest in the campground, and residents would like to ask for neighbors and strangers to respect their privacy as they continue to settle in. Families recently gathered to create signs to help clarify the private property boundaries.
Editorial: Marin's 'housing first' model needs an element of 'housing now
"In a departure from the ‘Housing First’ model, steps are underway to provide emergency housing for farmworkers in Bolinas. An imaginative approach and speedy action on the part of the nonprofit Bolinas Community Land Trust resulted in a first-rate temporary solution that is already up and running."
In the News: Plan for emergency housing in Bolinas comes at right time
The Bolinas Community Land Trust’s creation of emergency housing on a large parcel off Mesa Road is an example of a community taking care of its own.
In the News: Emergency homes open in Bolinas
"After work on Tuesday, a dozen Bolinas families received keys to their new homes in a temporary R.V. park just yards from their old ramshackle ranch housing. Children raced around the freshly graded grounds while their parents signed leases and toured trailers with staff from the Bolinas Community Land Trust, which plans to replace the condemned housing with permanent, affordable homes." (Ben Stocking / Point Reyes Light)
In the News: Bolinas RV Camp Proposed for Emergency Housing
"The Bolinas Community Land Trust is attempting to raise more than $2.59 million to provide emergency housing using recreational vehicles for people who have been living in substandard conditions for years in western Marin.
The trust plans to install 27 recreational vehicles with utility connections and a new mound septic system on a 20-acre parcel at 130 Mesa Road. Water for the project would be supplied despite Bolinas’ moratorium on new water connections by reallocating water from other land trust properties."
In the News: Emergency housing set to open in Bo
"About 60 people living in condemned housing on a Bolinas ranch could begin moving into an emergency R.V. park next door as early as next week. The project’s organizers are forging ahead even though they are still scrambling to secure all the permits and money they will need to keep the project running after it opens."
In the News: Bolinas ranch tenants take legal action
"Tenants living in condemned housing on a Bolinas ranch have gone to court to demand the repayment of rent and unspecified damages as compensation for threats to their health, safety and emotional wellbeing."
In the News: Bolinas RVs get water approval
A plan to build emergency housing for Bolinas farmworkers has cleared a major hurdle, with local utility regulators approving water service for the project despite the village’s strict limits on water consumption.
An Open Letter from Tacherra Ranch Residents
Statement of the Tacherra Ranch Residents for the May 10th Bolinas Civics Group Community Meeting at 6pm at the Bolinas Community Center