101 CA

101 Ways to Change the World Along 101 is a collaborative community project of the April Vargas for Supervisor Campaign.

Our goal is to begin a dialogue on how to improve life in San Mateo County and shape the campaign going forward on ideas and insights from you.

Help us build the blog up to 101 ideas by voicing your suggestions on how to change to the world along 101.

We welcome your ideas on saving the environment, getting people working, helping our schools, making government more effective, and anything else that will make life in San Mateo County healthier and happier for everyone.

  We’ll post your idea and add an image to the site.  Don’t be shy, you can also comment on other suggestions; this is an open forum.

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For more about April and the work she’s done for San Mateo County, please visit AprilVargas.com

The ideas posted on 101 Ways to Change the World Along 101 are part of an open community forum and do not necessarily reflect the views of April Vargas or her campaign.

Original Photo: Flikr user U.S. Army Africa. Used under Creative Commons license.

Progress towards healthcare for all could be furthered by the creation of a United States Medical Academy which would provide free education for those willing to serve for, say, 4 years as doctors in places where they are needed, with a strong focus on preventive medicine.   The purpose of this opportunity would be to improve the health of all citizens.

Those who would and will cry “socialism” would hopefully come to recognize that the military academies provide us with an excellent “socialized” military which protects us from threats to our national security and that the very notion of national security must involve a population free from threats to the health of our citizens.

George Cattermole

Original Photo: Flikr user mamamusings. Used under Creative Commons license.

Make sure we are utilizing best election methods, practices and systems.

San Mateo County is located in the heart of the leading technology geographic area-  but we use voting systems that have been reported as deficient by government study.  We should lead the country toward less expensive, more secure, open source / paper ballot voting systems.

– Brent Turner

Original Photo: Flikr user Mira (on the wall) from Columbia University.  Used under Creative Commons license.

South San Francisco is a city of many diverse cultures with a large Mexican and Latino population in particular.  There are few festivals in South San Francisco but today I saw the Fiestas Patrias at S.S.F. City Hall.  There was some great singing, musicians, and colorful Folklorico dancers.  They were so good they reminded me of the renowned Folklorico dancers I had seen many years ago in Ghadalahara, but I found out they were a South San Francisco troop of high school performers.  This colorful enjoyable performance on the City Hall steps, brought pride to a poorer culture that works hard to succeed in their new country.  It brought acceptance and admiration from people of other cultures.  It brought some money to the vendors, and enjoyment to brighten up the community.  The performance itself I thought was quite exceptional.

Their intent was to broaden it to other South American countries, and this is a very good idea.  Let’s create festivals for different countries to celebrate our cultural diversity and our differences. Lets enjoy the dance, music, art, and entertainment and the different ethnic food, and drinks.  Lets promote cultural tolerance, pride in different cultures at an early age, and more harmony in our community.  There could be multiple venues for the different cultures along Grand Ave and other sites.  One particularly successful example of this kind of multi cultural celebration is the 40 year old two week Folklorama festival in Winnipeg, Canada.  Whether it is a large festival with many venues such as this, or a smaller localized one, everybody benefits, economically, and by promoting understanding and tolerance of different cultural values.  It would certainly be well suited and benefit the multi-cultural community of South San Francisco.

– Z Corda

Original Photo: Flikr user Sean Dreilinger.   Used under Creative Commons license.

Increase area tipping fees to make deconstruction feasible. Fees should be over $150/ton.
Gladwyn d’Souza

Tipping fees (sometimes called gate fees) are charges levied at disposal sites such as landfills for dumping waste.  By increasing tipping fees, those working in building and infrastructure demolition would have incentive to salvage reusable materials and fixtures for later use rather than dumping them as waste.  Such reusable materials include plumbing fixtures, cabinetry, flooring and scrap metal.

PrincetonPhoto: Harbor District

Develop and carry through on a plan for the Princeton waterfront that deals with erosion, illegal/haphazard riprap, and construction at the shoreline, all of which impact public access and enjoyment of this coastal resource.

- Lisa Ketcham

SFGSnakeOriginal Photo: Flickr user Silvain de Munck  Used under Creative Commons license.

We need those who supervise us to have an understanding and appreciation of those species which were here before supervision was needed. Endangered species need to be protected by those who have the power to protect them. April Vargas understands this. Few in power these days do.

– George Cattermole

The San Francisco Garter Snake (Thamnophis sirtalis tetrataenia) pictured above is found only in San Mateo County and bits of far nothern Santa Cruz County.  This subspecies of the common garter snake is considered one of the most colorful snakes in the world.  Classified as endangered since 1967, only 1,000-2,000 individuals are predicted to remain.

Find out more about San Francisco Garter Snakes and efforts to protect them on Wikipedia , Don Robertson from Monterrey’s website, or the Center for Biological Diversity.

PlacesforPeople

Original Photo: Flikr user hildgrim.  Used under Creative Commons license.

Promote opportunities for people only spaces in commercial areas complete with benches, places for bicycles and lots of trees.  This is a great way to increase foot traffic in retail areas while at the same time creating great places for people to meet, exchange ideas and sip on their favorite beer or coffee.

Larry Jacobs

BusonCoast

Original Image: Flickr user CbCastro  Used under Creative Commons license.

Improve public transportation on the Coast: more frequent buses, free or cheaper transfers, better weekend service, service continuing later at night.

Patricia McKowen

Bilboards-and-trees

Original Image: Flickr user occam.  Used under Creative Commons license.  Tree: Public Domain.

Many people use Hwy. 101 and it is really a boring drive and frustrating.  If we could make it more beautiful and relaxing, perhaps we could lessen the road rage, etc.  Also, this greening of the highway by planting more trees would bring more rain to this desert state (as trees attract more rain).  I, for one, take Hwy 280 because it is such a lovely drive and never go on Hwy 101 unless I have no alternative.  Once the trees are planted, they should not need any upkeep.  Nature would provide that.

- Ron Meier

Thanks for this opportunity.
My main concern is the ugly billboards.
Get rid of them.

- Rick Gilbert, Redwood City

bussign

San Mateo County residents need to be able to get to work.

Current bus service is inadequate and leaves people stranded for us to 5 hours because it doesn’t run at night.  The bus ride from north to south is two hours. When the bus doesn’t start until 5 am in the north, a person can’t get to work until 7 am in the south.

Higher paying jobs are 9-5, lower paying jobs, the jobs that support us all, can be any time, day or night. These are service jobs, and many start much, much earlier.  Yet, low paid workers who desperately need to work more than one job, cannot get to 2nd and 3rd jobs.

Also, people going out at night are stranded if they don’t catch the midnight bus. This encourages drunk driving.

We basically only have one street in San Mateo County for north-south transport. Can’t we cover El Camino at least every 30 minutes?

-Dana Callen

STREET-Rendered-670x453

“Regenerative Suburban Median” designed by Brian Alessi.  From the Reburbia Suburban Design Competition sponsored by dwell magazine and Inhabitat.com.

Create more median strips, and allow gardening there. In San Carlos, we have many overly wide streets like Laurel Street between Oak Street and Spring Street. Those couple of blocks, for example, are a massive, ugly expanse of pavement. In spots like this, we should add wide medians with parks/community gardens. This would enhance pedestrian safety by slowing down cars, and it would make the town much more beautiful.

Here’s a description of how this might be done: Brian Alessi’s “Regenerative Suburban Median”

- Arley Lewis, San Carlos

AIDSRibbonOriginal Image: dbmatthews.com. Used with permission.

I would like to see funding for AIDS agencies to do prevention and education for those at risk as well as those who have already been infected.  This is extremely important in order to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS in our communities.

- Ginny W.

DevilsSlideOriginal Photo: Flickr user Airplane Journal.  Used under Creative Commons license.

It would be wonderful if there were more signs that tell you when the Devil’s Slide is closed. Also, on the week-ends having more signs that tell you how long it will take to get to HMB using 92. - Larry Kleinman

The Devil’s Slide Tunnel Project April actively advocated for should solve the problem of an impassible Highway 1 come 2011.

Express LaneOriginal Photo: Flickr user rutio. Used under Creative Commons license.

Charge solo commuters to use the express “carpool” lane and use that money to help fund SamTrans and Caltrain. – Elizabeth Lasensky

The VTA Express Lane project in Santa Clara County already follows a similar model.

Assembly Bill 2032 directs that revenue from express lanes operations be reinvested in projects and services that provide traffic congestion relief in the express lanes corridor. This will include operation and maintenance of the express lanes and expanding public transit service within the corridor.  This may allow funds collected to be invested in SamTrans and other transportation within the county.

BusShelter

Original Photo: Flickr user crderivative.  Used under Creative Commons license.

Install bus shelters that provide shelter from the weather, not advertising space.

Recently many of the bus shelters which had provided shelter from summer hot afternoon sun and winter rain and wind, we removed and replaced with more open shelters which provided illuminated billboards for advertising, but which do not provide protection from weather.

Since a rider has to wait for up to an hour, sometimes more, for a bus, don’t they deserve some protection? It gets pretty rough out there. The old shelters should have been kept in place which would have increased the number of shelters. – Dana Callen

greenjobs

Politicians want to promise “green jobs” for their citizens, but “green jobs” is an ambiguous term and too often the only green workers you see today are those collecting bottles and cans to recycle.

Let’s make San Mateo County a center for real, sustainable, green jobs by supporting educational and vocational training programs for environmentally responsible work.  Such programs might train people in solar panel installation and design, organic farming and ranching methods, manufacturing with recycled materials, safer waste disposal methods, sustainable forestry and open space maintenance, etc.

With a well-trained and talented work force, we can employ our citizens for years to come and attract new green businesses to the county.

HMB-Map

Every time I’m creeping along on Rte 92 approaching HMB, I think how wonderful it would be to have a by-pass from Rte 92 about 1/2 mile or mile east of town that would connect with Highway 1 north of town.
I’ve seen signs hinting that this may have been considered, but nothing to indicate that there’s any serious planning going on. – Carole Kleinman

SMBridgeLeveeOriginal Photo: FosterCity.org.

In San Mateo we have a problem with keeping the levee on the bayside safe and in repair.

My so-called flood insurance goes up every year (it has NEVER flooded here to my knowledge [by DMV.]) I pay $500 to $600 a year for fire insurance (more likely, more devastation) and over $1500  going close to $2000 a year for flood-ins. – Arlene Horan

SMCounty-ParkOriginal Photo: Flickr user Kevin.  Used under Creative Commons license.

-Ann and Alan Fleisman

solarpanels

Original Photo: Flickr user Pink Dispatcher.  Used under Creative Commons license.

Install solar panels on all San Mateo County buildings to achieve an economy of scale.

We must act to mitigate global warming. – Charlie Nordlinger