Binford Resident accused of attempted carjacking

From the IJ

Story here: https://www.marinij.com/2024/04/09/novato-suspect-accused-of-attempted-carjacking/

An assault suspect allegedly tried to carjack a driver while fleeing from authorities in Novato.

The suspect, who is described as an unhoused resident on Binford Road, attacked a neighbor with a pole on Monday morning, Marin County sheriff’s Sgt. Adam Schermerhorn said. The suspect might have been suffering from mental health issues and also had ingested fentanyl, Schermerhorn said.

A deputy deployed a Taser on the suspect after he allegedly threatened deputies with a golf club. The Taser was ineffective, and the suspect ran away.

Authorities found him on Highway 101 near Atherton Avenue after he allegedly attempted to carjack a driver in a moving truck. He was taken into custody after a struggle and later assaulted a nurse at a hospital, Schermerhorn said.

Owen Eugene Powell, 37, was arrested on suspicion of attempted carjacking, obstructing an officer, exhibiting a deadly weapon, committing an assault with a deadly weapon and trespassing on railroad property.

Powell was booked into the Marin County Jail. He remained in custody Tuesday in lieu of $150,000 bail, according to jail records.

Fire on Binford! – Photo’s from Toni S

Apparently there was a fire on Binford yesterday as shown in these photo’s.

They are cleaning up today.

She also called NPD to get rid of RVs and people sleeping in vans and cars. There were two out of state license plates.

Toni continues to keep the pressure on the local authorities to do their jobs. But it can’t just be Toni calling all the time, please make your voice heard if you see something illegal going on.

Please call NPD directly or use the “Report an Issue Website

Novato, county challenge state over fecal pollution claim

Link to the article in the IJ: https://www.marinij.com/2024/04/01/novato-county-challenge-state-over-fecal-pollution-claim/

Baykeeper’s scientists maintain that the Petaluma River is currently so contaminated with bacteria that people will get sick swimming and paddling in the waters” via this article.

Here is the full article from the IJ

Marin County and Novato are disputing a state water board’s contention that they are doing too little to prevent the discharge of fecal bacteria into the Petaluma River.

The San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Board notified both the county and Novato in January that they are out of compliance with a program that it adopted in 2019 to reduce the level of fecal bacteria in the river.

Both jurisdictions, however, contend that they are not required to comply with the program because the scheme has not yet been incorporated into their municipal storm sewer system permits, which are issued by the State Water Resources Control Board.

In addition, Jenna Brady, chief deputy county counsel, said, “We don’t believe that they have shown that the county stormwater system is at issue because there are no samples from downstream of our system.”

Nick Nguyen, Novato’s public works director, said the notice the city received was identical to the one sent to the county.

“We are in compliance with the permit,” Nguyen said.

The Regional Water Quality Control Board declined to comment.

“There is the potential this could become an enforcement matter,” Blair Robertson, a spokesperson for the agency, wrote in an email.

The Clean Water Act of 1972 requires states to compile a list of “impaired” water bodies that fail to meet water quality standards and to establish total maximum daily loads (TMDL) for the pollutants causing those impairments.

The main stem of the Petaluma River has been on the impaired list since 1975 because of elevated levels of fecal bacteria. High levels of fecal bacteria indicate the presence of pathogenic organisms that are found in warm-blooded animal waste and pose potential health risks to people who recreate in contaminated waters.

In 2019, the Regional Water Quality Control Board adopted total maximum daily loads for the Petaluma River watershed to address fecal bacteria. The total maximum daily loads identified numerous possible sources for the bacterial contamination, including wastewater treatment plants, onsite wastewater treatment systems, camps of homeless people, dairies, ranches, horse facilities and municipal stormwater runoff.

In its notice to the county, the regional water board wrote that discharges from the county’s municipal storm sewer system were “causing or contributing to exceedances of applicable water quality standards, especially the bacteria water quality objectives.”

The water board went on to say that the county’s permit requires it to “report on actions it will take and complete actions to address the exceedances.

However, the Water Board has not received the required reports and is not aware that the county is taking actions sufficient to address the exceedances,” it said. “As a result, the county is not in compliance with the permit.”

The permit referred to is issued periodically by the California State Water Resources Control Board and sets out the regulations governing the county’s municipal storm sewer system.

The county has responded to the regional water board’s notice by submitting a petition to the State Water Resources Control Board. In the petition, the county asserts that it is in compliance because “the bacteria TMDL for the Petaluma River watershed has not yet been incorporated into the Phase II permit.”

Brady said the petition will not be activated, however, unless the county is unable to settle its dispute with the regional water board. Nguyen said Novato submitted a similar petition based on the county’s filing.

Rob Carson, director of the Marin Countywide Stormwater Pollution Prevention Program, said that even though the permits are designed to be reissued every five years, the county’s permit is 13 years old.

“That is why the TMDL hasn’t been integrated into the permit,” he said. “The state board hasn’t reissued the permit to us yet.”

The regional water board’s notice directed the county and Novato to submit plans and schedules to investigate the sources of high bacteria levels, implement controls and conduct monitoring.

More specifically, it ordered the county and Novato to address non-stormwater discharges associated with unsheltered homeless populations and to monitor bacteria levels in San Antonio Creek at three locations.

San Antonio Creek, which defines the border between Marin and Sonoma counties, is the Petaluma River’s largest tributary and accounts for about 20% of the total watershed. When it issued the total maximum daily loads in 2019, the regional water board stated its intention to add San Antonio Creek to the list of impaired water bodies due to elevated fecal bacteria levels.

Carson said the county is already doing most of the things that the regional water board has directed it to do. It has not, however, begun testing for bacteria levels in San Antonio Creek.

“We will, as the letter requires us to, initiate that testing next month,” Carson said.

Carson added, however, that the three testing sites on San Antonio Creek are not covered by the county’s municipal storm sewer system permit.

“The stormwater permit is an urbanized area discharge permit,” Carson said. “The testing sites all upstream of the urbanized areas.”

Carson said the regional water board has a separate “grazing and dairy waiver program” intended to bring agricultural areas into compliance with water quality objectives.

“The water board recently announced an expansion of that grazing and dairy waiver program to include all of the Petaluma River watershed,” Carson said, “so we feel like that program will address the discharges in San Antonio Creek.”

Carson said the regional water board has announced its intention to expand those two programs into the San Antonio Creed watershed.

“So those property owners will be required to develop ranch plans that talk about how they’re going to control pollutants off of their properties,” he said.

The Petaluma River total maximum daily loads also identified a number of onsite wastewater treatment systems in West Marin, although the bulk are in Sonoma County.

Gwendolyn Baert, an environmental health specialist for Marin County, wrote in an email that the county has shared information about the approximately 20 onsite waste treatment systems located within 200 feet of San Antonio Creek.

“To my knowledge the Regional Board was going to have the property owners have their systems inspected within five years of the effective date of the implementation of the TMDL,” Baert wrote. “If any of the properties were identified as experiencing problems, Marin County Environmental Health Services would follow up for corrective actions.”

As for homeless campers, Carson said the camp on Binford Road is the only one he has identified that could be contributing to the Petaluma River’s fecal bacteria problem. The camp is adjacent to Rush Creek, which connects with the river via Pinkston Slough.

In December, the county announced that it had installed 12 portable restrooms and hand-washing facilities at the site and was offering free, biweekly pump-outs of sewage waste to RV owners there.

Citizen Letter: 2.4.2024

To: Jamie Scardina <[email protected]>, Mike Thompson <[email protected]>, <[email protected]>

Hi Jamie,
I called in the below today regarding Binford Road.  There are toxic generators with gas and oil and hoarding being submerged into our wetlands as I write this. 
The RV campers have abused the situation and continually destroy our environment. 

We, The People have had enough.  With over 2.2 Million of our taxpayer dollars given to “fix” Binford, this is shameful. 

Although efforts with Mike are completely acknowledged and appreciated, the county can do better. 

Our wildlife and citizens of Novato don’t deserve our community to be destroyed.

When Mike is off duty, please have an officer in charge to deal with this mess.  It appears when Mike is gone, little is addressed.

Posting all over Social Media and Barbara will not be happy!

Thank you,

Citizen Letter: Binford Road 1.14.2024 (update)

To: Dear Sheriff Scardina, Chief Naugle and Deputy Thompson

We appreciate Deputy Thompson’s efforts on Binford Rd. 

Today, I took the below photos:

1) The RV on the city side of the road needs to be removed.  I will call it in again to NPD.  If you need me to have members of the public call it in too, I can have that done.

2) A dog (healer breed) is tied to some junk and is unattended.  I cannot see if he has food or water.  I no longer call the MHS, as Nancy who is a leader of the MHS wrote to me, “The people who live on Binford Rd treat their animals like family.”   I don’t tie family members up to junk and I don’t know anyone who does. 

3) I asked the man to not have his two dogs defecate and urinate into the wetlands.  I purposely was on the phone with Dispatch when I stayed this so it would be on record.  The man clearly didn’t think he was doing anything wrong by being in the wetlands with his dog. 

I am respectfully asking again for the laws to be followed on Binford Rd.  No matter the hardships or painful  backstories of many of the residents living on Binford, that does not give them the right to neglect animals, have them defecate in the wetlands, litter, dispose of their human waste wherever they like and park wherever they do choose.

On a happy note, after church today, a woman said she appreciated all my social media posts on Binford Rd. I hear that all the time in the community.  Time for me to crank it up again.

Peace,

Citizen Letter: 1.14.2024 Newcomer?

To: Marin Sheriff

As I was emailing you about the dogs on Binford, the below just happened.

A car moved out and at the same time this RV moved in. 

From my understanding and what the public believes the county is telling them, no newcomers are allowed on Binford Rd.  

If this is not a newcomer, he can find another place to go. His RV clearly works.   Having two set of rules in this county —for those who follow the law and for those who don’t—-is infuriating the public.

New Binford Resident – Novato Side

Letter to the Chief of Police from a Concerned Citizen

Dear Chief Naugle,

I called about this new resident on Binford Road (city side) to your dept. this morning.  I was told by dispatch I was the second call in this regard.

Dispatch referred me to a website.  As I am working nonstop to pay taxes, I don’t have the time to go to a website (again) about all of the challenges on Binford Road.  That is your job.

I respectfully ask again that the law be followed.  Novato has created a precedent that needs to stop.  Please have the tents removed on the city side of the property and enforce the parking laws AND littering laws.  Our wildlife continues to be destroyed by oil spills, garbage and human waste.

Other cities in California are having successes.  Novato can too.