City of Novato – “Report An Issue” website

You can use this to report any issues wrt Binford on the Novato side.

At the City of Novato, we use a coordinated service request process to ensure all departments work together to handle these concerns. I recommend using our service request feature on the City of Novato website, found at this link:ย https://www.novato.org/community/report-an-issue.

You may upload a photo of the issue to help city staff evaluate what services are needed and which staff members (police, public works, homeless outreach) would be best suited to handle it.

Jim Naugle, Novato Chief of Police

Assault Reported on Binford

An Assault has been reported in 80XX BINFORD RD
Less than 1.57 miles from your home

View Map

From local police records:

  • Crime Type: Assault
  • Address: 80XX BINFORD RD
  • Description: Civil Problem Or Dispute : This Is From The Marin County Sheriff’S Office Calls For Service. Information Is Subject To Change.

More info at this link.

Call to Action – Post your Comments!

There is no mention of the Rush Creek Wetlands in this editorial which is ~3.5 miles from Bell Marin Keys. Please demand the immediate restoration of the Rush Creek area!

Post your comments here –> https://bit.ly/3PDXnTc


Snipped from the IJ Editorial below:

The proposed addition of 2,000 acres of Novato wetlands to the San Pablo Bay National Wildlife Refuge is a sign of the North Bayโ€™s success in restoring and protecting its baylands.

Marinโ€™s congressman, Jared Huffman, has joined forces with Reps. John Garamendi and Mike Thompson in drafting legislation to add 7,000 acres to the refuge. The proposal would add the Hamilton and Bel Marin Keys wetlands to the federally protected wetlands.

They are currently seeking public comment via Garamendiโ€™s website โ€“ bit.ly/3PDXnTc. A Dec. 12 deadline has been set for those comments.

The refuge, created in 1974, has grown to 19,000 acres, including much of the wetlands that border Highway 37.

The last time it was expanded was in 2011.

Its preservation is important to the health of San Pablo and San Francisco bays and to migrating birds for whom the area has historically been their winter stop.

Huffman says the Hamilton and Bel Marin Keys baylands are โ€œthe perfect candidateโ€ to be added to the refuge.

Since its creation โ€“ the turning of the old Hamilton military airfield runway back into wetlands โ€“ the area has become a prime spot for local birders.

The Bel Marin Keys wetlands includes 1,610 acres owned and managed by the California Coastal Conservancy, which has been involved in restoration work there since 2019.

The Conservancyโ€™s longstanding hope has been that management of Hamilton and Bel Marin Keys acreage could be turned over to the federal Fish and Wildlife Service.

In advancing the legislation, the congressmen and agency leaders need to be forthright in providing information regarding what changes the transfer and federal refuge designation might bring to current uses or to neighboring properties.

Providing for public comment on the legislation should also make possible ramifications clear upfront.

The overall goal is a sound one, one that Marin voters have backed with their tax dollars.

In 2016, Bay Area voters approved a $12-per-year parcel tax devoted to restoring and protecting baylands, improving public access and flood control work. Marin voters led the way, with a whopping 73.5% majority endorsing the measure.

Important! FOIA Request

Toni Shroyer made a FOIA request on our behalf to determine where the money is being spent by the County to relocated the Binford rd encampment.

The exact request was:

“I am requesting via the FOIA, proof of all taxpayer funds (Federal, state and county) spent on Binford Rd since January 2023. This includes the recent state funds allocated specifically for Binford Road. Of said funds spent, I need them itemized with trailing documentation.”

The County provided 80 documents, some data had been redacted and we are making them available to you here.

The analysis shows that the majority of the money is being spent on trash pickup and hauling.

Much less than 10% is being spent on determining who is living there, if they are actually homeless or mentally ill, and getting them moved to a location that is not impacting the Wetlands.

Details of our analysis are here. Please draw your own conclusions & let us know if we missed anything.