The Floating Times - Floating Homes Association
Transcription
The Floating Times - Floating Homes Association
The Floating Times VOL. XXXII No. 5 The Floating Homes Association Newsletter Sep/Oct 2012 by Ray Dunaway, President Photo by Court Mast. Waldo Point Harbor Construction Update By Stan Barbarich A t the time of this writing, August 16, 2012, the work at South 40 Dock continues at a pretty good rate. Most of the sheet pile has been driven, the dock entrance has been demolished and the utilities are being rerouted to accommodate the new seawall. It’s a real eye-opener to see the finished height of the new wall; one can talk forever about raising a parking lot four feet, but seeing the new wall at that level is a different thing. For an early peek at what the actual height will look like at your dock, look at the side of your dock house and find two small colored ribbons. The lower one shows the fill height and the upper one shows the top of the new seawall. Check it out. The South 40 seawall should be finished around the end of August and pile driving will then progress toward Liberty Dock, arriving at the dock around the second week of September. Then that dock house will be demolished, and on it goes. As soon as the last pile is driven at South 40, the parking lot excavation and fill will begin and will continue to late October. See there, I managed to write two paragraphs before talking about problems. The main one so far has been with getting timely notices of “minor” issues like utility shutoffs. Your representatives have been hammering on WPH management for more than three years, in an attempt to get them to have their acts together and be ready to do notices effectively when needed. Do you think they had it together by July? NOT. continued on page 2 The Floating Times Sep/Oct 2012 CONTENTS The seawall has progressed beyond the entrance to South 40, and is moving closer to Liberty Dock. PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE T he summer season is over and we are approaching autumn, which is traditionally one of the best seasons of the year for our community. This is the time when we share our unique and fantastic lifestyle with our extended community through the Floating Homes Tour on September 22. In addition to showcasing our community, this event allows us to dispel many misconceptions our neighbors and others have about our impact on the Bay. If you would like to support your friends and neighbors by participating in this event there are still open places for volunteers. Another significant event to celebrate this year is the start of the long awaited Waldo Point Harbor reconfiguration. Work began in July at the South Forty Dock and appears to be proceeding according to plan. This is the culmination of untold hours of work and negotiations by the Harbor Equity Group and others over the last twenty years. This would not have happened without the efforts of these dedicated volunteers. As you may deduce, this is part of my on-going effort to get more of the community involved in the Floating Homes Association. This continued page 2 Tour Volunteers............................. 2 Dinghy Dame................................. 3 AEDs Approved............................. 4 Cert Corner.................................... 4 KQED............................................ 5 Delta Williams................................ 5 Seattle Book.................................. 6 Bird Pictures.................................. 6 Advertising..................................... 7 Page 1 President’s Message - continued from page 1 fall and early winter there will be a call for nominees for Dock Reps and Alternates from each dock. These are the people who comprise the FHA Board of Directors who will elect the FHA Officers to provide leadership and continuity of relationships within the community, and represent the community to the outside world. How can you help? Get involved! How can you get involved? Volunteer to help with the Floating Homes Tour, volunteer to help with one of the FHA committees that represents something you feel strongly about. What are the committees? Emergency Services, Environmental, Legal, Membership, Newsletter, and Tour Directors. If there is a need you feel isn’t being filled, then volunteer to create a new committee! Almost everyone who has served and is currently serving in an elected or appointed post has a very full life of work, family and other volunteer jobs in addition to the work they do for the FHA. If you still don’t feel that you have the time to volunteer then just let new neighbors know about the benefits of becoming an FHA member. In addition to receiving the Floating Times, they get to attend the Annual Meeting and Dinner, are eligible for inclusion in the FHA Emergency Notification Network, can receive a discount for CERT training, and can benefit from many other FHA activities that have been discussed in earlier articles. As a special incentive, anyone joining the FHA starting in September, 2012, will be a member for the remainder of 2012 and all of 2013 for the cost of just one year’s dues. Dues are $25 per year or $65 for three years. Construction continued from page 1 The problem was especially bad when they had to shut off the water to South 40, because it’s impossible to shut off the water there without shutting off water to Liberty. So there you are, getting ready to take your shower and suddenly there’s no water, nor is there any for many hours. This happened on several days in one week. So, more hammering on WPH ensued and finally today they seemed to have done a notice correctly. The bright light (upcoming pun intended) in the ongoing process came this week from Curtis Havel, the county planner on the project. Harbor Equity reps met with him and his boss, Brian Crawford, several months before the start of work. We gave them a list of concerns, many of which related to incomplete or erroneous plans WPH had submitted. Curtis and Brian promised to be on the case for those items & they have. The aforementioned bright spot was that Curtis sent us the revised info on parking lot lighting that the harbor had recently submitted. We were therefore able to engage the harbor and their lighting architect in discussions about the type, size and height of the lights, before it was too late. The specific concerns, which we are working to resolve right now, are that there must be sufficient light to see in the area, and the lamps The Floating Times must be properly placed and at a height that will not flood the houses at the beginning of a dock with light all night long. Stay tuned for more fun. Only 4-1/2 more years to go! Make the Annual Tour a Success! by Hillair Bell Our floating homes docks are seen from a Seaplane Adventures airplane. Located next to Commodore Dock, Seaplane Adventures is a sponsor of the 2012 Floating Homes Tour. T Photo by Emily Riddell. he Annual Floating Homes Tour, on September 22 from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM, is shaping up to be another excellent opportunity for people to enjoy a visit to our community and get a glimpse of our unique lifestyle. But its importance goes well beyond the good will generated by the combined efforts of our volunteers, our home owners, our sponsors and our non-profit beneficiaries in the community. It is also an essential source of funds for the FHA, allowing the organization to continue it’s work to bring benefit to its members as well as our entire community. Volunteers can join the friends and neighbors who make the tour happen by contacting Lynn Lester at (llester@earthlink.net), or by calling her at 415 3324678. All volunteers get free admission to the tour! If your time is limited, take a few minutes to make sure your friends and acquaintances know about the tour and how to get tickets. Send them this link: (www.floatinghomes.org/showcase.htm). Or take just half an hour before 10:00 AM on the day of the tour, and join the set up crew. Just show up at Kappas Green and lend a hand. And buy your tickets in advance if possible. Tickets are limited and regularly sell out. While we do reserve some tickets for walk-ins, buying tickets ahead of time saves $5 and avoids lines at registration The entire Tour Committee thanks you for your support, and we look forward to seeing you there! Sep/Oct 2012 Page 2 Water You Doing Here? By the Dinghy Dame Emily and Stuart Riddell with a model of the plane Stuart flew in the Canadian Air Force. Photo by Dinghy Dame. Meet the Riddells by Dinghy Dame E mily and Stuart Riddell (rhymes with fiddle) have lived on Issaquah since 1991.They have been married 52 years now, and have led an adventuresome life with many a twist and turn. Now pretend you are Julie Andrews singing My Favorite Things… Stuart said he was a jack of all trades. He once sold insurance and then real estate. He mined hard-rock gold, was a logger too. Is there not something that man cannot do? Owned a sawmill, ocean cruiser… then he ranched some sheep. It gives pause to wonder when that busy man found suitable time to sleep! For the Royal Canadian Air Force he flew, and then was employed as a mechanic, too. Stuart seemed really to harbor no fear, was a Marine surveyor the last 20 years. Now he’s writing…short stories, and a novel, too. Like I said up above, there really is not a thing that this man can’t do! Stuart was born in Victoria, British Columbia, and raised in Vancouver. He attended Trinity College School which is owned by the Church of England, be- fore heading for the Royal Canadian Naval College. The plane he is holding in the photo is a replica of one he flew, the Canadian Harvard trainer, also called US AT6! His first car was a 1929 model A Roadster with a rumble seat. While he loved it, it seems he loved the water even more. November of 1958 found Stuart in Sausalito aboard his yacht Romayne, a 53-foot iron ketch. He and his crew of four other Canadians and one American (all related) were ready to sail to Tahiti, with plans to circumnavigate the globe. However, 24 hours out, they lost their mainsail and had to motor back. Had that not occurred, he would never have met Emily! It was November 11th, Armistice Day, when a mutual friend brought Emily aboard and that was the beginning of their lives together. Stuart and his crew finally set sail from Sausalito in April of ‘59 and this time they made it as far as Tahiti. Emily was born near Toledo, Ohio, and spent her winters in Florida. She attended Colby Junior College in New London, New Hampshire. One day in 1956, her mother announced, “Paint your furniture, we’re moving to California!” Emily and her brother Peter had recently won a puppy on a TV show, so the three of them and the dog piled into their Chevy with a UHaul and headed into the sunset! They landed in San Francisco and settled in Pacific Heights. Emily worked as a journalist and became an assistant to the director of public relations for the State Bar of California. She wrote articles regarding law for the layman. But, having met Stuart, Tahiti beckoned, so she quit her job and flew there to join him. She came in on one of the last pontoon planes to fly in there before the air strip was built. The crew plus one then hoisted their sails and set forth for Auckland, New Zealand, where Emily and Stuart were wed. They then sailed to Vancouver, landing in September of 1960. Emily and Stuart set up housekeeping in Hope, B.C. with 13 chickens. (Hen-pecked already??) Their son Cameron was born there. By 1963 Sausalito, siren that she is, lured them back and they moved into a home on Filbert Avenue where their daughter Romayne was born. Emily began doing some commercials as well as ramp modeling for Wednesday luncheons. Both she and Stuart were extras in several movies, including Bullitt. Wanderlust struck again six years later and they headed for England to see Stuart’s father. While there, they bought another sailboat, a lovely 43-foot wooden vessel named the Gay Vandra. They sailed her through the canals and rivers of France and emerged in the Mediterranean near Marseilles, having traversed through 250 locks. They settled in Piraeus, an island off Greece, and remained there four years and ran their boat as a charter while living on it. The kids attended a school run by the British Embassy on the mainland The last two years in the Mediterranean they wintered in a yacht harbor in Malta where Emily home-schooled the children. At this point they decided to return to the states and continued on page 4 The Floating Times Sep/Oct 2012 Page 3 CERT CORNER Dinghy Dame - continued from page 3 settle somewhere between California and the Caribbean, so they chose Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Emily started in the film business and worked on three major films as a production manager while Stuart worked as a yacht broker. Emily then moved into producing commercials. They stayed put because Emily felt it was very important for the children to have a continuous high school experience. After six years, however, Stuart said, “they found out what happiness was…. Florida in a rear view mirror.” It was 1982 when they, too, drove off into the sunset in a large truck. Their son enrolled in UCLA and their daughter in USC, and on the very same day Emily and Stuart moved back to Sausalito, next door to their old home on Filbert. Stuart had been an apprentice Marine Surveyor in the Mediterranean, so he set up his shingle here, and Emily continued to progress in commercials and films. She started producing her still photography, doing color slides. It was natural for her as she had begun pursuing her love of the art as a child and even had a darkroom in her bedroom in the middle school years. Emily also expanded into making brochures for well known realtors in Marin and for yacht brokers. I guess you could call Emily a Jackie of all trades!! “Jack and Jackie” lived on Filbert Avenue from ‘82 to ‘91, when they moved to our community They decided to look at floating homes, and when they saw their current abode they bought it within 15 minutes. AH…… back on the water. In 2000 they bought a 24-foot motor home and traveled for six months at a time for the adventure, and also so Emily could concentrate on her photography. One destination was Prince Edward Island in ‘04 and ‘05 where they experienced their first bluegrass festival and became “groupies.” When they came home they discovered comparable music in Grass Valley! Emily had played guitar 40 years hence, so once more picked it up and jams twice a month in the Lutheran Church in Corte Madera. She now plays at The Seahorse the first Monday of every month from 7:30-10pm! They sold their motor home, but are still incredibly busy. Stuart joined a creative writing class, and hopefully will see his first novel published. Emily was a founding member of the Artists of Issaquah. She does their public relations, and is on the steering committee. She is also a showing photographer. She still sells stock photos for Lonely Planet, and has agencies in New York, London, and Toronto with Getty Images. She was a “fire lady” for a couple of years on the dock, and Stuart held the environmental chair for the FHA for two years. Emily was the photographer for this year’s tour book, and she does the Floating Home Calendars, which are for sale through (Emily@ER.com). Stuart says their mantra is from the writings of Johanne Wolfgang Goethe: “Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, BEGIN IT. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it.” by Ray Dunaway Winter is On the Way! L iving on the docks is a wonderful experience, even with the rare occasion of 100 mph winds causing smashed ramps, snapped pilings and missing roofs. The best way to avoid problems is to be ready before the wind and high tides hit by taking a few simple steps: 1. Have your lines checked and adjusted or replaced as necessary. There are several qualified, experienced people who live on the docks and will perform this service for a small fee. At the same time they can inspect your pilings to determine if they need to be replaced or repaired. 2. Inspect your boat and tie down any loose items such as tables and chairs or other items that will blow away. 3. Make any necessary repairs to your boat to keep the wind and rain from getting under the roof and ripping it off. 4.- Have enough emergency supplies (water, food, etc.) to go five days without power or access to a grocery store. If you have questions about what should be in your emergency kit, attend a “Get Ready Marin” class to learn how to prepare for an emergency. Or if you have six people who want an emergency preparedness class, contact Ray Dunaway at (rdunaw@attglobal.net). 5. Check with your neighbors and see who is CERT trained, so you know who to call for help. Most of the CERTs have a little orange plaque saying, “CERT” at the entrance to their home, and their training can make the difference between a problem and a disaster. FHA Approves Limited Purchase of AEDs for Interested Docks by David West Liberty Dock’s AED in its protected, accessible location. E Photo by Stan Barbarich. arlier this year the Floating Times reported on Liberty Dock’s efforts to make an Automatic External Defibrillator (AED) available on the dock, and to train volunteers in its usage if a resident or visitor suffered a cardiac arrest. The acquisition and traincontinued on page 5 The Floating Times Sep/Oct 2012 Page 4 AED - continued from page 4 ing went well, and in July the FHA Board voted to approve funding for the implementation of similar AED programs on as many as four more docks in the 2012 fiscal year. The decision to move forward with this proposal was not made lightly. Concern was expressed by many board members about a wide variety of issues including how to secure these expensive devices against theft, whether having them available would or would not significantly improve outcomes given the close proximity of emergency services personnel in Marin City, locations where they could be safely but availably housed, whether resident interest would be great enough to obtain sufficient numbers of volunteers, and whether the expense was worth the possible gain given the rarity of cardiac arrests. All these subjects were thoroughly discussed, even debated. Further, this project is of a type on which FHA President Ray Dunaway has been focusing board attention-those that require capital expenditure, and those that have an ongoing nature. As such, the board set forth a requirement that before funding AEDs for an interested dock, the dock would need to submit a detailed plan for: 1. where the AED will be housed 2. which residents have volunteered to be responders 3. how, when and where volunteers will be trained 4. a communication plan for announcing the presence of the AED on the dock 5. the names and contact information of first responders 6. the steps contemplated for ensuring the AED is secure and well-maintained 7. a budget of projected expenditures Once a dock develops a plan, it should be submitted to the FHA executive committee. To receive funding, the proposal will need the review and approval of both the FHA executive committee and the full board. If your dock is interested in pursuing this option, please contact David West, the Liberty Dock FHA representative, at (dhw429@gmail.com). David coordinated the AED project on Liberty, and he’s happy to share his experience to help any dock interested in getting started on their own AED program. The Floating Times KQED Radio Chronicles Floating Home Community by Larry Clinton O n Tuesday, July 17, KQED Radio (88.5 FM) host Michael Krasny interviewed floating homes residents Joe Tate, Larry Clinton, Stan Barbarich and Cyra McFadden about our community. Topics included the history of the floating homes, some of the colorful residents, and the current reconfiguration of Waldo Point Harbor to accommodate 38 homes from the Gates Co-Op. Hear the entire one-hour program at: (www.kqed.org/a/forum/ R201207171000). Former Main Dock Resident Makes the Grade by Rusty Hendley Main Dock’s Delta Williams, college graduate. D (no credit) elta Williams graduated recently from California State University, Northridge, with a Bachelor’s Degree in Creative Writing. Delta was raised her entire life on Main Dock, in the floating home Wolf Island. And she published her first novel, Wink of Moonlight, while attending Tamalpais High School. She currently lives in Southern California and works in a doctor’s office until she obtains a job in publishing. And she hopes to join the Peace Corps within a few years. Sep/Oct 2012 Page 5 Seattle’s Floating Homes Featured in New Book by Court Mast T here was a period of time when the community was considered undesirable and was almost driven from the city shores. Yet it has evolved to become some of the most sought-after real estate in the area. It’s an intimate and unique community that is characterized by eclectic architecture, diverse individuals and a strong sense of community. Sounds like Sausalito’s floating homes, doesn’t it? Well, Seattle’s floating homes have a little history to them, and there’s a new book by Erin Feeney called Sausalito photographer Emily Riddell captured this Sausalito floating home for the new book. Seattle’s Floating Homes, that tells it all. Photo by Emily Riddell The book boasts a vast collection of vintage photographs and memories of days gone by, and features many photos by our own Sausalito photographer, Emily Riddell. The book is published by Arcadia Press, and sells for $21.99. It can be found online at (http://www.arcadiapublishing.com/9780738595429/Seattles-Floating-Homes) or by calling Arcadia at 888 313-2665. Common Birds Around the Floating Homes of Sausalito A snowy egret waits for the next course to swim by. Photo by Donna Lunsford. Q: What does a night heron do in the daytime? A: Insomnia. Photo by Donna Lunsford. The Floating Times Sep/Oct 2012 Page 6 (un)Classified Advertisements Nelson Painting Your Waterfront Experts www.nelsonpainting.pro FREE CONSULTATIONS Interior & exterior painting Dry rot removal and repair Industrial deck/roof coatings Natural wood restoration Dock repair/ non-skid coatings Feng Shui & Organizing 415-250-4100 786 Waldo Pt Sausalito Lic# 647175 Red Shield Insurance Company® JUST MORE COVERAGE www.redshield.com , 800-527-7397 Knowledge Commitment Reliability Service FINANCIAL BENEFITS CREDIT UNION Sausalito Floating Home Owners Explore Your Options - Purchase or refinance with 25 and 30 year terms - No balloon note - Any hull type California’s most experienced credit union lender. member.services@fbcudirect.com 510 433-9200 SADLER AND CO., INC. INSURANCE for Floating Homes Owner or tenant. Excellent rates. Also yacht, home, renters, auto, business, life/ health. Call Broker Laura Elliott (415) 457-2400 CONCRETE HULL REPAIRS Using the Xypex(TM) system permanently seals concrete from inside out! Remodeling, Repairs, Deck 70. Morgan Construction Contractor’s Lic. # 548554. (415) 531.5146 Visit www.houseboatrepair.info for details. PAYNE WHITTINGTON INSURANCE SERVICES Appointed agent for Red Shield Insurance Floating Home Insurance Uniquely designed for you. We understand and cover both marine and residential risks. Lic#0A96341 Luci Payne, CPCU 21 Commercial Blvd, #1, Novato, CA 94949 (415) 884-2930 HOWARD MYERS REAL ESTATE SALES Selling Floating Homes since 1985 Resident since 1971. To sell- buy call Howard at 415-378-4526. Frank Howard Allen Real Estate LEAVE IT TO DANN YOUR PERSONAL VALET Errands, Shopping, Chauffeur Service, Moving Packing, Dropping off/Picking up Your Basic All around Get-It-DoneFor-You Guy! Dann Layug (415) 244-9302 danetc@yahoo.com RON DORRIS ELECTRIC, INC Troubleshooting & Repair, Interior & Exterior Lighting, Security Cameras, Hot Tubs & Jacuzzi Wiring, Outlet & Switch Installs, Panel Upgrades, Replacements, Bath & Ceiling Fans, Solar Installations, Additions, Remodels & Service. Bonded & Insured. Lic. #784130 CALL 415-381-0215 BUYING/SELLING A FLOATING HOME? With 25 years of waterfront living, I am your neighborhood real estate agent. Contact Rachelle Dorris 380-4636 Frank Howard Allen PAUL BERGERON REAL ESTATE Residential Sales - Vacation Rentals Try a fresh approach to selling or purchasing a Floating Home or just earn extra income by renting as a Vacation Rental. 415 3327539 www.PaulBergeronRealEstate.com TIDAL SEQUENCE OPPORTUNITIES CONCRETE BARGE REPAIR ANODE PROTECTION SYSTEMS TED EITELBUSS- (415) 332-0145 Repairing barges since 1964 JOHN BOTT, Marine Mechanic Boats: engine/mechanical diesel & gasoline, electrical wiring/design, plumbing, woodwork. Houseboats: interior, exterior design/construction. Fire retardant treatments, seal hulls, design/ install solar systems, lighting. Work guaranteed-415 203 3836 RARE EAST COAST FLOATING HOME SPECTACULAR LOCATION!All season custom furnished home.Located on Jersey Shore, close to Seaside, LBI, Barnegat Bay, A/C & Manhattan. Built by noted South Jersey shipbuilder. http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeoo29t/ Ed McCann (609) 618-7286 The Floating Times Sep/Oct 2012 ENGMAN ARCHITECTURE Robert Engman AIA - Architect, estb. in Sausalito in 1973. Multiple experience with Floating Homes, Single Family Residences, new & remodeling, Kitchens, Baths & site improvements. Completed projects in all Southern Marin cities. Owner/architect of #11 “A” Dock, Waldo Point Harbor. (415) 383-1606 Web: www. millvalleyarchitect.com MICHAEL CLARRON SHEATS ARCHITECT 40 years experience in residential design - available for consultation, design and full service architectural projects for the floating home community. 415.948.1433 www.mcsarchitect.com mcsarchitect@yahoo.com Felicity Kirsch, MA, CHT Increase self esteem, focus, productivity, creativity, motivation, social skills, restful sleep and positive habits by combining somatic psychology, psychosynthesis, hypnosis & behavior modification. Free 30 minute phone consult. (415) 497 – 0194 MCGINNIS INSURANCE SERVICES RED SHIELD APPOINTED AGENT Serving the Floating Home community since 1993. Owner/tenant occupied up to 4 units. Broad & Basic policies available. Call Carolyn at 800-486-4008 ADVERTISE IN THE FLOATING TIMES Place your (un)classified advertisement in the floating times for the low, low price of $50.00/year (6 issues.) Ads should be no more than 250 characters in length with no formatting and with a header of up to 2 lines and 50 characters. Call Cathy Moreland at (415)332-2429 Email: cathy@morelandonline.com Page 7 FHA Voice Mail: (415) 332-1916 Website: www.floatinghomes.org FHA OFFICERS DOCK REPS and ALTERNATES Ray Dunaway Flo Hoylman Hillair Bell Ron Moreland Stan Barbarich Suki Sennett Henry Baer Lewis Shireman Emergency Services Environmental Legal Membership Newsletter Editor Newsletter Submissions Classified Ads Tour Co-Directors Webmaster Ray Dunaway 332-5548 rdunaw@attglobal.net Blaise Simpson 331-6079 blaises@yahoo.com Pam Bousquet 331-3614 pamafloat@comcast.net Jarl Forsman (510) 866-5275 jarlforsman@gmail.com Claudia Duncan 272-5002 duncanclaudia@sbcglobal.net Scott Stoneback 806-6083 scott@stonebackvp.com Court Mast 331-1953 court@mastphotography.com Cathy Moreland 332-2429 cathy@morelandonline.com JoAnn Dunaway joanndunaway@e-msii.com Linda Meyer 408-1421 linmeyer@juno.com Hillair Bell 577-7220 hillair_michael@yahoo.com Ric Miller 331-6116 ric@floatinghome.com COMMITTEES SERVICES Emergency Line when using cell phones RBRAHarbor Admin Bill Price 331-2888 332-1043 577-7220 332-2429 332-7225 331-6375 331-9220 331-8325 472-0911 289-4143 cell: 971-3919 San Francisco Baykeeper Hot Line 1-800 533-7229 Marin County Fire Dept. Non-emergency 446-4463 Marin County Sheriff Non-emergency 332-5422 Harbor Equity Group (HEG) Pam Bousquet 331-3614 WPH Residents (HEG) Liaison Ric Miller 331-6116 Kappas Residents (KHA) LiaisonRon Moreland 332-2429 WildCare 456-7283 (24 Hour Nightline) 300-6359 The Marine Mammal Center 289-7325 rdunaw@attglobal.net flohoy@gmail.com hillair_michael@yahoo.com ron@morelandonline.com stan@floatinghouse.net sennett24@comcast.net baerdds@aol.com lewisshireman@gmail.com bprice@co.marin.ca.us pamafloat@comcast.net ric@floatinghome.com ron@morelandonline.com ADock Alternate Commodore Alternate Co-op East Kappas Alternate Gate 6 1/2 Alternate Issaquah Alternate Liberty Alternate Alternate Main Dock Alternate Alternate South Forty Alternate West Kappas Alternate Yellow Ferry Laurel Polarek 339-8964 reddog1@sbcglobal.net Bob Engman 608-5068 engmanaia@sbcglobal.net Felicity Kirsch 888-3919 felicity_kirsch@comcast.net Michael Bank 717-5876 michael.bank@rabin.com Michael Labate 331-5081 labateml@netscape.net John O’Dea 729-9045 jfodjr@yahoo.com Rose-Meri Muldoon 331-5348 rozom2@aol.com Larry Clinton 332-6196 click@dipsymusic.com Blaise Simpson 331-6079 blaises@yahoo.com Steve Sekhon 510 205-2148 stevesekhon@gmail.com Rachelle Dorris 272-1543 rdorris@fhallen.com David West 331-8188 dhw429@gmail.com Gary Starr garystarr711@yahoo.com Nanci Starr Tony Williams 332-6296 tony@wolfisland.net Peter Huson 332-6240 peterhuson@att.net Janet Thuesen 332-6591 arkatype@comcast.net Craig Merrilees 331-3558 craig@ilwu.org John Adams 454-9100 john@johnbadams.com Court Mast 331-1953 court@mastphotography.com Rick Whiting 740-2924 captain_rick@sbcglobal.net Craig Meyer 408-1421 linmeyer@juno.com GOVERNMENT District 3 Supervisor Kate Sears Assemblymember Jared Huffman San Francisco BCDC FEMA Army Corps of Engineers Sausalito Post Office 473-7331 479-4920 352-3600 800-462-9029 332-0334 332-0258 Floating Homes Association, Inc. P.O. Box 3054 Sausalito, CA 94966 President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Directors at Large Admin. Coordinator
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