| Three weeks
ago the San Jose City Council voted by a narrow margin not to allow
emergency trapping of coyotes in the Villas of Almaden gated
community. During the Oct. 26 council meeting, the oddly
resurrected motion failed again, by a larger margin: This time,
five council members voted against lifting the ban and six voted
for it. The motion needed at least eight "yea" votes to pass. Council members Ken Yeager, Linda LeZotte, Terry Gregory,
Forrest Williams and Nora Campos voted no. "I don't think we've done enough to exhaust other options," said
LeZotte, echoing the same concerns expressed by the other
naysayers. "It's shortsighted. It'll give you a false sense of
security. I really believe that." She also wondered aloud how the issue had reappeared on the
agenda without a motion to reconsider. City Attorney Rick Doyle
said that a new letter from California Fish & Game officials
constituted enough new information for the issue to be re-evaluated
anyway. "I accept that explanation, but I don't necessarily agree. It
concerns me that there are ways around voting on something more
than once. It's astounding to me what's on our agenda," said
LeZotte. Cries of dismay were heard from the residents of the Villas of
Almaden in council chambers after the vote. The Villas of Almaden
is a 192-home gated community at Coleman Road and Meridian Avenue.
Residents have been complaining of aggressive coyote behavior, such
as stalking people who are out walking dogs. Several cats, allowed to roam the neighborhood, have also been
killed. Vice Mayor Pat Dando, who represents District 10 in which the
Villas sits, insisted that the residents of the Villas have been
taking proactive steps to solve the problem—such as removing
compost sites—and argued that traps were needed now to save human
lives. Santa Clara County Vector Control concurred, she said. "It should go without saying that people are important, too,"
Dando said. "No one up here today would say that animals aren't
important. There isn't anyone up here who would take lightly the
actions I hope you will take today. But I have to repeat again,
people are important, too." However, Little Blue Society, a nonprofit consultant group hired
by the city to solve the coyote problem, said residents as recently
as Oct. 18 were still not removing all possible food sources, such
as birdseed, and were not keeping their cats inside. Fifteen of the 28 speakers at the meeting spoke against killing
the coyotes. Wildlife experts testified that trapping the current
pack of five coyotes would only exacerbate the problem down the
road as new packs return to the neighborhood. Mary Paglieri, director of the Little Blue Society, said at the
meeting that despite offering a free educational program to the
residents, the consultants were denied access to the community. Although the emergency trapping ordinance failed, the council
did take some steps toward resolving the problem. It unanimously
passed a ban against feeding certain types of wildlife—including
deer; directed city staff to work with Villas residents and the
Wildlife Center of Silicon Valley on a long-term prevention
program; and asked that dog-leash signs be posted at nearby parks
to prevent off-leash dogs from chasing deer out of the parks into
neighborhoods. |