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SF Weekly Best Of 2009

Posted by hermanwong on June 2, 2009

SF Weekly Best of 2009

By Herman Wong

Best Human Guide to Endangered Species
Brent Plater

Brent Plater, who teaches in the environmental studies department at San Francisco State University, possesses a seemingly encyclopedic knowledge of the endangered birds, plants, and fish found in the Bay Area. Last year he put his nature smarts to use. The former Bay Area director of the Center for Biological Diversity organized a massive treasure hunt to encourage people to see all 33 threatened and endangered species in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. The contest, called the GGNRA Big Year, drew a few thousand people over the course of a year for trips to spots like Fort Funston to see California sea otters, or to the Presidio to find the yellow Lessingia flower. Plater has a story for every species: The Raven’s manzanita is not merely an evergreen shrub but the “loneliest plant in the world,” the Western snowy plover is “the cutest little puffball of feathers,” and the humpback whale the “most acrobatic whale.” This year Plater has been campaigning for the restoration of Pacifica’s Sharp Park Golf Course into a habitat for endangered animals, and was recently awarded a Fulbright scholarship to teach environmental law and policy in Trinidad in 2010.


Best Step Forward in Health Care

Healthy San Francisco

Healthy San Francisco, the city’s fledgling universal health care program, is a bold promise in the most uncertain of times. For its 37,000 members — most with incomes at or below the federal poverty level — Healthy San Francisco offers the possibility of regular treatment instead of seeing the doctor only when something is wrong. The program represents initiative at a time when accessible health care is needed more than ever, and so won the city praise from President Barack Obama. Some critics decry an increase in wait times for care, but for those enrolled in Healthy San Francisco, their membership cards afford them one less worry in a worrisome economy. And that should make us all feel a little better.

Best Place for Families to Help Others

San Francisco Food Bank, Sunday Family Hours

Put off your family vacation to help put some food on another family’s table. About a year and a half ago, the San Francisco Food Bank, which moves 33 million pounds of food through its warehouse each week, started letting parents bring kids as young as 4 on Sundays to volunteer and help pack food for the needy. The program has welcomed families to sort produce, divvy up rice into individual bags, and stamp labels on cans. Regular three-hour shifts have been reduced to 90 minutes to accommodate the younger crowd, with about 80 to 120 people showing up each week. With the Food Bank receiving 25 percent more requests for food in March 2009 compared with the year before, every little helping hand counts. A Sunday at the Food Bank is no trip to Disneyland, but in these tough times, maybe that’s a good thing.

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