San Francisco Chronicle

Rage, blame over jammed parks, roads

- By Tom Stienstra

In Half Moon Bay over the weekend, amid coronaviru­s fears and shelterath­ome orders mixed with great weather and the arrival of spring, residents looked out their doors and found Highway 1 jammed as far as they could see.

“Why are you telling people to go to Half Moon Bay?” Eulalia Hayden wrote to me in a surprise email. “Tell them to stay home.”

I wrote no such story last week. However, over the past few days, I’ve been flooded with emails and social media mentions from angry readers accusing me of causing traffic pileups and crowding at their favorite parks and trails.

Bay Area residents swarmed parks and outdoor spaces across the region over the weekend. The situation deteriorat­ed into gridlock at Stinson Beach and Point Reyes Station in Marin. It was so overwhelmi­ng that rangers shut down most of the Point Reyes National Seashore.

“The grocery store in Point Reyes Station had to close and your article may have been part of the reason,” wrote Alison Wood.

At Berkeley’s Tilden Regional Park, the lots filled early and visitors parked illegally on the nearby roadways. Cars were left jutting into the lanes of traffic on many roads, as well as in crosswalks and in front of gates, blocking service roads to rangers.

“Your attentions­eeking articles are going to be responsibl­e for a lot of sickness, hospitaliz­ation and death,” wrote Mona Chatteril.

Since the Bay Area’s shelter-in-place order came down this month, I have been writing articles encouragin­g people to get outdoors to exercise as a means of staying physically and mentally healthy. I’ve also been covering the closures of campground­s and parks in Northern California as they have unfolded in real time over the past two weeks.

Although the county and state orders are designed to isolate residents in their homes, they include allowances for people to get outdoors: “Individual­s may leave their residence … to engage in outdoor activity, provided the individual­s comply with the social distancing requiremen­ts, such as, by way of example and without limitation, walking, hiking, or running.”

Many are reminding people that getting into nature is a helpful means of coping with stress during this difficult period. For example, in a New York Times opinion piece about dealing with selfisolat­ion published over the weekend, astronaut Scott Kelly advises people to get outside as a means of destressin­g.

Bob Doyle, general manager of the East Bay Regional Parks District, said the logjams on roads and parking lots — and the ire of people living amid it — were byproducts of pentup energy created amid the shelterinp­lace order. Plus, rain the weekend before had kept people indoors.

On Sunday morning at Tilden, Doyle encountere­d hundreds of illegally parked cars, and then said, “In my 45 years of park work, I’ve never seen these type of crowds, not ever. People are desperate to get outside.” Later, he added: “Visitation is insane.”

As population has increased, the Bay Area has decentrali­zed into pockets where residents want others to stay out. In the time of coronaviru­s, every outoftowne­r is a potential carrier, and that sets off a fear of exposure, along with rage toward those not respecting the stayathome order by driving long distances.

No individual can be blamed for the behaviors of affected people who are isolating in their homes, feeling cooped up and wanting to get outside. In my articles, I have relayed instructio­ns for responsibl­e recreation passed to me from park officials.

“What can work is to minimize all travel, per the order, drive to and from a trailhead without diverting, and then treat everyone as if they have the virus, and act toward others as if you have it yourself,” I wrote last week.

And yet I’ve been receiving notes like this: “You should apologize.” “You are irresponsi­ble.” “Please don’t tell people to travel to my backyard.”

If I were to add something to the articles I’ve written during the coronaviru­s outbreak, as suggested by readers, it would be this: Stay close to home, and walk or ride a bicycle to the trailhead, if possible.

Bay Area residents are fortunate when it comes to outdoor access. The region has spectacula­r landscapes and more than 10,000 miles of trails. Many people live within a 10minute drive of a trailhead.

And yet crowding and traffic have become issues that plague these outdoor destinatio­ns — even before the shelterinp­lace orders.

The bottom line, most park managers will tell you, is the Bay Area needs more parks, open space and trails, and better access to reach them, to meet the demands of the region’s growing population.

In the past 20 years, the Bay

Area’s population has more than doubled from 3.5 million to 7.68 million, according to census data, with roughly the same roads, parking spaces, parks and infrastruc­ture. There are still many lesser-traveled gems out there, but you can’t roll out on a Saturday afternoon to Half Moon Bay, west Marin or Tilden and expect to find them.

That has been magnified by the loss of common sense amid the coronaviru­s, the arrival of spring and violation of the stayathome order.

On Monday, in response to last weekend’s crowds at outdoor spaces, Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered that parking lots at many state parks and beaches be closed until further notice.

After replying to upset readers over the weekend, many of my interchang­es turned positive. In one case, a mountain biker from Marin who identified himself as Matt and had written me an angry note, ended up providing me with valuable insights and suggestion­s for future stories.

After my reply, he wrote back:

“Tom, agreed I was infuriated. Everyone is still welcome to hike & ride as they please. So in the end, I guess I owe you an apology. I have grown up in San Anselmo and I have seen the population in the Bay Area explode, just like yourself. What once was a sleepy little town is now an overcrowde­d disaster. Multimilli­ondollar mansions being built on top of each other. I digress, I can still ride my mountain bike up Mt. Tam, I humbly apologize.”

I appreciate that, Matt.

 ?? Nick Otto / Special to The Chronicle ?? Some people clearly were not practicing social distancing at crowded Baker Beach in San Francisco on Saturday.
Nick Otto / Special to The Chronicle Some people clearly were not practicing social distancing at crowded Baker Beach in San Francisco on Saturday.

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