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The
Point Molate team is a team effort among the Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians
(Tribe), Upstream Point Molate LLC (Upstream), and numerous community
groups and individuals in collaboration with the City of Richmond.
Through the Point Molate project, Upstream and the Tribe have teamed up
to implement a "super-green" development, integrating advanced
environmental technologies and operational programs.
About Guidiville
The Guidiville Band of Pomo Indians is a federally recognized California
Tribe that is completing a 150-year quest for return of a land base to
support tribal government functions. These functions include providing
health care, education, eldercare, economic development, and other services
for the Guidiville people. The Guidiville people lost their land through
an unfulfilled treaty with the United States in 1851. After decades of
privation, disease, and death, the greatly reduced Tribe was restored
to federal recognition in 1991, following a wrongful termination lawsuit
against and settlement with the US government in federal court.
The Tribe is governed by a Tribal Council led by Chairperson, Merlene
Sanchez. Its economic development corporation, Black Oak Development,
is led by CEO Michael Derry, who also leads the Tribe’s environmental
sustainability program. Michael has worked on a range of tribal economic
development and environmental projects around California including one
of the largest solar photovoltaic projects in Southern California, the
first tire recycling facility on tribal land, a 48-megawatt biomass power
plant, and a tribal eco-industrial park.
About Upstream
Upstream is a Northern California-based community investment and development
organization with extensive experience in complex infill and Brownfield
real estate redevelopment projects. Upstream principals have worked on
diverse public and private projects, from downtown redevelopment to the
largest habitat restoration projects in the region. Upstream specializes
in public-private collaborations.
Significant projects by Upstream principals include:
- Reclamation and cleanup of the Point Isabel "dog-park"
in Richmond, California
- Reclamation of a major asbestos mill in California and stabilization
with native plants
- Finance and construction of one of the largest wetland restoration
projects (1,800 acres) in the San Francisco Bay Area
- Cleanup and redevelopment of Brownfield properties throughout the
East Bay and Silicon Valley
- Reclamation and redevelopment of a quarry property in the North Bay
- Upfront planning and design to integrate new office buildings adjacent
to historic buildings in San Francisco
Upstream principals are involved in wind power and biofuel projects,
and are currently leading a project team that developed a new technique
for increasing the amount of recycled tire rubber used in advanced road
pavements.
For more than two decades, Upstream principals have participated in civic
and governmental activities around the Bay Area, including appointments
to state and regional governmental positions. At a national level, one
of Upstream’s principals, former US Senator from Maine, William
Cohen, served as US Secretary of Defense under President Bill Clinton.
Upstream has sponsored and assisted numerous community programs in Richmond
and the greater Bay Area, including educational programs for inner-city
youth and a minority scholarship endowment at the UC Berkeley, College
of Engineering.
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