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Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova, left, and Debbie Robinson walk across a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to their homes in Los Gatos on March 21 after an active landslide closed the road. Residents say the one- to three-year timeline the county has given them for road repairs is frustrating, particularly since the repairs can't start while the slide is still active.
(Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)
Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova, left, and Debbie Robinson walk across a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to their homes in Los Gatos on March 21 after an active landslide closed the road. Residents say the one- to three-year timeline the county has given them for road repairs is frustrating, particularly since the repairs can’t start while the slide is still active.
Isha Trivedi is a Bay Area News Group reporter
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

Local officials are working to assess the status of a landslide on Mountain Charlie Road in the Santa Cruz Mountains as residents continue to contend with limited access to main roads to get to work and school.

Santa Cruz County’s Department of Public Works on April 12 secured $30,000 to conduct a geotechnical study and install equipment that will help them determine the rate of movement and characteristics of the slide from the inside. They said this effort will help county officials make the case that the slide is the result of heavy storms in the area last January, and as such should be eligible to receive the funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s disaster declaration for those storms.

Steve Wiesner, assistant director of public works for the county, said his department’s short-term priorities are to continue studying the movement of the slide for the next one to two months and to wait for the slide to dry out and movement to come to a stop. This will allow them to get a sense of what repairs are needed and what those repairs might cost, he said.

“Once we have that data, and once everything kind of settles out and stops moving, then we can start to really look at what repair strategies are available to us,” Wiesner added.

But long-term concerns about finding funds for those repairs persist.

  • Residents Don and Charlotte Ferris walk through a newly-cut trail...

    Residents Don and Charlotte Ferris walk through a newly-cut trail to get to their home and avoid a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova, left, and Debbie Robinson walk across a...

    (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

    Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova, left, and Debbie Robinson walk across a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to their homes in Los Gatos on March 21 after an active landslide closed the road. Residents say the one- to three-year timeline the county has given them for road repairs is frustrating, particularly since the repairs can't start while the slide is still active.

  • Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova and Debbie Robinson, from left, walk across...

    Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova and Debbie Robinson, from left, walk across a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to their homes in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • A view of a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road...

    A view of a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Resident Debbie Robinson walks across a collapsed portion of Mountain...

    Resident Debbie Robinson walks across a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to her home in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Julie Stanton walks across a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie...

    Julie Stanton walks across a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to her home in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Mailboxes along a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road in...

    Mailboxes along a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova and Debbie Robinson, from left, check out...

    Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova and Debbie Robinson, from left, check out a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to their homes in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • A barricade along Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos, Calif.,...

    A barricade along Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed a portion of the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Resident Don Ferris walks to his home on Mountain Charlie...

    Resident Don Ferris walks to his home on Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • A collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos,...

    A collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova and Debbie Robinson, from left, walk through...

    Residents Antonia Ondo-Estokova and Debbie Robinson, from left, walk through a collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to their homes in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • A collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos,...

    A collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • A collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road, right, and a...

    A collapsed portion of Mountain Charlie Road, right, and a private driveway, left, in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

  • Resident Debbie Robinson walks along a closed portion of Mountain...

    Resident Debbie Robinson walks along a closed portion of Mountain Charlie Road to get to her home in Los Gatos, Calif., on Thursday, March 21, 2024. An active landslide has closed the road and a number of residents have to walk in to their homes or drive the long way around. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

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FEMA has issued several disaster declarations for the county in recent years that have unlocked hundreds of millions of dollars in federal aid, but the county has yet to receive the full amount of this aid. Among the disaster declarations is one in 2023 for heavy storms in the county. The declarations paved the way to securing roughly $74 million in federal funds to aid in the county’s relief efforts, but as of last December, the county had only received 12% of those funds.

As such, the county’s efforts to find funds for the Mountain Charlie Road slide have proven difficult given the county’s persistent debt, and Weisner said he’s “definitely concerned” about the possibility that the county won’t be able to identify a source of funding.

“I’m an optimist, but I’m also a realist,” Wiesner said. “The optimist in me wants to believe that funding sources will come forward, and that’s why we’re leaving no rocks unturned.”

If the county did have the funds to support repairs on the road immediately, the process would still take anywhere from six months to a year after the slide’s movement stops later this summer, Wiesner said.

He said the department of public works has been in close touch with US Rep. Jimmy Panetta, whose district includes residents in the area, about their efforts to secure funding.

“My office continues to work in close coordination with both Santa Cruz County and FEMA on assessments and appeals needed to secure federal support for the repair of Mountain Charlie Road,” Panetta said in a statement.

Community members are pitching in to help. Theresa Bond, a board member for the Los Gatos-Saratoga Union High School District where many Mountain Charlie Road residents attend school, visited the landslide in April to meet with residents and draft a report on the situation to the state department of education’s school facilities and transportation services division.

“Ensuring our students’ ability to travel to and from school safely is a top priority for the district, and we are hopeful that these new discussions will lead to the support and response they need,” Tanya De La Cruz, spokesperson for the district, said in a statement.

After storms hit throughout the state in February, Gov. Gavin Newsom requested a presidential major disaster declaration Santa Cruz County and other counties to be included in relief efforts. Though the request was approved in April, the slide will not be eligible to receive funding through the declaration, said Tiffany Martinez, communications officer for the county’s department of public works.

Meanwhile, residents of Mountain Charlie Road and the surrounding area remain frustrated with the one- to three-year timeline for repairs outlined by county officials.

Emotional toll

Debbie Robinson, who lives south of the landslide, said the limited mobility that the slide has imposed on the community has taken an emotional toll on residents, who live in unincorporated Santa Cruz County with Los Gatos addresses. She said it has especially affected kids who are having a hard time seeing their friends and focusing on extracurricular activities.

“Every morning when my daughter leaves to go to school, I worry about her getting across the slide safely and getting to school,” she said.

The slide has almost completely demolished a private driveway that leads to five houses, in addition to blocking a portion of Mountain Charlie Road. While residents have been able to park their cars on the other side of the slide and cross it by foot to get to their cars to drive to Los Gatos, where many attend school and work, the slide’s constant movement means that will likely change in the near future.

The safest alternative is a long drive in the wrong direction to Scotts Valley to eventually head north, which means a doubling or tripling of commute times.

“It’s frustrating that we still don’t have any answers,” Robinson said. “Obviously, the slide is still active so they can’t do repairs, but the timeline that we were given, one to three years, is just really stressful.”

Robinson, who has lived in the mountains for most of her life, said the situation has sparked conversations in her household about moving.

But even if they did decide to move, doing so would be almost impossible until the road is repaired because large vehicles like moving trucks would have no way of making it safely to her house. Residents have felt “trapped,” she said.

“It’s sad because I love living here and it’s a beautiful area, but at some point this is not sustainable for the long term,” she said.