Sequoia County was a proposal in the early 1990s, to create a new county out of parts of Southern Humboldt and Northern Mendocino counties in California. The 1992 proposal halted signature gathering due to low support. The proponents of the proposal, restarted in 1993, submitted signatures in January 1994 to the Humboldt County clerk, who validated 2,033 signatures, 169 short of the necessary number to qualify for possible inclusion on the 1996 ballot.[1]
History
The new county was first proposed in 1992, by Alderpoint resident Lee Ann Barton from her class project at the College of the Redwoods extension in Redway, then under the name Salmon County.[2] The proponents wanted "better representation and services," including law enforcement, and said they wanted their taxes to stay local.[3][4] The petition to create Sequoia County, in the heart of a region best known for the cultivation of marijuana and the namesake redwoods, that would have united two thirds of the Emerald Triangle into one county, intentionally restarted their petition on April 20, 1993.[5] Part of the impetus for proposing a new county, was to have more control over law enforcement, specifically the enforcement of marijuana cultivation laws by Mendocino and Humboldt sheriffs and drug task forces, as well as the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting.[6]
In 2011, some of the proponents of the failed bid to create Sequoia County, started a new bid to incorporate a city in Southern Humboldt County, and call it Emerald City.[9] Early proposals were to incorporate Garberville, with a population of 913, and Redway, with a population of 1,225, into one new city. The proponents' main objectives were to have more control of local law enforcement and tax their lucrative marijuana industry.[9] Emerald City never made it past the early stages of proposal.
^LeBaron, Gaye (April 8, 1992). "Are we ready for 'Salmon County?'". The Press Democrat. Santa Rosa, California. Retrieved March 11, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
^Callahan, Mary (November 23, 1993). "Rural voters push 'Sequoia County'". The Press Democrat. Santa Rosa, California. Retrieved March 11, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.