The Bolinas Community Land Trust has begun clearing the Mesa Road site where it plans to install an emergency R.V. park for nearly 60 residents of condemned housing at the Tacherra ranch. The trust has hired Lunny Grading and Paving, a Point Reyes Station contractor, to clear and grade the property at 130 Mesa Road. When the work is completed, the trust plans to install a septic system at the 20-acre site. Executive Director Annie O’Connor said the land trust plans to install 27 trailers in the park by mid-October, before rainy season begins. The county approved the septic permit for the property last week, but the trust must still receive several other building permits before it installs the trailers. In May, the county approved an emergency coastal permit for the temporary R.V. park, saying that health conditions at the ranch property next door were dire. Last year, county inspectors found numerous violations at the site, where residents have been living for years in unpermitted, haphazardly constructed outbuildings and trailers without proper plumbing or septic systems. Dishwater and sewage had been pumped into pits close to people’s residences, some of which had only outdoor showers. The land trust plans to buy the ranch and replace the condemned dwellings with affordable units. The ranch residents, nearly all of them Latino, would live in the temporary R.V. park and be offered the chance to move into the new homes when they are completed. The trust is negotiating the purchase of the property with the court-appointed receiver who has been in control of the property since 2006. Recently, the trust received a low-interest $1 million loan from an anonymous Bolinas resident to help finance the purchase.