To increase compliance with laws protecting Marin County’s Open Space, county supervisors on Tuesday recommended increasing the penalties for 11 violations on the court’s bail schedule. Eight of the offenses will be upped from infractions to “wobblettes,” a legal term for wobbling between an infraction and misdemeanor; three others appear for the first time. “The bail schedule is one of multiple tools—including education, increased ranger presence in the preserves, adjustment to the trail system pursuant to the Road and Trail Management Plan, and amendments to [state law]—that the district can use to increase compliance,” Ronald Miska, the district’s assistant director wrote in a staff report. The revisions will “give rangers more flexibility in citing for an offense” and the district “greater leeway in pursuing the prosecution of an offense, depending on the degree of severity and other circumstances,” he added. The changes will apply to damaging district property; dumping garbage; building unauthorized structures, signs or encroachments; disorderly conduct like harassment, begging, soliciting, belligerent intoxication and breaching the peace; introducing organisms “living or dead … native or non-native”; polluting water; using pesticides, herbicides or other poison; damaging or collecting plants or other vegetation (excluding two quarts of edible berries); hunting, harming or removing animals; and operating motor vehicles. The recommended amendments still await consideration by a panel of superior court judges later this year, before they return to supervisors to change wording in the county code. The open space district manages 34 preserves, including West Marin’s Bolinas Lagoon, Roy’s Redwoods, Gary Giacomini and French Ranch Preserves—and one tiny one, the Maurice Thorner Memorial, by the San Geronimo Golf Course.