Rescuing paradise
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Susan McCormack
As a child, lifetime Newport Beach resident Mary Blake and her two
brothers would come to Crystal Cove State Park to dive. The hills
surrounding the cove were green, the village leading to the water was
inviting and the ocean seemed clean.
Blake, now 67, has seen a change in the beach over the last five years or
so, she said. The hills above it are becoming bare, a footbridge was
washed out two winters ago and never repaired, and recently a yellowish
film covered the water, she said.
The cove -- which boasts a sign reading “Welcome to Crystal Cove, a slice
of paradise” -- is becoming a soppy, dirty dump, some fearful residents
and visitors say.
“Over the last few years, there has been a steady, uncontrolled flow” of
urban runoff, said George Hrebien, a Long Beach resident who brings his
7-year-old son to Crystal Cove.
At least 15 beach-goers agree with Hrebien and, in September, formed the
Alliance to Rescue Crystal Cove, a group dedicated to preventing runoff
from planned development projects from ruining the area. While other
groups, such as Stop Polluting Our Newport and the local Coastkeeper
chapter, fight for the preservation of the shores and bays, members of
the alliance say their group is the first dedicated specifically to this
mission in Crystal Cove.
In the early 1990s, a golf club was built on land east of Pacific Coast
Highway near Crystal Cove. Two other major projects are being built on
the land. Marriott is constructing a time-share resort and the Irvine Co.
is grading in preparation for an upscale shopping center and about 800
homes.
The alliance said that runoff from Los Trancos Creek, which leads to the
beach at Crystal Cove, has increased since the golf club was constructed.
And, members fear it will get worse because the state Water Resources
Control Board agreed last week to allow runoff from the the Irvine Co.
project to flow into the creek.
“With Mother Nature, we already had problems,” Hrebien said as she
pointed to the creek. “It used to be dry eight to nine months out of the
year. Now it’s permanently wet.”
One of the alliance’s first goals is to learn more about the
developments’ effects. Members are puzzled by sediment plumes that rush
through the creek, bringing muddy water through Crystal Cove’s village
and into the ocean. The latest one occurred last Wednesday.
They said they don’t know the cause of it or how the new development will
affect it, but the alliance plans to do everything it can to get answers
and stop the destructive flow.
“No one will have this beach if the runoff continues,” said Terry
Stephens, a Newport Beach resident involved with the alliance.
Since its inception, the alliance has had four meetings, created a small
base of operations at Crystal Cove, started planning fund-raisers and
staffed a table at a Balboa Pier event that helped the group add 60
people to its mailing list.
The alliance members’ next move is to voice their opinions at the
California Coastal Commission’s meeting in Oceanside scheduled for
Tuesday morning. The commission is expected to hear an appeal of a county
decision to grant the Irvine Co. a permit to further grade areas of
Newport Coast.
“They have an incredible battle,” said Bob Caustin, president of Defend
the Bay, which fights for the preservation and protection of Upper
Newport Bay.
Iryne Black, a Stop Polluting Our Newport member, said she believes
Crystal Cove is particularly worthy of preservation efforts.”The thing
about Crystal Cove is it is a state park,” she said. “The runoff issue is
an exceedingly important one. You can’t swim there when it’s
contaminated.”
And that is exactly what concerns Blake, the leader of the alliance, so
much: remembering what it was like to swim in the waters as a child.
“Will it remain this way for my children and for future generations to
come?” she asked. “I want us all to stop and take a look at what we’re
doing. Is this what the people want?”
Blake said that in the past week groups of schoolchildren, senior
citizens and artists have spent time at Crystal Cove. She said she
worries that the qualities that made the beach so close to paradise will
soon disappear.
“It will only be a memory we can read about or remember from the artists’
paintings,” she said.
For more information about the Alliance to Rescue Crystal Cove, call(949)
494-1968.
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