Coastal Commission OKs wetland destruction
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Local environmentalists are split about the wisdom of
the California Coastal Commission’s 7-5 decision Tuesday to allow a
developer to destroy a small wetland in exchange for restoring a larger
habitat elsewhere in the city.
The Robert Mayer Corp. can now move forward with its plan to build luxury
townhomes on land that includes O.7 acres of “isolated and degraded”
wetland at the northwest corner of Pacific Coast Highway and Beach
Boulevard, said Steve Bone, the company’s president. To make up for the
loss, the developer agreed to spruce up 2.8 acres of wetland across town
at the Donald G. Shipley Nature Center, he said.
“It’s a joke,” said Debbie Cook, a member of the preservation group Bolsa
Chica Land Trust.
Because the nature center already serves as parkland, the public gains
little in exchange for losing a sensitive habitat, she said.
But Dave Carlberg, a member of the Amigos de Bolsa Chica, another
preservation group, said he recognizes the upside of restoring an area
four times greater in size.
“It’s a trade off,” he said. “We can gain by losing a wetland someplace
else.”
City officials supported the commission’s decision. The city issued a
permit approving the land swap, but the matter was appealed July 28 by
Coastal Commission staff.
The wetland sits on 23 acres where the developer plans to build 175
townhomes, with construction expected to begin in June, Bone said. The
homes should be ready by February 2002, he said. The restoration of the
nature center should be completed by April 2001.
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