Letter of the Week
Unpermitted development, unperformed studies, ocean dumping, beach
erosion, infected fish, poisonous tires, plastic debris ... this is the
description that the California Coastal Commission has fabricated to
destroy the experimental marine habitat of the Marine Forests Society.
The reality is quite different; you will see it if you dive on the
site or ask for the documentation which exists in video and is available
to all. The project was developed with a permit from the California
Department of Fish and Game and approval by the City of Newport Beach,
which owns the submersed land.
During 14 years, volunteers dove, scientists studied and
philanthropists paid for the discovery of how seaweed and shellfish can
be planted on a sandy bottom. It resulted in three major innovations to
plant kelp and mussels. It created a new marine ecosystem which cleanses
the waters and where fish find food, shelter and spawning grounds.
Not government agents, but people from the community were able to
achieve this.
What is wrong with the California Coastal Commission? Their excessive
power, their incompetence or their scheme for monopolizing the business
of environmental marine restoration? It is all of that and even more, say
the Marine Forests Society. And, they say it to the Superior Court of
California in Sacramento.
Hopefully, it will only take a small environmental project for both
environment and justice to be served.
RODOLPHE STREICHENBERGER
Marine Forests Society
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