Officials hope to get center in place earlier
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Paul Clinton
BACK BAY -- For Orange County officials eager to install a marine
research center on Shellmaker Island, two years is too long to wait.
The county, Newport Beach and other groups announced plans yesterday
to build the center -- which would include a water quality testing
component, marine education center, working science laboratory and new
rowing center -- by 2003.
The county officials on the project hope to start the testing later
this year, however. The California Coastal Commission, California
Department of Fish and Game, UC Irvine and the California Wildlife
Foundation have all announced they would support the $5-million project.
“We’re working with all the folks to get the lab up and running as
soon as possible,” said Holly Veale, chief of staff for 5th District
Supervisor Tom Wilson. “We’d like to push the time frame ahead and get
our lab in ahead of the building.”
Veale and others said they would like to install trailers or some
other type of temporary structure to house the water lab until the
20,000-square-foot permanent building is in place.
The timing depends on whether the county allocates additional money
during this year’s budget process, which begins in June, officials said.
So far, the county has guaranteed almost $1.5 million in funding, a
move that served as the catalyst to get the long-hoped-for project off
the ground.
County officials plan to use $1.1 million in tobacco settlement money,
made available by Measure H, as well as $330,000 from the general fund
for additional staff and equipment. The later funding was approved as
part of last year’s county budget.
In addition, UC Irvine will chip in $1.25 million for a new crew
center for the school’s rowing team.
Newport Beach and the State Department of Fish and Game, the agency
that has owned the island since 1975, would contribute $500,000 and
$250,000 respectively from oil mitigation funds made available from the
state attorney general’s settlement with Pacific Trader stemming from an
early 1990s spill off the coastline. Other dollars must still be lined
up, Fish and Game spokeswoman Chamois Andersen said.
“We’re still in the planning process,” Andersen said. “We’re trying to
solidify the funding for the project.”
County officials have said they would like to start water monitoring
by “late summer,” said Larry Paul, the county’s manager of water and
environmental programs.
Officials haven’t determined what they would test Back Bay water for,
but antibiotic and DNA testing would probably be included.
Fish and Game officials said they also hope to install some type of
“early warning system” that would alert the proper authorities when
sewage or oil spills occur.
More importantly, they hope to identify the source of pollutants in
the Back Bay.
“We know a lot of things that are in the water,” Fish and Game
spokesman John Scholl said. “But we don’t know the source of the
problem.”
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