Caltrans loses cove appeal
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Paul Clinton
CRYSTAL COVE -- The state water board on Thursday slapped down
Caltrans’s appeal of a lower board’s order to clean up storm-water runoff
into the cove.
While the California Department of Transportation lost its appeal of
the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board’s Nov. 16 cleanup
order, the agency was given a one-year extension to implement a plan.
The transportation agency had questioned the regional board’s claim
that rain water flowing from Coast Highway into Crystal Cove was illegal
in an appeal filed Dec. 15.
The cove, one of 35 “Areas of Special Biological Significance” in the
state, falls under rules laid out in the state’s 1972 Ocean Plan.
Polluted water can not be dumped into a water body with that designation.
“They made certain legal arguments that the board didn’t agree with,”
said Elizabeth Jennings, senior staff counsel at the state board. “There
was runoff. That’s prohibited by the Ocean Plan.”
Once the final ruling came, Caltrans accepted it, Jennings said.
Caltrans spokeswoman Beth Beeman could not confirm Jennings’statement.
“I can’t really comment,” Beeman said. “We continue to work with all
parties on it.”
Under the new timetable, Caltrans was given until Nov. 16, 2003 to
stop any further “direct discharges” of waste water from the highway. The
agency must submit its plan by May 16, 2002.
Caltrans wasn’t the only entity the regional water board named in the
Nov. 16 cease-and-desist order. The California State Parks Department and
The Irvine Co. were also mentioned.
After announcing some details of its own runoff plan, the Irvine Co.
secured an approval from the California Coastal Commission on March 12.
Local environmentalists lauded the ruling, which has been in the works
since an April 4 public hearing. Garry Brown, executive director for
Orange County Coastkeeper, sued the Irvine Co. last year, a move that
prompted the company to begin implementing changes at its housing project
above the cove.
“They took a stab at it,” Brown said about the Caltrans appeal. “I
don’t think their arguments hold water.”
Environmental lawyers representing Newport Beach activist Bob Caustin,
who founded Defend the Bay, filed a legal brief supporting the regional
board’s claim against Caltrans.
“These people now have to find another place to put their waste,’
Caustin said Thursday. “It’s such a monumental decision. [State board
members] are finally saying ‘Hell no.”’
The regional board “acted properly in issuing a cease and desist order
to the Department of Transportation for violations or threatened
violations of the Ocean Plan,” the state board found in Thursday’s
written decision.
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