Newport Beach case strikes at Coastal Commission
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Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- A superior court judge declared the California
Coastal Commission unconstitutional while ruling this week on a case
brought by a Newport Beach environmentalist.
Rodolphe Streichenberger, who founded the Marine Forests Society,
began his challenge of the commission’s operating practices in April
1997, shortly after it refused him a permit to operate a marine habitat
about 300 yards off the Balboa Pier.
In a statement released Wednesday, Streichenberger cheered the judge’s
ruling, calling the commission “tyrannic.”
The decision will pave the way for less intrusive governmental review
of coastal projects, said Ronald Zumbrun, Streichenberger’s Sacramento
attorney.
“It’s a real bombshell,” Zumbrun said. “It’s a major decision.”
In the tentative ruling, Sacramento County Superior Court Judge
Charles Kobayashi said the agency operates improperly because it isn’t
accountable to other branches of government -- a violation of the
separation of powers clause in the state and federal constitutions.
“Purportedly an executive agency, the commission is answerable to no
one in the executive [branch],” Kobayashi wrote in the decision. “The
members are not directly answerable to the voters.”
Kobayashi also objected to the commission’s limits on judicial review
of its actions and the free reign by the legislature to appoint or remove
members.
Commission attorneys said they would ask the Third District Court of
Appeal to overturn the ruling. Otherwise, its implementation could put
the breaks on the commission’s oversight and approval process of all
forms of coastal development.
Lisa Trankley, the deputy attorney general that argued for the
commission, said the ruling should be put on hold until a higher court’s
decision.
“During the appeal, I don’t think it would be in anybody’s interests
for the commission not to function,” Trankley said. “If [the ruling] were
allowed to be implemented, it would be mass chaos.”
Kobayashi’s ruling expands on “Nollan vs. California Coastal
Commission,” a 1987 U.S. Supreme Court case imposing sharp limits on
coastal regulation.
The decision could chill governmental controls on development, said
Peter Reich, an environmental law professor at Costa Mesa’s Whittier Law
School.
“The implication would be very broad in terms of giving developers
more of a license to build on the coast or interfere with coastal
access,” Reich said.
Environmentalists said they are unsure about how the ruling would
ultimately play out.
Defend the Bay founder Bob Caustin said he was concerned about giving
developers free reign but also said regulatory agencies should be
checked. Caustin agreed that the commission could use an overhaul.
If the ruling stands, the legislators would probably need to intervene
and restructure the agency.
“I don’t think we need to tear it apart,” Caustin said. “I think we
need to get some separation [of powers]. It’s got to be fixed.”
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