Dettloff does battle
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Paul Clinton
California Coastal Commissioner Shirley Dettloff had planned her
speech to the Orange Coast Assn. to be a relaxed reminiscence through
five years on the statewide panel.
But an appearance by Newport Beach environmentalist Rodolphe
Streichenberger, a commission nemesis, sparked a confrontation over the
legality of the agency at a June 5 speech.
Standing up in the luncheon room of the Newport Dunes Waterfront
Resort after Dettloff delivered her speech, Streichenberger accused the
commissioners of having too much power.
“I announced to her I am a critic,” Streichenberger said later about
his stir with Dettloff. “I said, ‘You [commissioners] are outmoded, you
are backward.”’
When interviewed later, the unflappable Dettloff said she didn’t mind
being put on the spot.
“I hope I answered him well,” said Dettloff, who is also a Huntington
Beach councilwoman and former mayor. “He brought a little bit of a
different perspective.”
Streichenberger’s five-year battle against the state commission came
to a head in April 2001, when a state Superior Court judge agreed with
the environmentalist’s claim that the agency is unconstitutional.
He sued the commission in April 1997, shortly after it refused him a
permit to operate a marine habitat about 300 yards off the Balboa Pier.
He is a founder of the Marine Forests Society.
Dettloff said she disagreed with the ruling, as well as
Streichenberger’s views. She praised the commission as “fair-minded” and
said developers appearing in front of the commission should have “no
reason to be upset by the process.”
State Senate Pro Tem John Burton appointed Dettloff in 1998. Her term
will expire in February. However, as she is not running for her City
Council seat in November, she would be required to give up her commission
seat anyway.
The veteran Surf City leader said she has valued her time on the
commission.
An issue close to Dettloff’s heart, development plans for Bolsa Chica,
could prove to be her last hurrah. Hearthside Homes is heading to the
commission in the near future for approval of a plan to build 388 homes
on 107 acres of land.
Dettloff got her start in politics as a member of the Amigos de Bolsa
Chica, the group that has fought to protect the wetlands since the
mid-1970s.
At the association’s Wednesday lunch, Dettloff also discussed the
creation of the commission by the Coastal Act in 1972. The association is
a loosely knit group of coast cities.
* PAUL CLINTON is a reporter with Times Community News. He covers City
Hall and education. He may be reached at (714) 965-7173 or by e-mail ato7 [email protected] .
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