Editor’s notebook -- Danette Goulet
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I had an epiphany the other morning.
I was driving down Pacific Coast Highway and was just at the top of
the hill at Seapoint Drive. As is my habit, I looked out over the ocean
taking in the view. What I saw made me sigh and smile contentedly. The
waves looked small but clean, there were about a dozen surfers bobbing
there just south of Lifeguard Tower 16 and a smattering farther down
along the surf zone. I took a snap shot in my mind.
Then it occurred to me -- there is a plan floating out there, just
waiting for the approval of two more state and federal agencies, to
destroy this view and the south end of this beach.
I personally reported on the proposed $100-million Bolsa Chica
restoration plan, which would restore full tidal flooding to the wetlands
by cutting away a 360-foot stretch of beach to create an inlet.
At the time I reported this, I did it in a detached, nonpersonal way.
Sure, there were some concerns in the back of my mind, but I was in my
objective reporter mode -- a mode I will return to when the project is
back in the news lest anyone worry about fair coverage.
But looking at this area Saturday morning, as someone who lives, works
and plays in Huntington Beach -- someone who cares about this place -- I
realized the idea stinks.
Although I would like to see the wetlands rejuvenated, I don’t think
it should be done at the expense of this popular and beautiful beach.
We lament the selfish decision of the duck hunters 100 years ago, to
block off the passage of water at the other end of the wetlands, so that
hunting would be easier and more fruitful. They took it upon themselves
to make a major change to something created in nature. It is something
man has done with ever increasing frequency over the years. But in recent
years, environmentalists have begun to try to preserve the integrity of
nature. The California Coastal Commission was created to protect nature.
Protect it from those who would destroy its integrity. And yet, they have
failed in that charge by approving this plan and have become the
destroyers. Despite good intentions, the plan will destroy one part of
nature to benefit another.
Although they are not being self-serving as the duck hunters were, if
this plan makes it through, they are no better.
I don’t know what the answer is to restoring the wetlands. Perhaps it
is to cut the inlet back where it was (Sorry Jack in the Box.) Or perhaps
it is an area already destroyed by man and that’s it.
But let’s not destroy yet another treasure in nature in an attempt to
right an old wrong.
Some say, we have plenty of miles of beach, and so people think losing
this one section is no big deal. But that is what they once thought of
the thousands of miles of wetlands that stretched the length of the
California coast.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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