Make the Back Bay boardwalk a reality
The oil spill from the American Trader tanker in 1990 left Newport and Huntington beaches and their habitats in ruins. The
400,000-gallon spill remains the worst environmental disaster in
Orange County history.
Earlier this month, Newport Beach officials received a residual,
if you will, of $786,000 from the oil-spill agreement that will be
used toward building a $3.4-million boardwalk along the Back Bay’s
western edge.
We can’t think of a better beneficiary for that money than an
environmental project and the Back Bay boardwalk sounds like a great
idea.
Anyone trekking through the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve
these days will find makeshift trails that city officials dub
illegal. In essence, they are quite harmful to the Back Bay’s habitat
and, as proposed, the boardwalk would better protect that habitat.
Officials propose a long walkway along the Back Bay’s western edge
that would then sprout out three viewing platforms extending into the
middle of the estuary.
Now, though, Newport Beach leaders need to come up with the rest
of the boardwalk’s price tag within a year. We urge the city to
immediately begin asking around for the money so that it doesn’t lose
out on this grand opportunity.
Among the agencies that will be solicited so far is the Wildlife
Conservation Board, which hands out money from Proposition 40, a bond
passed in 2001.
If the city comes to a point where it has exhausted all of its
resources, we urge officials to ask the city’s state and federal
representatives for help in securing the needed funding.
The boardwalk is a novel idea and will do even more to save the
Back Bay environment while helping to educate those who visit it.
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