Bill would protect sand dunes
- Share via
A seven-acre patch of sand dunes in Southwest Huntington Beach
would be set aside as protected land under a bill introduced by
Assemblyman Tom Harman.
On Dec. 2, Harman introduced Assembly Bill 13, which would
authorize the California Department of Transportation to hand over
the property to a local nonprofit group. Harman introduced a
preliminary version of the bill and is still fine-tuning the exact
language.
“Caltrans should not be in the business of managing a sand dunes
area,” Harman said. “That’s not their job.”
After the transfer, the Huntington Beach Wetlands Conservancy
would be responsible for maintaining and protecting the land, which
is situated between Pacific Coast Highway and the AES Huntington
Beach power plant.
Caltrans bought the land bought the land several years ago, when
the agency widened Pacific Coast Highway.
“It is imperative that organizations such as [the conservancy] be
afforded the opportunity to care for and maintain these lands,” said
Gary Gorman, the conservancy’s president. “That’s the reason [the
conservancy] was founded.”
State regulators working on Ascon agreement
Officials with the state’s Department of Toxic Substances Control
are eyeing January for a potential agreement with the handful of oil
and chemical companies that contributed to the Ascon toxic waste
dump, a spokeswoman said.
These nine companies, a roster of industrial giants that includes
Chevron and Texaco, are moving toward signing an agreement to clean
up the noxious styrene pit, oily lagoons and other waste they
unloaded on the property for five decades.
Earlier this year, the companies hired a Fullerton-based
environmental firm to perform tests of the soil and groundwater to
determine the nature of the contamination.
The clean-up is estimated to cost between $31 million and $75
million.
In related news, a potential purchaser of the land allowed an
option to buy the property lapse.
Developer Enfra LLC had secured a six-month option from landowner
Beach Coast Properties earlier this year, but has balked at
purchasing the property until the state completes its deal with the
companies.
A string of earlier developers went bankrupt after buying the
property, then buckling under the high cost of cleanup.
Without funding from the oil companies, the property would
probably not be cleaned up and developed, Enfra project manager Bret
Braden said.
“When I add in the financial commitment from the oil companies,
the door opens,” Braden said. “We still have great interest in this
property.”
Federal court rules anti-banner suit moot
A federal district court judge has thrown out a lawsuit
challenging the city’s defunct anti-banner law.
Federal District Court Judge Alice Marie Stotler tossed out the
suit, which had been filed by Gregg Cunningham and the Center for
Bio-Ethical Reform Inc.
The City Council repealed its law banning aerial advertising Nov.
18, after the Federal Aviation Administration clarified language in
federal law that makes it the sole arbiter in questions of airspace.
Stotler declared the lawsuit moot, since the law is now off the
books.
“We’re very pleased with the result,” City Atty. Jennifer McGrath
said. “Once we were apprised of the change in regulation, there was
no reason to proceed at the district court level.”
However, Cunningham forced Stotler’s hand when he refused to
withdraw the suit.
Gas line severed, homes evacuated
No one was injured Wednesday when a road construction crew severed
a natural gas line while working.
An off-duty fireman reported the rupture at 2:04 p.m. Wednesday,
when he drove by and noticed the odor.
The crew, a private contractor working for the city, severed the
underground line with Caterpillar while digging up asphalt at the
intersection of Huntington Street and Adams Avenue, said Tony Smith,
spokesman for the Fire Department.
Fire officials evacuated 55 people from two apartment complexes in
the area to a boys and girls club nearby.
Huntington’s beaches get swept clean
About 50 Edison High School students joined a Costa Mesa
environmental group’s effort to clean up trash from Huntington State
Beach on Saturday.
Earth Resource Foundation, based in Costa Mesa, sponsored the
event, called “Human Broom Beach Cleanup.”
Students and group leaders met at the state beach, at Brookhurst
Street and Pacific Coast Highway, at 8:30 a.m. Saturday and began
picking up trash from the sand.
The students also picked up trash from the Santa Ana River
Jetties, in Newport Beach, said Stephanie Barger, the group’s
executive director.
More than 200 students from all over Orange County participated in
the event, including about 70 students from Newport Harbor High
School and Corona del Mar High School.
The students were separated from their friends to help teach them
about environmental problems in other parts of the county.
“The students did not clean up the trash with their friends,”
Barger said. “They got to meet kids from other schools and hear what
their concerns were.”
Brookhurst road work nearly finished
The Public Works Department is finishing construction on the final
segment of road improvements on Brookhurst Street, south of Adams
Avenue.
The improvements are being funded with city money and a grant from
the Orange County Transportation Authority, which has given funding
for 14 street rehabilitation projects over the last three fiscal
years.
As part of the work, city crews fill cracks, grind down uneven
patches, rebuild some sections of pavement and lay new asphalt over
the top of the old.
The rehabilitation project is expected to increase the life of the
streets by 10 to 20 years.
The next project will bring improvements to sections of Warner
Avenue and Newland Street.
On Warner, the section running from Springdale Street to Beach
Boulevard will be upgraded. On Newland, the section from Hamilton
Avenue to Atlanta Avenue will be upgraded.
Beach improvement plans now available
Plans for the second phase of the beach improvements are now
available for review at the front counter of the Public Works
Department at City Hall.
The project, for which bids were due on Dec. 10, includes the construction of new plaza areas, a new lifeguard headquarters, an
education center and a parking lot. Grading and drainage of
facilities will be done.
The current lifeguard headquarters, two restrooms and a concession
stand will be demolished along with the concrete, asphalt, lighting
and landscaping in the parking lot.
A temporary pedestrian walkway and bike path will be built during
the construction.
Construction, which will contain art elements that will complement
the beach theme at Pier Plaza, should cost about $9 million, city
officials estimate.
The project will be awarded in early January. Construction is
expected to last about 14 months.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.