Agency challenger presses on
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Paul Clinton
The local activist who took on the California Coastal Commission and
won vowed to continue his fight Wednesday as the state Legislature
works to cure the agency’s ills.
Rodolphe Streichenberger, who founded the Newport Beach-based
Marine Forests Society, blasted the state Senate’s approval on
Tuesday of a bill that supporters say would answer Streichenberger’s
criticism of its constitutionality.
The trenchant French-born activist said on Wednesday that the bill
would not solve what he contends is its illegality.
“That’s a cosmetic fix,” Streichenberger said. “It’s still
unconstitutional.”
It was Streichenberger’s lawsuit, filed in 1997, that ultimately
led to a state superior court judge’s decision four years later that
the institutional state agency violated the state’s constitution.
The appeals court agreed with arguments made by Streichenberger’s
attorney, Ronald Zumbrun.
In the various rulings, judges agreed with Zumbrun’s claim that
the agency violated the state separation of powers clause because
members of various branches could appoint or remove members.
The commission on Tuesday appealed the Dec. 30 appellate ruling to
the state Supreme Court.
The Senate, also on Tuesday, approved a bill on a 25-14 vote that
would establish fixed four-year terms for the commissioners and take
away the Legislature’s ability to remove them.
The Assembly approved a similar measure on Jan. 30 on a 49-24
vote. Both votes held closely to party lines, with Republicans
opposing them. Costa Mesa Assemblyman Ken Maddox abstained in the
vote.
On Wednesday, Assemblyman John Campbell, who represents Newport
Beach and opposed the bill, said coastal planning should be a local
matter.
“It is probably the most oppressive state agency out there,”
Campbell said. “While the Coastal Commission is being reformed, we
ought to fix it. ... The City Council in Newport Beach is fully
equipped to deal with [coastal development].”
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