City to look at ocean plan
- Share via
June Casagrande
From Corona del Mar to El Morro, as much as 1,000 feet from the
shore, dolphins frolic and breed.
The California Ocean Plan protects this area and other sensitive
marine habitats throughout the state. But changes to that plan could
ease its standards, sending more pollution into these areas.
Some cities, however, worry that fine print of the proposed
changes would at the same time bring tough new runoff standards so
high that even Newport leaders label them impossible.
That’s why Garry Brown, director of Orange County CoastKeeper, an
environmental group opposing the changes, and a member of the city’s
water quality committee, will give a presentation on the alternations
at today’s committee meeting.
“This is a way to let the committee and others know what’s going
on with the Ocean Plan,” Brown said.
CoastKeeper and a long list of other environmental groups have
opposed the amendments to the ocean plan proposed by the State Water
Resources Control Board.
The plan lists more than 1,600 environmentally sensitive areas
along the California coast that it labels as “areas of special
biological significance,” usually because they support marine life.
The plan says it’s illegal to dump potentially harmful wastewater
into these areas, but in the 30 years since the plan was written, it
hasn’t been enforced, Brown said.
In 2000, CoastKeeper successfully sued to make the board enforce
the rules. In the wake of that lawsuit, the board is looking for ways
to make compliance more realistic.
Brown will give the presentation today on why he and other
environmentalists think those changes are a bad idea.
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said that committee members might
decide to send the matter to the City Council for consideration. The
council could decide to examine the changes and send its comments to
the state board in hopes of influencing its final decision.
“It’s very possible the council will want to take a position,”
Kiff said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.