Locals wary of proposed coast council
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Alicia Robinson
A bill that would create a new state council to supervise ocean
protection and resources is passing through the state Legislature,
but local coastal advocates worry it may add another layer of
bureaucracy to the web of agencies that regulate the state’s coastal
waters.
A bill written by Sen. John Burton (D-San Francisco) would create
a state Ocean Protection Council to coordinate and increase
cooperation among the various state agencies that now work to protect
the coast and ocean.
“I introduced this bill because the ocean that Californians depend
on for recreation, fishing and tourism is taking a pounding, and it’s
one of our prime responsibilities to protect this resource for future
generations,” Burton said in a written statement. Aides said
significant amendments to the bill are expected in the next week.
State legislators have extensively discussed ocean protection in
the past and some progress has been made in protecting the coastal
waters, but 70th District Assemblyman John Campbell said there’s room
to do more.
However, Campbell and some coastal advocates said they’re wary of
putting another finger in the bureaucratic pie.
“What this does is it actually adds another commission of
bureaucracy in the way, I think, of getting the ocean cleaned up,”
Campbell said. “Instead we ought to be consolidating some of these
commissions and streamlining the process rather than adding another
layer.”
He said he wouldn’t support the current form of the bill, which is
scheduled for discussion in the Senate in April and could then move
on to the Assembly.
While more attention should be given to the health of the ocean,
adding a governmental agency may not be the best way to achieve it,
said Garry Brown, executive director of Orange County CoastKeeper.
“I think one of my concerns is that it dilutes some parts of the
Coastal Act and it may take away some of the authority that the
[California] Coastal Commission now has,” Brown said.
Another layer of bureaucracy could make it harder for CoastKeeper,
a nonprofit group that works to protect and restore marine habitat,
to do its job, Brown said. The group now has to deal with agencies
including the Army Corps of Engineers, the coastal commission and the
state Department of Fish and Game to perform any activity that
affects the coast.
“We have to get approval from eight different agencies already to
plant kelp off a reef in Crystal Cove,” Brown said.
Newport Beach City Councilman Don Webb, who is on the city’s
Coastal/Bay Water Quality Advisory Committee, echoed Brown’s
concerns.
The city already has difficulties in getting permits from the
Coastal Commission and another level of government would make the
process even harder, he said.
Brown and Webb said they would reserve judgment until they saw how
the bill came out of the legislative process, and both said it could
be a positive move under certain conditions.
Brown said if the new agency could find more funding for coastal
protection or do more to protect certain areas from overfishing, he
would be in favor of it.
“We definitely support anything that’s going to make our beaches
and ocean waters cleaner and better and safer for our residents to
use,” Webb said. “But I think we have enough agencies already.”
Changes to some of the departments that deal with ocean protection
could already be in store due to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s
California Performance Review, Campbell said. The review is one of
the governor’s promised reforms to cut costs and streamline state
government. It will likely be finished this summer.
“I would be surprised if in the environmental area there was not
some consolidation,” Campbell said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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