Little Shell restoration begins
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Jenny Marder
Construction is underway on a small pocket of wetlands that
environmentalists have fought for years to preserve.
Dubbed Little Shell by environmentalists, the acre of degraded
wetlands is located about 1,000 feet inland of the northwest corner
of Pacific Coast Highway and Beach Boulevard. The property was
formerly owned by the Robert Mayer Corp., which had planned to pave
over the area to make way for additional homes before a settlement
agreement to preserve the wetlands was reached in 2002.
The preservation and restoration of wetlands is a monumental
occasion, no matter how small the area restored, project manager Gary
Gorman said. Gorman is heading up the restoration for the Huntington
Beach Wetlands Conservancy, whose mission it is to restore degraded
wetlands to their natural state as a thriving habitat for plants and
endangered wildlife.
“Any time we can get any of this preserved forever to save what
little we have left, we think that’s positive,” Gorman said.
The wetland area will be surrounded by 2 1/2 acres of storm-water
treatment wetlands, which the Robert Mayer Corp. was directed by the
city to construct.
Urban runoff from surrounding condominiums and street runoff from
the west side of Beach Boulevard will flow into Little Shell, where
it will settle into ponds to be naturally filtered out by plants
before entering the wetlands, said Larry Brose, senior vice president
with the Robert Mayer Corp.
“Water, as it flows downhill, will go through various cleansing
through this treatment zone, so when the water actually gets into
this wetland, it’s as clean as can be,” Brose said. “We want to make
certain the water, when it reaches the wetland, isn’t contaminated
with oil or trash or other things, and this treatment will do that.”
The treatment zone will be ready by July 1, he said
Restoration of the wetlands, which Gorman said will take about a
month to complete, is the result of a hard-fought battle. Joey
Racano, local activist and one-time City Council candidate, picketed
at the site for 111 days, “at times in the driving rain,” he said.
“I’m humbled,” Racano said. “This has convinced me that you can
make a difference.”
In 1998, city officials and the Robert Mayer Corp. reached an
agreement containing several provisions over the developer’s plans
for the area, including the termination dates of hotel leases,
cost-sharing between both parties to demolish and clear mobile homes,
as well as a plan to fill in Little Shell in return for restoring an
area four times larger at the Shipley Nature Center.
Dispute over Little Shell led to a settlement in November of 2000
with the California Coastal Commission, where the Robert Mayer Corp.
and the city agreed to preserve the land from development.
“Developers saw this as an opportunity to do a couple of things --
to build the wetlands and treat the runoff,” Gorman said. “Developers
are paying for this.”
It was a community effort, Racano said, as he was joined by
somebody new every day.
“It was the community that saved it and I’m proud of it,” he said.
Landscapers are in the process of grading the channels, the
islands and the ground, in order to allow the water to flow into the
wetlands. Once this is complete, they will begin planting vegetation.
“There are thousands of plants that they’re going to be planting
and they’re all native species,” Gorman said. “Once the water’s
flowing and the plants are in, then the land is protected.”
Of the 2,000 acres that used to stretch along the coast of
Huntington Beach, only about 190 acres remain.
“Only about 10% of coastal wetlands is left in Southern California
and Huntington is not unique,” Gorman said. “We’re trying to preserve
what little coastal wetlands is left.”
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