Coastal case set to begin
Andrew Edwards
The attorney representing the Newport Beach nonprofit in its battle
against the California Coastal Commission said the legal remedy
sought by his client would strip away the commission’s powers to
issue or deny coastal development permits.
“The Coastal Commission cannot be involved in the implication of
laws, because it’s a legislative commission controlled by the
legislature,” attorney Ronald Zumbrun said.
Zumbrun is representing Rodolphe Streichenberger’s Marine Forests
Society, a nonprofit group that filed suit against the Coastal
Commission in 2000.
The nonprofit claimed that since eight of the commission’s 12
members are appointed by the legislature, the body violates the
constitutional principal of separation of powers by enforcing the
Coastal Act, an executive function.
Streichenberger won his case, and again was victorious in 2002
when a state appeals court ruled in his favor. Oral arguments before
the state Supreme Court are scheduled to begin Wednesday.
If Streichenberger wins again, Zumbrun said the Coastal Commission
would be able to issue broad regulations consistent with the Coastal
Act but lose its power over individual projects.
Upholding the appellate court’s decision could also open the
floodgates to future lawsuits.
Zumbrun said if the Supreme Court finds the Coastal Commission did
not have proper jurisdiction to make its previous decisions, courts
would have to determine whether to allow litigation to reverse
previous commission decisions.
“The courts can decide what can be overturned and can’t be
challenged,” Zumbrun said.
However, law professors at Whittier Law School doubted the state’s
highest court would issue a ruling that could have a sweeping impact
on coastal policy.
“I think the Supreme Court will be loathe to uphold the decision
in its current form,” visiting assistant law professor Kenneth Agran
said.
Agran, who primarily studies the federal judiciary, suggested the
state Supreme Court could take a middle road by evaluating
interactions between the Coastal Commission and the legislature.
The appellate court ruled the commission was unconstitutional on
the basis of the body’s structure, but Agran said the state Supreme
Court may focus on whether legislators can control the commission.
The process for appointing Coastal Commissioners changed after the
appellate court sided with the Marine Forests Society. In 2003, Gov.
Gray Davis signed a law giving four-year terms to commissioners
appointed by the legislature, who previously could have been removed
at will.
The law was a welcome reform, Coastal Commissioner Toni Iseman
said. Iseman said legislators can try to influence commissioners’
decisions but can’t fire anyone over their positions.
“The appointing agent can call as many times as they like, but
they can’t give you the hook,” Iseman said.
Newport Beach’s Judy Rosener, a former member of the Coastal
Commission, said officials would appoint members they expected to
agree with but attributed that dynamic to basic politics.
Rosener said she served on the commission from 1973 to 1981 and did not know of any commissioners being removed because legislators
disagreed with their actions.
When Assembly Speaker Willie Brown ousted her from the commission,
Rosener said she was not given a specific reason why she was told to
leave. She also said she never met the legislators who appointed her
-- George Moscone and Leo McCarthy.
If the state’s highest court finds the Coastal Commission’s
structure is unconstitutional, the ruling would not necessarily
invalidate past decisions, Whittier Law School professor David
Treiman said.
“They usually don’t do it completely retroactively,” he said.
One possibility, Treiman speculated, is that the court could issue
what he called a prospective ruling. In this situation, the
commission could lose power to make future decisions or be given a
grace period during which lawmakers could restructure the body.
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