Pumped up about governor’s support
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When that $38.4 million project you’ve been promoting for seven years
has only netted $1 million in funding, any help you can get is
welcome.
Given that, Newport Beach Rep. Chris Cox must have been pleased to
see Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s endorsement of the Back Bay
restoration project. We are.
Cox has been seeking a $13-million chunk of the 2006 federal
budget to help fund the restoration, which would help protect the
1,000-acre Upper Newport Bay -- Southern California’s largest tidal
wetland. The project, which includes dredging 2 million cubic yards
of silt from the Back Bay, received only $1 million in the 2005
budget.
Before getting the nod from Schwarzenegger, the congressman had
been working overtime to drum up support from congressional leaders.
Cox played host last month to Ohio Rep. David Hobson -- the chairman
of the House subcommittee on appropriations for energy and water
development -- in a bid to build support for Newport Beach’s request.
And there is some urgency to the matter, as some of the local
matching grants for the project will lose their guaranteed status
after 2006. If the local money is lost, the restoration may be lost,
regardless of whether the federal funding comes in or not.
Whether the governor can sway enough in Congress to get Newport
Beach the entire $13 million, or even a fraction of it, remains to be
seen. Schwarzenegger hasn’t promised any effort to lobby Congress on
behalf of the project. So far, the extent of his involvement has been
a letter to Cox expressing his endorsement.
Still, it is commendable that Schwarzenegger recognizes the
benefits of the project, not only to Newport-Mesa but also to Orange
County and to the state. And it’s a credit to him that he’s willing
to go public with his backing.
If nothing else, Cox can’t be blamed for failing to get enough
muscle behind the effort.
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