Poseidon plan moves forward
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Supporters of the Poseidon desalination plant scored a major victory
Tuesday night when the Huntington Beach City Council narrowly
approved an environmental report on the project during a marathon
meeting at City Hall.
Just before 3:30 a.m., the council voted 4-3 to certify the
environmental impact report on the proposed $250-million desalination
facility to be built behind the AES plant on Pacific Coast Highway
and Newland Street.
The plant is said to be capable of creating 50 million gallons of
drinking water per day from the sea.
“This is by no means a done deal,” Councilman Don Hansen said,
arguing that the project must still go through a permitting process
more rigorous than Tuesday’s hearing.
“I feel like it was a good decision, and the environmental
concerns were dealt with,” Poseidon Senior Vice President Billy Owens
said after the hearing. “It’s progress, and we’re happy with it.”
Hundreds of people packed City Hall for the nine-anda-half-hour
meeting. They quickly filled the small amphitheater and overflow
seating areas, forcing some residents to watch the hearings on a
small television in a City Hall entryway.
Foes and friends of the project maintained a relatively cordial
atmosphere during the intense hearings, which included more than five
hours of public comment ranging from the pragmatic to the volatile,
with plenty of friendly hooting and hollering on both sides.
In the end, a contingency of Poseidon supporters wearing
pro-desalination T-shirts walked away the victors, much to the
chagrin of the dozens of southeast Huntington Beach residents who
argued that the plant will have a negative effect on their already
heavily industrialized neighborhood.
Arguments for and against the plant seemed to address every
conceivable facet of the project, but in the end the debate narrowed
to two points. Opponents of the project said the group’s
environmental report did not adequately address all the effects of
the project.
They also argued that building the Poseidon facility behind AES
prolonged the life of the aging power plant.
The project’s backers said the report met state requirements and
argued that a denial of Poseidon could mean a public water agency
would likely move onto the site and build a desalination plant. State
law would give Huntington Beach very little say over how the
government used the land.
“My biggest fear is that if we say no, then a public agency will
come in and build it anyway,” Councilwoman Cathy Green said. “Then we
get absolutely nothing out of it and we have no control.”
In the end, supporters of the project outnumbered opponents, with
Councilmembers Hansen, Green, Keith Bohr and Gil Coerper voting to
certify the project’s environmental impact report.
Hansen said he voted to certify the report because he thought the
city needed to move beyond the debate over the adequacy of the report
and analyze how the plant would affect the community.
Specifically, Hansen said he wants to see more information about a
proposed pipeline that will deliver water from the plant to a
regional water distribution center.
Many residents in Huntington Beach are concerned that the
installation of the pipeline will disrupt their lives, especially in
the wake of the Orange County Sanitation District’s sewer line
installation, which has sparked a series of lawsuits from nearby
homeowners.
Hansen also said he wants to see the city’s tax agreements with
Poseidon spelled out in writing before the city approves the project.
He said he learned his lesson from a 2001 episode with neighboring
AES, which made $225 million in improvements to its property but
successfully blocked a Huntington Beach attempt to reassess the
property-tax value of the site.
“I don’t want to go to the public with a project only to find out
there’s a big loophole,” Hansen said.
Despite Hansen’s explanation, many residents said they were
dismayed by the council’s decision to certify the environmental
report.
“I think last night’s decision was tragic,” homeowner Tim Geddes
said. “I’m sure we conclusively proved to everyone’s satisfaction
that the environmental impact report was not adequate.”
The three council members who voted against the project argued
that the report didn’t adequately tackle the project’s intake
pipeline. According to project plans, Poseidon will get its water
from an offshore pipeline AES uses to draw in water for cooling.
“These things are like a giant vacuum that suck in everything out
there in a huge area,” Councilwoman Debbie Cook said.
Cook and Councilman Dave Sullivan argued that Poseidon’s report
fails to look at the effects the pipeline will have on marine life. A
recent Coastal Commission report said the pipeline killed all
organisms within a two-mile radius.
Poseidon officials argued that AES should answer those questions
since it operates the pipeline; Poseidon only uses the water it
provides.
Sullivan also said he believed a desalination plant would prolong
the life of the unsightly power plant and dissuade visitors from
using the city’s south beaches.
“I’ve been convinced that our economic future and only future is
tourism, and I don’t think a desalination plant helps that situation
out one bit,” he said.
The project is now scheduled for a Oct. 17 hearing and could be
subject to several more meetings at City Hall. If the project secures
its permits, it still must secure approval from more than a dozen
public agencies including the California Coastal Commission, whose
staff has been highly critical of the project.
“We’re still a long way from this thing seeing daylight,” Hansen
said.
QUESTION
Did the City Council make the right decision in approving the
Poseidon environmental report? Call our Readers Hotline at (714)
966-4691 or send e-mail to [email protected]. Please
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