Coastal Commission to decide fate of small wetland
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The fate of a small wetland by the Waterfront Hilton
rests in the hands of the California Coastal Commission, which is
scheduled to hold a hearing Feb. 15 to determine if the sensitive habitat
should be filled in exchange for restoring a nature center in Central
Park.
The city supports developer Robert Mayer Corp.’s plan to build a portion
of a gated residential community over the “degraded” wetland, which takes
up less than an acre, said Howard Zelefsky, the city’s planning director.
The developer more than makes up for the loss by agreeing to reintroduce
native vegetation on about 2 1/2 acres of the Donald G. Shipley Nature
Center, he said.
“It’s more beneficial to the environment,” he said.
Preservationists argue that wetlands can’t be substituted.
“Wetlands should not be filled -- period,” said Nancy Donaven, a member
of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust. “We’ve lost more than 90% of our wetlands
in California. We need every bit we have left.”
The sensitive habitat is located at the northwest corner of Pacific Coast
Highway and Beach Boulevard. It sits on part of the 23 acres where the
developer plans to build up to 230 upscale homes.
The city had issued a permit approving the land swap, but the matter was
appealed July 28 by Coastal Commission staff, according to the agency’s
documents. The appeal is based, in part, on a state appellate court
ruling in April that prevents the developer of the Bolsa Chica mesa from
building homes where a eucalyptus grove stands.
But Bolsa Chica is in an unincorporated part of the county, and the same
rules don’t apply to a project in the city, Zelefsky said.
“This isn’t Bolsa Chica,” he said. “It puts the city in a completely
different standing both morally and legally.”
QUESTION
SAVE THE WETLAND?
Do you think the Robert Mayer Corp. should be allowed to fill in a small
wetland for a home development in exchange for the restoration of a
nature center in Central Park? Leave your thoughts on our Readers Hotline
at 965-7175, fax them to 965-7174 or send e-mail to [email protected].
Please spell your name and include your hometown and phone number for
verification only.
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