ON THE WATER -- Defending the Back Bay from all kinds of pollution
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- It happened during lunch in Laguna Beach. Bob
Caustin, a real estate broker, his wife-to-be, Susan Skinner, and her
father, Jack, had driven down the coast and were enjoying their meal to
ocean views.
Susan and Jack -- both physicians -- did their usual doctor talk and
Caustin tuned out and gazed across the water. But when the conversation
switched to plans by the Irvine Ranch Water District to release treated
sewage into the bay, Caustin began to pay more attention.
“Nah,” he said to his fiancee’s father. “You’re pulling my leg.”
“I’ll show you the green stuff they want to put in [the bay,]” Skinner
responded.
That afternoon proved to be a turning point in Caustin’s life. He
began following his father-in-law to City Council meetings and heard him
talk about the dangers the water district’s proposal would pose to the
bay.
“I realized that a good science presentation in a gentleman’s way
wasn’t working,” Caustin said. “Jack did the science talk. I would tell
people that they are going to put treated sewage in the bay.”
To emphasize his point, Caustin would carry a bottle of the greenish
fluid to council meetings, put it before council members and take the
shock treatment approach.
“This is treated sewage,” he’d tell the council and those watching on
the televisions at home. “You want to swim in it? Drink it?”
It took the Skinners -- Susan’s mother, Nancy, also remains one of the
city’s most active environmentalists -- some time to get used to their
“in-your-face” son-in-law.
“If I was making a presentation and didn’t make [my in-laws] wince, I
didn’t do a good job,” Caustin said, laughing.
In order to protect his new family from possible law suits, Caustin
formed a nonprofit organization in 1995 called Defend the Bay.
The group soon managed to win a court ruling stopping the water
district from realizing its plans.
“If it wasn’t for Defend the Bay, Newport Beach would be a sewage
outfall,” Caustin said, adding that he’s not swum in the bay for the past
six years.
“The bay is pretty polluted,” he said. “As far as the ocean is
concerned, I pick my times and locations. I know too much.”
As a real estate broker, he’d sometimes show people the door if they
lied to him on their loan applications, Caustin said.
“They can tell me all their problems,” he said. “But don’t lie to me.”
In a way, the same holds true for his adversaries in the struggle to
protect the bay.
“If they would be honest and forthright, we would be able to solve our
problems,” he said. “When they work in the dark, it’s nonproductive. It
creates suspicion and mistrust. If they could tell us what they need, I’d
rather spend my efforts building a pipeline and solve their problems.”
But despite years of monitoring the worsening state of the bay,
Caustin’s not lost his optimism and hopes things will improve.
“My goal is to take my son shell fish harvesting on his 18th birthday
in the Back Bay,” he said.
The young Caustin is due to be born on March 15.
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