Support for wetlands inlet plan rising
- Share via
Bryce Alderton
A proposal to restore the Bolsa Chica wetlands by putting a tidal
inlet at the south end of Bolsa Chica State Beach got a boost of support
this week from city officials and wetland activists but not the
environmental group, the Surfrider Foundation.
At a meeting Monday, members of the City Council Committee voted 3 to
1 in favor of the inlet proposal as well as to keep the East Garden
Grove-Wintersburg flood control channel as is, emptying into the Outer
Bolsa Bay.
The committee’s voting members include council members Ralph Bauer,
Connie Boardman, Shirley Dettloff and Peter Green. Planning Commissioner
Ed Kerins and the city’s environmental board are also members.
Boardman reminded the audience during the meeting that the City
Council has no authority to approve or disapprove the project. It can
only give a recommendation to the California Coastal Commission, which
will hold a public workshop on the issue Aug. 9 in Redondo Beach.
The proposed tidal inlet would cut through the south end of Bolsa
Chica State Beach, leading into the Lowlands area.
Representatives from the Amigos de Bolsa Chica and Bolsa Chica
Conservancy offered their support of the proposal.
Adrianne Morrison, executive director of Bolsa Chica Conservancy, said
she favors the project, but added that water quality in Huntington
Harbour must be a top concern when devising any restoration plan.
“A tidal inlet is critical to the success of the restoration, but I’m
concerned about Huntington Harbour’s water quality,” Morrison said.
Morrison warned against possible pollution coming from Huntington
Harbour when the 2.7-million cubic yards of Bolsa Chica Lowlands are
dredged as part of the work.
“Pollution could come into Bolsa Bay so a flap gate or something would
have to be installed,” Morrison said.
President of Amigos de Bolsa Chica, Linda Moon, said the only way to
get restoration of the wetlands is with the tidal inlet, but she too is
concerned about pollution hitting both the beaches and Huntington
Harbour.
“There’s a channel pollution problem that should not exist, and I
would prefer the Wintersburg channel not running into Outer Bolsa Bay
with heavy metals,” Moon said.
Green, who is vice chairman of the Orange County Sanitation District,
pointed out that water from the flood-control channel could be diverted
into the sanitation district.
Right now, the district handles an average of 2-million gallons of
water a day during the dry season, he said. The district could handle
10-million gallons.
Green said he, too, favored the tidal inlet plan.
“The inlet would be at the lowest point at Pacific Coast Highway and
the narrowest point on the beach, so it would keep much of the beach open
for people to enjoy,” Green said.
But “much” of the beach is not enough for members of the Surfrider
Foundation.
Surfrider member Gary Sargent, who attended the meeting, said the plan
could endanger the beach.
“I’m worried about destroying coastal properties because any kind of
jetties will stop flow of sand,” Sargent said.
Instead of the inlet plan, Sargent suggested wetlands restoration with
no inlet and managed seawater and freshwater input.
He also was careful to call his alternative solution an “enhancement,”
not restoration.
“My independent solution calls for full-tidal fluctuations with
floodgates controlled electronically to minimize flow through Huntington
Harbour,” Sargent said.
Sargent’s proposal would have the inlet at the end of the Wintersburg
channel feeding into the northern portions of the wetlands.
Sargent was not alone in questioning the inlet proposal. Boardman
opposed it, as well, citing the loss of a group of birds in the area.
The project calls for the restoration of 880 acres of the Bolsa Chica
Lowlands to create wetland and habitat areas, including 368.5 acres of
full tidal and 200 acres of muted tidal habitat.
A bridge for PCH would need to be constructed over the inlet channel,
and a drain would have to be built between the wetlands and nearby
housing development.
Jack Fancher of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said seawater that
takes a long time to flush out now because it must travel about four
miles would speed up and water would circulate better and remain fresher
with the new inlet.
“The best biological payoff is the increased tidal influence,” Fancher
said.
Fancher added that one of the wildlife service’s job is to complete an
ecological study that will determine appropriate cleanup levels that
other parties will have to put in place.
“We will also work with Caltrans on designing and building a bridge
[for PCH],” Fancher said.
The project could force the removal of nontidal pickle weed, a grass
that harbors Belding’s Savannah sparrow, according to the plan’s
environmental review. To construct the full tidal basin, between 118 and
138 Belding’s Savannah sparrow territories could be lost.
At its Aug. 9 meeting, the coastal commission will receive feedback on
the project from eight state and federal agencies and the public. A final
decision isn’t expected before October.
The commission isn’t anywhere near a decision, said Larry Simon, a
project analyst for the Coastal Commission.
Simon also noted that permits must be given to state and federal
agencies involved before construction begins on the restoration.
“Restoration won’t start any time soon,” Simon said. In fact, his best
estimate is restoration work wouldn’t begin for more than a year with
completion sometime around 2005.
The City Council is scheduled to discuss the Bolsa Chica Lowlands
restoration at its next meeting Aug. 6.
Eight state and federal agencies are involved in the study including:
The California State Lands Commission, the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, the California Department of Fish and Game, the United States
Fish and Wildlife Service, the State Coastal Conservancy, the National
Marine Fisheries Service, the California Resources Agency and the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.