Poseidon debate goes on
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All eyes seem to be on City Councilman Don Hansen as the
controversial Poseidon project heads toward round two at City Hall.
One of the four yes votes that approved the desalination plant’s
environmental report, Hansen has been the target of anti-Poseidon
groups angry over the council’s Sept. 6 decision.
In e-mail forums and online discussion groups, Hansen has been
crowned the swing vote for the next public hearing.
“He’s put himself in a very precarious position,” land activist Ed
Kerins said. “In one instance, if he approves the project, many will
say he has shown his true colors. If he goes against Poseidon, he
will be a shining rose.”
It was Hansen who instructed the council to approve the
environmental report on the project but delay a vote issuing permits
until Poseidon had a chance to spell out its benefits. The
$250-million desalination plant is said to be capable of converting
seawater into 50 million gallons of drinking water per day.
The environmental report debate is merely a distraction, Hansen
said, and the council must now “go all in” and finally side with
either the supporters or the detractors of the project.
“It’s pretty obvious that’s what the community wants from us,”
said Hansen. He said he has not made his mind up on the project.
Unlike the environmental report phase, which merely asks the
council to determine whether Poseidon has disclosed all the possible
detrimental effects of the project, the upcoming permitting process
will rule on the project itself.
“They have full jurisdiction to certify the environmental impact
report and deny the conditional-use permit,” said Scott Hess of the
planning department.
In 2000, the council took a similar approach on a housing project
near City Hall. A majority of the council members voted to certify an
environmental impact report on a residential development on the old
Northam property, only to later deny permits for the homes.
The council members must now determine whether Poseidon is a good
fit. According to city law, the council can reject the project on one
of four criteria: the project is not consistent with the city’s
general plan; the project isn’t zoned properly for the site; the
project isn’t compatible with surrounding areas; or the project is
ruled detrimental to the health and welfare of its neighbors.
The first two criteria don’t apply because the city’s general plan
calls for an industrial use on the site and the land is zoned for use
by a utility. The council could, however, rule that Poseidon will
have a detrimental effect on residents living near the site due to
construction, noise or a pipeline planned to connect with regional
distribution system. The council could also rule that the project
will lower property values.
Hansen said it was not appropriate to deal with these concerns
during the environmental report phase, but opponents of the project
argue that Hansen and others missed a chance to kill the project.
“We’re terribly disappointed,” said David Guido of Huntington
Beach Tomorrow, a local land-use group. “They had the perfect
opportunity for this thing to be put to bed before it went any
further.”
Hansen disagreed, arguing that Poseidon would have simply further
revised the report and resubmitted it.
“You must concede that at some point the report is going to become
adequate,” he said.
Councilman Dave Sullivan said the city has not reached that point,
adding that he was concerned that the report does not address the
possible dewatering effects the construction of the pipeline might
have on coastal areas.
He said he voted against certifying the environmental report
because he was concerned that the pipeline might also destabilize the
Ascon toxic waste dump.
“Until my dewatering questions are addressed, I will continue to
have grave concerns about this project,” he said.
Sullivan suggested that a compromise pleasing both sides seems
unlikely, but Hansen said the possibility for a deal exists.
“It depends at what point the applicant will start delivering
things that will ease some fears,” he said. “I’m sure that’s how the
guys at Poseidon are busy spinning their wheels.”
In the meantime, opponents of the project are busy contemplating
how to stop Poseidon. Just as in the environmental report phase, when
opponents worked to provide council members with reasons to reject
the plan, organizers must now begin compiling reasons that a
desalination facility is not a good fit for the community, Guido
said.
“We lost the first round, but we plan to keep the fight going,” he
said.
Guido added that he believes the environmental report is the
easiest step in the process, followed by the permitting process and
then a more difficult review by the Coastal Commission. Staff members
from that agency have been highly critical of the desalination plant.
Ultimately, Poseidon could be decided by a judge, said
Councilwoman Debbie Cook, who voted against certifying the
environmental report.
“The city invites two lawsuits by doing this the way it looks like
they will do it,” she wrote in an e-mail. “They will be sued on the
EIR [environmental report] -- there is just too much interest
statewide in this. If the environmental groups don’t sue, they run
the risk of another entity utilizing the approved EIR or Poseidon
winning a lawsuit on the CUP [conditional-use permit] side. Poseidon
will probably sue if their project is denied.”
The city has the right to substantiate findings against the
project, but Cook said, “I have my doubts as to whether this council
has the stomach for a protracted legal fight. Past behavior is the
best indicator of future behavior.”
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