Coastal Commission double checks its decision
As plans to restore full tidal flooding to the Bolsa Chica wetlands
move forward, the California Coastal Commission will meet to verify that
plans it approved match reports drawn up by staff.
The Coastal Commission will meet at 8 a.m. Monday at the Westin Hotel
at Los Angeles International Airport.
Some of the items in the Bolsa Chica restoration plans that the
commission will focus on include excavation and new plantings, the ocean
entrance itself, habitat areas affected by construction of the inlet and
the reduction from six to four lanes of the Pacific Coast Highway bridge
that will cross over the inlet, said Coastal Commissioner and Huntington
Beach City Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff, who will attend the meeting.
“We’re determining that the actions the commission took are the
correct ones in the reports,†Dettloff said. “This is a routine
procedure.â€
Commissioners present at the November meeting will be the only ones
allowed to vote at Monday’s hearing, Dettloff said.
The Coastal Commission approved the $100-million proposal to dig a
channel across Huntington State Beach to allow tidal flushing of 1,200
acres of wetlands at Bolsa Chica at its Nov. 13 meeting.
The plan was made possible when California Department of
Transportation officials announced that they were scrapping plans to turn
a four lane section of Pacific Coast Highway into a six lane bridge over
the tidal inlet a week prior to the Coastal Commission’s approval of the
inlet. Caltrans officials agreed to scale the bridge down to four lanes
after learning the commission intended to fight the expansion.
Construction of the inlet is expected to begin in 2003 and will take
about three years.
Bolsa Chica is home to a number of endangered species and rare plants.
It has been cut off from nearby salt water that once flowed through it
for 100 years.
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