Council backs plan to buy wetlands
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Jenny Marder
The City Council has vowed to support the Huntington Beach Wetlands
Conservancy in its quest to purchase and restore 45 acres of wetlands
between the AES power plant and Brookhurst Street.
The nonprofit group hopes to add to 25 acres, known as the Talbert
Marsh, and another 22 acres it owns near AES, bringing it one step
closer to creating 180 acres of restored salt marsh and coastal dune
habitat along the Surf City coastline.
The land is owned by Daisy E. Piccirelli Enterprises LLC, which is
the estate of the late Daisy Piccirelli.
“The owners are interested in pursuing a sale to the conservancy,”
said Curtis Chipman, the attorney representing the estate. “We are
currently working on a final agreement.”
The City Council agreed Monday night to send a letter in support
of a funding request by the wetlands conservancy to the California
Coastal Conservancy, a state organization committed to protecting
wetlands in Southern California.
Trish Chapman, the Coastal Conservancy’s project manager for the
site, said that she will also recommend that the state agency provide
a grant for the project.
“For the Coastal Conservancy, acquisition in order to preserve and
restore coastal wetlands in Southern California is a high priority
because there are so few left,” Chapman said.
Purchasing the land would mean another victory in the wetland
conservancy’s goal to one day develop all of the Huntington Beach
wetlands, which stretch inland along the Pacific Coast Highway from
the mouth of the Santa Ana River to Beach Boulevard.
“This is part of a mosaic in parcels that makes up the entire
wetlands system,” said Gary Gorman, president of the Huntington Beach
Wetlands Conservancy.
The 45-acre site is separated by Magnolia Street, with 10-acres on
one side and 35 acres on the other.
The conservancy’s plea on Monday night for support from the city
is one step in a larger effort to gain widespread support for
purchase of the land. The organization has also asked that the
special projects branch of the county, Surf City Assemblyman Tom
Harman and local organizations such as the Southeast Huntington Beach
Neighborhood Homeowners Assn. send letters of support to the Coastal
Conservancy.
Restoration of the area to a working wetlands can not begin until
all 180 acres are purchased. The next step in the process will be to
draw up restoration plans. Designs will begin soon after purchase and
will take about a year, Gorman said.
The Huntington Beach Wetlands Conservancy was formed in 1983 with
a mission of saving and protecting the Huntington Beach Wetlands.
Preserving the wetlands would not only be valuable to the area’s
natural resources, but would have economic and aesthetic benefits,
Gorman said.
“It’s a resource that has been lost over time,” he said. “Our goal
is to preserve the open space and make it accessible to the public.
Wetlands provide flood protection, a nursery area for fish, a
feeding and nesting area for birds and a haven for endangered species
such as brown pelicans, least terns and Savannah sparrows.
“I believe [restoration] would add immeasurably to the appearance
of the area,” Gorman said.
He also expects the increase in bird life that it could trigger
would benefit Surf City’s tourism industry.
“There are a large number of American people that travel to
various places in the country to observe birds,” he said. “It’s a
very quiet activity, but nevertheless there is a significant economy
based around that. This will provide another viewing spot.”
If approved, the state agency will provide the wetlands
conservancy with $1.2 million, Chapman said.
The nonprofit group has been awarded federal funding in the past
for the purchase and restoration of Huntington Beach wetlands. In
2000, the conservancy was granted $700,000 from Proposition 12, the
Safe Neighborhood Parks, Clean Water, Clean Air and Coastal
Protection Bond Act. In 2002, it received $183,000 from Proposition
40, a $2.6-billion bond measure to improve the environment and
protect open space.
Chapman said that the state Coastal Conservancy will continue to
work with the wetlands conservancy to acquire more land along the
coast.
“This is part of an ongoing partnership between the Coastal
Conservancy and the Wetlands Conservancy to acquire and restore as
much of the Huntington Beach wetlands as we can,” Chapman said.
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