Poseidon report is brought back to the table
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Jenny Marder
Planning Commissioner Ron Davis convinced a slim majority of his
colleagues on Tuesday night to reopen discussion on the proposed
desalination plant after learning that Poseidon scientists provided
the commission wrong information.
Davis, who voted with the narrow majority on July 8 to approve the
plants’ environmental report, has since come to believe information
given by a scientist representing Poseidon Resources Corp. was
“remarkably wrong or false.”
Scott Jenkins, a oceanographer representing Poseidon, provided
information about the salinity of the ocean and the operation of the
AES power plant that he was unable to support, Davis said.
“There’s a difference between buyers remorse and what I’m doing,”
Davis said Tuesday night when he asked the commission to reconsider
its approval of the proposed plant’s environmental report.
Before voting on July 8, Davis asked scientists how the salinity
in the plant’s discharge compared to that of the ocean and how it
would affect marine life.
Jenkins said that the range in ocean salinity is so broad, the
ocean has salt concentration levels that come close to those in the
plant’s discharge. Jenkins then told commissioners the range, which
turned out to be wrong.”In my mind, I’ve been given information, upon
which I made a decision, that is demonstrably wrong,” Davis said,
adding that it made him question the credibility of Jenkin’s entire
analysis. “I don’t know when somebody is making something up or when
somebody is speculating to me.”
Billy Owens, senior vice president of development at Poseidon,
said Jenkins had made a technical mistake in his statement about
salinity, but that the discrepancy in no way changes the significance
of the findings in the report.
“We did not have the intent to misrepresent, we did not bring up
the subject and we did not lead the discussion,” Owens said. “I
wouldn’t have thought that this would be the pivotal moment in his
thinking.”
The report was also reviewed by city analysts, who never
questioned the report’s conclusions, Owens said.
Four days before Davis’ written request to reopen the discussion,
Mayor Connie Boardman appealed the approval of the report to give the
City Council an opportunity to review it, as well.
The project’s coastal development permit and conditional use
permit would automatically go to the council for approval, but the
environmental report would not.
“I wanted to give the council the opportunity to discuss the
report,” Boardman said. “And I don’t think it addresses the growth
inducing impact.”
Boardman said she supports Davis’s right to reconsider the issue,
but added “it’s pretty clear that if they approve the EIR, it’s still
going to be considered by the Council.”
The commission’s decision to reopen discussions will nullify
Boardman’s appeal; she can, however, make another appeal once the
commission decides again.
Commissioners, as well as the residents in the audience, were
split on whether reconsideration was warranted.
Some felt that after three nights of in-depth discussion, it was
time to move forward, while others applauded Davis for bringing the
item back.
Planning Commissioner Don Stanton felt they “should respect the
mayor’s appeal and let the wisdom of the City Council decide.”
After the initial 15 hours of deliberation, Commissioner John
Scandura said he was comfortable with the numbers presented in the
report.
“Ultimately, the City Council is accountable and we should allow
them to consider the [environmental report],” Scandura said.
But Commissioners Steve Ray, Robert Dingwall and Randy Kokal,
proponents of revisiting the report, said they felt they had a
responsibility to pass a reliable and accurate report on to the
council without letting unchecked facts slip through.
“The basic foundation of the project is the EIR,” Ray said. “If
the foundation is not secure, than the project will fail. I think
that if we have a chance to look at it again and get it right this
time, we should do it.”
Commissioners voted 4 to 3 to reconsider the report. The
commission will reconsider the vote at its next meeting, at 7 p.m.
Aug. 12.
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