Correspondence
I would like to thank David Carlberg for his Jan. 4 letter (“Setting
record straight on runoff”) about the Bolsa Chica wetlands restoration
plan.
In his letter, he pointed out that the current plan would have the
Wintersburg Channel bypass the restored wetlands.
This is contrary to a quote attributed to me in your article “City
board seeks approval for Bolsa Chica restoration” (Dec. 14).
I was quoted as saying the city’s Environmental Board is “concerned
about the East Garden Grove Wintersburg Flood Control Channel, which the
report shows is flowing into the wetlands.”
Although the rest of the Dec. 14 article is accurate, I was misquoted
about the flood control channel. The report I referred to was not the
environmental impact report that described the restoration plan and seven
alternatives, but comments by the city to the state Land Commission about
the environmental impact report.
The city staff has stated the “restoration plan must include 100%
diversion of the Wintersburg Channel [from Huntington Harbor] into the
wetlands . . . “
Before these comments were sent to the commission, the Environmental
Board expressed in a letter to the city staff that this channel could
bring pollutants from a highly urbanized watershed, particularly during
storm, into the wetlands.
If an ocean inlet were constructed, these pollutants, including
bacteria, could migrate to the beaches, where swimmers would become
exposed to them.
The Environmental Board is concerned that the city staff’s
recommendation that this channel could be diverted into the restored
wetland could contradict the city’s interests of having pollution-free
wetlands and clean beaches.
However, the Environmental Board is aware the city must carefully
weigh potential impacts of the Wintersburg Channel runoff to Huntington
Harbor compared to diversion to the wetlands and eventually the beaches.
All the issues surrounding the restoration of the Bolsa Chica wetlands
need to be carefully weighed. The Environmental board is recommending
that the City Council take a position on the wetlands restoration plan in
the environmental impact report.
A key consideration for taking this position will be whether the
channel should flow into or bypass the restored wetlands.
JOHN SCANDURA
Vice chairman
Huntington Beach Environmental Board
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