25 years and counting
Tariq Malik
A silver anniversary is always cause for celebration.
That fact has not slipped past resident Linda Moon and the members of
the Amigos de Bolsa Chica, a Huntington Beach-based environmental group
aimed at preserving and protecting the city’s wetlands and coastal
resources.
Moon, the group’s president, is gearing up for a Sunday celebration at
Chimayo at the Beach, where Amigos members will congregate at 2 p.m. for
fun, food and music.
“I’m very pleased with what’s happened here,” Moon said. “It’s been a
long, hard drive, and it’s still going on with a lot more left over to do
. . . but I’m pleased.”
Moon, a 25-year resident, is one of the founding members of the
Amigos, a group that has its roots in the League of Women Voters and the
American Assn. of University Women. A 1970 study of the Bolsa Chica by
those groups recommended the need for an independent organization aimed
at preserving the wetlands, the largest in Southern California and a key
way stop for birds traveling along the Pacific Flyway.
“We’re very fortunate as a city to have an organization like the
Amigos in Huntington Beach,” said Mayor Pam Julien Houchen, adding the
group has spawned leaders in a number of arenas. “We’ve seen past mayors,
planning commissioners and community leaders. It’s quite astonishing.”
Bolsa Chica, she added, is certainly one of the oldest continuing
issues in the city.
In 1976, the Amigos opened for business, butting heads with Bolsa
Chica landowner Signal Landmark. Three years later, the group filed a
lawsuit alleging a land-exchange agreement between the owner and state
was unconstitutional because the tidelands at Bolsa Chica were held in
public trust and couldn’t be sold. Nine years later, Signal’s attempt to
dismiss the suit failed, scoring a major victory for the group.
There was a joke at the time, which most people shrugged off, that new
Amigos members should be prepared to hang around 20 years, members said.
“Most of our founding members are still in the area and still involved
in our organization,” she said, adding that it was community awareness
that drew people to the group. “[Bolsa Chica] is something that was very
important to the community because it was about maintaining open space.”
Later, Amigos officials said, development of the 1,200-acre Bolsa Chica was seen by some as a threat to their accustomed lifestyle because
of the impact it would have on city infrastructure, roadways and the
beach, let alone the wetlands and mesa.
The early development vision for the area included a marina with boat
access to the sea, 5,700 homes and hotels. Such plans have been scaled
back after challenges by the Amigos and other activists, most recently in
November.
Then, the California Coastal Commission voted to cut the land
available for now-developer Hearthside Homes to build 1,235 homes from 183 acres to 65. That decision provoked a lawsuit by landowners and
developers against the commission, who see the restrictions as a “taking”
of their land.
Coastal commissioner and Huntington Beach City Councilwoman Shirley
Dettloff, who also helped found the Amigos, said the most notable
accomplishment of the group has been its longevity and camaraderie.
“Activist groups come and go, and they accomplish their goals or they
don’t,” she said, adding that the Amigos learned early that many
agencies, not just one, decide what happens at Bolsa Chica. “But when
this group gets together on Sunday, there will be a lot of familiar
faces, and it’s nice to think about a bunch of people who started out
with a cause, and found a lifetime of friendships.”
FYI: The Amigos de Bolsa Chica will hold its 25th Bolsa Bash at 2 p.m.
Sunday at Chimayo at the Beach, 315 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington
Beach. Information: (714) 840-1575.
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