Sounding Board -- Rodolphe Streichenberger
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Who wants to plant kelp (“Kelp reforesting could get boost,” Monday)?
For the purpose of protecting and developing marine life, two groups
of Newport Beach residents want to plant kelp in our coastal waters. Both
nonprofit and public benefit organizations, the Marine Forests Society
and the Orange County CoastKeeper were permitted to plant by the owners
of the designated submerged land, the city of Newport Beach and the State
Lands Commission. However, the permit of the legitimate property owners,
representing the people of Newport Beach and the people of California, is
worth nothing without the other permits of government bureaucrats who
want to rule on this land as if they were the owners.
After two years of bureaucratic hardship, the CoastKeeper will be
given eight permits by eight agencies to allow them to plant a few
hundred plants of kelp. In the other case, after seven years of
bureaucratic wrangling, the Marine Forests Society was ordered by the
California Coastal Commission to cease and desist. Fortunately, the
Marine Forests program was saved by a May 8, 2001, decision of a California Superior Court that declared the coastal commission
unconstitutional, with no power to control development permits. The
coastal commission has appealed the decision of the court.
Who will plant the kelp?
The state bureaucrats say they will do it themselves, although they
have long-demonstrated that they are incapable to do so. For 26 years,
and in spite of a budget of several hundred millions dollars, the
California Coastal Commission failed to plant 150 acres of kelp offshore
from San Onofre. And the Department of Fish and Game was equally
incompetent.
* RODOLPHE STREICHENBERGER is a Newport Beach resident who founded the
Marine Forests Society.
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