Creek clearing still up in the air
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Alicia Robinson
The Orange County Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to continue the
emergency declaration for work on San Diego Creek, public works
director Kenneth R. Smith said.
Workers in the county’s public facilities and resources department
are continuing to clear vegetation from along the creek. The clearing
is part of a three-month project county officials said is needed to
reduce the risk of flooding in the creek, which could cause a sewage
spill from a nearby water reclamation plant into Upper Newport Bay.
The board of supervisors must vote every two weeks on whether to
continue the project’s emergency status, Smith said.
Thinning of vegetation has been completed in part of the 2.5-mile
project area, Smith said. Workers were expected to begin removing
vegetation outside a 40-foot buffer zone north of Campus Drive today,
he said.
While the work is still an emergency for the county, California
Coastal Commission officials last week rejected Orange County’s
request for an emergency permit to clear vegetation and sediment in
the coastal zone.
Smith said the county will apply for a nonemergency permit, a
request the Coastal Commission won’t hear until at least March.
Workers will wait for that permit to start work in the coastal zone,
he said.
The Army Corps of Engineers is still reviewing a permit
application the county submitted for the work, Smith said. The corps
has some jurisdiction over the project area.
Environmentalist Jan Vandersloot, who attended the county
supervisors’ meeting Tuesday, said he will continue to follow the
issue because the work is destroying vital animal habitat by the
creek.
“I still am quite concerned that this is not an emergency,” he
said. “They’re only making up an emergency because they don’t want to
go through the regulatory process.”
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