Bolsa gets $10 million
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Jenny Marder
The missing link needed to breathe life back into the Bolsa Chica
Wetlands was approved by the California Coastal Conservancy last
week.
At a meeting in Laguna Beach, the state agency OKd the final $10
million needed to move forward with the restoration of the degraded
marshland.
“To see a plan of restoration completed and approved and to now
see restoration begin is wonderful,” said Shirley Dettloff, a former
mayor and coastal commissioner, who’s been working on this for
decades.
The influx is the final funding piece to the $109-million project,
which calls for 370 acres of full tidal and 180 acres of muted tidal
habitat.
The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach are providing the funding
for the bulk of the project to offset the environmental effects of
development along San Pedro Harbor.
“Ten million dollars is only part of the greater expenses, but it
means that we can get going on this extremely important restoration,”
conservancy spokesman Dick Wayman said. “This is one of the most
important restorations on the California coast. We know from the
existing restored area that a lot of animals, including many
endangered species are doing pretty well there right now. We can be
quite confident that further restoration will greatly improve this
habitat.”
Restoration calls for an inlet to be cut through Bolsa Chica State
Beach and cross Pacific Coast Highway, allowing ocean water to flow
into the degraded marshes at the long-neglected Bolsa Chica lowlands.
Goals are to create a nursery habitat for the California Halibut and
improve the nesting habitat for the area’s endangered birds; the
California least tern, light-footed clapper rail, snowy plover, and
Belding’s Savannah sparrow.
Restoration is set to begin this fall and will include
construction of a new ocean channel, tidal basins, island habitats
and pedestrian bridges that connect the wetlands to the beach via
Pacific Coast Highway. Construction is expected to take three years
to complete.
The first phase -- stripping the south end of the Bolsa Chica of
39 active and 17 idle oil wells and rigs -- is already underway.
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