Coalition undecided on American Trader money
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A coalition of government agencies, including
Huntington Beach, failed to reach an agreement Tuesday on how to spend
$11.2 million from a legal settlement stemming from an oil spill in 1990,
city officials said.
The city hopes to recover as much as $4 million for losing
recreational use of the beach as a result of the Feb. 7 incident, in
which the oil tanker American Trader ruptured its hull on its own anchor,
spilling 400,000 gallons of crude off the coast, said Ron Hagan, the
city’s community services director and its liaison to the coalition. At
its worst, the oil contamination closed beaches from Anaheim Bay to
Corona del Mar for five weeks.
Before spending its share of the settlement, the city must receive
unanimous approval on projects from the coalition, which includes Newport
Beach, the county, the state department of parks and recreation, the
department of fish and game, the state land commission and the Coastal
Commission, said Deputy City Administrator Rich Barnard.
“They’re still working out the details,” he said.
The coalition will only consider projects that improve the city beach
and benefit ocean enthusiasts from across the region rather than just the
city, Hagan said. Using the money to build a soccer field in Central
Park, for example, would be unacceptable, he said. The city plans to use
at least part of the money for improvements to the South Beach area that
include new bicycle and pedestrian trails and better landscaping, he
said.
The next meeting is tentatively scheduled for the end of February,
Hagan said. A final decision is expected by May, he said.
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