Letter to the editor
I am a professional geologist, resident of Huntington Beach and
environmentalist.
For the last 25 years during the effort to save and restore the Bolsa
Chica, I have provided professional expertise and other support to, and
on behalf of, environmental organizations interested in saving and
restoring the Bolsa Chica, residents of Huntington Beach, the people of
California and, very importantly, posterity.
My professional input was primarily oriented toward pointing out the
extent and level of geological hazards and other concerns that would be
associated with the development of the Bolsa Chica.
The following comments and concerns continue primarily to be
professionally based and are directed toward the proposal for a tidal
inlet, which is the alternative most favored by the agencies and many
environmentalists for water replenishment and circulation in the Bolsa
Chica restoration plan. In view of my history of involvement with the
Bolsa Chica, my comments may seem incongruous with my past efforts but
these comments are made for the same purposes as in the past.
Tidal inlets are interruptions in the natural shoreline processes that
produce such things as beaches, beach maintenance and replenishment,
estuaries, lagoons and wetlands, all of which we have come to enjoy and
sometimes depend on. These processes are complex and we can do all the
modeling studies we like, but when we meddle with Mother Nature and
shoreline processes, we do not always, and some would say rarely, do it
right. I believe it is the consensus of professionals, geological and
others that, because of the unavoidable and potential problems associated
with them, tidal inlets are to be avoided in this day and age, if at all
possible. Avoidance is possible at Bolsa Chica.
The primary problems associated with this projected tidal inlet, even
if it works (something that remains in doubt), are: beach interruption,
maintenance and replenishment; sea cliff protection in the area of
Seapoint Avenue and southwest to Goldenwest Street; the physical,
continuing maintenance of the inlet itself; and, whether Wintersburg
Channel water should ever enter the wetlands, potentially polluting an
area usually relatively free of pollution.
Quite aside from the inlet-produced loss of beach width, beach access
and near-shore use, beach protection and maintenance must be assured for
the vitally important public amenity it provides to the public both north
and south of the proposed inlet; its contribution to the economy of
Huntington Beach; and any protection it does or can supply for the
eroding Huntington Beach sea cliffs and Pacific Coast Highway between
Seapoint Avenue and Golden West Street.
Such protection, as well as maintenance of the tidal inlet, will come
at a high cost in perpetuity. Taxpayers, now and in the future, are being
asked to assume these burdens effectively forever. Do they even know the
projected cost of such protection and maintenance? I don’t believe they
do. If so, where are these set out in publicly accessible documents?
Beyond these considerations, very significant questions arise as to the
reliability of such financial support, as the residents of Surfside and
Seal Beach have had occasion to raise in recent years.
What happens if that support isn’t there or the politics of the
situation change? Further, the state is now considering legislation that
would significantly affect coastal modification and might, as has been
done in other states, ban coastal armoring. What will happen then to the
eroding Huntington Beach sea cliffs and Pacific Coast Highway if and when
such armoring is banned and such methods as beach protection and
maintenance must be used?
Lastly, the question arises as to why this alternative with all of its
disadvantages and potential problems would even be considered when there
is an alternative -- alternative No. 5 of the plans’ environmental report
-- that offers a credible, low-technology, low-cost solution to wetlands
restoration. This alternative would use at least one closely controlled
and monitored tidal gate and a currently available, but blocked, culvert
to assist in water requirements for the restoration of the tidal
marsh/lagoonal environment that most recently existed geologically at
Bolsa Chica.
The answer seems to be that the tidal inlet and associated deep-water
environment and habitat of past eons is the alternative favored by the
state and federal agencies involved, and has been sold to at least a part
of the environmental community, which just wants to see restoration and
has to rely on the agencies to get it done. The agencies currently have
money available for the tidal inlet but not enough money to do the
deep-water restoration. However, in order to encourage support for the
tidal inlet, the agencies reportedly have taken the position “no tidal
inlet, no restoration” and the money will be used for other sites. That
sounds suspiciously like blackmail and holding the Bolsa Chica hostage,
especially since at $11 million for the tidal gate/culvert solution, the
savings might be used for at least a partial restoration, thus
eliminating not only the tidal inlet, the damaging dredging necessary for
a tidal inlet/deep water type of restoration, but at least beginning
restoration.
In any event, I encourage the public, Huntington Beach residents, the
environmental community, city staff and council members and members of
the agencies themselves to look long and hard with their eyes wide open
at the tidal inlet alternative before such an alternative is chosen and
implemented, especially when another suitable alternative is available.
BOB WINCHELLHuntington Beach
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