Mailbag - Aug. 23, 2001
I totally agree with Bob Winchell’s letter titled “Inlet not best way
to save wetlands” (Aug. 16). As a person who has spent over 20 years
fighting to acquire, preserve, and restore the Bolsa Chica ecosystem,
including the wetlands and mesas, I find the restoration plan that is
being proposed to be highly destructive and disrespectful of the habitat
values that have made Bolsa Chica worth fighting for.
The inlet plan will remove some 2.7 million cubic yards of lowland
habitat, along with the prime nesting areas of the Belding’s Savannah
sparrow, a state endangered bird. This will happen because the state
agencies have to use the money from the ports of Los Angeles and Long
Beach to create full tidal habitat lost from port expansion. The agencies
are holding the Bolsa Chica restoration hostage to this money. They have
stated on more than one occasion that if they don’t get the inlet, the
money won’t be spent at Bolsa Chica. Moreover, they won’t support any
other possible restoration at Bolsa Chica, including the non-inlet
Alternative 5, even though this alternative is a lot less expensive, at
$11 million, while their grandiose inlet plan is not fully funded even at
$60 million. Total costs of the inlet plan are not yet known, but the
agencies are going to have to seek additional funds above and beyond the
port money to complete the plan.
Meanwhile, the inlet plan is not a wetland restoration, but a wetland
construction. The original natural architecture of the Bolsa Chica
wetlands, including the Bolsa Chica channels visible on maps from 1873,
will be totally obliterated, gouged out, and removed, including the biota
inhabiting the sediments, and the lowlands rearranged to accommodate a
tidal basin.
A system of culverts and gates will have to be constructed to direct
flow in a managed wetlands system at the back of the lowlands. An untried
and untrue drainage wall system will have to be constructed to protect
the existing homes in the back from sea water intrusion and ground water
alteration. A jetty system will have to be built causing loss of beach,
beach safety problems, beach erosion in perpetuity, and instability of
the Huntington seacliffs.Swimmers will be exposed to bacteria and oil
products draining the wetlands.
The nesting endangered birds will fly away, and the agencies hope, on
a wing and a prayer, that they later come back to their new nesting
grounds next to the houses and their cats in the back of the lowlands.
The Wintersburg flood control channel will still be directed into Outer
Bolsa Bay and Huntington Harbour, along with its unfiltered pollution.
But we do get a Taj Mahal of a restoration plan, with a little bit of
everything thrown in to make everyone a little happy.
So what would happen if we went for Alternative 5, with no inlet? The
water would go into the degraded wetlands through a tide gate located
upstream from where the tide gate now is at the Wintersburg flood control
channel. This life-giving water would irrigate and nourish the wetlands
which have been starved for water for 100 years, like turning on the
sprinklers to turn a brown yard into green grass. The water would flow
again through the established waterways in the lowlands, bringing with it
the ocean and its nutrients, restoring and enhancing the wetlands,
allowing the wetlands to return to its former estuarine system,
especially if fresh water from the Wintersburg channel is also allowed to
filter through the restored wetlands from the back.
With Alternative 5, all of the problems associated with the inlet
disappear, and Huntington Harbour has a way to get clean water. There is
no beach pollution of Bolsa Chica State Beach, no beach erosion, no
seacliff instability, no beach safety problems. There is no, or very
minimal, disruption of valuable endangered species habitat for birds in
the lowlands.
There is no possibility of flooding or changing the ground water for
the homes in the back. There is no need to build a french drain, with
unproved abilities to keep water out of the homes and below their
properties.
On the other hand, with Alternative 5, there is a possibility of using
the wetlands for their natural function as a filter. Allow the water from
the Wintersburg channel to go into the wetlands, as it always did from a
historical perspective when the Santa Ana River and the Freeman Creek
carried fresh water into the Bolsa Chica from the back, as in an estuary.
With no inlet to carry bacteria onto the beach, there is no concern
about beach pollution. The water from the Wintersburg channel is not so
bad that Outer Bolsa Bay is unduly harmed. Witness the vibrant wildlife
in Outer Bolsa Bay. Bolsa Chica could use this water. Don’t send it into
the sewer system as advocated by some on the City Council. By sending the
Wintersburg channel into the wetlands, the wetlands filter the runoff and
we get both wetland enhancement and improvement of water quality in
Huntington Harbour.
It’s obvious that there is another way to restore Bolsa Chica besides
the inlet plan and full tidal. Plain and simple, Bolsa Chica needs water,
H2O. Don’t get hung up on transit time. Inner Bolsa Bay does fine with
long transit times. Alternative 5 avoids all the problems with the inlet
and restores habitat lost by a century of water deprivation. At the
lowest cost. With the quickest results. With a respect for the “beloved
haven” we call Bolsa Chica.
Jan D. Vandersloot
Huntington Beach
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