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Toll
road may have life yet
Orange
County agency may appeal Coastal Commission's rejection
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By Paul
Sisson
North
County Times
February 8, 2008
SAN
ONOFRE ---- The battle over extending the Highway 241 toll
road through San Onofre State Beach may not be over yet.
At 11:20 p.m. Wednesday, after 10 hours of passionate
testimony, a crowd of more than 1,000 activists cheered
victory as the California Coastal Commission voted 8-2 against
the toll road, which they insisted would kill the Trestles
surf break and blight a popular state park.
But
the next morning, toll road officials said that they may
exercise their right to appeal the commission's decision to
U.S. Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez. The Cabinet
official could overturn the commission's decision if he finds
that the $875 million project is consistent with coastal
development law.
However, toll road opponents said they were confident state
law would still trump whatever the White House appointee
decides.
Jennifer Seaton, a spokeswoman for the Foothill/Eastern
Transportation Corridor Agency, which is trying to build the
new toll road to relieve congestion on Interstate 5 in Orange
County, said Thursday that federal law allows an appeal within
30 days of the commission's decision, and that the agency's
board would probably make a decision at its meeting next
Thursday.
"No decision on an appeal has been made yet, but it is
definitely something we're considering," Seaton said.
If the agency appeals, its opponents who prevailed Wednesday
night vowed Thursday to rejoin the battle.
"We are going to be fighting for this park to keep it
safe in perpetuity for the people of California," said
James Birkelund, senior project attorney for the National
Resources Defense Council, on behalf of the coalition of
environmental agencies that opposed the toll road.
About four miles of the 16-mile toll road passes through the
portion of San Onofre State Beach that runs inland from
Interstate 5. Because the park is so close to the ocean, the
Coastal Commission must find that the project is consistent
with state and federal coastal development guidelines before
the toll road agency can apply for a series of permits
necessary for construction.
At Wednesday's meeting, held in Wyland Hall Pavilion at the
Del Mar Fairgrounds, commissioners found that the project
could harm various native plants and animals and could also
stop pebbles from entering nearby San Mateo Creek. It's the
pebbles, surfers said, that make the Trestles surf break one
of the best in the state.
Seaton said the transportation agency disagrees with the
Coastal Commission's ruling that the toll road is not
consistent with the Coastal Zone Management Act, a federal law
passed in 1972.
"We feel that the Coastal Commission has not considered
the evidence," Seaton said. "If we appealed, we
would probably be arguing that the project is
consistent."
Anson Franklin, a spokesman for the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, confirmed Thursday that
Foothill/Eastern has the right to appeal the commission's
decision.
Franklin said that the Coastal Zone Management Act gives the
commerce secretary the ability, in certain circumstances, to
override the Coastal Commission's decision that the toll road
is inconsistent with coastal building requirements.
Those circumstances, Franklin said, include situations where
the commerce secretary determines a project:
- "furthers the national interest in a significant and
substantial manner;"
- "outweighs any adverse coastal effects;"
- has "no reasonable alternative available that would
allow the activity to proceed consistent with the state
program;" or
- is "necessary in the interest of national
security."
And Franklin said that Gutierrez would look at the project on
its own merits, rather than examining the Coastal Commission's
decision.
"The secretary would evaluate the project that's
appealed, rather than passing judgment on the objections of
the state," Franklin said.
The "consistency determination" that the Coastal
Commission voted against Wednesday was only the first round of
approval for the toll road.
Seaton, the spokeswoman for the toll road agency, said that
the project would still need a coastal development permit from
the Coastal Commission even if an appeal is successful.
"We would definitely have to go to them again for a
permit," she said.
Environmentalists who opposed the project said the toll road's
progress would continue to be stopped by the Coastal
Commission.
Birkelund said, "We believe that the Coastal Commission
sent a clear message that running a toll road through a state
park is inappropriate."
Despite the specter of an appeal, the grass-roots coalition of
surfers, environmentalists and beach lovers that swarmed into
the Wyland Hall Pavilion all day Wednesday was euphoric
Thursday.
Marty Benson of Oceanside, a member of the Save San Onofre
Coalition, which mobilized the opposition effort, said
Thursday morning that he is still stoked about the victory.
"I still get shivers today when I think about it,"
Benson said. "I got choked up about 50 times
yesterday."
He said the coalition plans to oppose any appeal.
"I will be there in opposition every step of the
way," Benson said.
The Coastal Commission held the second day of its three-day
meeting schedule at Oceanside City Hall on Thursday. Just
after the commission broke for lunch, Chairman Patrick Kruer
of Rancho Santa Fe said the overflow crowd at Wednesday's
marathon meeting didn't sway the commissioners.
"It was not the numbers, not at all," Kruer said.
"It was the facts that were presented."
Contact staff writer Paul Sisson at (760) 901-4087 or psisson@nctimes.com
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Copyright 1999-2008, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
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