New Coastal Commissioner Appointed from San Diego

March 29th, 2007

Hueso gets nod for state coastal panel

By Terry Rodgers
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
March 29, 2007
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20070329-9999-1m29hueso.html

After keeping seven finalists in suspense for more than three months, state Assembly Speaker Fabian Núñez chose a buddy from his boyhood barrio in San Diego yesterday to be the newest member of the California Coastal Commission.

Núñez ended a drawn-out political drama by naming San Diego Councilman Ben Hueso to the powerful agency, which oversees development along the state’s 1,100-mile coastline.
Early on, Hueso was pegged as the favorite because of his political and family ties to Núñez. Both grew up in Barrio Logan, a predominantly Latino neighborhood south of downtown on San Diego Bay.

“I’m very humbled,” Hueso said. “I will represent those families that haven’t had access to the coast and who don’t have the money to buy a beachfront home.”

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New Chance to Save Del Monte Forest!

March 25th, 2007

Monterey Herald
http://www.montereyherald.com/mld/montereyherald/16959187.htm
Del Monte Forest plan back on table
Coastal Commission to take up zoning issue this summer

By LARRY PARSONS
Herald Staff Writer
A long-controversial development plan by the Pebble Beach Co. is headed for another showdown before the state Coastal Commission this summer.

Nearly seven years after Monterey County voters approved zoning changes that would allow more homes, hotel rooms and another golf course in the Del Monte Forest, the commission must decide whether the coastal zoning plan is consistent with the state Coastal Act.

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Pleasure Point Seawall Rears Ugly Head Years After Being Killed Off By Coastal Commission

March 22nd, 2007

March 21, 2007

County approves Pleasure Point seawall project
http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/archive/2007/March/21/local/stories/01local.htm
By Soraya Gutierrez
Sentinel staff writer
PLEASURE POINT — The cliffs are falling into the ocean, and county supervisors agreed Tuesday to move ahead with a 1,100-foot seawall along scenic East Cliff Drive to save the bluffs from further slides.

After a crash course by UC Santa Cruz geologist Gary Griggs on why the waves break as they do at the famed Pleasure Point surf break, there was little doubt that armoring the cliffs would protect the homes and the public’s access to the pedestrian path without threatening the wave action.

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Harbor House Condos- Ugliest Building on Entire Coast? You Decide!

March 22nd, 2007

Editor’s Note: Inexplicably the Coastal Commission has decided to allow the owners of the Harbor House condos to construct a seawall that will destroy Del Monte Beach, despite the fact that the homeowners are currently suing the Coastal Commission to avoid having to pay any mitigation whatsoever for destroying the public beach. Isn’t that like allowing a thug to continue to rob old ladies while out on probation? Notwithstanding all that, does anyone dispute that the Harbor House is the ugliest, most inappropriately sited building on the entire California Coast? Take a good look at http://www.cacoast.org/200508237
Posted on Wed, Mar. 21, 2007
http://www.montereyherald.com/mld/montereyherald/news/16944816.htm

PROTECTION FROM THE SEA
Panel approves seawall for oceanside condos
By VIRGINIA HENNESSEY
Herald Salinas Bureau

Homeowners at a wave-buffeted condominium complex are set to move forward with construction of a controversial seawall after receiving their final permit from the California Coastal Commission and settling a lawsuit against the complex’s developers.

The commission issued the permit Tuesday after agreeing that the Ocean Harbor House Homeowners Association had met all of the conditions for the approval that was issued in October 2004.

Steve Morgan, president of the group’s board, said he was “thrilled” with the developments.
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US Navy to Answer in Court for Senseless Marine Mammal Slaughter

March 22nd, 2007

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-sonar23mar23,1,6127013.story?coll=la-headlines-california
Coastal agency goes after Navy for high-powered sonar use
By Kenneth R. Weiss
Times Staff Writer

11:48 AM PDT, March 22, 2007

The California Coastal Commission today filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Navy for rejecting its recommendations for additional safeguards to protect whales and other marine mammals from high-power sonar used by ships in training exercises planned for Southern California waters.

The lawsuit, and a separate suit filed today by environmental and animal welfare groups, sets up a legal battle in federal court in Los Angeles that pits the state’s right to enforce environmental protections against the U.S. Navy’s contention that it can be exempted from environmental rules in the interests of national security.
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Protect Our Coast From LNG!

March 19th, 2007

Hearing Santa Barbara_2.jpg

Protect Our Coast From LNG!

March 19th, 2007

Hearing Santa Barbara_3.jpg

Artificial Beaches 4 An Artificial World?

March 18th, 2007


2001 beach benefits short-lived

http://nctimes.com/articles/2007/03/18/news/top_stories/21_12_383_17_07.txt

By: DAVE DOWNEY – Staff Writer

NORTH COUNTY —- It was nice while it lasted. When the San Diego Association of Governments dredged up enough sand from the ocean bottom to fill Qualcomm Stadium and piped it onshore in the summer of 2001, San Diego County had some of the finest beaches around.

From Oceanside to Imperial Beach, once-narrow beaches suddenly were 25 to 100 feet wider than they were before the association spent $17.5 million and spread 2 million cubic yards of the fine material along six miles of the county’s coastline.

But it didn’t last. Winter arrived and storm swells battered the coast. And the manufactured beaches were swept back out to sea.
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Seen This Sign?

March 18th, 2007

Trespass.jpg

Of course it is obnoxious, not to mention unpermitted and illegal. But up and down the California coast such attempts to intimidate and dissuade public beach access are common. If you happen to see a sign like this while hiking the coast, take a picture and forward it to the Enforcement Division of the California Coastal Commission, tel: #415-904-5200 (http://www.coastal.ca.gov/).

Who Owns Malibu Now?

March 9th, 2007

Billionaire’s buying has the town talking
Oracle CEO Larry Ellison’s purchases may help remake a piece of Malibu. So far he’s submitted plans for two new restaurants.

By Martha Groves
Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-malibu9mar09,1,3561954.story?coll=la-headlines-california&ctrack=1&cset=true
March 9, 2007

For years now, software magnate Larry Ellison has been on a spending spree in Malibu that has caused even his fellow billionaires’ tongues to wag.

By some accounts, he has shelled out as much as $200 million for more than a dozen properties, including five adjacent residential parcels on Carbon Beach, two nearby restaurants, the Casa Malibu Inn and a vacant gas station or two that he apparently intends to use for customer parking.

Carbon Beach, which runs east from the Malibu Pier for about 1 1/2 miles, is also known as Billionaires Beach thanks to its lineup of denizens including philanthropist Eli Broad, former Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan, television financier Haim Saban, producer Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen, the music magnate who famously battled the state over public beach access.

So far, Ellison, 62, has submitted plans to the city of Malibu for two new restaurants, including one expected to feature ultra-high-end Japanese cuisine. That would be in keeping with his affinity for the finer things in life and for all things Japanese.

The Oracle Corp. chief executive — who, according to Forbes magazine, is worth nearly $20 billion — spent 10 years and a reported $200 million re-creating a Japanese village on his 23-acre estate in Woodside, south of San Francisco. And Rising Sun was the name he chose for his 454-foot yacht, said to be the world’s longest privately owned boat.

Jefferson Wagner, owner of Zuma Jay surf shop on Pacific Coast Highway, speculates that Ellison wants to “control this end of town” because of his restaurant plans.

“He’s buying what he needs to create his little world,” said Wagner, whose store is across the street from some of Ellison’s commercial parcels. “I’m not knockin’ it. It’s an upgrade as far as local merchants are concerned.”

Ellison’s representatives did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Meanwhile, Geffen is renovating the nearby Malibu Beach Inn, which is taking online room reservations for June.

“Geffen will raise the bar on what has been a dated hotel but a great location,” said Tony Dorn, a longtime Malibu resident and commercial real estate broker.

Geffen and Ellison are changing what has been, commercially speaking, a rather forlorn stretch of the highway, an odd state of affairs considering the immense collective wealth of the locals.

Dorn said Geffen and Ellison were drawn to the properties because there are so few commercial parcels on the beach side of PCH. “The Malibu commercial environment is so tight, and there are no [new] permits available right now,” Dorn said. “That’s what makes it attractive to these people.”

Residents and real estate agents say houses on Carbon Beach, even the few remaining “shacks,” would start at $20 million. Courteney Cox and David Arquette recently put their four-bedroom, five-bathroom showcase house, with 80 feet of frontage, on the market for $33.5 million.

Ellison’s buying binge started in 2003, when he paid $65 million for five adjacent residential properties on Carbon Beach. Next, a couple of restaurants at the beach’s western end near the pier caught his eye. According to local scuttlebutt, in early 2004 he paid nearly $30 million for the Pier View Cafe and Cantina and the Windsail. Both have been shuttered since. City officials say Ellison recently bought the Casa Malibu Inn, a beachfront getaway that opened in 1949 and is near the restaurants. In addition, he reportedly purchased a $20-million home in a gated hillside community just west of Malibu Pier.

The situation is once again turning a spotlight on Malibu’s rich and famous and their hunger for land. One resident who socializes with Carbon Beach’s well-heeled residents and asked to remain anonymous said of them: “They’re sort of in this club. They walk on the beach and schmooze. What they all talked about was how to get more property on Carbon Beach. They’re asking each other if they’ll sell their place for any amount of money.”

Since Ellison began popping into town to conduct business and relax, Malibu residents have engaged in the game of Larry-spotting. Wagner ran into him at the local Ralphs and jokingly asked, “On that real estate thing, have you left anything for me?” He said Ellison replied, “I hear your building’s for sale.” Wagner promptly found a partner, who helped him buy the building that houses his surf shop for $4.2 million. “I could just see the glint in his eye,” Wagner said of Ellison.

Last week, the City Council, on a first reading, narrowly approved a zoning change that would allow Ellison to proceed with plans for a commercial enterprise on one of his restaurant sites. That change, known as a local coastal program amendment, faces a second vote by the council and then would need to be approved by the California Coastal Commission. The other restaurant has already been approved by the city planning commission.

Mayor Ken Kearsley, who voted against the amendment, said he fears that the restaurants will cause a traffic backup on the highway. He also said Ellison should honor a development agreement between the city and the previous owner, who had promised to donate $400,000 to local schools and include a community room in his proposed beach club and spa.

“At this point, he hasn’t brought anything to the table,” Kearsley said of Ellison, adding that, for the billionaire, $400,000 would be “couch change.”

For a time, rumor had it that Ellison would try to lure Nobu, a celebrity hangout in the Malibu Country Mart, to Carbon Beach. Whether it’s that or another upscale eatery, some business owners are cheering him on.

“Put the restaurant back, whatever it is,” Wagner said. “I’ll never be able to afford to go there, but at least sushi will smell better than the septic.”

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