Ed note: The article below, from the LA Times, has some great quotes. Finally, it appears the scientists are catching on to what beach advocates and seawall armoring opponents have known – and have been saying – for decades: oceanfront homeowners, generally wealthy sorts, are destroying California beaches because they’ve built to close to the shore, refuse to move back, insist on ruining public sandy beaches with seawalls to ’save’ their property, which doesn’t work, and, oh yeah, the seas are rising faster than we ever thought!
The best line in the piece has to go to Ken Ehrlich, attorney for the beachfronting bandits, who apparently doesn’t realize his quote makes his clients look like self-centered *#@holes. He says: “There is no hidden agenda here. The owners are trying to protect and widen the beach so these public access issues will go away.” Doesn’t Ehrlich realize the irony: his clients illegal seawalls are destroying the beach, thereby ridding them of that pesky public access issue altogther. Too bad it’ll also wreck havoc on their own houses as well.
‘Drowned beaches’ is also a powerful term describing the result of decades of poor coastal land use policies in California. Look for that to become familiar. Why not go one step further: These people are waterboarding Califorinia beaches!

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-beach31-2008dec31,0,7928541.story
From the Los Angeles Times
Malibu’s vanishing Broad Beach a sign of rising sea levels, experts say
As wealthy homeowners build sandbag walls and plan more extensive, costly measures, scientists say the ocean could eventually defeat all such efforts.
By Kenneth R. Weiss
December 31, 2008
Broad Beach has long been a scenic backdrop to Malibu’s public access wars. The tranquil rhythm of surf has been routinely shattered by security guards and sheriff’s deputies bouncing beachgoers who spread towels on the confusing mosaic of public and private sand.
Today, Broad Beach has shrunk into a narrow sliver of its former self. And like other skinny Malibu icons, its slenderness qualified the beach for a different kind of trend-setting role: How California will deal with rising sea levels.
Sandwiched between the advancing sea and coastal armor built to protect multimillion-dollar homes, the strip of sand is being swept away by waves and tides. Soon, oceanographers and coastal engineers contend, the rising ocean will eclipse the clash between the beach-going public and the private property owners: There will be no dry sand left to fight over.
“If the latest projections of sea level rise are right, you can kiss goodbye the idea of a white sandy beach,” said Bill Patzert, a climatologist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge. “You are going to be jumping off the sea wall onto the rocks below.”
The rise of sea levels, which have swelled about eight inches in the last century, are projected to accelerate with global warming.
A group of scientists this month once again elevated those projections, suggesting that a rise of up to two feet predicted last year by the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change could easily double or more within the next century. The new numbers, outlined in a study commissioned by the U.S. Climate Change Science Program, take into account the latest data and observations of glacial and land ice melting, which send torrents of fresh water into the ocean.
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