Bill seeks to redirect funds to beach projects
Alex Coolman
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach) introduced a bill in
Congress on Thursday that he said should benefit the nation’s beaches.
The bill, the Coastal Resources Enhancement and Restoration Act of
2000, has a number of provisions, including proposals to allocate more
money for erosion control and the consolidation of efforts by agencies
that study pollution.
“It is designed to address some of the inequalities we’ve had in the
past” in spending, Rohrabacher said. “In the past, the vast majority of
the money that the Army Corps of Engineers spends on projects has gone to
the East Coast.”
Rohrabacher’s proposal would not have any new programs starting or any
new money generated for environmental projects. Instead, the bill
redirects existing funds toward coastal projects.
Ten percent of National Science Foundation funds would be directed
toward “coastal engineering and coastline protection research,” according
to the bill.
Additionally, the proposal would send 2% of funds from the federal
Outer Continental Shelf royalty fund toward sand replenishment, sewage
treatment and urban runoff programs. The transferred funds would probably
amount to roughly $66 million per year, said Ricardo Bernal, a
Rohrabacher spokesman.
The measure represents more government involvement in environmental
affairs than Rohrabacher has typically championed. The congressman has
often said he would rather create incentives for private enterprise to
tackle environmental challenges than use legislation to achieve those
goals.
Bernal said the proposed legislation was consistent with Rohrabacher’s
conservative political philosophy.
“It’s not creating any new bureaucracy, and it’s using already
existing funding,” he said.
Nancy Gardner, president of the Newport Beach chapter of the Surfrider
Foundation, gave the proposed legislation a cautiously optimistic review.
“It looks like there’s some good things in it,” she said. “It just
depends on how things are interpreted.”
Gardner praised the attention given to urban runoff but said the
bill’s focus on coastal engineering would need to be dealt with
carefully.
“Coastal engineering tends to mean armoring” the shoreline, a practice
of using concrete or boulders to reinforce the beach. Surfrider generally
opposes the practice, she said.
The bill also contains language that would direct funding only to
public beaches with sufficient public access.
Gardner said the restriction sounded like “a nice way of keeping
access in people’s mind.” But she cautioned that the language could also
be used as an excuse to restrict public access to hard-to-reach beaches,
such as those in the Dover Shores area.
The bill will not be taken up in this session of Congress. But
Rohrabacher said he hopes it will be enacted next year.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.