Thursday, March 27, 2014

Surfrider Foundation Current Logo For Download

For all of our Partners, Sponsors, Chapters, Members, Supporters and beyond.   Here is a large-sized file of the most current Surfrider Foundation logo (effective 2010) for your use.

When partnering with a local Surfrider Foundation Chapter, please be sure to contact your local  Chapter directly.   Chapters are required to use a unique logo that includes the Chapter name listed below the Surfrider Foundation brand name.

Please don't hesitate to contact Surfrider Foundation headquarters directly if you need a specific logo shape, size, color, .eps file, etc.   We are happy to help get that to you and can usually do it same day.

Thanks!



Thursday, March 20, 2014

Supervisors Vote For Alternative Goleta Beach Park Plan


Plan will save rocks and money

Tracy Lehr, KEYT NewsChannel 3 Reporter, tracy@keyt.com
POSTED: 11:14 PM PDT Mar 18, 2014 UPDATED: 08:22 AM PDT Mar 19, 2014 


Goleta Beach Park Rocks To Stay Put
Santa Barbara County, Calif. -
A plan to change Goleta Beach Park lost out.

Santa Barbara County supervisors voted unanimously in favor of an alternative plan that won't cost millions of dollars.

Supervisors want rocks placed under an emergency permit to prevent erosion to stay in place.

But the county will have to apply to the California Coastal Commission for a permit

Goleta Mayor Michael T. Bennett said he believes the supervisors made the right decision.

The city had considered a lawsuit if changes were approved.

The issue was also heating up debate in the race for second district supervisor.

Members of the Surfrider Foundation had hoped for a compromise.

They favor a berm made of small cobblestones to protect the sand.

Manhattan Beach extends bans on plastic bags, polystyrene products

By Esther Kang | March 20, 2014 News
poly pix
Restaurants will no longer be able to use plastic bags and polystyrene products in Manhattan Beach. File photo.
Plastic bags and polystyrene products could soon become a thing of the past in Manhattan Beach.
The City Council on Tuesday voted unanimously to prohibit restaurants from distributing single-use carry-out plastic bags and to extend its ban on polystyrene products to include utensils, straws, cup lids and foam coolers. After a second reading of the ordinances at the April 1 City Council meeting, the new laws could become enforceable as early as June.
The city made headlines in July 2008 as one of the first municipalities to ban the distribution of plastic bags for all retail establishments. Following a lawsuit from The Save the Plastic Bag Coalition, the city battled to prove the legality of the ban and ultimately won, with the California Supreme Court upholding the ordinance and ordering the coalition to pay the city’s legal fees. In 2012, however, the Manhattan Beach City Council amended the law to exempt restaurants from the ban to avoid further litigation under the California Retail Food Code.
Tuesday’s vote lifts this exemption, and Manhattan Beach can be confident that it will not invite more lawsuits from the plastic bag industry, said the city’s environmental programs manager Sona Koffee, citing a failed lawsuit against the city and county of San Francisco last December.
Some 180 restaurants in Manhattan Beach will be affected by the amendment, Koffee said, adding that city staff has provided them with a list of vendors who offer alternatives—such as reusable bags or paper bags made with recycled materials—with comparable prices. With direction from the Council Tuesday, the ban will also apply to food trucks and push carts.
Currently, the enforcement of the plastic bag ban is solely complaint based, Koffee said, but city staff is considering inspections as well as a mandatory acknowledgement in annual business license renewal process. The polystyrene ban is currently enforced in this manner.
Last August, the Manhattan Beach City Council introduced a ban on polystyrene containers used for distributing prepared food and directed city staff to research alternatives for items such as lids and straws.
Polystyrene is a disposable thermoplastic petrochemical material commonly used for food and drink containers. The ordinance as introduced outlaws two types of polystyrene – clear plastic and foam, commonly known as Styrofoam.
In addition to outlawing the distribution of polystyrene straws, cup lids, utensils and foam coolers, Tuesday’s vote prohibits the sale of such products and lifts the previous exemption for the Manhattan Beach Unified School District.
“They’re doing an excellent job to transition all the schools,” Koffee told the Council.
Alternatives include paper and plastic material that are not necessarily bio-degradable or plant-based but generally less harmful to individuals and the marine environment because people are more inclined to recycle them, she said.
So far, backlash has been limited to a statement from Ralph’s expressing that the chain grocery store would not be in support of the prohibition on selling their lines of polystyrene products, Koffee said.
Craig Cadwallader, resident and South Bay chairperson of the Surfrider Foundation, commended the City Council for blazing a trail in environmental policies.
“I just gotta say, this is what makes me proud to be a resident of this city,” Cadwallader said. “This is one of those intelligent things that this council continues to do. We’re actually setting the pace rather than following behind and doing things halfway.”
Mayor Amy Howorth credited past Councilmembers as well as former Mayor Portia Cohen, explaining that Tuesday night’s motions were the culmination of their tireless efforts to protect the environment.
“I’m glad we have kept up this legacy,” Howorth said. “It’s incredibly important and it’s very instructive, I hope, for other cities. We do differ on a lot of issues, as we should, to get to good decisions, but we all understand that this is so important. California leads the way, but Manhattan Beach, little Manhattan Beach, leads the way.”

Reposted from:
http://www.easyreadernews.com/81890/manhattan-beach-extends-bans-plastic-bags-polystyrene-products/


Board of Supervisors Backs Status Quo for Goleta Beach

Board of Supervisors Backs Status Quo for Goleta Beach



Much of the debate over the future of Goleta Beach County Park centers on whether to keep the rock revetments that protect parking lots and other structures. The Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously agreed to support the status quo. (Zack Warburg photo)
Santa Barbara County decision-makers unanimously agree to send California Coastal Commission a plan that will keep protective rock revetments
Dodging a contentious political debate that has raged for years, the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously on Tuesday to keep the status quo, and not pursue any project to address long-term erosion problems at Goleta Beach County Park.
The supervisors said the significant impacts from the proposed project were unacceptable, and they will pitch a "no-project alternative" to the California Coastal Commission in a Coastal Development Permit application they will forward to the state panel.
The board didn't certify the environmental documents for the project, and offered no comments about what will happen if the Coastal Commission rejects keeping the rock revetments that have been in place since 2005.
The controversial project, known as Goleta Beach 2.0, would remove 107 parking spaces from the west end of the park, relocate utility lines, and remove all the rock revetments, which were installed with emergency permits that have since expired.
The environmental documents also analyzed several alternatives, and critics of the so-called “managed retreat” project urged the county to take a different approach to control erosion at the popular county park.
City of Goleta leaders, the Goleta Valley Chamber of Commerce, and a community group called Friends of Goleta Beach have all criticized the proposed project, worried that the park will be completely washed away by big storms without the rocks or another form of protection.
On the other side, the Environmental Defense Center and other organizations advocated for a new hybrid version of the project.
Rock revetments and seawalls cause significant long-term impacts, EDC environmental analyst Brian Trautwein said.
The erosion could reach the seawall and then the beach would disappear, he said. He advocated a “compromise plan” with a cobble berm replacing the rocks. It would be cheaper and safer, he argued.

At Tuesday’s meeting, the five supervisors were tasked with picking a project to present to the Coastal Commission, which has demanded a long-term strategy for dealing with erosion at the beach.
County staff members said the shoreline is not in a long-term retreat at Goleta Beach, but fluctuates over time. The rock revetments are placed relatively high on the beach so stay buried most of the time.
The recent storms exposed some of them, but they haven’t been exposed in at least eight years before that, planner Alex Tuttle said.
Second District Supervisor Janet Wolf surprised a lot of people when she made the motion to pursue the no-project alternative and keep the 1,200 feet of rock revetment along the park area.
There has been “too much rhetoric, political theater, legal threats and personal threats” in the debate over the project, Wolf said.
“The debate over what to do about Goleta Beach has consumed an inordinate amount of time, money, environmental studies, and peace of mind among many people over the past dozen years or so,” she said, reading a prepared statement from the dais.
In the debate, people have become concerned that they won’t be able to enjoy the park in the future, and her goal Tuesday was to bring some closure to “at least this phase of study and debate,” she said.
The no-project alternative will be sent to the Coastal Commission for review, which could take more than a year.
Wolf said the final EIR influenced her decision on the project.
Some impacts the county feared – such as starving down-coast beaches of sand or having the beach narrow over time – have not happened, and aren’t projected to happen until at least 2050, she said.
Wolf said the project’s significant, unavoidable impacts are “simply unacceptable to me.”
Third District Supervisor Doreen Farr quickly seconded the motion. The board needs to do what is best for its county residents, and what’s best financially, which is why the no-project option is a winner, she said.
There were two hours of public comment during Tuesday’s hearing, but the supervisors said very little, except to agree with Wolf’s points.
While there are experts on both sides of the debate, the supervisors ultimately need to rely on their own judgment, Fifth District Supervisor Steve Lavagnino said. The no-project plan makes the most sense, he said.
Most of the speakers at Tuesday’s meeting emphasized a project to protect the lawn area of the park, while others wanted to remove the rocks and let the beach expand inland.
The beach isn’t in danger of disappearing now, but the park needs protecting because it’s unnatural, said Jim Childress, a retired UCSB oceanography professor. The scientific debate comes from citing science that isn’t relevant, he added.
Speakers pointed to the staff presentation and said the rocks are not harmful to the beach now, and the park would essentially wash away if they were removed.
Dave Hardy, owner of the Beachside Bar & CafĂ©, said the rocks worked perfectly in the recent storms that flooded his restaurant and damaged the pier. The rocks protected the building’s foundation, though the water was high enough to come over the top of the wall.
“What’s a couple of windows and carpet?” he said.
Goleta city leaders came out in force, asking the supervisors to send the project to the Planning Commission before the Coastal Commission. Mayor Michael Bennett and the City Council support keeping the rocks to protect the park, which is heavily used by Goleta Valley residents.
Goleta’s city manager, neighborhood services and public-safety director, city attorney, planning manager, public information officer and four council members attended Tuesday’s meeting.
City Manager Dan Singer posed a question to the board: If it’s acceptable to have rocks protect the restaurant and other infrastructure, why not to protect the park’s lawn area?
County staff members said it is “perfectly legally adequate” to send the project to the Coastal Commission before certifying the final environmental impact report. The project will come back to the county Planning Commission if it’s approved, they said.
The county used the same process for the permeable pier project proposal, which was rejected by the commission in 2009.
Goleta City Attorney Tim Giles and Mayor Michael Bennett reiterated the city’s threat of legal action if the county moves forward without certifying the EIR, which they believe violates the California Environmental Quality Act. 
Second District Supervisor Salud Carbajal told Giles the county’s attorneys looked over the letter and “disagree with you greatly.”
— Noozhawk staff writer Giana Magnoli can be reached at gmagnoli@noozhawk.com. Follow Noozhawk on Twitter: @noozhawk@NoozhawkNews and @NoozhawkBiz. Connect with Noozhawk on Facebook.

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Meeting to discuss Banning Ranch is Thursday

March 17, 2014 | 1:08 p.m.

An advocacy group working to fight development at Banning Ranch is hosting a community meeting Thursday in Costa Mesa.
The Banning Ranch Conservancy plans to update the public on its efforts, according to a news release. Endangered species like the California gnatcatcher and the cactus wren live in the roughly 400-acre site, according to the conservancy.
The land, located east of the Santa Ana River and north of West Coast Highway, is currently serving as an oil field. A proposal awaiting California Coastal Commission approval would turn it into a mix of open, park, residential and commercial space, with consolidated oil field use.
The meeting will take place from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. in the Victoria Room at the Costa Mesa Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa.
— Emily Foxhall
Twitter: @emfoxhall


Monday, March 17, 2014

ACTION ALERT! HELP SAVE GOLETA BEACH! Critcial hearing on March 18, 2014

CRITICAL HEARING TO DECIDE FATE OF GOLETA BEACH, MARCH 18 

Whether it’s a sunny afternoon with your kids building sand castles, a morning walk with your dog, a picnic on the beach while watching the sunset, or a nap on the sand, Goleta Beach is a very special place. We need your help to protect Goleta Beach today. 

Starting in the 1960’s, and then in the years that followed, a number of rock seawalls were constructed. Those on the park’s west end are unpermitted and illegal. Unless we take action and remove these seawalls, they threaten to erode and eliminate Goleta’s largest sandy beach. Imagine going to Goleta Beach and seeing no beach!

On Tuesday, March 18 at 1:30 pm the County Board of Supervisors will be reviewing a management plan for Goleta Beach.  We need you to lend your voice to help protect our community's beach and park from storm damage, sea level rise and the illegal seawall. 

The project removes these illegal rock seawalls and protects the beach. It is also a compromise. It leaves all the other rock seawalls - which are permitted - at the east end and in front of the pier, restaurant and other facilities and adds 250-feet of cobble berm protection in front of the Goleta Sanitary District vault near the restaurant. The Santa Barbara Chapter Surfrider Foundation and the Environmental Defense Center have been engaged in this issue for years.   We encourage the public to support a hybrid alternative to the above project which would remove the unpermitted revetments, retain the existing number of parking spaces, move the bike path and utility lines out of the erosion hazard zone, but also install a cobble berm to better protect the park, the restaurant and the beach.
 
Removing the illegal seawall and moving the sewer line out of the erosion hazard zone will allow the beach to expand naturally, providing a larger sandy beach for recreation – including beach walks, sun-bathing and sand castle building, more habitat for shorebirds, and a nicer beach park for all to enjoy. 

County Board of Supervisors
Hearing on Goleta Beach
Tuesday, March 18, 1:30-4:00 pm
County Admin Building, 4th floor 105 E Anapamu, Santa Barbara


Please also call or e-mail the supervisors to let them know you want the rock seawall removed and the park and beach protected:

Janet Wolf: 805-568-2191
Doreen Farr: 805-568-2192
Salud Carbajal: 805-568-2186
Supervisor Adam: 805-346-8407
Supervisor Lavignino: 805-346-8400

 
or email the Board here: 
sbcob@co.santa-barbara.ca.us
More information:
http://www.edcnet.org/learn/current_cases/goleta_beach/index.html
http://www.sbcountyplanning.org/projects/11DVP-00000-00016/