Wetlands bill becomes law
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Assemblyman John Campbell (R-Irvine) celebrated his
first major legislative victory Friday when Gov. Gray Davis signed a
wetlands bill he sponsored that could help filter urban runoff to the
Back Bay.
The legislation, known as Assembly Bill 810, will allow the Irvine
Ranch Water District to install man-made wetlands in various sections of
the watershed that feeds into Upper Newport Bay.
“One of the keys to me is [giving] a single agency with a proven track
record the responsibility for cleaning up the entire waterway,” Campbell
said. “I’m certainly very pleased that [the governor] sees the benefit of
the bill and signed it.”
The wetlands would be put in place to filter out urban runoff from
nearby housing projects and other developments before it flows into the
San Diego Creek and to the Back Bay.
District officials praised their wetlands project in a statement
released Friday afternoon.
“This is a cost-effective, environmentally sound alternative for
handling dry weather runoff,” said district general manager Paul D. Jones
II.
The district has begun planning on the project, isolating nearly 60
locations along the watershed where the wetlands could be installed.
Between 10 and 30 wetlands could ultimately be installed, said Norris
Brandt, the project manager.
The district is moving forward with its environmental review of the
project.
Campbell’s bill encountered little resistance along the path toward
becoming law. It will become law Jan. 1.
The Assembly passed the bill 69 to 1 on May 17. Only freshman
Assemblyman Edward Chavez (D-Industry) opposed it. Chavez later changed
his vote to an abstention.
Local environmentalists also have put up few roadblocks. Bob Caustin,
the founder of Defend the Bay who has had several legal tangles with the
water district, has called it innocuous, though he said he worried that
the bill would allow for illegal land seizure.
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