Cove funding bill dropped
Paul Clinton
CRYSTAL COVE -- A local assemblyman has dropped a nearly yearlong push
to use revenue from the El Morro trailer park to help pay for the
restoration of the beachfront cottages at the state park.
Assemblyman John Campbell, whose district includes the park, says he
will no longer pursue his Assembly Bill 2190, which he introduced Feb.
20.
If made law, the bill would have raised as much as $10 million to
restore the cottages. The trailer park’s residents, set to be evicted by
California State Parks in 2004, would have been given a five-year
extension of their leases.
The bill has been opposed by state parks officials and local
environmentalists, who have lobbied Campbell to back away from his plan.
In dropping his bill, Campbell pointed to several other sources of
funds to restore the cottages, which have been vacant since July.
“My objective from the beginning has been to see the cottages
restored,” Campbell said. “With the park bond, coastal commission and
department dollars, I believe the necessary funding is available without
my legislation.”
The passage of Proposition 40 on March 5 has opened several avenues
for significant funds for the restoration. The $2.6-billion bond includes
a $225-million outlay to California State Parks, $200 million to the
California Coastal Conservancy, $632 million in local assistance grants
and $267 million for cultural and historic resources.
State parks agency officials promised that the cottages at Crystal
Cove would be high on the list of projects recommended for use with those
funds.
“It’s going to be very near the top of our priority list for Prop. 40
money,” said Roy Stearns, California State Parks spokesman. “It’s a
strong possibility [for funding].”
A contingent of environmentalists led by Laura Davick and local
members of the Sierra Club met with Campbell on Wednesday at his Irvine
office and urged the legislator to drop the bill.
Environmentalists said they would work to convince Gov. Gray Davis to
include some money in his revised budget, which he is scheduled to
release May 10.
Campbell, also on Wednesday, sent a letter to Davis, formally
requesting about $16 million needed to repair the cottages.
“We need to be diligent in trying to pressure the appropriate
individuals,” Davick said. “[Campbell’s bill] was definitely an irritant
for a lot of folks.”
Campbell’s bill had raised the ire of environmentalists and state
officials because it would have allowed private residents at El Morro to
continue living on publicly owned land.
Even influential heiress Joan Irvine Smith, who has pushed state
officials to restore the historic cottages at Crystal Cove, logged her
opposition to the bill.
“This would have perpetuated a private use,” Smith said. “This was not
the correct approach.”
Campbell said he would resuscitate the bill next year if funding could
not be secured.
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