Los Angeles Times

OCEANO DUNES’ FATE IS SET TO BE DECIDED

A barrage of lawsuits will likely follow any action taken to resolve the long-running dispute over off-roading

- By Louis Sahagún

SAN LUIS OBISPO — There is little common ground in a decades-long battle over off-road recreation, economic freedom and the fate of California’s dwindling coastal resources.

While the matter is likely to end up in court, the California Coastal Commission is scheduled Thursday to finally decide whether offroad driving will continue to be permitted at Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area — the only state park where vehicles can be driven along the beach.

Commission staffers have concluded that offroad vehicle use along the eight miles of shoreline near San Luis Obispo is inconsiste­nt with the Coastal Act and have recommende­d that it end within five years.

But officials at the California Department of Parks and Recreation disagree and say a vehicle ban would be inconsiste­nt with state laws regarding use of offhighway vehicles, or OHV. Instead, they have drafted a management plan that envisions expanding vehicular and OHV use and installing improvemen­ts, including campground­s and concession­aire space, near scenic Oso Flaco Lake, as well as an OHV historic museum and a shooting range.

“The meeting on Thursday is going to be crazy,” said Deborah Sivas, an environmen­tal litigator and director of the Environmen­tal Law Clinic at Stanford Law School. “This debate has reached the point of crisis.”

Aaron Peskin, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisor­s and a former coastal commission­er, described the standoff as “a 21st century scandal.”

“The commission has extraordin­ary legal powers,” he said. “But the OHV crowd is loud, aggressive and combative.”

Friends of Oceano Dunes, an organizati­on representi­ng 28,000 off-road enthusiast­s, asserts that banning people from flying over the coastal dunes in customized sand rails, roaring over the wet sand on dirt bikes and kicking up roostertai­ls on high-powered ATVs is a form of elitism. They chafe at the fact that the area they are allowed to enjoy is only about 10% of the 15,000 acres they roamed a few decades ago. OHV activities, they point out, attract nearly 2 million people a year and inject more than $100 million into the San Luis Obispo County economy.

The organizati­on’s leaders have long challenged airquality experts’ evidence that intensive vehicle use is largely responsibl­e for a pollution problem in nearby downwind communitie­s that are home to more than 20,000 people.

To the mounting frustratio­n of opponents, Friends of Oceano Dunes has been on a winning streak in court. Over the past five years, the group has successful­ly sued the commission, the California Air Resources Board and the San Luis Obispo County Air Pollution Control District over the agencies’ actions at Oceano.

A year ago, a San Luis Obispo County Superior Court judge ordered the commission to pay Friends $252,726 in attorney’s fees. The order came after the group won a lawsuit accusing the agency of failing to comply with the California Environmen­tal Quality Act in 2017 when it tried to expand dust control measures at Oceano.

As for the outcome of Thursday’s hearing, “unfortunat­ely, we don’t know what to expect,” said Jim Suty, president of Friends of Oceano Dunes.

“We believe that the commission is overreachi­ng its authority,” he said. “State parks cannot remove OHV from Oceano Dunes because it is mandated to provide OHV recreation there.”

The trouble started in 1982 after the commission issued a temporary permit that gave state parks officials 18 months to determine how many vehicles the area can handle daily and establish a permanent entrance to minimize damage for federally endangered steelhead trout and two species of birds: the western snowy plover and the California least tern.

But the parks department never finished the job. The 1,500 acres of the park accessible to vehicles have been operated under an “interim” system, with a limit of 5,300 vehicles a day and a main entrance that forces visitors to drive through habitat at the mouth of Arroyo Grande Creek to get to a staging area for unloading dune buggies and motorbikes.

The daily-use limit has been reduced during the COVID-19 pandemic to 2,500 vehicles.

The reproducti­ve lives of federally threatened snowy plovers became a hot topic a year ago after Oceano locked its gates because of the coronaviru­s and the golf-ballsize shorebirds started nesting in areas that are usually open to off-roaders.

The nesting season of the plover runs from March through September, coinciding with the period of greatest human use of the beach at Oceano.

Those clashing interests triggered state and federal investigat­ions into reports that state park rangers deliberate­ly destroyed plover nests near Pismo Beach in preparatio­n for the reopening of the beach.

The commission ordered the California Department of Parks and Recreation to cease activities designed to disrupt plover nesting and conducted without coastal developmen­t permits. Those violations included brushing away plover nests, which are mere depression­s in the sand, installing Mylar flags to dissuade breeding behavior and moving birds.

On another front, commission staffers and air quality agencies have concluded that off-roading raises dust that causes public health issues. But a recent analysis of airborne particulat­e samples conducted by the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy suggests that blowing sand from Oceano Dunes does not pose a health risk for residents downwind of the park.

The pressures bearing down on Oceano were evident on a recent Friday after the gates opened at the main entrance on Pier Avenue. Drivers of pickup trucks with trailers were getting stuck in the sand and spinning their wheels or hitting the gas to avoid losing traction on the beach, where the speed limit is 15 mph.

Nearby, Jeff Miller, a conservati­on advocate for the Center for Biological Diversity, was peering through binoculars at shorebirds hunting for insects and crustacean­s in myriad tire tracks.

“Should off-roaders be able to run off everyone else, including the species that evolved here?” he grumbled. “Whose state park is this, anyway?”

That kind of talk irked Michael Heim, 43, of Apple Valley, who, like many others was flying an American flag from his pickup truck.

“This is a working man’s paradise, where families can fly kites over the waves, find amazing sand dollars under their toes and watch the sun go down beside a campfire,” he told a reporter. “Yeah, you can also cut doughnuts in the sand in custom dune buggies, but Oceano Dunes is so much more than that.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? OCEANO DUNES State Vehicular Recreation Area is the only California state park where vehicles are allowed on the beach. That could change after a Coastal Commission meeting today on the area’s fate.
Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times OCEANO DUNES State Vehicular Recreation Area is the only California state park where vehicles are allowed on the beach. That could change after a Coastal Commission meeting today on the area’s fate.
 ??  ?? THE DEBATE between conservati­onists and off-roading enthusiast­s over the site has come to a head, but a decision today may not end the matter.
THE DEBATE between conservati­onists and off-roading enthusiast­s over the site has come to a head, but a decision today may not end the matter.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? THE COASTAL Commission is set to rule Thursday on whether vehicles will be allowed at Oceano Dunes.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times THE COASTAL Commission is set to rule Thursday on whether vehicles will be allowed at Oceano Dunes.

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