San Diego Union-Tribune

ORANGE COUNTY SEEKS FIX FOR RAIL HAZARDS

Proposal to extend rock revetment to protect tracks along beach

- BY PHIL DIEHL

Orange County transit officials have proposed adding more boulder seawalls to better protect what is the only railroad link to San Diego along 7 miles of the coast between San Clemente and Dana Point.

A map presented at the last California Coastal Commission meeting showed new sections of rock revetment to be installed in several places along the rail corridor, including areas near the San Clemente pier and at the San Diego County border just north of Trestles Beach.

Orange County Transporta­tion Authority officials are working with the Coastal Commission to better identify the most vulnerable areas and obtain permits for the new or expanded seawalls, OCTA project manager Jason Lee told the commission.

His remarks came during an update he presented at the commission’s Dec. 14 meeting on efforts under way to stabilize a recurring landslide at San Clemente, where passenger rail service has been suspended since Sept. 30.

The agency has fortified the rock revetment along the beach with more boulders and is installing ground anchors there to stabilize the slope on the shore side of the tracks. Amtrak and Metrolink passenger trains are expected to resume running between Oceanside and San Clemente after the constructi­on is finished in late January or February, Lee said.

The work at San Clemente has been expedited by a temporary state of emergency declared by the Orange County agency, the fourth local emergency since September 2021 because of the landslide at San Clemente.

Two representa­tives of the Surfrider Foundation urged the Coastal Commission to take a more long-term approach to the problem.

Rick Erkeneff, vice chairman of the South Orange County Chapter of Surfrider, said the emergency permits are frustratin­g for a number of reasons.

“They don’t allow for public comment or comprehens­ive alternativ­e analysis showing the issues long-term,” Erkeneff said.

“With this Band-Aid approach of repeated emergencie­s we can only focus on 700 feet of track (in San Clemente),” he said. “Now they are talking about potentiall­y armoring the entire length” of the 7 miles between San Clemente and Dana Point.

Old aerial photograph­s show the beach was never wide at San Clemente, he said, and beach ero

sion has jeopardize­d the tracks for a long time.

“The situation in San Clemente should not be considered an emergency,” said Laura Walsh, the California policy manager for Surfrider. “It’s a situation that has long been anticipate­d ... and successful­ly prepared for by other agencies in the region.”

The San Diego Associatio­n of Government­s has been working for years on a plan to reroute the railroad around a 1.7-mile section of the tracks on the fragile coastal bluffs in Del Mar. But even after two decades of preliminar­y planning, the Del Mar realignmen­t is unlikely to be completed before 2035 at the earliest.

Seawalls, soldier piles and other stabilizat­ion work have been completed on the bluffs in Del Mar, and more is planned with the understand­ing that the coastal structures will be removed

when the alternate route through an inland tunnel is built at a cost estimated at more than $4 billion.

Surfrider has advocated for rerouting the San Clemente segment of the tracks, but so far the Orange County agency has not identified any potential new routes. Instead, it has taken emergency measures to shore up the existing track.

“Revetments and bluff tie-backs to this extent should not be dealt with through the emergency permit process,” Walsh said.

OCTA began studying a 25-mile segment of the rail line between Irvine and the San Diego County border in 2019 to see what improvemen­ts could be made to better prepare for storm surge, sea-level rise, and other extreme weather, said Eric Carpenter, a senior communicat­ions specialist for the agency.

That study resulted in the OCTA’s Rail Defense Against Climate Change Plan, which was completed in January 2021. The plan

recommende­d only relative stopgap measures such as better vegetation along the rail line and improved amenities at train stations.

The Orange County agency is developing a new feasibilit­y study that will start late next year and take 18 to 24 months to complete at an estimated cost of between $1 million and $2 million, Carpenter said in an email Wednesday.

The new study will involve numerous local, state and federal partners working to better understand the problem and to develop solutions, which could include

moving the tracks, he said.

“It will look at things such as beach erosion, sand replenishm­ent, why soil and sediment from inland rivers may not be reaching the coast, watershed impacts and other factors to help better understand the situation,” Carpenter said.

“It’s easy to say this may be caused by climate change, but if we don’t understand the very specific causes of beach erosion, we can’t develop viable, longterm solutions,” he said.

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