The Mercury News

Coastal Commission phases out all off-roading at Oceano Dunes

Park is the only one in the state that allows motorized recreation on a beach

- By Julie Cart Calmatters

The California Coastal Commission ordered an end to offroad vehicles at Oceano Dunes state park within three years in a decision that climaxes 40 years of acrimony and debate.

The commission­ers last week voted unanimousl­y to approve a new coastal permit for Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area with the condition that off-roading would be phased out at the park.

Oceano Dunes is one of only nine state parks in California — and the only one on a beach — that allows motorized recreation. About 1.5 million people visit the park each year, with thousands of all-terrain vehicles a day motoring across 3,600 acres of sand.

The decision followed a 12hour meeting Thursday, including five hours of fiery, virtual public comments from nearly 200 people and several hours of discussion among the 10 commission­ers.

“We are obligated to comply with the Coastal Act,” said Commission­er Caryl Hart. She said it

is clear that off-road driving harms resources at the park, which is largely protected under state law as an environmen­tally sensitive habitat area.

Arguably the most contested stretch of sand in California, the park in San Luis Obispo County has been the stage for decades of government­al infighting, missed deadlines and serial lawsuits.

An array of issues are at stake at Oceano, including protection of endangered species, recreation­al access to parks, air pollution from sand and dust stirred up by vehicles, and impacts on nearby communitie­s’ health and safety.

Pro-riding groups have long argued that the coastal commission has applied a heavy hand to park management and vowed to fight the agency in court.

Don Amador, a longtime advocate for off-highway recreation, warned the commission that it was in legal jeopardy, vowing to take the agency to court. “Never have I seen such hubris displayed by a state or federal agency in my career.”

Amy Granat, managing director of the California Off-road Vehicle Associatio­n, said the commission is “making judgments about the value of off-highway recreation.”

But commission staffers told commission­ers that their recommenda­tions “follow the facts and the law.”

“In our view, it would be irresponsi­ble for the commission not to take action here,” said Dan Carl, the commission’s district director.

The Coastal Commission is tasked with enforcing California’s Coastal Act, which requires the state to maximize public recreation on coastal land “consistent with sound resources conservati­on principles.”

The commission’s staff says that off-roading at the park endangers rare birds, which nest there. The state parks agency, on the other hand, is adamant that the public should retain a right to use the park for motorized recreation, the activity it was originally establishe­d to encourage.

At the crux of the debate is two state agencies with disparate views of state laws, environmen­tal protection and beach access.

The park is home to Western snowy plovers and California least terns, two federally protected birds that build their nests in the sand, making them extraordin­arily vulnerable. Every year at Oceano, some of the rare birds are inadverten­tly squashed under the wheels of off-road vehicles.

After decades of no resolution, the commission in June issued a cease and desist order ordering the parks agency to stop harming imperiled birds because it violates the Coastal Act.

Street-legal vehicles — not off-road vehicles — will still be allowed along a onemile strip of the beach in a northern section of the park that does not carry special habitat protection­s. The commission also voted unanimousl­y to amend the permit conditions to allow people in campground­s to drive in the park at night. No recreation­al riding will be allowed at night.

Many people speaking at the hearing chided the parks department for its failure to meet deadlines and warned that the staff’s proposal to phase out motorized recreation in the park over five years would result in more broken promises.

“What does state park need five years for? We need justice now,” said Lucia Casalinuov­o, president of the Oceano Beach Community Associatio­n, which represents residents of nearby towns.

“Five years is the biggest kick down the road you have given so far, and you promised not to kick the can down the road,” she said. “Please do not believe that park will comply in five years when they have not complied in 40 years.”

The hearing began with an admonition from Coastal Commission Chairman Steve Padilla calling for civility and decorum, behaviors that have not been hallmarks of previous meetings on Oceano.

Parks Director Armando Quintero set a conciliato­ry tone, calling for partnershi­p. He said the issues “are some of the most complex in the state park system.”

Coastal Commission Executive Director Jack Ainsworth reflected on his 35 years of wrestling with the Oceano problem and the “stalemate” with the parks department.

“I’ve always tried to reach (a) compromise, but sometimes it’s just not possible. In the end, we cannot compromise our core values. That’s what’s happening here,” he said. “We simply cannot continue a cycle of running around in circles, kicking the can down the road. That is not the definition of good government.”

But as the evening wore on, Mark Gold, executive director of the Ocean Protection Council, was frustrated by the acrimony between two state agencies. The Newsom administra­tion last year tasked Gold with bringing the two agencies together after decades of conflict.

Gold said it’s “just not true” that the agencies aren’t at war. “The working relationsh­ip between parks and the commission is beyond disappoint­ing.”

The parks department has developed a proposed plan, called a Public Works Plan, that is a management guide for the park and will still require Coastal Commission approval.

The commission took issue with aspects of the plan, saying it did not resolve more than a dozen issues the commission asked the park to address. Instead of making immediate changes, the plan called for multiyear studies of vehicular reduction, wildlife management and air quality, and making adjustment­s in the future should problems arise.

The proposed plan also includes future developmen­t around Oso Flaco Lake and additional campground­s, staff housing, a state vehicle car wash station and a law enforcemen­t target shooting range. The commission’s staff calculated that the future plans add 2,000 acres to the park, representi­ng a 40% increase to the park’s size.

The parks department’s unwavering fidelity to offroading may be traced to its unique source of funding. Unlike California’s nearly 300 other parks, the nine set aside for vehicles are funded almost entirely by off-road receipts: license fees from the vehicles, entrance fees from the parks and a portion of gas taxes that everyone pays at the pump.

That money is deposited in the state’s Off-highway Vehicle Trust Fund, which provides off-road areas with much more operationa­l funding than other parks even though they have fewer visitors.

Local air quality officials say the region sometimes records the nation’s worst air quality for PM10, coarse particles linked to asthma attacks and other respirator­y problems, partly from dust and sand stirred up by thousands of off-road vehicles.

One of the issues raised is environmen­tal justice and how the park operations are harming the residents of Oceano, a mostly Latino community. But pro-riding groups assert that they, too, represent a culture with traditions that should be respected.

The commission has a representa­tive appointed by the governor to specifical­ly monitor environmen­tal justice issues, but that commission­er, Effie Turnbull-sanders, was not present for the meeting. In addition, the gubernator­ial appointmen­t to the commission, representi­ng the Central Coast region, is unfilled.

Commission­ers heard public comments from nearly 200 people, most of them polarizing. But the sides coalesced on one point: Instead of punting, someone needs to make a decision.

“Taking no action on these concerns is not an option. We must resolve this conflict,” said state Sen. John Laird, D-santa Cruz, whose district includes the park. In eight years as former head of the state resources agency, Laird has debated the issue countless times.

 ?? DAVID MIDDLECAMP — SAN LUIS OBISPO TRIBUNE ?? Hundreds of dune buggies parade along the Oceano Dunes State Recreation­al Vehicle Area in Oceano in August 2018. The California Coastal Commission voted 10-0 on Thursday to phase out off-road vehicle use at Oceano Dunes within three years.
DAVID MIDDLECAMP — SAN LUIS OBISPO TRIBUNE Hundreds of dune buggies parade along the Oceano Dunes State Recreation­al Vehicle Area in Oceano in August 2018. The California Coastal Commission voted 10-0 on Thursday to phase out off-road vehicle use at Oceano Dunes within three years.
 ?? ANNE WERNIKOF — CALMATTERS ?? A sign warns that motorcycle­s and off-road vehicles are banned along a cordoned-off portion of the dunes on Sept. 5.
ANNE WERNIKOF — CALMATTERS A sign warns that motorcycle­s and off-road vehicles are banned along a cordoned-off portion of the dunes on Sept. 5.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States