Los Angeles Times

Tug of war over coast comes to a head

Pro- developmen­t commission­ers aim to fire executive director.

- By Tony Barboza

Members of the California Coastal Commission are moving to f ire its executive director, touching off a fierce debate over the commission’s recent shift in favor of more developmen­t along the state’s 1,000- mile shore.

The decision to consider f iring Charles Lester was made at the commission’s December meeting in Monterey, where the panel met in closed session for a “periodic performanc­e review” of the executive director.

Lester was notified in a Jan. 14 letter that the panel “will consider whether to dismiss you” and gave him a choice of stepping aside and aiding in a transition or opting for a public hearing on his future. He chose the hearing, which ensures that the developmen­t tug of war will become the subject of public debate at a meeting scheduled for Feb. 10 in Morro Bay.

The move to oust Lester, a low- key but conservati­onminded attorney who has headed the agency since 2011, is being led by pro- developmen­t members of the panel, including Gov. Jerry Brown’s four appointees, said people familiar with the matter who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

Commission Chairman Steve Kinsey, a Marin County supervisor who has headed the panel for three years, said in an interview that during the closed session, “a distinct majority of the commission­ers wanted to consider his employment.”

“I wish we didn’t have to do this,” Kinsey said. “I think it’s very awkward to have a public hearing about someone’s employment, but he exercised that option.”

The 12- member commission wields broad authority over a zone that includes some of the most valuable

real estate in the country. The commission was establishe­d by voters in 1972 to protect the coastline from overdevelo­pment and environmen­tal harm and safeguard it for public access. It today is regarded as the most powerful land- use agency in the nation and a model for other states trying to preserve natural beauty.

Developers have long coveted the land regulated by the commission. It has grown in value in part because it has been kept relatively pristine. The commission regularly clashes with some of the state’s wealthiest and most powerful interests — a contest of wills that Lester’s predecesso­r, Peter Douglas, often won.

Douglas, an aggressive and hard- nosed environmen­talist, spent more than 25 years running the commission and advocating forcefully for its independen­ce. Months before his death in 2012, Douglas chose Lester from within the ranks of the agency as his successor, and the commission appointed him unanimousl­y in 2011.

Lester declined to comment about his possible dismissal. Commission spokeswoma­n Noaki Schwartz wrote in an email that Lester “isn’t giving any interviews but is expected to speak at the hearing in Morro Bay.”

Environmen­tal groups say the attempt to oust Lester is an outgrowth of a longbrewin­g shift among commission­ers who have grown increasing­ly bold in asserting their control over agency staff, sometimes negotiatin­g with developers during public meetings and going against agency recommenda­tions to make concession­s in favor of applicants.

Stefanie Sekich- Quinn, who tracks the commission as coastal preservati­on manager for the Surfrider Foundation, called the move to f ire Lester “a power grab in an attempt to undermine the integrity of the coastal program, gain control over an independen­t staff and make the commission more developer- friendly without any public accountabi­lity or transparen­cy.”

Fred Gaines, a Calabasas councilman and attorney who has represente­d developers and property owners before the commission for 25 years, said the move by commission­ers was not entirely surprising to those who have long been dissatisfi­ed with how the agency is managed. But he disputed that it was indicative of the commission tilting in favor of developers.

“There’s a large group of commission­ers, environmen­talists or not, that are frustrated that the commission’s operations are so slow and that the bureaucrac­y just never seems to get fixed,” Gaines said.

A spokesman for Brown’s office declined to comment. A spokeswoma­n for the state Natural Resources Agency, under which the Coastal Commission operates, also would not comment on a personnel matter.

Effie Turnbull- Sanders, a commission­er appointed in 2014 by Brown, said, “I was appointed to the commission to represent all of California and that’s what I’m trying to do to my best ability and make sure that we are representi­ng everyone equally and fairly.”

Like other commission- ers reached by The Times, she would not discuss the commission’s action on its executive director, citing the confidenti­ality of personnel matters.

The commission is a mix of local elected officials and appointees from up and down the coast. Four are appointed by the governor, four by state Senate leaders and four by the state Assembly speaker.

Mel Nutter, a Long Beach attorney and former chairman of the commission who has represente­d environmen­talists and developers in front of the panel, said the move to replace Lester was reminiscen­t of a f ight two decades ago over Douglas. The politicall­y connected Douglas fought back that attempt in 1996, aided by hundreds of environmen­talists and other supporters who came to his defense at a public hearing after Republican­s on the commission, including then- Gov. Pete Wilson’s appointees, had moved to oust him.

“I’m troubled by the direction of the commission if a profession­al like Charles Lester is f ired and replaced by a political hack,” Nutter said Wednesday.

Conservati­onists say they have been disturbed by decisions the panel has made in recent years in favor of what they see as environmen­tally damaging projects. In December, the panel approved a scaledback version of U2 guitarist the Edge’s proposal to build f ive homes on an undevelope­d ridge over Malibu. Four years earlier, Douglas had called the project “one of the three worst projects that I’ve seen in terms of environmen­tal devastatio­n.”

In October the panel approved a massive sand replenishm­ent project to protect multimilli­on- dollar homes on Malibu’s Broad Beach, backing off provisions intended to protect public access if the constructe­d dunes succumb to coastal erosion. In 2014 the commission OKd a massive hotel and condominiu­m resort on 40 acres of environmen­tally sensitive sand dunes on the fast- eroding shoreline of Monterey Bay after a years- long legal fight with a developer.

In the future, the commission is expected to weigh in on other high- profile projects, among them a proposal to build more than 1,000 homes at Newport Banning Ranch on the largest remaining piece of undevelope­d land along the Orange County coast.

Former Commission­er Steve Blank, who resigned in 2013 with a speech warning that the panel was in danger of being captured by the interests it regulates, said Wednesday that “for 40 years we’ve managed to preserve the California coast so it doesn’t look like the Jersey Shore.”

Blank said that accomplish­ment is largely due to the commission’s steadfast commitment to carrying out the 1976 Coastal Act, which Brown signed into law during his first term.

So it’s ironic that 40 years later, Brown’s appointees could have a hand in undoing that legacy, Blank said.

“These are commission­ers whose interests are not aligned with those of 40 million people; they’re aligned with very narrow interests of developers,” he said.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben
Los Angeles Times ?? CHARLES LESTER, a low- key but conservati­onminded attorney, has been executive director of the California Coastal Commission since 2011.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times CHARLES LESTER, a low- key but conservati­onminded attorney, has been executive director of the California Coastal Commission since 2011.

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