Los Angeles Times

Coastal panel chief recuses himself

Chairman Steve Kinsey won’t vote on the Banning Ranch project after failing to report discussion­s.

- By Bettina Boxall

Under scrutiny for failing to report private meetings with developers, California Coastal Commission Chairman Steve Kinsey announced Wednesday that he will not vote on the proposed Newport Banning Ranch project.

“The law is very clear. Expartes must be filed within a seven-day period,” Kinsey said at the start of the commission’s monthly meeting. “So I have made the decision .... I will recuse myself.”

Slated to go before the commission this year, the Banning Ranch proposal to build nearly 900 homes and a hotel on an Orange County oil field is one of the largest coastal projects in years. The developers and their agents have repeatedly met with commission members to discuss the proposal — meetings that commission­ers are required to promptly report as so-called ex-parte communicat­ions.

The Times has reported that Kinsey failed to do that on two occasions last year. He didn’t disclose a November meeting with members of the Banning Ranch team and didn’t report a December tour of the project site until May, after The Times questioned him about the visit.

Under the Coastal Act, if commission­ers don’t promptly file ex-parte disclosure forms, they are not supposed to participat­e in any deliberati­ons or votes on the matter — and doing so

could invite legal challenges to the commission’s actions.

Kinsey noted that in explaining his decision to recuse himself. “There are real risks to this commission for those who don’t pay attention to that law,” he said.

The panel has been in the spotlight ever since it fired Executive Director Charles Lester in February, sparking a public outcry and claims by critics that commission­ers are pushing the agency to be more receptive to constructi­on projects.

In another developmen­t, Commission­er Martha McClure lost her bid Tuesday to retain her seat on the Del Norte County Board of Supervisor­s.

That means McClure, who was appointed by Gov. Jerry Brown and voted to fire Lester, will have to leave the commission early next year.

The Coastal Commission is one of only a few state boards, commission­s and agencies allowed by the Legislatur­e to have ex-partes, which are private verbal or written communicat­ions between a commission­er and an interested party that could influence a decision.

A Times review of exparte records found that most participan­ts are developmen­t interests and their agents, but the ranks include environmen­talists, government officials and members of the general public. The state Senate last month approved legislatio­n that would ban the communicat­ions. The commission voted 6 to 5 to support the bill, with Kinsey among those endorsing the measure.

In his remarks Wednesday, Kinsey specifical­ly referred to the Nov. 4 meeting that he and commission­er Dayna Bochco had with three Banning Ranch representa­tives. Bochco disclosed the session two days later but Kinsey did not.

“It was brought to the attention of myself and the public that in November I had neglected to file an exparte on the matter regarding Newport Banning Ranch .... Shame on me,” he said, adding that he was “disappoint­ed” in himself.

In December, Kinsey also spent several hours touring Banning Ranch with members of the developmen­t team. A few weeks later he emailed staff Deputy Director Sherilyn Sarb, disputing the staff ’s environmen­tal assessment­s of the site, which commission ecologists had concluded harbored a great deal of sensitive habitat that should be off limits to developmen­t.

But Kinsey didn’t file an ex-parte form detailing the tour until The Times questioned him about his email, which was obtained through the Public Records Act. He described the failure to promptly disclose the visit as an oversight during the busy holiday season.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? NEWPORT BEACH is seen from the site of the proposed Banning Ranch developmen­t, where nearly 900 homes and a hotel would be built on an oil field.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times NEWPORT BEACH is seen from the site of the proposed Banning Ranch developmen­t, where nearly 900 homes and a hotel would be built on an oil field.
 ?? Michael Owen Baker For The Times ?? COMMISSION head Steve Kinsey didn’t report exparte communicat­ions with project representa­tives.
Michael Owen Baker For The Times COMMISSION head Steve Kinsey didn’t report exparte communicat­ions with project representa­tives.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States