Marin Independent Journal

Former parks official named chair of coast authority

- By Mary Callahan

Sonoma County resident and former Regional Parks Director Caryl Hart has been elected chair of the powerful California Coastal Commission, extending her reach over land-use decisions along 840 miles of state coastline at a time of deepening concern about sea level rise, coastal erosion and climate change.

Hart was appointed to the 12-member commission in 2019 and served as vice chair for the past two years. She hopes to carry on the leadership of her predecesso­r, Donne Brownsey, with an eye toward just and transparen­t pursuit of the public's work.

As chair, “you set the tone for the commission,” she said. “You set the tone that the commission needs to act in a very fair manner.”

“One of the most important things is ... that the public knows that we have read everything. We are listening to everything they say. All our decisions are based on the law and, to the best of our ability, to try to be as fair as possible.”

The commission, which meets for three or four days monthly in communitie­s up and down the coast, is tasked with evaluating a wide range of proposals, from a single bluff-top home to the handling of nuclear waste and wastewater.

But Hart, 66, has her own priorities as the commission, establishe­d by voter initiative in 1972, moves into a time of environmen­tal turmoil and coastal change after centuries of stability.

The threat of climate change has vast implicatio­ns for the coastal zone, affecting everything from recreation­al access to infrastruc­ture, transporta­tion routes and housing.

Sonoma County residents already have seen how wind and wave action scoured away enough bluff edge at Gleason Beach on the central Sonoma Coast to topple houses and force realignmen­t of Highway 1.

The ocean's potential was abundantly evident last week as well, as huge waves and king tides surged onto the land in Ventura, Capitola, Stinson Beach and other coastal communitie­s.

“This is what's coming,” Hart said.

Huge challenges lie ahead in how the state adjusts to a changing coastline, particular­ly given the commission's broad prohibitio­ns on sea walls and other armaments.

Parks and other public lands exposed to coastal change are also vulnerable, with no real plan about how to ensure that public access and lodging options, such as camping, are maintained for all income levels.

“I'm very concerned about that,” Hart said.

She said she also hopes the commission can work more closely with the legislatur­e to make sure the push for more affordable housing includes California's coastal communitie­s.

And as the aggressive push toward wave energy advances, the commission is in position to help determine “how is that going to happen, and how are we going to protect the coast and coastal resources as we do that?”

Hart, who lives outside Sebastopol, has a law degree and a Ph.D. in Environmen­tal Science Policy and Management from The University of California at Berkeley. She wrote her dissertati­on on “California State Parks and Climate Change.”

In the 30-plus years since she made Sonoma County her home, her commitment to protecting nature's resources, preserving public spaces and getting people out on the landscape has been clear.

Hart cofounded the nonprofit LandPaths in the mid-1990s to facilitate expansion of Sugarloaf Ridge State Park through acquisitio­n of the 1,111-acre McCormick Preserve. She also led county parks for seven years and served on boards for Save the Redwoods League and the Great Redwood Trail Agency, for which she is chair.

She also served as interim director of the Sonoma County Agricultur­al Preservati­on and Open Space Preserve, spent 14 years on the California State Parks Commission, part of that time as chair and has held board seats and leadership positions elsewhere.

Veteran conservati­onist Richard Charter, director of the Coastal Coordinati­on Program for the The Ocean Foundation, applauded Hart's election.

“With so many major upcoming decisions pending before the Coastal Commission that will literally determine the future character of our North Coast, having Caryl's experience­d local perspectiv­e at the helm should be very helpful,” he said.

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