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Heal the Bay Blog

After 20 years, the City of Los Angeles’ stormwater program is at a crossroads.

The program has come a long way since its beginnings in the early
nineties as a result of the Hyperion consent decree and new regulations
under the federal Clean Water Act and the first countywide stormwater
permit. The City has done a superb job on stormwater education for
students, businesses and the public. During the early 1990s, Heal the
Bay worked closely with the City on our Gutter Patrol program where
volunteers helped stencil tens of thousands of catch basins all over the
city. Today, the City runs the program and you can’t find a catch basin
in the city without a “No Dumping” stencil.

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Fish Justice

Usually, we hear about the need for Environmental Justice because of
the health tragedies that were allowed to get out of control. Asthma
rates near the ports. Cancer Alley along the lower Mississippi.
Pesticide-induced Cancer clusters near Macfarland and now, the cleft
palate cluster near Kettleman Hills’ Hazardous Waste Facility. Rarely
does the public hear about an Environmental Justice win, without the
associated, demonstrated environmental health tragedy.

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Last Thursday, the Regional Water Board voted to approve a Waste
Discharge Requirement (WDR) for the Los Angeles County Nature Control
District’s “channel maintenance” activity. After all, to the County,
our LA, Santa Clara and San Gabriel Rivers are flood control channels,
not living ecosystems and habitats.

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I just read something more depressing than James Inhofe on climate
change. The city of L.A.’s Chief Administrative Officer’s mid-year
budget update and recommendations is a real tearjerker. It offers a
$200M plus deficit and a plan to eliminate at least 1,000 general fund
employees. And there’s no serious economic help on the way. Not from the
state and not from the feds.

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Today’s guest blogger is Kirsten James, Water Quality Director at Heal the Bay.

Recently seven sperm whales breached off the coast of Italy and died soon thereafter. A report out of Tuscia University found that the guts
were filled with plastic debris and that this was the cause of death.
This is by no means an isolated incident. Our oceans are full of plastic
pollution.

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Apartments and homes in San Pedro flooded with two feet of water.
Cars on Long Beach streets nearly submerged as an urban kayaker paddles
by. Residents in La Crescenta living in perpetual fear of losing
everything due to debris flows as a consequence of the Station Fire. The
end result of this week’s L.A. storms will be millions of dollars in
property losses. 

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Jan. 15, 2010 is the day that the Los Angeles Board of Public Works
enlisted the help of the development and business communities and
homeowners to green L.A. and clean local rivers and beaches.

The cost of clean water is high and we all need to do our part to
reduce runoff pollution. The newly adopted Low Impact Development
ordinance is an equitable approach to reducing runoff and will help the
city keep down the cost of compliance with water quality standards.

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Bay Day

The Santa Monica Bay Restoration Commission hosted a daylong
conference yesterday on the overall state of the bay. The well-attended
event at LMU blended science and policy, focusing on such topics
as marine debris, climate change, invasive species, contaminated fish
risk communication, beach water quality and marine protected areas.

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Life Lessons

Gov. Schwarzenegger gave his State of the State speech yesterday. A
pretty depressing topic, to be sure. However, he did rightly focus on
the need to improve California’s education system. His most powerful
statement asked, “Why are we spending more on prisons than education?”
Why indeed.

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Yesterday,  I outlined  my top three green initiatives that
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa should tackle in the remainder
of his second term. Here’s a look at some other environmental issues
that he should make a priority:

Fast-track city approval of a Stream Protection Ordinance in 2010. The
Department of Public Works has spent three and a half years working on a
stream protection ordinance.  Based on Watershed Protection Division
analysis, there are approximately 462 miles of riparian habitat that
would receive some level of protection under the draft ordinance. 
Council districts 11 (Rosendahl), 2 (Krekorian), and 12 (Smith) all have
over 60 miles of habitat, while 11 out of 15 districts have at least 12
miles of habitat.  The ordinance would protect the city’s remaining
stream habitat by requiring development buffer zones of 100 feet for
soft-bottomed habitat and 30 feet for concrete-lined channels. We need
to start treating streams like habitat rather than flood control
channels. Unfortunately, the ordinance has been frozen in the mayor’s
office for over two years. If the mayor says he wants to protect L.A.’s
streams, the ordinance would likely sail through City Council. 
Unfortunately, the ordinance is not on the mayor’s radar.

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