K. Lloyd Billingsley • Friday September 25, 2020 • 1 Comment
“California American Water withdrew its application to the California Coastal Commission for a permit to construct a desalination plant in the Monterey Bay,” reported Josh Copitch of KSBW, so the Commission canceled its September 17 meeting. Opponents of the desalination plant hailed the Commission’s new policy on “environmental justice” for nixing the project.
Marina city planning commission member Kathy Biala told KSBW “disadvantaged communities, communities of color in specific, are often victimized by larger organizations that often build environmentally damaging projects in those areas.” Marina mayor Bruce Delgado said his city would have received no water from the project but been saddled by “all the adverse impacts.” Delgado claimed 66 percent of his constituents are “non-white,” and “it doesn’t get any more textbook perfect of an example to exemplify what systemic racism looks like.” To say the least, that charge is highly dubious, unlike the water needs on the Monterey Peninsula............
The real back story here is the
California Coastal Commission, an unelected body that overrides scores
of elected governments on land-use issues. For decades, the Commission
has run roughshod over property rights and its regulatory zealotry now
blocks improvement of the water supply. Monterey Peninsula residents
have a case that the Coastal Commission, not a desalination plant, is
the true injustice inherent in the system..................To Read More....
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