GrokSurf's San Diego

Local observations on water, environment, technology, law & politics

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    GrokSurf's San Diego by George J. Janczyn is produced under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License. Anything on this blog copied and used elsewhere online must include attribution and a link to the original on this blog, or a citation with the URL if reprinted on hard copy.

     

     

Archive for February, 2010

Friday spot check: Carlsbad

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 12, 2010

Waves are ankle high here, it’s a Friday Calm (the freeways weren’t that calm, though). I saw a couple of surfers and some kayakers, but didn’t see waves being ridden. There were signs up that Carlsbad Blvd. southbound would be closed for the next couple of months, starting near Palomar Airport Road. The Poseidon desalination plant will be built somewhere to the left of the power plant in the top left-hand picture. As always, pics are clickable for enlargements.

Click here to see the entire Friday Spot Check series.

 

Posted in Friday spot check, Surfing, Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Morning view

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 11, 2010

Antenna cluster at Mount San Miguel keeps radios crackling for morning commuters

Posted in Miscellaneous | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Carlsbad desalination project survives revocation attempt

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 10, 2010

The California Coastal Commission voted 8-4 today against a motion to revoke the approval for the Carlsbad Desalination Plant.

At issue was whether the commission had earlier been misled about whether and how the project would be “carbon neutral.” The groups asking for revocation of the permit said that Poseidon Resources misled the commission into believing that Metropolitan Water District (MWD) would reduce its imports from the State Water Project (SWP) although later information revealed MWD would NOT reduce its imports (i.e., the key being that carbon emissions from the plant were to be offset by reduced carbon emissions from imported water).

What emerged during discussion is that the even though MWD would not reduce its SWP imports, it WOULD reduce water sent to San Diego. Since San Diego area reductions in water imports, not MWD reductions in SWP imports, were the basis of the commission’s understanding of carbon offsets for the plant, it became clear there wasn’t much more to discuss.

The majority view for the vote was, therefore, yes, Poseidon made misleading statements about MWD’s role, but that didn’t change the carbon offset picture for San Diego, and commissioners would not have voted differently at the beginning, knowing what they now know, although a few members did say that they might have wanted additional conditions.

This new lawsuit didn’t take long, though:

April 26, 2010: Surfrider Foundation files suit against San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board over Carlsbad Desalination Plant / Know Your H20

Reports:

[* = best reports]

Posted in Water | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

San Diego’s water use is up…and down

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 10, 2010

It depends on whether you’re looking at residential use or city operations and commercial & irrigation use.

The Voice of San Diego reported that City of San Diego use of water in January increased 20 to 22 percent compared to January 2009. Commercial use went up 5 percent and irrigation use went up 5 percent. Residential use, however, is down 1.5 percent.

 

Posted in Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Preserving Colorado River resources in the Grand Canyon

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 9, 2010

It turns out that a high-flow experiment conducted by USGS to flush extra water from Glen Canyon Dam down the Colorado River in order to restore riverbanks and sandbars turned out to be a wash. Sandbar development occurred but once normal flows of clean water returned, so did the erosion.

Here’s what I think. Bring in one of those ocean sand-dredging machines to Glen Canyon Dam. Instead of pumping sediment out and dumping it somewhere, simply stir it up and let it flow out with the water being released. Voila! A year-round supply of sediment to maintain riverbanks and sandbars.

 

Posted in Environment, Water | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Money to help pay for a new stadium in San Diego?

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 9, 2010

Water Number: $4 a bottle. In the latest skirmish in the war on tap water, the sports arena that hosts the Cleveland Cavaliers basketball team — with the lovely name of the Quicken Loans Arena concession — has removed its drinking water fountains. The only way for thirsty fans to get water now is to wait in line at the concessions counter for a free small cup or pay $4 for bottled water or try to drink water from the bathroom faucets.

Click to read the whole article at Peter Gleick’s City Brights

 

Posted in Satire, Water | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Councilmember Marti Emerald takes credit where not due

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 8, 2010

This updates the Jan. 23 report on storm damage to Lake Murray’s service road (http://wp.me/pySCN-17V)

The temporary repair is in place.

City Councilmember Marti Emerald wasted no time using this event for political advantage. On Feb. 3, she issued a press release headlined “Councilmember Marti Emerald Gets Fix For Lake Murray Sinkhole” (http://www.sandiego.gov/citycouncil/cd7/pdf/100203lakemurraysinkhole.pdf).

Quite disingenuous, because the Water Department had already begun temporary repairs and planning for the permanent repair and provided Ms. Emerald’s office with information about it when she made her request. The press release also calls it a pedestrian path, but it is actually a service road belonging to the Water Department which the public is presently permitted to use.

She got the information, not the fix

Posted in Environment, Water | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »

Voice of San Diego fills gaps in local news…

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 8, 2010

…and so does the OB Rag.

If you’re not a big fan of online news media, you probably haven’t heard that our own Voice of San Diego just turned five years old. In an age where we read about the dinosaurs of the old media dying daily, our home town of San Diego hosts one of the bright shining lights of what many consider the future of news reportage.

What the Voice has successfully achieved over its first five years is a reputation for doggedly digging the public record for actual facts combined with skillfully executed interviews that give its reporting a sense of depth and credibility not often found in today’s world of repackaged links, sound bites and (not-so) hidden agendas…

Click to read the entire article at the OB Rag

Posted in Newspapers | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

SDSU’s expansion project in Del Cerro’s Adobe Falls a step closer to reality

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 4, 2010

Judge issues ruling on case challenging SDSU’s Master Plan EIR

Last July I wrote an article in which I explored Alvarado Creek and its path from La Mesa to Adobe Falls in Del Cerro and on to the San Diego River. Adobe Falls was ultimately to become its own story, though, as I learned more about SDSU’s Master Plan project to build residential housing for faculty and staff in the Adobe Falls area and the ongoing legal challenges that ensued. The story was entitled Alvarado Creek and the future of Adobe Falls.

When I wrote that story there were still unresolved legal challenges to SDSU’s project, specifically the Environmental Impact Report (EIR), and I encountered ongoing obstacles in following the legal developments. Indeed, after writing the story, I wasn’t able to access the casefile any more. That process is documented in my Adobe Falls updates post.

Both of those posts contain detailed background information including links for the EIR, the Master Plan, and more.

Today, I finally made some progress. Although the clerk in the public records office again informed me that the casefile was not available, after I pleaded how long I’ve been trying to get my hands on it she contacted the department and they (reluctantly) agreed to allow me limited access to it, but only in the clerk’s presence.

I had already seen the older casefile documents, but regarding new developments, I was only allowed to see one item — a Proposed Statement of Decision that Judge Thomas P. Nugent issued. I could choose to have the clerk stand over me while I read it or she could make a copy for me. I took the copy!

My informal reading of the major challenges is: 1) the EIR fails to identify, mitigate, and consider alternatives to local & regional traffic impacts; 2) the EIR fails to provide correct or adequate fair share calculations; 3) the EIR fails to adequately identify impacts to or mitigation measures to reduce impacts to area population and housing stock; 4) the EIR fails to provide analysis or description of proposed open space and/or recreational facilities; 5) the EIR fails to adequately identify or mitigate for impacts to Adobe Falls Creek and surrounding riparian wetlands, or to native plant habitat, open space, or visual character.

The judge’s Proposed Statement of Decision was filed on Jan 13, 2010 and essentially dismisses all challenges to SDSU’s 2007 EIR.

One issue that particularly interested me was water (!). The Petitioners argued that SDSU’s EIR did not adequately examine the development’s impacts on the city’s (limited) water supply. The judge ruled, however, that the EIR had specifically addressed both water supply impacts and water delivery infrastructure impacts and that they were adequately addressed and supported by substantial evidence.

In his Conclusion, the judge says “This Proposed Statement of Decision shall become final within fifteen days unless either party files objections thereto pursuant to California Rules of Court, §3.1590(f). Any objections shall be limited to alleged errors of fact or law. Attempts to reargue the case will not be considered.”

I was not permitted to see additional new documents that apparently represent objections to the decision statement. I was told the department is probably going to put together a new volume for the case (it already has 6 volumes); that probably means more paperwork is expected while the new objections are heard. Since the objections can only pertain to errors of fact or law in the decision, though, it seems pretty clear to me that at this point, there’s not much more standing in the way of the project, other than SDSU and CSU finding money to pay for it.

For the long term, I intend to continue following the project after the legal issues are resolved. I’ll keep all further updates in the Ongoing Topics page on the menu bar at the top of this blog.

Added Feb 5: PDF copy of the Proposed Statement of Decision (will open in new tab)

[updated Feb 5 to emphasize the likelihood that there are objections or challenges to the decision]

[Feb 8 - It's curious that the local mainstream news media hasn't written a word about the judge's ruling. I wouldn't think it's because it is a proposed statement of decision, because the media had plenty to say when a proposed decision was announced regarding the QSA water transfer business! I don't care if they mention my blog post or not, but isn't this a topic of broad importance?]

Revised SDSU Master Plan

Posted in Environment, Land use, Water | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Football first, water last

Posted by George J. Janczyn on February 4, 2010

In his State of the City speech on January 13, Mayor Jerry Sanders devoted 434 words to the possibility of taxpayers shelling out hundreds of millions of dollars for a subsidized Chargers stadium and 174 words to the idea of those taxpayers paying for an expansion of the convention center. But Sanders devoted only 114 words to the subject of water — far and away the most critical short-term and long-term problem facing San Diego. He devoted zero words to water conservation.

Click to continue reading this article in the San Diego Reader

Posted in Politics, Water | Leave a Comment »

 
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