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HomeMy WebLinkAbout00 - Non-Agenda - HandoutWajerVtoi Good evening, Council. My name is Grant Bixby. I'm a resident since 1994, a local business owner, and member of the Business Alliance to Protect the Pacific Coast. BAPPC is a coalition of over 7,500 businesses on the west coast— many members in Newport Beach—who believe offshore oil & gas development is bad for business. I'm here as a businessperson to advocate for the City Council to support a resolution opposing offshore oil and gas drilling and exploration activities off our shores. Why now? The federal government has opened our coast to new offshore oil exploration and drilling leases. This means that we could see new oil rigs popping up off Corona del Mar, Crystal Cove, and the Balboa Peninsula. As a local real estate broker, I don't know a single client or Newport Beach resident who wants to see that happen. Imagine if this recent spill happened at the beginning of summer. Imagine if it were larger in scope—no Jr. Guards, no regattas, the harbor shut down for an extended period, beach tourism ground to a halt, and severe economic disruption. It's sad to say, but we got lucky this time. NOW is the time for action. Why the Newport Beach City Council? 1.) The Bureau of Ocean & Energy Management considers the sentiment of residents and local & regional officials when evaluating lease proposals. Absent formal opposition, these leases get APPROVED. You don't want that to happen on your watch. 2.) There is currently pending federal legislation to ban expanded offshore oil drilling in the SoCal Planning area, as well as an upcoming appropriations process that will allocate funds to protect Southern California. Such a resolution from you will help those efforts succeed. 3.) Lastly, because you've done it effectively before. In 1978 the Newport Beach City Council OPPOSED Lease Sale #48. This letter signed by former Mayor Paul Ryckoff states, "The City of Newport Beach is on record in strong opposition to any oil or gas exploration and development. The most immediate impact on our City is the possible destruction or degradation of the coastline by an oil spill occurring offshore either from a pipeline or a platform." I submit to the Clerk and Council for the record a DRAFT resolution along with a copy of the City of Newport Beach letter, and I ask that the Council place this resolution on the next meeting's agenda. This resolution costs us nothing, benefits all Newport Beach residents and visitors, and protects our businesses. Thank you for your time and consideration. A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH PROTECTING OUR OCEAN AND COAST FROM OFFSHORE OIL AND GAS DRILLING AND EXPLORATION ACTIVITIES THE NEWPORT BEACH CITY COUNCIL RESOLVES AND FINDS AS FOLLOWS: WHEREAS, the City of Newport Beach and its visitors enjoy California's beaches and the Pacific Ocean for recreational and commercial activities, all of which support our local economy; and WHERAS, our city's residents value our state's ocean and coastal waters, which provide habitat to a vast array of wildlife, including fish, whales, sea turtles, and birds that depend on a healthy and clean environment; and WHEREAS, in California hundreds of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars of the state's gross domestic product depend on clean water, oil -free beaches, and abundant fish and wildlife; and WHEREAS, offshore oil and gas drilling places coastal communities at economic and ecological risk from oil spills and the pollution brought by routine drilling operations, threatening the lives and livelihoods of small business owners, particularly commercial and recreational fisherman; and WHEREAS, a massive oil spill in 1969 off the coast of Santa Barbara fouled coastal waters and caused catastrophic economic and environmental damage; and WHEREAS, in 1990 over 400,000 gallons of oil were spilled in Huntington Beach waters from an oil tanker, closing beaches and causing ecological devastation and massive revenue losses for coastal area businesses; and WHEREAS, in May 2015, a pipeline ruptured near Refugio State Beach in Santa Barbara County and spilled oil into the Pacific Ocean, with oil reaching as far south as Orange County, damaging wildlife, closing beaches, and impacting recreational and commercial activities; and WHEREAS, a major spill off Newport Beach in October 2021 dumped over 100,000 gallons of oil into coastal waters, resulting in beach closures, impacting recreational and commercial activities, and causing significant environmental and economic damage; and WHEREAS, the Biden administration has resumed lease sales for offshore oil and gas drilling without protecting the Pacific coast from new and expanded offshore drilling; and WHEREAS, the state of California prohibits new oil and gas leasing in state waters due to the unacceptably high risk of damage and disruption to the marine environment; and WHEREAS, the Governor of California, the State Senate, the State lands Commission, and several cities, have taken a stand against new federal offshore oil and gas leases in the Pacific Ocean, and several municipalities have called for a ban on offshore drilling; and WHEREAS, expanding offshore drilling off the California coast will deepen the state's dependence on fossil fuels and undermine its efforts to address climate change by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and moving toward renewable energy; NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the City Council of the City of Newport Beach, California, that the City of Newport Beach supports (1) a permanent ban on new offshore oil and gas drilling, fracking, and other well stimulation in federal and state waters off the California coast, and (2) no new federal oil and gas leasing in all U.S. waters, including off the coast of California. The Clerk shall forward a copy of this Resolution to U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, California Governor Gavin Newsom, U.S. Senators Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla, as well as U.S. Congressional and state representatives for Newport Beach and any other interested parties. �2tiyC.�D�N`r - �--eTl-�Y�- br D�1(1DSIT fc�� I CITY OF NEWPORT,BEACH i, .;'-vWtber 9. 1979 Manager Pacific OCS Office lWrBau of Land VanAgerent 390 North Los lsnfaeles 5t., Bow++ 71?7 Los Angeles. California 9nf112 5x."B,JECT: Proposed Outer Continental Shelf Lease Sale 04$ )1) I have boon authorized by the Newport Beach City CoLmcil to respond to .your request for convents on the proposed Southern California OCS Lease Sale No. 48, The City of Newport- heath is on record in strofig opposition to any oil or pas eAwloration and developmarrt in the flirter Continental Shelf off the Southern California Coastline primarily becausie of the potential devastating effect on the coastal ®nrirowtot. I?) f)n July 26. 1976, the City of Newport Beach went on record as specifically opposing TICS Lease Sale #48, in a letter to the t7lrector of the Bureau of Land Management. The City continues to oppose OCS Lease sale 048. 131 '"Part Beath Is one of the Nost renowned regional recreational areas In Southern California. The a *aches. bays a" harbors are indeed a valuable Public resource which nu5t be protected. We dispute the wisdom of prix. gedinp with ()CS development when many serious environvental quitstions inherent in off- shore drilling remain unanswered. The roost imrodiate inpact an o1Jr City is the possible destruction or degradation of the coastline by an ail spill occurring offshore either frn- a pipeline or a platform. )4) We believe that the proposed Lease Sale ROCS 048) should be postponed until technoloaica1 advances have been developed which wfli preclude the destruction of our cost valuable publ.0 (*Creational resource, ile sugoest that tore are rany energy sources which are economically and environmentally preferable, alternativts to M development, Very truly yours, Q f �.cl�_ ilaul Rytktr t f cc, Members of City Council iiayo r City Mtanagrr City Clerk PR'Idt City Attorney Orange County. 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N v T Q° -0 •o m 3 o Q Q N ° < M xQ= N p U n 3 3" a n m 0%,° s a 9:03 3 m O 7 m m I IA Q r�'o �^ or 'O N O N eDQ c � O � j rt 0 o Q m ° m m N Q O Q Naj j d n c S x 0 .� Q .�'i w a. m w n N m m 3 x m O rt m n c 3 � ;. m s rD 0 �. M O ry d n M N rn) fD `G S o m- o a m ID o a Oa 0 CL � :3•O Q i Q m lai o 0 B 4 o BAPPC AGRINN Our Business Community on Offshore Oil Drilling... "The surfing industry" along with other U.S. industries and wildlife that would be negatively impacted by expanded offshore drilling, need reassurances that we won't be dealing with oil spills in the future. The only way to guarantee that is to scrap the federal offshore drilling program. "" --Paul Naude, Vissla Founder and President of the Surf Industry Manufacturers Association, which represents more than 300 surf industry suppliers My clients who own and operate vacation rentals and depend on that income for their livelihoods have received bulk cancellations immediately following the oil spill and going out for months. And property owners throughout coastal Orange County now have their main source of recreation completely shut down. Its devastating to their pocketbooks, their property values, and their physical and emotional health. " --Grant Bixby, Principal Broker, Bixby Residential Group @ COMPASS Yve seen a dramatic cut to my surfboard rentals since the oil spill and that will continue for weeks, maybe months. And its not just the ocean -related businesses herein Newport that are suffering but all tourism -related businesses as well. " --Peter Belden, Owner, The Board Club "lt s going to be devastating. We "re going to have to brace ourselves for a really nasty couple of weeks here. " --Ryan Lawler, Owner, Newport Coastal Adventures "The pattern over the past 52 years is clear - oil spills have been taking place in San Francisco, Santa Barbara and Huntington Beach - validating that where we drill, we spill. The recent spill is another unfortunate wake up call that we need to move towards clean energy to avoid ecological and economic disasters like what is happening along Orange County's vibrant coastal region. " --Vipe Desai, Founder, BAPPC, which represents over 7,500 business members "Not only are we shutting down today, but our beautiful beach we "re so passionate about has been damaged. More importantly, the beautiful dolphins and marine life out there are swimming in oil. It "s so disturbing. " --Alicia Whitney, Restauranteur, Huntington Beach 4i BAPPC Good for the Economy. Good for the Environment. ORANGE COUNTY'S OCEAN ECONOMY Offshore oil drilling is economic risk: the tui spill will have a major impact on Orange County's ocean economy and the tens of thousands of local jobs that What' s at risk: iD 4.1 Billion and 57,348 Jobs Documented value of Orange County, s ocean economy, g y o y, including tourism, recreation, construction and fishing industries (not including oil and gas), along with the number of employees in those sectors 2.7 Billion and 47,421 Jobs is Value of Orange County, s ocean tourism and recreation economy, along with the number of employees in those sectors California' s coastal economy generates $54.3 billion in economic activity and supports 654,000 jobs. As we, re witnessing with the spill off of Orange County, offshore oil drilling puts that prosperity at risk, directly impacting the future of hotels, restaurants, tour operators, commercial fishing operations and the livelihoods of Californians statewide. www.e2.org Created October 2021 Sources: Ocean Economy Data: National Ocean Economics Program; http://www.oceaneconomtcs.org/Market/ocean/oceanEcon.asp - data from 2018; California Ocean Economy Data: Oceania; Oceana.org/jobsandDollars Huntington Beach Economic Impact Data: The Economic Impact of Tourism in Huntinaton Beach A (September 01 ); Photo credits: Damon Nagani. I� Good for the Economy. Good for the Environment. "It's a huge environmental impact and it's an economic impact both in terms of the cleanup and shutting down a major tourist destination during a pandemic when we've all been struggling. It's a tragedy on all fronts." -Orange County Supervisor Katrina Foley (Los Angeles Times, Oct. 2, 2021) "Not only are we shutting down today, but our beautiful beach we're so passionate about has been damaged. More importantly, the beautiful dolphins and marine life out there swimming in oil. It's so disturbing " -Alicia Whitney, restaurateur, Huntington State Beach (Orange County Register, Oct. 3, 2021) "It's going to be devastating. We're going to have to brace ourselves for a really nasty couple of weeks here. l don't know how they are going to clean it up." -Ryan Lawler, owner, Newport Coastal Adventure (The (San Bernardino) Sun, Oct. 4, 2021) HUNTINGTON BEACH SNAPSHOT: What' s at risk e 2,500 hotel rooms; 23 properties • $565 million in direct spending by visitors • $736 million in direct/indirect spending by visitors • $91 million in tax revenues from tourism • 6,900 jobs related to tourism (I out of every 16 jobs in Huntington Beach.) DUE TO 01L SP►ll YHE WATER IS CLOSED THANK YOU Sources: Ocean Economy Data: National Ocean Economics Program; http://www.oceaneconomics.org/Market/ocean/oceanEcon.asp - data from 2018; California Ocean Economy Data: Oceana; Oceana.org/jobsandDollars Huntington Beach Economic Impact Data: The Economic Impact of Tourism in H ntino on Beach A (September 2019); Photo credits: Damon Nagani.