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#santa

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More than 50 years ago, a catastrophic oil spill along
#Santa #Barbara’s coastline
served to galvanize the modern environmental movement
and also helped to usher in one of the state’s strongest conservation laws:
the California Coastal Act.

Now, as the Trump administration seeks to encourage oil and gas production within federal lands and waters,
that watershed conservation law is being tested along the same stretch of coastline
— and in a way it never has before.

For months, a Texas-based oil company has rebuffed the authority of the California Coastal Commission
— the body tasked with enforcing the act
— and has instead pushed forward with controversial plans to revive oil production off the #Gaviota #Coast.

Ten years after another spill brought oil production here to a halt,
#Sable #Offshore #Corp. has begun repairing and upgrading the network of oil pipelines responsible for that 2015 spill,
🆘without Coastal Commission approval and ignoring the commission’s repeated demands to stop its work, officials say.

🔥“This is the first time in the agency’s history that we’ve had a party blatantly ignore a cease and desist order like this and refuse to submit a permit application,”
Cassidy Teufel, deputy director of the California Coastal Commission, told a packed town hall recently.

byteseu.com/897172/

Bytes Europe · A Texas oil firm is pushing revive drilling off Santa BarbaraMore than 50 years ago, a catastrophic oil spill along Santa Barbara’s coastline served to galvanize the modern environmental movement and also helped to usher in one of the state’s strongest conservation laws: the California Coastal Act. Now, as the Trump administration seeks to encourage oil and gas production within federal lands and waters, that watershed conservation law is being tested along the same stretch of coastline — and in a way it never has before. For months, a Texas-based oil company has rebuffed the authority of the California Coastal Commission — the body tasked with enforcing the act —

#EAS #WEA for Bernalillo, #NM; #Santa Fe, #NM; #Torrance, #NM: National Weather Service: DUST STORM WARNING for this area until 4:45 PM MDT. Be ready for sudden drop to zero visibility. Pull Aside, Stay Alive! When visibility drops, pull far off the road and put your vehicle in park. Turn the lights off and keep your foot off the brake. Infants, the elderly and those with respiratory issues urged to take precautions. Source: NWS Albuquerque NM #Bernalillo, #NM; #Santa Fe, #NM; #Torrance, #NMwx*

A new project is underway to restore #kelp #forests in the #Santa #Barbara #Channel -- by removing sea urchins and selling them to restaurants or turning them into agricultural products.

“It’s really been decades in the making,” said Kim Selkoe, executive director of Commercial Fishermen of Santa Barbara,
co-founder of Get Hooked Seafood, and research scientist at UCSB.

“It’s really been the commercial sea urchin diving community that has noticed so much kelp decline out of the Channel Islands.”

Selkoe said that there used to be a vibrant kelp forest on the backside of San Miguel Island,
but starting in the 1980s warmer waters from El Niño storms caused the kelp to die off.
Purple urchins then started taking over and feeding on the remaining kelp.

“We’ve gone from like this rich three-dimensional forest filled with fish and snails and invertebrates and other algae, down to this carpeted urchin where nothing can grow;
and as soon as the little spores land and start to try to grow again, they just mow them down,” Selkoe said.

However, when urchins are removed, kelp is able to grow back fairly easily, according to Selkoe
noozhawk.com/kelp-restoration-

Noozhawk · Kelp Restoration Project to Begin in Santa Barbara this SpringBy Rebecca Caraway, Noozhawk Staff Writer