Malibu’s Epic Battle of Surfers Vs. Environmentalists
Local politics take a dramatic turn in southern California over a plan to clean up an iconic American playground
- By Claire Martin
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Then, one day this past February, Glas drove up the coast to Oxnard and purchased a handgun.
***
Malibu Creek originates on the flanks of 3,111-foot Sandstone Peak, the highest point in a range of mountains that sequesters Malibu from the rest of Los Angeles. The creek descends through rolling foothills into what was once a sprawling wetlands with a large estuary and lagoon. In prehistoric times, the Chumash Indians built a village near the creek mouth, where shallow waters teemed with steelhead trout. “Malibu” is a mispronunciation of the Chumash word Humaliwo, “where the surf sounds loudly.” Like other coastal wetlands, the Malibu Creek and Lagoon managed floodwaters and served as a giant natural recycling system, channeling rainwater and decomposing organic materials. Jackknife clams, tidewater goby fish, egrets and thousands of other species thrived.
By the time modern development kicked into high gear during the westward expansion of the early 1900s, the ecosystem was gravely misunderstood. “They didn’t know what the wetland function is,” Suzanne Goode, a senior environmental scientist with California’s Department of Parks and Recreation, told me one afternoon last summer as we stood on the edge of Malibu Lagoon. “They saw it as a swamp that’s full of bugs and maybe doesn’t smell good, and you can’t develop it because it’s all wet and mucky.”
When workers in the late 1920s carved the Pacific Coast Highway through the wetlands, tons of dirt sloughed into the western channels of Malibu Lagoon. Soon after, a barrier beach buffering the lagoon was sold off to Hollywood celebrities such as Gloria Swanson and Frank Capra, who plunked shacks into the sand to create a neighborhood known as the Malibu Movie Colony. This development was one of the first to choke the path of the creek and gobble up wildlife habitat.
At the same time, municipalities throughout Southern California began tapping the Colorado River and the San Joaquin Delta system, allowing the booming population to grow lawns and flush toilets. Much of this extra, imported water made its way to the ocean. Throughout the 1970s and ’80s, a wastewater treatment plant upstream from Malibu Lagoon released up to ten million gallons of lightly treated San Fernando Valley sewage daily. As of the 1989 North American Wetlands Conservation Act, which aimed to provide funding to manage wetland habitats for migratory birds, 91 percent of the wetlands in California—and half of those in the United States—had been obliterated.
The lagoon cleanup plan was designed to enable the wetlands to purge itself naturally. To that end, the westernmost channels would be drained of contaminated water, and bulldozers would dredge the excess sediment from that area. The machines would then remove invasive species and regrade a portion of the lagoon to allow water to circulate more easily. Eventually the native plants and animals that had been temporarily relocated would be returned.
In the Malibu Lagoon controversy, which had hijacked local politics by 2011, the dissenters were maybe 150 to 200 people—a small percentage of the city’s nearly 13,000 residents—but they were vocal. At one city council meeting, a surfer and real estate agent named Andy Lyon, who grew up in Malibu Colony, launched into an explosive tirade about the threat to the surf break. He shouted into the microphone as council members struggled to regain decorum; they eventually summoned the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. “I don’t care! I’m going to surf!” Lyon yelled as he left City Hall. From then on, a sheriff’s deputy was assigned to the meetings. “It definitely got people’s attention,” Lyon later told me of his public speaking style. In last spring’s city council election, four candidates campaigned on an anti-cleanup platform; of those, a 28-year-old named Skylar Peak, who had vowed to chain himself to the bulldozers alongside his surfing buddy Lyon, was elected.
The city council, as some restoration opponents saw it, was failing to protect Malibu’s greatest asset: Surfrider break. Malibu surfers were a notoriously territorial bunch with a long history of bullying and even threatening violence against outsiders who dared to poach their waves. To them, jeopardizing the surf was the ultimate betrayal. “[The break] is like a historical monument. It should be protected above everything. Above the lagoon itself,” Lyon told me. “They talk about the Chumash Indians and all that other crap. The historical cultural value of Malibu as a surf spot should have been protected and they did zero.”
The exchanges on the Malibu Patch site devolved into vicious sparring matches. One opponent wrote: “Stephanie [sic] Glas wants to kill animals, birds, fish, nests, plant life, in order to help the fish and ‘water flow.’” She fired back by posting detailed scientific information about the project—and then calling her adversary a liar. Despite their original intention of maintaining a civil discourse, Woods and Glas were eventually barred from commenting on Patch.
So Glas created TheRealMalibu411, where she posted the official lagoon restoration plan, the environmental impact report, photographs and court documents. Glas got more heat. One night, she and Woods were at a local restaurant when a woman screamed at them, “ ‘F— you, animal killers! Get the f— out of Malibu! Nobody wants you here!” They weren’t the only targets. In early June, a California parks department worker was approached by a pair of surfers who asked whether he was involved in the lagoon restoration. “If you are, you will be wearing a toe tag,” the surfers warned. Soon after, Suzanne Goode, one of the project managers, received a voice mail: “You’re horrible, you’re a criminal, you should be ashamed of yourself. And we’re not through with you.” The opposition went on to nickname Goode “The Wicked Witch of the Wetlands.”
Glas “feared for her safety,” according to Cece Stein, Glas’ friend and co-founder of TheRealMalibu411. To be sure, Glas was also exhausted by the round-the-clock nature of her firefighting job and the grisly traffic accidents and crime—drug deals, overdoses, gang violence—it forced her to encounter. In 2008, she was a first responder at a deadly train crash in Chatsworth; she had to look for survivors among the bodies destroyed in the blaze. Glas developed a hard edge that may have undermined her in the Malibu Lagoon debate. But there was more to her than that. The opposition, Woods said, “didn’t know she was this delicate little flower inside.”
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Comments (9)
Good article. It's amazing how ignorant people can be. "I see birds, therefore dozens of scientists and tons of data are wrong". And the side that ignores facts and works on mob energy, intimidation, and profanity is almost always wrong. The opposition group should be financially responsible for the costs borne by the taxpayers. Being ignorant of science doesn't absolve them of the responsibility...
Posted by os1234 on November 25,2012 | 09:29 PM
Working on this project for 12 years, I have never encountered anyone named "Judith Israel." Maybe she exists. Maybe she doesn't. Throughout this project, we have been tormented by phoney people using phoney names spewing phoney information in behalf of phoney opponents. Every claim in Judith's comments have been thoroughly debunked by hundreds of environmental professionals and by several California State Judges.
Posted by matt horns on November 15,2012 | 05:51 AM
After months of anticpation, I finally got to read this entire article. I have been working on this project for 12 years. I have worked with Abramson and Suzanne Goode for more than a decade creating a new Malibu lagoon. Now that it it almost finished, Malibu Lgoon is much more beautiful than I imagined. I know (knew) Stepahanie Glas, Steve Woods, Glenn Henning, and Cece Stein very well. They are (were) some of the most awesome people I have ever known. Regardless of the complaints that I have heard, I find this piece remarkably accurate and well-balanced. My only complaint is that it puts lagoon restoration proponents and opponents on a somewhat equal level. Proponents have been proven right and are still prominent in the public eye. Opponents have been thoroghly discredited and are in hiding.
Posted by matt horns on November 15,2012 | 05:33 AM
The facts were most certainly checked on this article and the due diligence was done on the part of the reporter for the better part of the science and environmental aspects of this story. The public rants of the opponents ( including the one included by Ms. Israel ) were addressed which is why over 80 environmental and state agencies agreed the project should continue. As far as the sensationalisitic approach to Stephenie's suicide and unfair attention it received over the work that was done by State Parks, Santa Monica Bay Restoration Foundation and numerous scientists and workers on this project is another issue. While the added stress of being involved in a hotly contested issue, which was a personal choice, may have added to the ultimate outcome, Stephenie's suicide was largely due in part to extenuating medical and personal issues. She had the support of the people who loved her to get help but it was not enough. Exploring depression, post traumatic stress disorder and other psychological issues would be a better forum and tribute to Stephenie. Not The Malibu Lagoon Restoration Project.
Posted by Cece Stein on November 4,2012 | 03:55 PM
What a refreshing piece of good journalism, presenting the facts in an unbiased way. Very sobering, the human cost of political self-promotion based on complete fabrications. There is only one set of facts. The natural world does not operate on a belief system. In 2 or 3 years, the habitat at Malibu Lagoon will be richer and more diverse than ever, and the tidal dynamics more robust. The truth will be self-evident, and will support the coming restoration of the Ballona Wetlands. Click on or go to the link: Restoring Southern California's Wetlands - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nGYnpWs-uU
Posted by David Kay on November 2,2012 | 06:49 PM
Then the chilly winds blew down Across the desert through the canyons of the coast, to the Malibu Where the pretty people play, hungry for power to light their neon way and give them things to do Some rich men came and raped the land, Nobody caught 'em Put up a bunch of ugly boxes, and Jesus, people bought 'em And they called it paradise The place to be They watched the hazy sun, sinking in the sea -The Last Resort, Don Henley, Glenn Frey
Posted by Brenda Knox on October 29,2012 | 09:42 PM
There they go again! The comment/screed from Judith Israel is a perfect example of what the author described as the toxic online environment that the project unleashed. The author nailed it on the head and the commenter is just repeating the anti-restoration propaganda that simply isn't true. And the courts agreed...more than once. The restoration is nearly complete. Science and common sense prevail. One thing should be updated: Marcia Hanscom and Roy van de Hoek do NOT run non-profits. Their nonprofit status was yanked a year ago and they are registered as a business. No tax write-offs for donations to their organizations! Otherwise, the author paints them exactly as they are.
Posted by Harlow Thomas on October 29,2012 | 05:22 PM
Where a Coastkeeper when you need one?...Hmmm! Sounds like good intentions have hit a wall, which is becoming a backlash of most coastal groups picking away at money mechanisms to survive. Its becoming a "broken record" and a nasty battle of the "enviro-nit-pickers", Small watershed can get so complex once impaired, you need to look completely outside the box to fix them. For some reason it was easier to cause the stormwater problems then to ever fix them.
Posted by Randy on October 28,2012 | 01:30 PM
BOYCOTT The Smithsonian Magazine ! Have you investigated into whether the information that you printed are facts, cover stories or propaganda? Did you investigate into possible other reasons that this woman may have killed herself? Did you ask to see State Parks scientific evidence to justify this Restoration Project? Suzanne Goode doesn't have one shred of geological or archeological evidence proving there was ever 60 million gallons of permanent standing water or crustains inhabiting this area, as she constantly claims. When pressured for some evidence, all that she could come up with was ONE 1900's photo showing ONE slender finger that never has been proven to be water, or even if it is water, how do we know it wasn't from a 100 or 200 year event. This area is a registered Floodplain and we have fifty photos from the same time period showing no water,including a large photo hanging in our Library from 1903! There has only been water there when the artificial, manufactued water fingers were dug out in 1983. They were a huge mistake and did not function. Now State Parks are creating another artificial environment "pilot project" that they admit may or may not work. If it was a true restoration it should have been baised on the scientific geological history of that floodplain. The bacteria studies were outdated ( 1999-2000) and ten years old and the recent studies ( 2010) dispute and call them irelevent. Why didn't these envirmentalists, who were being paid to monitor, do updated studies of their own? Maybe because it would impeach their arguments for this project? Did you investigate the " due diligence " that State Parks didn't do on the dewatering plan where the oppostion forced them to revise it and make it safe for the public? If their circulation plan fails, when it pours, there will be tons of mud dumped into the ocean,since there's NO vegitarian to stabalize a mud flow, additionally, there will be mosquito infestation and a health threat.
Posted by Judith Israel on October 26,2012 | 09:30 PM