MLPA Task Force Recommendations for
North Central Coast . . .
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE:
CONTACT: Melissa
Miller-Henson Steve
Martarano
April 23, 2008
530.400.2545
916.804.1714
MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force Again
Sets Milestone and Makes Recommendations for
Improving California’s System of
Marine Protected Areas
Four proposals for marine protected
areas from Alder Creek (Mendocino County) to
Pigeon Point (San Mateo County) will
be delivered to the California Fish and Game
Commission
San Rafael – The Marine Life
Protection Act Blue Ribbon Task Force set another milestone on Wednesday by
recommending marine protected areas for California’s north central coast. The
recommendation includes a preferred alternative and three other proposals that
will help the State of California improve the design and management of its
marine protected areas (MPAs). This recommendation will be presented to the
California Fish and Game Commission, the decision-making body under the
MLPA.
“Our effort has extended for 15
months, with over 50 days of formal meetings and public workshops, to develop
and adopt recommended alternative MPA proposals for the north central coast,”
said Susan Golding, chair of the task force. “We are confident that the work of
all the stakeholders and the task force has created an excellent preferred
alternative that will increase ocean protection.”
The MPA proposals are based on the
efforts of a group of 45 stakeholders and their alternates that worked with MLPA
Initiative staff in an intensive stakeholder process. Marine constituencies
represented in the stakeholder group included recreational angling and diving,
commercial fishing, ports and harbors, conservation, business, and other
government agencies with marine protected area
responsibilities.
After 12 months of formal meetings,
innumerable informal meetings, and input and review from a science advisory
team, the stakeholder group developed three MPA proposals for the north central
coast, identified as proposals 1-3, 2-XA and 4. The task force determined that
all three proposals were well-designed and worthy of
consideration.
Ultimately the task force voted to
blend elements of all three proposals in developing its preferred alternative,
which consists of nine state marine conservation areas (8.4% of the study
region), two state marine parks (0.5%), eleven state marine reserves (11.6%),
and two state marine recreational management areas (0.2%).
Summary
of North Central Coast MPA Proposals (April 23, 2008)
|
|
Number
of MPAs and SMRMAs1 |
Total
Area of MPAs (mi2)2 |
Percentage
of Study Region3 |
|
Preferred
alternative |
24 |
155.9
mi2 |
20.4% |
|
Proposal
1-3 |
23 |
164.6
mi2 |
21.6% |
|
Proposal
2-XA |
21 |
137.5
mi2 |
18.0% |
|
Proposal
4 |
28 |
204.9
mi2 |
26.0% |
|
Proposal
0 (existing MPAs) |
13 |
26.8
mi2 |
3.5% |
1 SMRMAs (state marine recreational
management areas) are not a marine protected area; SMRMAs are a marine managed
area.
2 The total area calculation includes
both state marine reserves and state marine recreational management
areas
3 The MLPA North Central Coast Study
Region encompasses 763 square miles
“These packages reflect a
significant and invaluable amount of work by many people, including our
stakeholders and the science team,” Executive Director Ken Wiseman stated. “Our
hope is that when the commission begins its deliberations about MPAs along the
north central coast, it will recognize the open and transparent process we
conducted with stakeholders and the commitment they made to developing these
proposals.”
The California Fish and Game
Commission will automatically consider existing MPAs as the “no project”
alternative during the state regulatory process. All
proposals provide some level of protection to living marine resources, with
different approaches and emphasis using reserves, parks and conservation areas.
The final decision
about which proposals to forward and selection of the preferred alternative was
reached after the task force received evaluations by the science advisory team
and staff, as well as extensive input from stakeholders and the
public.
In addition to MPAs, the task force
recommended seven special closures to offer additional protection to seabirds
and marine mammals from disturbance, which is not necessarily addressed by MPAs.
Special closures prohibit or limit human access within a specific distance of
high diversity and abundance areas for marine birds and
mammals.
The task force recommendations are
scheduled to be delivered to the commission in June. The commission will then
review and assess the proposals with advice from the science advisory team that
has been assisting the task force since June 2007.
In 1999 the state enacted the MLPA,
which directs state agencies to reexamine and redesign California’s system of
marine protected areas with the goal of increasing its coherence and
effectiveness at protecting the state’s marine life and habitats, marine
ecosystems, and marine natural heritage, as well as to improve recreational,
educational and study opportunities in marine ecosystems that are subject to
minimal human disturbance.
To achieve the goals of the MLPA,
the California Resources Agency and DFG partnered with the Resources Legacy Fund
Foundation to establish the MLPA Initiative; this public-private partnership is
designed to help the state implement the MLPA. Led by former San Diego Mayor
Susan Golding, the five-member MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force was formed by
Secretary for Resources Mike Chrisman to oversee the initiative
process.
Making
recommendations for MPAs along the north central coast, utilizing the best
readily available science and the advice of stakeholders, is one of a number of
steps being taken to comply with the MLPA, implementation of which is part of
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Ocean Action Plan.
A map of the MPAs in the task force’s
recommended preferred alternative will be
posted to the MLPA website. For more information about the
proposals being forwarded to the commission, please visit the MLPA website at
http://www.dfg.ca.gov/mlpa/.
##