County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer Holds First Community Meeting on Trump’s Plan to Expand California’s Offshore Drilling

San Diego County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer held a community meeting in Encinitas Thursday, Dec. 4, to urge the public to take a stand against the Trump administration’s plans to expand Califonia’s offshore drilling. She was joined by Solana Beach Mayor Lesa Heebner. The meeting had been organized by the environmental groups California Coastal Protection Network, Oceana, Surfrider Foundation and Wildcoast.

The Thursday gathering followed the Nov. 20 announcement by the Trump administration that it will reopen ocean waters off the Pacific Coast to oil drilling leases, generating rapid opposition from California officials and environmentalists.

Lawson-Remer said she and others are united in defending the San Diego region, and told President Donald Trump and oil executives to “go pound sand.”

“We are not going to go backwards,” no matter how much Trump calls clean energy “a con job,” Lawson-Remer said during the meeting.

The announcement by the U.S. Department of the Interior called it an effort to address the nation’s “growing energy needs” and “boost United States energy independence and sustain domestic oil and gas production.” The directive calls for the potential lease of 34 offshore drilling sites between 2026 and 2031 — 21 off the coast of Alaska, seven in the Gulf of Mexico and six along the Pacific Coast. The public has until Jan. 23, to comment on the proposed drilling projects.

Earlier, Lawson-Remer had said:

“It would be a disaster for public health. It would threaten our local environment, our clean beaches, our clean coastlines.”

Lawson-Remer’s district covers much of San Diego County’s coastline. She still remembers seeing images of animals being covered in oil from the 2015 Santa Barbara oil spill. Thousands of gallons of crude oil spilled into the Pacific Ocean when a pipeline ruptured.

The Rag agrees with the urgency reflected in Lawson-Remer’s stance. This reporter called her office to inquire whether she planned more community meetings, such as holding them in the coastal neighborhoods of San Diego like Ocean Beach. The staff member who took the call thought it was a good idea and was going to consult with other staff members, but could not say definitely that more meetings would be organized.

If you, dear reader, also agree, contact Lawson-Remer’s office and urge her to hold more community meetings. (Here’s her contact info: 619-531-5533; Terra.Lawson-Remer@sdcounty.ca.gov)

Meanwhile, Gov. Gavin Newsom called the proposal “idiotic” and said it “endangers our coastal economy and communities and hurts the well-being of Californians.”

During Thursday’s gathering at the Encinitas Community Center, Lawson- Remer mentioned how the January 1969 spill off the coast of Santa Barbara resulted in millions of gallons of oil leaking into the Pacific Ocean.

“But we were not defeated — we built a movement out of that disaster,” Lawson-Remer said, adding that wind and solar energy production costs have dropped, meaning a more affordable and cleaner future.

“I’m very heartened when I look around this room tonight, because I know that (if) Donald Trump wants to auction off our coastline — he has got to go  through all of you,” Lawson-Remer said.

Heebner said she knows first-hand how interconnected the region is, and that it’s important to look out for the entirety of California.

“I was a child when the Santa Barbara spill occurred, and it was devastating,” said Heebner, who described the state’s ecosystem is one of the world’s richest. “Why are we looking to expand oil and gas drilling anyway?” she asked.  “Our coast is not for sale.” “Hearing your voices makes all the difference in the world, and to the world,” Heebner told the more than 100 attendees.

Pete Strauffer, Surfrider‘s ocean protection manager, said the federal government has over 2,000 permits it’s not using, making offshore drilling unnecessary.

He noted that drilling involves seismic operations which are louder than a jet engine and damaging to marine life, such as humpback whales.

“But they cannot submit comments to the federal government,” so humans must be their voice, Stauffer said.

Stauffer said there’s a lot of misinformation about drilling, including the argument that it will lower gas prices, but those are set by global markets.

He added the United States has been energy-independent for the last five years.

“We’re at a point where we desperately need to transition away from oil and gas,” Stauffer said.

Stauffer added that increased offshore drilling will mean more refineries on land, usually in lower-income communities, which can in turn increase asthma and cancer rates.

Also on Thursday, U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, D-California, Rep. Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, and 26 other California congressional Democrats formally condemned the Trump administration’s actions.

“The plan proposes opening vast swaths of previously protected federal waters — including the California coast — to new oil and gas drilling for the first time in over 40 years, disregarding bipartisan opposition,” according to a statement from Padilla and Huffman.

“We stand united with the overwhelming majority of Californians who fundamentally oppose any proposal that would expand offshore drilling and risk our state’s invaluable, ecologically unique coast,” the lawmakers said.

“This proposal, coupled with ongoing efforts to reduce federal staffing and funding for agencies that protect our environment, including for safety and oil spill response, is not only dangerous but outright reckless.”

In a letter sent to Trump and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, the House and Senate members wrote that California’s marine economy accounted for $51.3 billion in gross domestic product and $26.7 billion in wages in 2021.

The letter included signatures of Padilla’s U.S. Senate colleague Adam Schiff, D-California, and three San Diego-area House members, Reps. Mike Levin, D-San Clemente, Scott Peters, D-San Diego, and Juan Vargas, D-San Diego.

“Further industrialization off our coast will inevitably pollute our beaches, spelling disaster for California’s economy and detrimentally impacting the rest of the country, which relies on California as an economic engine,” according to the letter.

News source: Times of San Diego

Author: Staff

4 thoughts on “County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer Holds First Community Meeting on Trump’s Plan to Expand California’s Offshore Drilling

    1. I think she can do several things at a time. I’m glad someone like her is speaking up against the oil drilling. What about you, CS, you support more oil drilling off our coast?

      1. I support her time would be better spent on issues closer to her control. Plenty of state people that can work on offshore drilling. Community meeting kumbayas are lip service.

  1. The easy way to stop oil drilling off the California coast is to apply for National Marine Sanctuary (NMS) status for San Diego through NOAA.

    http://tinyurl.com/20110920a

    All that is needed is leadership and for a local Congress person to apply to NOAA. With buy in and approval by both the City and County of San Diego.

    https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/about/maps.html

    Then the scientific evidence needs to be packaged into a report. The State of California has already collected the needed scientific evidence for the City of San Diego when they created the State Marine Protective Areas (MPAs).

    Federal NMS were specifically used in Central and Northern California from Bodega Bay to Cambria, and the Florida Keys to stop oil drilling off the coast.

    One of the last thing President Obama did is create 2 National Marine Sanctuaries to protect his native Hawaii from exploitation.

    https://hawaiihumpbackwhale.noaa.gov/

    I spoke to NOAA at a California Coastal Commission meeting and they were interested, but I could not get any elected official to understand the easy solution. NMS also comes with free international advertising for tourist and a volunteer docent program with free Federal liability.

    https://www.google.com/search?q=national+marine+sanctuary+oil+drilling&sca_esv=1815a7f33e9f1d97&rlz=1C5CHFA_enUS1185US1185&sxsrf=AE3TifM3CS8fyrBhmMVdsZnfMwTLJEQapg%3A1765171520130&ei=QGE2abLZB_eMur8PieGh8Qo&ved=0ahUKEwiy-bKroK2RAxV3hu4BHYlwKK4Q4dUDCBE&uact=5&oq=national+marine+sanctuary+oil+drilling&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiJm5hdGlvbmFsIG1hcmluZSBzYW5jdHVhcnkgb2lsIGRyaWxsaW5nSABQAFgAcAB4AZABAJgBAKABAKoBALgBA8gBAJgCAKACAJgDAOIDBRIBMSBAkgcAoAcAsgcAuAcAwgcAyAcAgAgA&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

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