Case Studies
De Anza Cove
The tidelands around Mission bay were deeded to the City by the State Lands Commission in 1948 “for the use and enjoyment of all the citizens of California. By 1955 De Anza Cove had been dredged and filled to produce the artificial construction that they named De Anza Point, otherwise known as the boot. The original intent for De Anza Point was for it to be a vacation style resort and trailer park. It soon , however morphed into a gated residential community. The State Lands Commission stepped in, in 1960, ruling that this was an illegal use. Laws passed in the interim had made it harder to close residential trailer parks. The result was State legislation, known as the Kapiloff bill, which allowed residents to stay until the original 50 year lease ran out. Ten years later the lawsuits are still being litigated, but most of the residents are gone. We believe that the complete removal of the boot is essential to restoring tidal flows and to improve water quality in the whole North East corner of Mission Bay.
Mission Bay Golf Course
This parcel was included in the City’s “special study area” but is on Pueblo Lands which are fully owned by the City. The golf course was opened in 1955 as a nine hole course. When it was rebuilt as an eighteen hole course in the early sixties, the fences went up. While these fences are said to be for the safety of the public, they also isolate the surrounding community from it’s own bay front and park. Some of these fences are twenty feet high and combined with golf course landscaping, not only access is blocked, but even the view of the bay is blocked off from the surrounding community. We believe that Golf is not coastal dependent and the course could be moved anywhere to improve ingress and egress to the Park, improve the view, and to make room for sea level rise.
Rose Creek
Rose Creek is the largest source of fresh water to Mission Bay. Rose Creek and it’s tributaries drain San Clemente Canyon and Rose Canyon all the way to Miramar and including the Miramar Land Fill. It is the only year round fresh water source to Mission Bay. The land surrounding the Creek is a mix of commercial, dedicated park land and City owned land. We are working with the State Lands Commission and the Friends of Rose creek to determine the status of these City owned lands and to settle issues of jurisdiction and responsibility.We believe that the complete removal of the artificial construction known as “the boot”, is integral to plans to restore the mouth of Rose Creek and to build a wetland habitat to filter the water coming from The Creek.
Campland
In the nineteen fifties, this area was the site of a sewage treatment plant, which was moved to Fiesta Island and then to Miramar. The land was leased in 1967, to Campland, who hauled in thousands of yards of construction waste and filled in the Bayfront to build a private resort, complete with private marina and beach. This operation is still in business today. In the last update of the Mission Bay Master Plan this area was dedicated to the expansion of the only remaining salt marsh in Mission Bay, the Kendall Frost reserve and the Northern Wildlife Reserve, which are directly adjacent. Plans for the restoration have not yet been provided by the City But they do plan to put Campland next to De Anza Cove.
We believe that any RV facility should be placed at the South Shores where there is direct access to two freeways, right next to Sea World. We also believe any concession on public property should be subject to competitive bidding and open to public review.
Kendall Frost Reserve and the Northern Wildlife Reserve
The Kendall Frost Reserve is 21 acres and together with the northern Wildlife reserve protect 40 acres of the only emergent wetlands (mud flats and marsh) left in Mission Bay. When the adjacent land now occupied by Campland is restored to marsh and upland habitats, as designated in the Mission Bay Park Master Plan Update of 1994, this will be less than 3% of the original marshlands in Mission Bay. The Mission Bay Park Master Plan Update clearly designates the North East corner of the Bay as the focus of efforts to restore marsh lands to improve water Quality and create open space for passive enjoyment. We believe that more habitat needs to be restored and De Anza Cove is the only place to do it. The whole area needs to work together as a natural system if it is to provide bioremediation and filtration of pollutants reaching the bay.
In review:
- We believe the Golf Course and RV facility are not coastal dependent uses and should be moved to make way for sea level rise
- We believe the removal of the boot is essential for water quality, restoration of the view and to connect Rose Creek to the marshlands.
- We believe the creation and restoration of open space and natural habitat will enhance the passive enjoyment of Mission Bay and provide a buffer against sea level rise.
- We believe the City should work with the relevant State and Federal agencies and with the Audubon Society instead of the moneyed interests that are seeking to profit from our natural resources.
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