Ormond Beach

WORTH SAVING | Ormond Beach receives $1M for desperately needed restoration

Mar 31, 2021 | Chuck Graham, Cover Story, Feature, News, Oxnard | 0 |

WORTH SAVING | Ormond Beach receives $1M for desperately needed restoration

PICTURED: California least tern with chicks on the dunes of Ormond Beach. Photo by Chuck Graham

Story and photos by Chuck Graham, VC Reporter www.vcreporter.com

The perpetual northwest winds were up, grooming the exposed fore-dunes of a windswept Ormond Beach in Southern Oxnard. The well-manicured dunes constantly shifted with the winds, buffering a sliver of coastal wetland still hanging on in Southern California.

The wetlands at Ormond Beach are one of the last remaining coastal wetlands in the entire state. Over 90 percent of all coastal wetlands have been lost to coastal development; harbors, homes, roads, and oil refineries replacing some of the richest, most biodiverse habitats in North America.  

Looking at an aerial map of Ormond Beach and the surrounding area, saving this postage stamp of a wetland appears hopeless. The beleaguered wetland is smothered by habitat degradation, especially at the end of McWane Boulevard and Perkins Road. A power plant, toxic waste, agricultural run-off, and graffiti far overshadow this remnant of a struggling coastal ecosystem. It appears as if the amount of trash in the channels and mudflats far outnumber the shorebirds, gulls and waders that somehow coexist in this meager ecological quagmire. 

Still a Pulse

Wild flowers, wildlife and the precious wetland habitat of Ormond Beach . Photo by Chuck Graham

At first light Ormond Beach resembled a working wetland. Pools on the mudflats reflected the highest peaks of the nearby Santa Monica Mountains. Western sandpipers tiptoed through the mirrored water as a flock of snow geese migrated north overhead. Behind me a wide channel was full of waterfowl: ruddy duck, mallard, northern shoveler and pied grebe. A pair of white-tailed kites harassed a perched red-tailed hawk as a belted kingfisher spouted off with strident, mechanical rattles heard across the swollen channel.

Naturalist and educator Amy Davis has been leading guided nature walks for The Nature Conservancy for the past four years at Ormond Beach, revealing the natural wonders of a coastal wetland. Most of those walks take place at the end of Arnold Road, the more intact region of the Ormond Beach wetland compared to the badly degraded wetland to the northwest at the end of McWane and Perkins. Most of her participants are adults, but it’s the children participating in those nature walks that are potentially the next wave of naturalists and stewards.  

“It seems like no one wants to deal with it,” said Davis regarding the overall state of Ormond Beach. “It’s the ugly stepchild of the area.”

Yet, something here stirs us naturalists. There is a responsibility that comes with stewardship of one of the last remaining wetlands in California. It holds true for an educator such as Davis, who enjoys revealing to future generations that Ormond Beach is still a viable coastal wetland.

“The only way to not go down the rabbit hole of depression is to educate people, or increase awareness,” continued Davis. “These aren’t things we can fix, but maybe these kids can.”

An Ecological Facelift

For years it has felt like the battle cry for Ormond Beach has been a drum beaten to death, and when observing it, the wetland seems like a battle lost. It appears as if the wetland of Ormond Beach is on a downward trajectory toward becoming an ill-functioning mire with no glimmer of recovery.

Despite pollution, development, the nearby power plant and other threats to the wetland, Ormond Beach is a vital habitat for numerous birds — including this ruddy duck. Photo by Chuck Graham

Still, like other remaining coastal wetlands, Ormond Beach is an important stopover along the Pacific Flyway for more than 200 species of migratory birds, and restoration work performed in the future will provide habitat and an important refuge for migrating and nesting birds of all kinds.

Its foredunes and beaches do look as they should and are mostly void of trash, thanks to the efforts of dedicated volunteers. The fore-dunes and back-dunes are vital habitats for western snowy plovers and California least terns.  It’s the mud flats, channels and upland habitats that are in dire need of an environmental facelift.

Some help is on the way, however, for what will be a long road to recovery. Recently, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) awarded more than $27 million to 14 states, funds put toward restoring almost 28,000 acres of coastal wetlands and adjacent upland habitats. The California State Coastal Conservancy (SCC) received $7 million of that total sum, with $1 million going towards restoration efforts at 650-acre Ormond Beach. 

https://scc.ca.gov/ormond-beach/

Under the National Coastal Wetlands Conservation Grant Program, funds were generated via USFWS’s Wildlife and Sports Fish Restoration Program (WSFR). Taxes or import duties from the program were collected from the sale of recreational fishing equipment, boats, electric motors and motorboat and small engine fuels under the authority of the Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Act. The WSFR program provides funding for the long-term conservation of coastal wetland ecosystems by helping states and territories protect, restore and enhance coastal habitats. The billions of dollars generated through recreational angling, boating, waterfowl hunting and birdwatching benefit communities in the vicinity of wetland restoration projects.

“We’re entering a really exciting period”

“Ormond Beach currently is a viable coastal wetland,” said Christopher Kroll, project manager for the SCC’s Ormond Beach Restoration and Public Access Project. “It has been impacted by the development of the area but it continues to have great habitat value for many plant and animal species. Restoration of degraded habitat areas is a goal of the current planning effort. Restoration and public access projects of this scale take a significant [amount] of time at the front end — to identify the opportunity, find the funding, study the ecological impacts, talk to the community, and get the permits lined up — but we’re entering a really exciting period now where I’ll expect people will see things moving forward.”

Snow geese are among more than 200 migratory bird species that depend on Ormond Beach as a stopover on the Pacific Flyway. Photo by Chuck Graham

Some of those efforts moving forward include eradicating 11 nonnative, invasive plant species, as well as controlling five others, across the 650-acre project area. Others will be removing 80,000 pounds of trash from wetlands, waterways and beaches; monitoring four times every year water quality and trash source pollution of the three waterways that feed into Ormond Lagoon; installing 5,000 feet of fencing to protect endangered shorebird nesting habitat; and monitoring and managing 150 acres of nesting habitat for coastal-dependent and migratory birds. 

The project will also provide training — six sessions annually for volunteer naturalists and/or schools, one session a year for local and state law enforcement — in nesting habitat protection and management. Some of the funds will support the management of 24 community-organized waterway and beach clean-up events annually. Finally, the project will spearhead public outreach efforts for the restoration and public access plans, which will include two public workshops as well as surveys, focus groups and field trips conducted virtually, in multiple languages. 

“It is a functioning wetland habitat now but the goal of the planning effort is to restore habitat areas that have been degraded and improve the public access experience while protecting sensitive species,” continued Kroll. “Despite the industry and industrial waste around it, it has been largely untouched by freeways, residential developments, oil extraction and other urban infrastructure that hem in most of the region’s other wetlands.”

Community outreach is a major goal of the SCC, and Kroll stressed that over the next several years he wants the community of Oxnard to feel a connection with Ormond Beach that it hasn’t had in the past.

“Study after study has shown the physical and mental benefits of access to nature,” explained Kroll. “This project isn’t just important for birds and wildlife; it’s going to be a recreational amenity especially for the people of South Oxnard.”


For more information on the Ormond Beach Restoration and Access Project, visit the project page at the State Coastal Conservancy at scc.ca.gov/ormond-beach/. To access this report directly visit www.vcreporter.com.

LA Times Update on Puente Power Plant at Ormond Beach 2017

photo courtesy LA Times. (c)2017 LA Times, Inc.

Al at Keep Out Sign

Founded by Roma Armbrust, Jean Harris in 1983 & joined by professional photographer and environmentalist Alan Sanders in 1990, the Ormond Beach Observers is dedicated to protecting and restoring the Ormond Beach Wetlands in So. California, an area spanning city boundries between Port Hueneme and Oxnard, Ca.

Draining the Wetlands4

Threatened on all sides by development, agricultural & industrial business (and pollution) since the early 1950’s, the Ormond Beach Wetlands has needed an advocate organization to help protect the water & air quality and to fight against industrial and residential development.

Snowy Plover Chicks at Ormond Beach (c)2011 Alan Sanders

The Ormond Beach Observers have been performing that advocacy role for over 23 years. It has as it’s sole mission to protect not every wetland habitat on the West Coast (although they would like to be able to) but to rather focus on protecting this diverse and rare sanctuary at Ormond Beach, one of the last remaining saltwater/freshwater wetlands remaining in So. California.

Dunes & Lagoon at Ormond Beach (c)2011 Alan Sanders        Ormond Beach Sunset    Migrating Waterfowl at Ormond Beach (c)2011 Alan Sanders    Snowy Plover at Ormond Beach (c)2011 Alan Sanders    Waterfowl Nest at Ormond Beach (c)2011 Alan Sanders

The Ormond Beach Restoration Project

Organized through the Ca. Coastal Conservancy & The So. Ca. chapter of the Sierra Club, the Ormond Beach Restoration Project is planning to acquire 900+ acres of nearby ag land and land that is currently a Superfund clean-up site, for the ‘managed retreat’ of the Ormond Beach Wetlands inland, to provide vital habitat for coastal wildlife as sea levels rise due to global warming & climate engineering.

Learn more about the OBRP here; http://www.ormond.scc.ca.gov

For additional information, please contact:
Christopher Kroll, Project Manager for the Ormond Beach Restoration/Public Access project, Coastal Conservancy at 510 286 4169; chris.kroll@scc.ca.gov
Isidro Figueroa, Principal Planner, City of Oxnard at 805 385 8207; Isidro.figueroa@oxnard.org
Laura Riege, Restoration Project Director, The Nature Conservancy at 805 290 4776; LRiege@tnc.org

         Tractors in the Ormond Beach Wetlands!                                  

        

       

No good deed goes unpunished

Al Sanders Interviewed about the Current State of the Ormond Beach Wetlands (Jan., 2014)

View the story at the VC Reporter here;  http://vcreporter.com/cms/story/detail/no_good_deed_goes_unpunished/11606/

The Risks of Using Abandoned Wells to Store Toxic Byproducts from Fracking Operations (in Ohio)  by Al Sanders

http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20140130/EDIT02/301300032/OPINION-mercy-fracking-waste?nclick_check=1

(c)2014 Barrett Productions. All rights reserved. Copyright claim below (Raindrops) is for the webpage graphic design, only.



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