The Estuary
A Significant Natural Resource
San Francisco Bay and the Delta combine to form the West Coast's largest
estuary. The Estuary conveys the waters of thc Sacramento and San Joaquin
Rivers to the Pacific Ocean. It encompasses roughly l,600 square miles,
drains over 40 percent of the state (60,000 square miles), and contains
about five million acre-feet of water at mean tide.
The Estuary watershed provides drinking water to twenty million Californians
and irrigates 4.5 million acres of farmland. The Estuary also hosts
a rich diversity of aquatic life. Each year, two-thirds of the state's
salmon pass through thc Bay and Delta, as do nearly half of the waterfowl
and shorebirds migrating along the Pacific Flyway. In addition, Estuary
waters enable the nation's fourth-largest metropolitan region to pursue
many activities, including shipping, fishing, recreation, and commerce.
The San Francisco Estuary Project
A Cooperative Approach to Environmentally Sound Management
Growing public concern for the health of the Bay and Delta led the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) to establish the San Francisco
Estuary Project (SFEP or Project) in 1987. The Project, part of the
U.S. EPA's National Estuary Program, is a five-year cooperative effort
to promote more effective management of the San Francisco Bay-Delta
Estuary and to restore and maintain the Estuary's water quality and
natural resources. The Project is jointly sponsored by the U.S. EPA
and the State of California. It is financed by federal appropriations
under the Clean Water Act and matching funds from the state and local
entities.
Managing a resource as important and complex as the Estuary is a challenging
task. The compelling need for environmental protection must be weighed
against competing uses of Estuary waters and resources. To address this
challellge, thc Projcct brought together over one hundred representatives
from the private and public sectors, including government, industry,
business and environmental interests, as well as elected officials from
all twelve Bay-Delta counties. After five years, the Project's cooperative
public-private partnership has reachcd its goal of developing a Comprehensive
Conservation and Management Plan (CCMP) for the Estuary.
The Plan
A Blueprint for Estuary Conservation and Restoration
The CCMP presents a blueprint to restore and maintain the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of thc Bay and Delta. It seeks to
achieve high standards of water quality; to maintain an appropriate
indigenous population of fish, shellfish, and wildlife; to support recreational
activities; and to protect the beneficial uses of the Estuary.
For the purposes of the CCMP, restoration implies improving the health
of the Estuary. Rather than attempting to completely restore the Estuary
to its historical state, the CCMP strives to maintain, protect, and
enhance the ecological integrity of the Estuary within the given urban
context. The CCMP attempts to regain as much of the altered or destroyed
wetlands as possible, to establish the highest restoration or target
goals, to ensure continuance of beneficial uses, and to generally provide
a sustainable ecosystem.
To develop the CCMP, the Project's Management Conference identified
five critical program areas of environmental concern: I) decline of
biological resources; 2) pollutants; 3) freshwater diversions and altered
flow regime; 4) dredging and waterway modification; and 5) intensified
land use. Subcommittees then produced status and trends reports that
summarized the current state of the Estuary's resources. Next, the subcommittees
prepared recommendations that became the basis for a CCMP Action Plan.
The Management Committee reviewed a working draft of the Plan in November,
1991. The Management Committee then met frequently during the first
seven months of l992. Through facilitated, consensus-building discussions,
the Management Committee developed a Draft CCMP, which was released
for public comment in August of l992. Finally, the Management Committee
incorporated public comments on the Draft CCMP and finalized the CCMP.
The Management Committee unanimously adopted the final CCMP at its March
31, 1993, meeting.
The CCMP sets forth this vision for the Estuary:
"We, the people of California and the San Francisco Bay-Delta region,
believe the San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary is an international treasure
and that our ongoing stewardship is critical to its preservation, restoration,
and enhancement. Acknowledging the importance of the Estuary to our
environmental and economic well-being, we pledge to achieve and maintain
an ecologically diverse and productive natural estuarine system."
The mission statements that guided the development of the CCMP are
to:
- Restore and protect a diverse, balanced, and healthy population
of fish, invertebrates, wildlife, plants, and their habitats, focusing
on indigenous species.
- Assure that the beneficial uses of the Bay and Delta are protected.
- Improve water quality, where possible, by eliminating and preventing
pollution at its source, while minimizing the discharge of pollutants
from point and nonpoint sourccs and remediating existing pollution.
- Manage dredging and waterway remodifications to minimize adverse
environmental impacts.
- Effectively manage and coordinate land and water use to achieve
the goals of the Estuary Project.
- Increase public knowledge about the Estuary ecosystem and public
involvement in the restoration and protection the health of the Estuary.
- Increase our scientific understanding of the Estuary and use that
knowledge to better manage the Estuary.
- Develop and expand non-regulatory programs, such as public-private
partnerships and market incentives in conjunction with regulatory
programs, to achieve the goals of the Project.
- Preserve and restore wetlands to provide habitat for wildlife, improve
water quality, and protect against flooding.
- Assure an adequate freshwater flow as one of the essential components
to restore and maintain a clean, healthy, and diverse Estuary.
Adoption of the Plan
Governor and Administrator Approval
After the Management Committee approved the CCMP, it was sent to the
Project's Sponsoring Agency Committee (SAC) for review. The SAC forwarded
the Plan to the Governor of California and the Administrator of the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Governor Wilson concurred on thc
CCMP on November 17, 1993. Administrator Browner approved the CCMP on
Decembcr 9, 1993. Formal implementation of the Plan may now commence.
CCMP Program Areas
In the sections that follow this Executive Summary, you will find program
areas on Aquatic Resources, Wildlife, Wetlands Management, Water Use,
Pollution Prevention and Reduction, Dredging and Waterway Modification,
Land Use, Public Involvement and Education, and Research and Monitoring.
Each program area includes the following elements:
- A problem statement;
- Discussion of the existing management structure;
- Program area goals;
- A recommended approach to the problem; and
- The stated objectives and actions.
For purposes of this Executive Summary, the discussion of the existing
management structure has been eliminated, and the list of actions abbreviated.
Therefore, not all recommended actions for a particular program area
will appear in this Summary.
Aquatic Resources
The Problem
Native flora and fauna in Estuary waters have declined precipitously
in recent years. This is largely the result of human activities that
modify waterways, impair water quality, alter freshwater flows, and
introduce non-native species. For example, water development projects
reduce Delta outflows and contribute to an increase in salinity levels
in the lower reaches of the Estuary. The projects thereby eliminate
low-salinity habitat necessary for certain estuarine-dependent species.
Water diversion facilities can also trap and displace migrating fish.
As a result of these habitat modifications, the number of Chinook salmon
returning to spawn in the Estuary's tributaries has declined by 70 percent
from historical levels. Populations of striped bass, Delta smelt, longfin
smelt, Sacramento splittail, and California bay shrimp--all of which
depend on the Estuary for reproduction and survival--are also in decline.
During the past century, at least one hundred species of non-native
aquatic invertebrates have been introduced into the Estuary. This has
also taken its toll on native species. For example, the Asian clam,
Potamocorbula amurensis, has reached populations of up to 30,000 clams
per square meter in some places. The clam is rapidly replacing native
bottom-dwelling organisms and interfering with the aquatic food supply.
Recommended Approach:
The Aquatic Resources section of the CCMP Action Plan seeks to build
on cooperative efforts already underway among government agencies, non-governmental
organizations, academic institutions, and water consumers to improve
the management of aquatic resources in the Estuary. This section recommends
development of a comprehensive plan to manage estuarine aquatic resources,
development of species-specific management plans to control or eliminate
undesirable non-indigenous species, and adoption of standards for salinity
and flow that will increase the probability of successful I reproduction
and survival of important living resources.
Goals
- Stem and reverse the decline in the health and abundance of estuarine
biota (indigenous and desirable non-indigenous), with an emphsis on
natural production.
- Restore healthy estuarine habitat conditions to the Bay-Delta, taking
into consideration all beneficial uses of Bay-Delta resources.
- Ensure the survival and recovery of listed and candidate threatened
and endangered species, as well as other species in decline.
- Optimally manage the fish and wildlife resources of the Estuary
to achieve the purpose of these goals.
Actions
Actions to achieve water quality, flows, and management goals include
such measures as:
- Designing, installing, and effectivcly operating fish screens or
othcr protective devices at diversions associated with fish mortality;
- Protecting and restoring shaded riverine aquatic habitats;
- Identifying alternative water quality and flow standards, water
management measures, operational changes, habitat improvements, and
facilities to improve protection of estuarine resources;
- Adopting and implementing measures to control discharges of ship
ballast water within the Estuary or adjacent waters;
- Prohibiting the intentional introduction of exotic species into
thc Estuary and its watershed;
- Providing necessary instream flows and temperatures in tributaries
to the Delta to benefit anadromous fish;
- Identifying and protecting remnant stream habitats containing indigenous
and endemic fishes by establishing Aquatic Diversity Management Areas;
- Implementing thc Upper Sacramento River Management Plan; and
- Developing and implementing a San Joaquin River management plan.
Wildlife
The Problem
Many of the Estuary's wildlife species are in long-term decline, succumbing
to urban growth, pollution, water development, disease, predation, loss
of habitat, and othcr factors. In particular, developmcnt over the past
140 years has drastically reduced and fragmented the Estuary's native
wildlife habitats, forcing wildlife to concentrate in small, isolated
areas. Primarily as a result of habitat loss, at least seven insect specics,
one reptile species, three bird species, and five mammal species have
become extinct in the Estuary region.
The environmental changes associated with human activitics and regional
population growth continue to have an enormous impact on the Estuary's
wildlife. Total waterfowl numbers in the Estuary dropped from a record
high of 1.3 million in 1977 to a low of 109,000 in 1982. Populations
of dabbling ducks and geese are at all-time lows. Meanwhile, growing
numbers of red fox (a non-native species) continue to prey on many shorebird
populations, including the endangered California clapper rail. Unlike
the fox, however, many small native mammals and carnivores can now find
little food and habitat in the Estuary's fast-developing counties.
As a result of these declines, federal and state governments have designated
over 130 species of fish, insects, amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals,
and plants in the Estuary as deserving of special protection or monitoring.
Recommended Approach:
Many of the problems associated with the decline in abundance and diversity
of the Estuary's wildlife are interrelated. This section of the CCMP
Action Plan can only be effective when coupled with other actions identified
throughout the CCMP. Recommended actions in other sections, such as
increasing and protecting critical habitat, increasing biodiversity,
decrcasing harmful pollutants, and managing freshwater flows through
thc Estuary, will collectivcly help restore populations of Bay-Delta
wildlife.
Goals
- Stem and reverse the decline of estuarine plants and aninials and
the habitats on which they depend.
- Ensure the survival and recovery of listed and candidate threatened
and endangered species, as well as special status species.
- Optimally manage and monitor the wildlife resources of the Estuary.
Actions
Actions designed to achieve wildlife protection goals include:
- Preserving, creating, restoring, and managing large and contiguous
expanses of tidal salt marsh and necessary adjacent uplands;
- Completing the expansion of the San Francisco Bay National Wildlife
Refuge and its satellite refuges;
- Restoring tidal marshes in San Francisco Bay;
- Identifying and converting/restoring non-wetland areas to wetland-
or riparian-oriented wildlife habitat;
- Enhancing the biodiversity within all publicly owned or managed
wetlands and other wildlife habitats as appropriate;
- Completing and implementing a wildlife habitat restoration and management
plan for the Estuary;
- Implementing, predator control programs;
- Updating and, where necessary, preparing recovery plans for all
listed wildlife species; and
- Monitoring the status of all candidate species and listing them
if warranted.
Wetlands
The Problem
In 1850, the Estuary's tidal marshes covered 545,371 acres. By 1985,
they had dwindled to approximately 45,000 acres, largely to urban and
agricultural development. These losses have reduced the Estuary's capacity
to support sustainable populations of fish and wildlife and to provide
the other benefits associated with wetlands. Of the thirty-two wildlife
species whose populations are currently declining, twenty-three are
associated pimarily with wetlands. Although wetlands degradation and
conversion have slowed substantially since the 1970s, wetland losses
continue. Unless substantial efforts are made to avoid future losses
and increase wetland acreage and values, the health of the Estuarv will
continue to deteriorate.
Recommended Approach:
The Wetlands Management Program seeks to improve wetlands regulation
and management for all ecological wetlands, consistent with the general
welfare of the state and with respect to private property rights, by
identifying ways for state, federal, and local agencies to work together
more effectively. This section intends to expand efforts to acquire,
enhance, restore, and create wetlands, as well as improve existing regulatory
mechanisms.
The actions recommended here establish clear, non-duplicative goals
and policies for wetlands protection and restoration and encourage private
initiatives to protect wetlands. This section also recommends that the
state govemment develop a comprehensive wetlands protection program
that recognizes the Bay-Delta Estuary as a resource of statewide significance
and relies on local wetlands protection programs.
Goals
- Protect and manage existing wetlands.
- Restore and enhance the ecological productivity and habitat values
of wetlands.
- Expedite a significant increase in the quantity and quality of
wetlands.
- Educate the public about the values of wetlands resources.
Actions
Actions within the Wetlands Management area include:
- Preparing a Regional Wetlands Management Plan;
- Encouraging geographically focused cooperative efforts to protect
wetlands;
- Establishing a comprehensive state wetlands program for thc Estuary;
- Increasing enforcement efforts to curtail illegal wetlands alteration
and ensure compliance with permit conditions;
- Developing and adopting uniform compensatory mitigation policies;
- Expanding wetlands acquisition programs; and
- Identifying and converting/restoring non-wetlands areas to wetlands-
or riparian-oriented wildlife habitat.
Water Use
The Problem
Northern California rivers and streams carry two-thirds of the state's
available fresh water. However, water diversions at more than seven
thousand locations for purposes such as agriculture, flood control,
and drinking water storage reduce the annual volume of fresh water entering
San Francisco Bay by more than one-half in some years. The resulting
changes in the Estuary's natural flow patterns (often referred to as
altered flow regime) affect the Estuary's circulation and water quality,
as well as habitat conditions for wildlife, production of phytoplankton
and zooplankton, and the survival of eggs and young of marly fish species.
Constrution of currently planned local water development projects and
completion of the State Water Project will likely increase annual diversions
from the Estuary's water supply by at least 1.1 million acrefeet. With
demand for the Estuary's limited freshwater supply increasing on all
sides, California is now strugglillg to manage competing demands and
protect the health of the estuarine ecosystem.
Recommended Approach:
This section of the CCMP strongly encouragcs conservation of existing
water supplies. Agricultural, urban, and industrial water users should
develop and implement aggressive water conservation measures statewide.
By providing funding for research and pilot projects, government can
foster further conservation of water used for agriculture. This section
encourages more efficient use of existing water supplies, combilled
with development of new supplies, by promoting use of rcclaimed water
to reduce: 1) cxisting diversions of fresh water; 2) demand for increased
diversions; and 3) existing discharge of wastewater directly into the
Estuary. Legal and regulatory methods to achieve such reductions could
include pricing incentives and water-marketing arrangements.
The development of new storage and conveyance facilities, coupled with
more efficient use of existing supplies, can help reduce the problems
associated with water diversion in the Estuary watershed. Methods of
augmenting water supplies include, but are not limited to, reclamation,
conservation, water transfers, water-marketing agreements, and conjunctive
use of groundwater. (Conjunctive use refers to the coordinated management
of groundwater and surface water supplies that results in more efficicnt
use of both water sources.)
Goal
- Develop and implement aggressive water management measures to increase
freshwater availability to the Estuary.
Actions
Water Use actions include:
- Encouraging publicly owned treatment works, municipalitics, and
water districts to complete water reclamation and reuse feasibility
studies;
- Ensuring that state water quality standards and Basin Plans encourage
water reclamation and reuse;
- Working to develop a mechanism to ensure implementation of efficient
agricultural water management practices;
- esearching new methods of agricultural water conservation;
- Evaluating and adopting mechanisms to manage groundwater to protect
the long-term integrity of groundwater basins;
- Creating the legal and regulatory framework for voluntary water-marketing
agreements among agricultural, urban, and environmental interests;
and
- Encouraging the state to continue to negotiate with the federal
government regarding the possible transfer of ownership or operational
control of the Central Valley Project to a non-federal entity.
Pollution Prevention and Reduction
The Problem
The marked reduction in conventional pollutants entering the Estuary over
the past forty years has largely eliminated the most obvious symptoms
of water pollution, such as odors, algal blooms, and low oxygen levels.
But other pollutants, such as trace elements, organochlorines and other
synthetic pesticides, and petrochemical hydrocarbons, continue to be of
major concern.
Each year, an estimated five to forty thousand tons of at least sixty-five
pollutants enter the Estuary from urban and agricultural runoff, municipal
wastewater treatment plants, industrial facilities, dredging, chemical
spills, and atmospheric deposition. The pollutants reach highest concentrations
in harbors, marinas, and industrial waterways and at effluent discharge
sites. High pollutant levels have produced toxic effects in the Estuary's
fish, shellfish, bird, and mammal species. Studies indicate that certain
pollutants are reducing reproductive success in the starry flounder
and causing decreased embryo size and eggshell thickness in black-crowned
night heron eggs.
These effects indicate that much of the Estuary is threatened or impaired
by combinations of differcnt toxic pollutants. With urban land uses
expected to expand, pollutant loading from all sources will increase
substantially.
Recommended Approach:
Protection of estuarine species and human health requires that the pollutant
problem be addressed in a comprehensive manner that includes: 1 ) pollution
prevention; 2) control and reduction of pollutants that cannot be avoided;
and a) remediation of existing contamination. This program proposes
both the full implementation of existing regulations and, where necessary,
the development of new initiatives to reduce pollution at its source.
The pollution actions identify methods to integrate existing regulatory
programs and enforce existing statutes more effectively. This area also
recommends policy initiatives for pollution prevention.
Goals
- Promote mechanisms to prevent pollution at its source.
- Where pollution prevention is not possible, control and reduce pollutants
entering the Estuary.
- Clean up toxic pollution throughout the Estuary.
- Protect against toxic effects, including bioaccumulation and toxic
sediment accumulation.
Actions
Actions designed to reduce, prevent, control, and alleviate pollution
include:
- Establishing specific goals for reducing the discharge of toxic
pollution over time and discouraging reliance on toxic material;
- Developing environmental audit procedures for all significant users
and producers of toxic substances;
- Reinforcing exsiting programs and developing new incentives to reduce
selenium levels in agricultural drainage;
- Developing a comprehensive strategy to reduce pesticides in the
Estuary;
- Pursuing a mass emissions strategy to both reduce pollutant discharges
into the Estuary from point and nonpoint sources and to address the
accumulation of pollutants in estuarine organisms and sediments;
- Adopting water quality objectives that effectively protect estuarine
species and human health;
- Improving the management and control of urban runoff from public
and private sources;
- Developing control measures to reduce pollutant loadings from energy
and transportation systems;
- Establishing a model enviromnental compliance program at federal
facilities;
- Cleaning up contaminants presently affecting fish, wildlife, and
their habitats; and
- Expediting the clean up of toxic hot spots in estuarine sediments.
Dredging and Waterway Modification
The Problem
To maintain the navigability of the region's harbors, marinas, and shipping
channels, dredgers remove over eight million cubic yards of sediment from
the Estuary floor each year. Although critical to the Estuary's economic
well-being, such extensive dredging and waterway modification activities
have had significant environmental impacts. In the Bay and Delta waterway
channelization, shoreline riprapping, urban development, and flood control
projects have eliminated or degraded wetlands and riparian wildlife habitats,
increased seasonal storm flows, and changed sediment movement and distribution
in the estuarine ecosystem.
Environmental impacts associated with dredging and disposal of dredged
material in the Bay include redistribution of toxic pollutants, burial
of bottom-dwelling organisms, and resuspension of sediment particles,
which causes turbidity and reduces fishing success in and around disposal
sites. In the late 1980s, these kinds of environmental concerns and
the accumulation of dredged sediments at the Alcatraz disposal site--a
navigational hazard--brought disposal practices into question. State
and federal agencies and concerned citizens then called for the developrnent
of more environmentally sound dredging and disposal methods for the
future.
Recommended Approach:
Much of the approach described here derives from the Long-Term Management
Strategy (LTMS) for dredging and disposal, a regional effort begun in
1989 by thirty different government agencies, enviromnental organizations,
development interests, ports, and fishing organizations. The LTMS seeks
to develop technically feasible, economically prudent, and environmentally
acceptable long-range ways to meet the region's dredging and disposal
needs over the next fifty years. The effort sprang directly from SFEP's
cooperative discussions and research on dredging and waterway modification
in 1988 and 1989.
The LTMS will evaluate all potential disposal options, including ocean
sites, in-Bay sites, and upland altermatives, such as reuse of dredged
material for wetlands creation or other projects. By supporting this
broad-based effort, this section of the CCMP seeks to provide the framework
for developing connections among many issues facing the Estuary, including
improvement of waterway modification practices, sediment management,
and ecosystem protection and enhancement.
Goals
- Adopt a sediment management strategy for dredging and waterway modification.
- Manage modification of waterways to avoid or offset the adverse
impacts of dredging, flood control, channelization and shoreline development
and protection projects.
- Eliminate unnecessary dredging activities.
- Maximize the use of dredged material as a resource.
- Conduct dredging activities in an environmentally sound fashion.
Actions
Actions to achieve the goals in this area include:
- Conducting studies on sediment dynamics aimed at defining accretion
(the addition of soil to land by gradual, natural deposits) and erosion
processes in marsh and mudflat areas;
- Developing and setting sediment quality objectives;
- Identifying dredged material reuse/nonaquatic disposal opportunities
and constraints;
- Developing regulatory land use procedures to promote reuse of dredged
material for wetlands restoration/creation and other benificial uses;
and
- Implementing waterway modification policies that protect shoreline
areas from detrimental flooding and erosion while maintaining natural
resource values.
Land Use
The Problem
With over one million new inhabitants expected during the next two decades,
population growth and land use change in the twelve-county Estuary area
will continue to increase pollutants, alter wetland and stream habitats,
and otherwise adversely affect the Estuary's health. Because state planning
laws do not require Estuary protection, local government land decisions
rarely consider impacts on this regional resource.
Recommended Approach:
This section of the CCMP seeks to enhance the Estuary, while ensuring
economic development to meet vital housing, transportation and other
needs. It focuses on using existing local land use decision-making mechanisms
to protect wetlands and stream environments and reduce pollutants and
runoff.
Goals
- Establish and implement land use and transportation patterns and
practices that protect, enhance, and restore the Estuary's open waters,
adjacent wetlands, adjacent essential uplands habitat, and tributary
waterways.
- Coordinate and improve planning, regulatory, and development programs
of local, regional, state, and federal agencies to improve the health
of the Estuary.
- Adopt and utilize land use policies that provide incentives for
more active participation by the private sector in cooperative efforts
that protect and improve the Estuary.
Actions
Actions to achieve land use goals include:
Integrating protection of the Estuary with other state land use-related
initiatives; Adopting policies and plans to promote compact, contiguous
development; Developing and implementing guidelines for site planning
and best management practices; Education the public about how human
actions impact the Estuary; Creating economic incentives that encourage
local governments to implement measures to protect and enhance the Estuary;
and Investigating and creating market-based incentives that promote
more active private sector participation in cooperative efforts to protect
and restore the Estuary.
Public Involvement and Education
The Problem
Public involvement will be essential for effective implementation of
the CCMP. Public involvement will make the difference between general
concern and informed action, and between complacency and directed public
will. Without a united and organized public constituency able to monitor
the ongoing management of the Estuary, achievement of the CCMP's goals,
objectives, and individual actions cannot be assured. Only when it comes
to understand and embrace the CCMP will the public be able to promote,
support, use, enforce, and watchdog the Plan through the critical years
of its implementation.
Recommended Approach:
This section of the CCMP provides for a strong public involvement program
enabling educated and motivated volunteers to invest in sustainillg
and restoring the Estuary. In a time of severe budget constraints in
both government and the private sector, the public's skills, energy,
and enthusiasm can serve as low-cost alternative resources to solve
many of the Estuary's problems. Through actions rccommended in this
section, the public can also provide informed activism, trained and
vigilant monitoring, and other support vital to the CCMP.
Goals
- Build public understanding of the value of the Estuary's natural
resources and the need to restore, protect, and maintain a healthy
Estuary for future generations.
- Increase public involvement in the ongoing stewardship of the Estuarv.
Actions
Actions designed to encourage CCMP education, advocacy, and citizen involvement
include:
- Building awareness, interest, and support of the CCMP's goals and
action plans by the general public and decision-makers;
- Providing and encouraging opportunities for direct citizen involvement
in CCMP implementation;
- Seeking, encouraging, and actively supporting environmental projects
and programs that are consistent with CCMP goals and objectives;
- Developing, promoting, and supporting multicultural understanding
of and involvement in Estuary issues;
- Developing and promoting necessary public education tools;
- Holding a State of the Estuary Conference at least every other year;
and
- Providing opportunities for hands-on citizen action in Estuary restoration
activities.
Research and Monitoring
The Problem
Environmental decision-makers and managers need continuous access to
timely scientific research to refine existing strategies and formulate
new methods for protecting the Estuary's resources. Effective use of
research results requires strong alliances among managers, scientists,
educators, and the public. In addition, new institutional arrangements
are necessary to broaden existing environmental research and monitoring
programs for the Estuary.
Recommended Approach:
A new institutional arrangement is necessary to implement a coordinated
research and monitoring program conerned with the broadest range of
issues facing the Estuary. The central recommendation of this section
is the establishment of a San Francisco Estuarine Institute* to assist
in gathering, analyzing, and disseminating information on all environmental
issues of concern to the Estuary. This specifically includes oversight
of a Research Enhancement Program and the Regional Monitoring Strategy,
which are currently under development.
*According to its by-laws adopted in May,1994, the San
Francisco Estuarine Institute has changed its name to the San Francisco
Estuary Institute.
Goal
- Improve the scientific basis for managing natural resources within
the Estuary through an effective monitoring and research program.
Actions
Recommended Research and Monitoring actions include:
- Establishing a San Francisco Estuarine Institute for coordination
of research and monitoring;
- Providing a long-term administrative home for the Research Enhancement
Program; and
- Developing and implementing the Regional Monitoring Strategy, which
will integrate and expand upon existing efforts and will eventually
be part of the comprehensive Regional Monitoring Program.
Implementation of the CCMP
Thc development of this Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan
is only the first step towards achieving and maintaining an ecologically
diverse and productive estuarine system. In order to achieve the goals
and the vision described in the CCMP, its recommended actions must be
implemented. Further, implementation of the recommended actions will
require strong public support, adequate funding, and the cooperation
of multiple parties.
Effective implementation will require close coordination among the
variety of public, local, state, and federal organizations that havc
responsibility for managing the Estuary. Therefore, the Management Committee
has proposed an implementation structure under which an Executive Council
will have primary responsibility for implementing the CCMP. An Implemention
Committee will coordinate implementation activities under the broad
policy direction of the Executive Council. Thc lmplementation Committee
will convene subcommittees and working groups as necessary.
Thc Science/Technical Review Committee, through the San Francisco Estuarine
Institute, will ensure that the CCMP's Research and Monitoring Program
is carried out and will provide technical support for implementation
activities.
Friends of the San Francisco Estuary will implement the CCMP's Public
Involvement and Education Program and will provide a public review and
involvement function for CCMP implementation.
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