environmental hazards

Marin County Exploring Sea Level Rise Adaptation & Drafting Hazards Development Guidance

Marin County launched a Coastal Communities Working Group (CCWG) in early 2020 composed of EAC, Surfrider, the Alliance of West Marin Villages, and additional village association representatives with the goals of providing local, community input on hazard and climate adaptation planning initiatives and projects in West Marin, for the members to be liaisons between the County and their respective communities, and for members to gain expertise and integrate knowledge from each project to inform its review of future planning processes. This builds on the County’s C-SMART (Collaboration: Sea-level Marin Adaptation Response Team) process that identified vulnerabilities and potential solutions to the County’s coastal climate challenges.

Three County projects are currently the focus of the CCWG: 1) Stinson Beach Nature-Based Adaptation Feasibility Study, 2) Tomales Bay Living Shoreline Feasibility Study, and 3) Local Coastal Program (LCP) environmental hazards policy amendments.

California Coastal Commission Receives Update on Marin County’s LCP; Marin County Still Fails to Comprehensively Plan for Climate Change

Yesterday, August 12, 2021, the California Coastal Commission (Coastal Commission) received an informational update on Marin County’s fraught LCP update process. Last month, the Marin County Board of Supervisors finalized their Local Coastal Program (LCP) update and retained 40-year old land-use policies to inform development in hazardous areas in the face of the climate crisis. The finalized LCP went into effect August 12, 2021.

In the Face of a Changing Climate, Marin Sups Finalize LCP and Keep 1980s Flood and Fire Policies

Point Reyes Station, CA (July 14, 2021) - Yesterday, the Marin County Board of Supervisors (Board) voted to finalize their Local Coastal Program (LCP) update and retain 40-year old policies to inform land-use and development for environmental hazards. The finalized LCP will go into effect 30-days from the Board’s decision, on August 13, 2021. The Environmental Action Committee (EAC) – a grassroots local environmental organization working to protect the unique lands, waters, and biodiversity of coastal Marin – has been advocating to the County for 13-years to comprehensively update their LCP including environmental hazards policies, which has only become more urgent in the face of the mounting climate crisis.

EAC and the Surfrider Foundation submitted comments to the Board in advance of the meeting asking for the County to complete the missing hazards chapter before finalizing the LCP with concerns that the incomplete plan will result in inconsistencies, set a negative precedent in the state for other jurisdictions to ignore planning for the impacts of the climate crisis, and that the implementation of the LCP required more time for public education and outreach.