Denial of marine terminal advised

By Alexander Rich, Staff Writer
Tuesday, December 04, 2007 | 7 comment(s)

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A hearings officers has recommended Coos County deny an application to build a marine terminal on the Coos Bay North Spit.

If Coos County commissioners agree with the officer’s opinion, it would be the first serious stumbling block for a proposed liquefied natural gas terminal.

But the recommendation is somewhat ambivalent. Hearings officer Anne Corcoran Briggs said the application did not satisfy her concerns about the potential impacts of a marine terminal on commercial fishermen and recreational users. Yet in her conclusion, she argued against her own opinion.

“However, I realize that reasonable minds can differ about both the interpretations of applicable standards and the evidence used to show that the standards have or have not been justified,” she wrote.

In turn, she offered 10 conditions of approval for the commissioners if they chose to approve the application.

The commissioners will have an opportunity to discuss the matter today at 1:30 p.m. in the commissioners’ courtroom at the Coos County Courthouse in Coquille.

The public record for the application has been closed, so neither opponents nor the applicant, Oregon International Port of Coos Bay, can provide further testimony.

But Jeffrey Bishop, executive director of the port, shared his sentiments about the opinion Monday.

“We respectfully disagree with her conclusions and hopefully the commissioners will carefully consider her conclusion and will come to a different conclusion,” he said.

In her opinion, Corcoran Briggs said the port failed to meet the county’s criteria for dredging the estuary. According to its proposal, the port plans to dredge about 5.6 million cubic yards of materials from 12 acres of intertidal land. It would then be deposited in designated locations around the North Spit. The excavated area would make way for a port slip that would provide berth for LNG tankers as well as other vessels.

In the Coos County Zoning and Development Ordinance, applicants must demonstrate their projects will provide a public benefit and won’t “unreasonably interfere with public trust rights.”

At the Sept. 17 public hearing, opponents argued the need for a dock does not warrant the costs of the proposal. They also said LNG tankers coming to port would disrupt commercial fishermen and scare away tourists. On these items, Corcoran Briggs agreed. She also argued that a prior configuration for the ship dock would pose less damage to the area.

“As opponents note, an earlier alternative that creates docking facilities parallel to the shoreline requires considerably less dredging, has a much smaller impact on the estuary and provides similar benefits to the Port,” she wrote.

“The fact that the proposed slip will generate some generic economic benefits over an unspecified time frame is not enough to show that there is a need for this terminal configuration.”

Bishop said the current configuration is necessary because otherwise the port would not have sufficient land to construct a container terminal.

“We think the (proposed) slip is the least invasive option,” he said. “The earlier proposal would have required more dredging for an access channel.”

Aside from design matters, Corcoran Briggs wrote that the dredging and disturbance of eel grass beds in the area could adversely affect local fisheries.

“Until that impact is better quantified and analyzed, I cannot say that the applicant has met its burden of demonstrating the Public Trust rights have not been unreasonably affected,” she wrote.

On other concerns raised by opponents, however, Corcoran Briggs found less common ground. Many opponents argued the project would destabilize dunes and create further environmental degradation when dredging spoils had to be deposited elsewhere.

Corcoran Briggs dismissed these arguments, however, noting that the areas the port planned to remove spoils to were approved by the county.

She also found little reason to be concerned about storm water drainage from the slip and the LNG terminal adversely impacting the local ecosystem.

Although the two projects are not directly related, one of the conditions the commissioners have preliminary included requires the construction of a ship dock suitable for handling LNG tankers. If the port’s application is turned down, that would possibly put in jeopardy the Jordan Cove application.

But Project Manager Bob Braddock did not seem concerned.

“The verdict was surprising, but in the end, I think the (project’s) facts will stand any scrutiny,” he said. “I do believe it will be positively resolved.”
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Marcie wrote on Dec 5, 2007 12:47 PM:

Oh Yes..! Just look at the Bay Area today. I'm assuming the San Francisco Bay Area is what you're referring to. Another huge oil spill mess for the coastline to contend with, and the taxpayers to foot. And just a few days after Gov. Kulongoski of Oregon touts LNG Terminals for the state whether they provide any local benefit or not, he's declaring a state of emergency in view of recent storms. He states "My priority is to ensure the safety of Oregonians by providing whatever resources they need to stay warm and dry and protect their property". But what of the 80 plus percent of private property owners protection along the proposed Pacific Connector Pipeline route who's property will be seized through eminent domain? Why not take a little more time and research and develop a potential hotbed right under our feet? GeoThermal is a renewable resource that is surely to be a vision to the future. Betting on foreign oil is a gamble we would better let go and turn our collective energies to ecologically and climate friendly alternatives. Wake up, Governor, the hour is at hand.

Miller wrote on Dec 5, 2007 10:39 AM:

LNG is coming whether you people like it or not. I fully support this project. Good for the Bay Area and good for Coos County!

Former Resident wrote on Dec 4, 2007 9:33 PM:

This is part of the reason that I had to leave the Bay Area. Doesn't anybody want a family wage job? I can remember when we had 300 Longshoremen. I can remember when trucks ran 'round the clock 6 days a week. I can remember when there were young families and generations of families in the Bay Area. I remember when you really could fish and make a living at it in Coos Bay. I helped build the road out to the North Spit Industrial Area. Now they call it an INDUSTRIAL AREA for a reason. Does anybody care to guess why? All the NIMBYs out there have theirs and they are preventing working people from getting a piece of the American Dream. I hated to leave, but I had to leave. The same narrow minded, selfish hippies/Luddites seem to still be running the show. My hope is that the Bay Area can once again become an economic force on the West Coast and slip the bonds of socialism.

Jody wrote on Dec 4, 2007 9:10 PM:

Just to correct Mr. Bishop in regards to his comment as he is in error. The only reason this slip dock is being proposed is to tuck the LNG ships out of the way because the original proposal had the ships parallel to the shore and this would have never passed muster as these ships are so hazardous. The Port is still violating many of the regulations recommended by the Gas Industry on the placement of LNG terminals but when you have the fox watching the henhouse what can you expect? Why the Port is having tax payers foot the bill for the Jordan Cove ship docking facilities including fees, maintenance, etc, should be sending alarm bells all over the place, particularly when you don't see other Ports doing this for other LNG proposals and this being a foreign controlled energy company and all that Americans cannot even invest in! Regardless of what Mr. Bishop says here, I think the people of this area can do the math and figure out that the removal of 5.6 million cubic yards of dredging material is far more detrimental than the removal of just a few acres. This LNG facility, if built, will more than likely be detrimental to the Port's ability to place their containerized cargo facility where it is proposed but it isn't like we haven't tried to warn them! You would think after all the boondoggles this Port has done in the past they would learn a few things but guess not.

Rusty wrote on Dec 4, 2007 3:17 PM:

Joe six pack may be an iliterate red-neck but he has a point!

Gene wrote on Dec 4, 2007 2:34 PM:

I am not sure what you mean Joe but, I support your right to say it. In my opinion, Corcoran Briggs played her cards perfectly. She got paid and managed to include everyone in her final analysis. I am not sure what she accomplished that couldn't have been done on the local level with some common sense thinking by our elected officials. I hope they aren't afraid to tell the Port of Portland,(OOPS, I guess I mean the Port of Coos Bay) to keep their ships in the Columbia. We need to protect our resources and livelihoods, the people from the Port are not our friends.

Joe six pack wrote on Dec 4, 2007 2:13 PM:

In the beginning thay put the dredging spoils on the north spit that made a man made nesting spot for sea birds.(new sand with no grass) Then thay changed the rules again. No new man made nesting,(no new sand with no grass, spoils) So we pay to study,We pay to find something to protect,we pay to kill grass,And thay don't tell the public that the feral cats kill the birds so we pay to protect. The Oregon International port of Coos Bay is controled by the Port of Portland and thay won't let Portland loose jobs or money. So kill the the grass by the sea on the north spit and stop treating the puplic as criminals by making laws to stop access to puplic land and walking a dog or flying a kite or driveing a 4x4 or ATV after dark, We pay to park we pay to play. So read and watch the world news and watch the government it needs us to govern it.


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