Our mission is to protect the habitat of Puget Sound tidelands from the underregulated expansion of new and intensive shellfish aquaculture methods. These methods were never anticipated when the Shoreline Management Act was passed. They are transforming the natural tideland ecosystems in Puget Sound and are resulting in a fractured shoreline habitat. In South Puget Sound much of this has been done with few if any meaningful shoreline permits and with limited public input. It is exactly what the Shoreline Management Act was intended to prevent.

Get involved and contact your elected officials to let them you do not support aquaculture's industrial transformation of Puget Sound's tidelands.

Governor Inslee:

Monday, June 30, 2014

Drakes Bay Oyster Company: Supreme Court Denies Request for Hearing

 
It's now time to let the Philip Burton Wilderness,
created for all citizens, be completed as Congress passed as law.
 
A contiguous marine wilderness
may now be completed. 
(click to enlarge)
 
 

Today the Supreme Court of the United States denied Drakes Bay Oyster Company's (DBOC) request to hear their case. With that decision the injunction allowing DBOC to continue its commercial operation in Drakes Estero is now lifted and the process for the removal of non-native marine species being grown by DBOC and the dismantling and removal of the structures in this wilderness area may begin.
 
Press release from the West Marin Environmental Action Committee
 
June 30, 2014

Contact:  Amy Trainer 415-306-6052
Neal Desai:  510-368-0845
Gordon Bennett: 415-663-1881

U.S. Supreme Court Declines To Hear Oyster Company Petition for Review
    Interior Department Can Proceed to Restore Wilderness To Drakes Estero as Congress Intended

Point Reyes, Calif. - Today the United States Supreme Court denied the petition for review filed by the Drakes Bay Oyster Company, thus affirming the 9th Circuit Court of Appeal's denial of the Company's preliminary injunction lawsuit. The Company sued the Interior Department in December 2012 after former Interior Secretary Ken Salazar decided to let the 40-year lease expire on its own terms. The effect will be that the temporary emergency injunction put in place by the 9th Circuit in February 2013 will be lifted and the Department of the Interior can set in motion a timeline for the company to remove its oyster operation from Drakes Estero.
 
“The Court made the right decision in upholding the long-anticipated oyster lease expiration that protects Drakes Estero, the wild ecological heart of Point Reyes National Seashore, which is particularly important on the eve of the 50th Anniversary of the Wilderness Act,” said Amy Trainer, executive director of the Environmental Action Committee of West Marin. “We look forward to a time of healing in the community and stand ready to do our part to support the workers’ transition.”
 
“The Court decision affirms that incredibly beautiful places like Drakes Estero need to be returned to their full splendor, as Congress determined decades ago when the land was purchased by and for the American public,” said Neal Desai, Pacific Region Field Director for the National Parks Conservation Association. “We have been waiting for more than 40 years to celebrate this marine wilderness designation in Point Reyes National Seashore.” 
"There is nothing surprising in the Court decision that has now confirmed for the fourth time that the closure of the oyster operation was a well-established matter of law and policy that Mr. Lunny was fully aware of before he bought the last few years of the lease," said Gordon Bennett, President of Save Our Seashore. "  I hope that community wounds can heal and the clean-up begin so that the public and wildlife can enjoy this Marine Wilderness as Congress intended," said Bennett.
The company has been operating for 19 months past its lease expiration under the soon-to-be-lifted court injunction. The company's workers living on-site will be allowed to remain in the housing for the foreseeable future until equivalent housing can be located, and they will receive a generous relocation package allowed under federal relocation assistance laws.
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Amy Trainer, JD
Executive Director
Environmental Action Committee of West Marin

Box 609 Point Reyes, CA 94956

(415) 663-9312 office
(415) 306-6052 cell

Protecting West Marin Since 1971!
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Those who contemplate the beauty of the Earth

find reserves of strength that will endure
as long as life lasts.  ~ Rachel Carson






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