Oceana and Save Our Shores Applaud Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors For Opposing Expanded Offshore Drilling - Oceana

Oceana and Save Our Shores Applaud Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors For Opposing Expanded Offshore Drilling

Press Release Date: November 15, 2017

Location: Santa Cruz, CA

Contact:

Anna Baxter | email: abaxter@oceana.org
Anna Baxter

Yesterday afternoon, the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors unanimously adopted a resolution opposing new offshore drilling off the coast of California. Santa Cruz County is the fifteenth municipality in California to pass such a resolution, joining more than 150 municipalities on both the West and East coasts that have voiced opposition to offshore drilling and/or exploration off their shores.

“We need to stand together to protect the coast and the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary,” said Supervisor John Leopold. “The Bay provides life, recreation and is the core of our economy.”

“We applaud the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors for standing up to protect California’s coast from expanded offshore drilling,” said Ashley Blacow, Pacific policy and communications manager with Oceana. “We simply cannot support expanded offshore oil and gas drilling at the risk of coastal communities, economies, and ocean wildlife. The County of Santa Cruz just sent a clear message to decision-makers in Washington, DC that California’s coast is not for sale.”

“As a leader of a coastal conservation non-profit with a mission to steward clean shores, healthy habitats and living waters in our Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, it is particularly gratifying to see the County of Santa Cruz unite and take a stand against potential future threats to our Sanctuary,” said Katherine O’Dea, Executive Director of Save Our Shores. “Environmental policy coming out of D.C. these days is imprudent at best, so action by our local governing bodies is one of our best lines of defense.”

The West Coast has long been safeguarded from expanded offshore drilling; no new leases have been granted in Pacific federal waters since 1984 or in California state waters since 1969—the year of the Santa Barbara oil spill disaster. However, in April 2017 President Trump issued an Executive Order calling for a re-evaluation of U.S. oceans for oil and gas potential, including the Pacific coast. In response, local jurisdictions in California have been speaking out, with 15 municipalities passing resolutions since April.

A healthy Pacific coast contributes upwards of 500,000 jobs and provides nearly $12 billion in wages, through fishing, recreation and tourism and other sectors. The 1969 Santa Barbara and 2015 Refugio Beach oil spill disasters, combined with multiple leaks from offshore platforms and undersea pipelines, have released more than four million gallons of oil into the Pacific Ocean over the decades. Offshore drilling related spills and chronic oil leaks put the ocean economy, marine wildlife, and the health of communities at risk.

Many of California’s state leaders also vocally oppose expanded offshore oil drilling including California Governor Jerry Brown, California Lt. Governor Gavin Newsom, Attorney General Xavier Becerra, the California Fish and Game Commission, the California State Lands Commission, and the California Coastal Commission.

For more information go to www.oceana.org/ProtectOurCoast