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Resolution Opposing Offshore Drilling on SD County Supervisor Docket

 Resolution Opposing Offshore Drilling on SD County Supervisor Docket

SAN DIEGO (CNS) = The San Diego County Board of Supervisors today will
consider a resolution opposing drilling off the coast of Southern
California, following the Trump administration's plans to expand the practice.
  

Put forward in a board letter by Paloma Aguirre and Terra Lawson-
Remer, the resolution states that the Board of Supervisors ``opposes any new or
expanded offshore oil and gas drilling, and deep seabed mining, and urges
federal and state decision-makers to permanently prohibit offshore drilling and
deep seabed mining in all U.S. waters, including the Pacific Ocean off
California.''

The proposal also calls for  Chief Administrative Officer Ebony
Shelton ``to express the county's support for (United States) House of
Representatives Bill 2862, the Southern California Coast and Ocean Protection
Act,'' according to a board letter.
  

Shelton would coordinate with Gov. Gavin Newsom, state Attorney
General Rob Bonta and Southern California counties on a ``unified, regional
response needed to keep new oil drilling out of our coastal waters and protect
our San Diego communities and local economy.''
  

On Nov. 20, the Trump administration announced that it will reopen
ocean waters off the Pacific Coast to oil drilling leases, generating rapid
opposition from California officials and environmentalists.
  

During a Monday morning press conference on the harbor side of the
county Administration Building, Aguirre and Lawson-Remer were joined by other
opponents of offshore drilling, including an Imperial Beach business owner, an
environmental group leader and a medical doctor.
  

``We are here to tell Donald Trump and the CEOs of Exxon, Chevron and
all the major oil companies that our coastline is not for sale,'' said Lawson-
Remer, board chair.
  

The push to reopen California to more offshore drilling ``would be
costly, destructive and puts our beaches and coastline at risk of another
devastating oil spill,'' she said, as people stood nearby holding signs that
read, ``Drilling is Killing.''
  

Lawson-Remer, whose district includes a good chunk of the county's
coastline, said she will never forget the sea birds and seals that she saw
drowning in oil. She said the 1969 Santa Barbara disaster poured 4 million
gallons of crude oil into area waters.
  

Caused by a well blowout, the spill killed wildlife, destroyed miles
of coastline and ``changed our state forever,'' Lawson-Remer added.
  

The county government resolution will send a message to ``Big Oil
executives that San Diego County's coastline is not for sale,'' Lawson-Remer
said. ``We have strong environmental and pipeline laws to make sure that this
does not happen.''
  

The county has made real progress on cleaner types of energy, and ``we
will not go backwards,'' said Lawson-Remer, who urged residents to sign a
petition available on both her and Aguirre's social media platforms.
  

Aguirre said that San Diego is ``defined by its iconic natural
spaces,'' and accused the Trump administration of trying to turn back the clock
to the mid-1980s.
  

``Let me be clear: No one wants this,'' said Aguirre, whose district
includes the South Bay. ``And I mean no one.''
  

Aguirre noted that both Democrats and Republicans in California oppose
off-shore drilling, which also threatens undersea ecosystems.
  

One oil spill ``can shut down an entire tourism industry,'' said
Aquirre, citing the Santa Barbara disaster and a 2021 spill off the coast of
Huntington Beach in Orange County. The 2021 spill spread tar balls all the way
down to San Diego beaches and ``it could happen again,'' Aguirre added.
  

She said her district knows first-hand the harm pollution can do, as
evidenced by sewage in the Tijuana River Valley, which has led to years of
beach closures.
  

``Stopping this plan will take all of us, up and down the state,''
Aguirre said. ``We will send a message so loud they will hear it all the way to
the White House.'' Aguirre also said while a resolution may seem symbolic, it
can be an effective tool to push back.

John Crumley, who runs an ice cream shop in Imperial Beach, said he
has seen his community change due to environmental pollution. Imperial Beach
used to be busy and thriving beach town -- but sewage plumes and toxic waste
have caused damage, said Crumley, owner of Cow-A-Bunga.


Area beaches are technically open -- but if conditions are unsafe,
tourists go somewhere else, meaning communities can't bounce back easily,
Crumley said. ``We absolutely have to oppose any push to expand drilling off
our coasts,'' he added.


The resolution proposal is agenda item 26. The Tuesday board meeting
will start at 9 a.m. room 310 of the County Administration Center, 1600 Pacific
Highway.

Copyright 2025, City News Service, Inc.

By: City News Service

December 9, 2025

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Resolution Opposing Offshore Drilling on SD County Supervisor Docket