BCDC Socks It
to ViolatorRecord Settlement for Violating
Bay Protection Law
Hanson Aggregates Mid-Pacific, Inc. paid $373,000
to BCDC (the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development
Commission)–the California state agency responsible for protecting
the San Francisco Bay and providing public access to the Bay
shoreline–to settle alleged violations by Hanson of the California
law administered by BCDC. The amount is the largest paid to settle
an enforcement case in the Commission’s 39-year history.
Sand, which has been commercially mined from the
bottom of the Bay since the 19th century, is used to make concrete
and asphalt, as well as for other construction purposes. In 1999,
Hanson, a multinational corporation headquartered in Great Britain,
acquired sand mining rights from two local sand mining companies. An
investigation by BCDC’s staff found that, at least since 1997,
significantly more sand was being mined than the amount authorized
by BCDC permits. These violations continued after Hanson took over
the mining rights from the local companies. BCDC initiated an
enforcement action against the sand miners for violations of the
McAteer-Petris Act, the law that established BCDC and requires
permits for activities in the Bay, including sand mining. Hanson has
chosen to resolve the violations through the settlement and has
advised BCDC that the illegal practices have ended.
On October 24, 2003, Attorney General Bill Lockyer
filed a separate lawsuit against Hanson and its predecessors seeking
$200 million in damages to recover the value of sand illegally taken
from public property and unpaid royalties owed to the State. BCDC’s
settlement does not affect the lawsuit brought by the Attorney
General.
Barbara Kaufman, the chair of BCDC, said, “I
believe this settlement is just and fair. Hanson deserves credit for
taking responsibility for the violations and bringing a quick
resolution to this enforcement problem.”
Will Travis, BCDC’s executive director added, “The
amount of the fine reflects the gravity of Hanson’s past violations
and is an important precedent. This settlement, along with Governor
Schwarzenegger’s approval last week of Senate Bill 1568, which
allows our Commission to impose higher penalties on violators,
should make it clear that the laws passed to protect the Bay will be
aggressively enforced.”