October 27-30, 2002
Santa Barbara, California
Concurrent Sessions B
Monday, 2:00 p.m.
Please note: co-authors will
be identified in the conference book of abstracts and post-conference proceedings.
The Role of California’s Marine
Protected Areas
in Ecosystem and Fisheries Management
Chair: Michael
Orbach, Director, Duke University Marine Lab
Panelists for Discussion
Billy Causey, Superintendent, Florida Keys National Marine
Sanctuary
Pietro Parravano, President, Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen’s Associations
Tom Raftican, President, United Anglers of Southern California
Warner Chabot, Vice-President for Regional Operations, The
Ocean Conservancy
Rodney Fujita, Senior Scientist, Environmental Defense
Too Much Sediment, Not Enough
Sand
Chair: Naomi
Schwarz, Supervisor, County of Santa Barbara
Benjamin Kozlowicz, Graduate Student, Department of Environmental Science and
Policy, University of California Davis: Anthropogenic Sedimentation in North,
Coastal Watersheds of California: Assessing the Gualala, Navarro, and Mattole
River Watersheds
John Duffy, Senior Engineering Geologist, California Department of Transportation:
Living with Landslides on the Big Sur Coast: The Challenges of Maintaining
Highway 1
Kiki Runyan, Graduate Student, University of California Santa Cruz: Implications
of Harbor Dredging for the Santa Barbara Littoral Cell Sediment Budget
Greg S. Reid, Senior Coastal Engineer, Department of Beaches and Harbors, County
of Los Angeles: Opportunistic Beach Nourishment Program
Craig Everts, Principal, Everts Coastal: Managing the Sand Resources in Hook-Shaped
Bays in Southern California
International, National and State
Case Studies
Chair: Biliana
Cicin-Sain, Director, Center for the Study of Marine Policy, University of
Delaware
Geoff Wescott, Associate Professor, Deakin University, Melbourne Campus: Implementing
the World’s First Oceans Policy: Australia’s Experience 1998-2002
Kristina M. Gjerde, International Legal Advisor, Environmental Investment Partners:
Seamounts and Other Deep-Sea Treasures: Challenges Ahead
Glenn Boledovich, Policy and Program Analyst, National Ocean Service: Devolution
Derailed? Federalism and the Coast After 911
Xiaoqing Zeng, Hydrologist, Stetson Engineers, Inc.: Study of Transboundary
Water Pollution Control Between China and Hong Kong
Leonora P. D. Kaiaokamalie, Planner and GIS Analyst, Coastal Zone Management Program,
Hawaii State Office of Planning: The Hawaii Coastal Zone Management (CZM) Program’s
Cumulative and Secondary Impacts Initiative
Maritime Air Quality
Chair: Nancy
Sutley, Energy Advisor, Office of the Governor, State of California
Peggy Taricco, Manager, California Air Resources Board: State Approaches to
Managing Seaborne Sources of Air Pollution
Roxanne Johnson, Environmental Protection Specialist, Region IX, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency: Federal Management of Maritime-Generated Air Pollution
Sharon Maves, Environmental Project Manager, Port of Oakland: The Port of Oakland
Air Quality Incentive Program for Land Based Mobile Sources of Pollution
T. L. Garrett, Marine Environmental Supervisor, Port of Los Angeles: Marine
Vessel Emissions (Local Control of Global Sources)
Clive E. Dorman, Center for Coastal Studies, Scripps Institution of Oceanography,
University of California San Diego: Application of New Understandings of the
Marine Layer to Offshore Oil and Gas Development Planning
Regional Watershed Management
Chair: A.
L. Riley, Watershed Division, San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control
Board
Suzanne Michel, Research Fellow, San Diego State University: The Alamar River
Corridor: An Urban River Park Oasis in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico
Kallie M. Kull, Program Director, FishNet 4C: FishNet 4C- Central Counties’
Challenge to Restore Salmon Fisheries
Bridget Hoover, Monterey Bay Sanctuary Citizen’s Volunteer Monitoring: Monterey
Bay Sanctuary Citizen Watershed Monitoring Network
Christy Loper, Associate Scientist, Watershed and Coastal Planning, EIP Associates:
From Opposite Sides of the Fence to the Same Side of the Table, Challenges
and Opportunities Associated With Large-Scale Watershed Management in the Santa
Ana Watershed
Michael V. McGinnis, Acting Director, Ocean and Coastal Policy Center, Marine
Science Institute, University of California Santa Barbara: Watershed-Based
Partnerships and Coastal Ecosystem Planning
California Resources Agency | California
Environmental Protection Agency | CERES
Last modified on: Monday, November 11, 2002
Document URL: http://resources.ca.gov/ocean/CWO_02/ConSesSchedA.html