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Battle of the Boards on Seal Beach Council

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TIMES STAFF WRITERS

It’s a municipal ruckus that only Southern Californians could understand. The mayor of Seal Beach is a windsurfer. One of the councilmen is a surfer.

They can pass resolutions on street improvements and order traffic surveys and decide how much of the city’s money to set aside for various environmental studies. But they cannot agree on the latest issue tearing at the seams of their tiny city on the border of Los Angeles County: Who gets a little spit of water offshore and for how long--the windsurfers or the surfers?

No one so far is budging in this battle of the boards. The windsurfers are outnumbered and fighting for a chance to sail on a quarter-mile stretch of water in Seal Beach, where the perfect mixture of wind and waves makes for some of the best rides between Malibu and Mexico.

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But the water rights have belonged for a decade to the surfers, protective of every inch of every wave.

They have tried to negotiate over the table, to reach some kind of compromise like grown-ups, but that just led to shouting matches.

Finally, after a windsurfer was cited for trespassing in the river mouth, they went to their City Council for help. And while all this may sound insignificant to some--a simple issue of taking turns and who started it first, anyway--Mayor Paul Yost, 39, and Councilman Shawn Boyd, 30, each take their personal turf war very seriously, like the hundreds of constituents who brought the case before them.

“The whole thing sounds childish, I know,” Yost said. “I mean, it’s really about sharing, right? Yes, but you see, no one really wants to share. And it’s my job to keep the city in one piece.”

One thing everyone agrees on is that the tight quarters of the San Gabriel River mouth make it unsafe for simultaneous surfing and windsurfing. In 1989, the City Council passed an ordinance restricting the area to surfers, and designated for windsurfing a 600-foot stretch of coastline south of the river mouth.

For years, the two groups coexisted that way. Surfers and lifeguards even overlooked, for a while, the handful of windsurfers who would sneak into the river mouth on the windiest days.

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But as the sport gained in popularity, more windsurfers started to steal time at the river’s mouth. Lifeguards began ordering them out, at the very vocal requests of surfers. Verbal fights broke out. So did a few shoving matches.

Then Seal Beach lifeguards moved to introduce some peace on the beach. When winds reached at least 15 mph and there were fewer than six surfers in the river mouth, lifeguards would raise a flag giving the OK to windsurfers to use the area.

But soon windsurfers complained that the flag was not raised enough--only about 10 times last year.

“The lifeguards, they’re all surfers too,” said Larry Taugher, a Newport Beach resident who has wind-surfed Seal Beach for 12 years. “They don’t want to deal with us anymore.”

To surfers, the issue has come down to numbers and local turf ties. First of all, there are more of them. And they allege that most of the windsurfers who want to use the river mouth are not even Seal Beach residents.

Moreover, surfers say, they have the law on their side. Councilman Boyd made it clear several weeks ago that, as far as he’s concerned, the 1989 ordinance stands. If you start changing the rules for the windsurfers, Boyd said, “Next we’ll have the skateboarders saying, ‘I want to skate on Main Street two hours every day.’ ”

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Surfers say that they have long been kicked around by restrictive communities, and a surfing ban that was leveled in Seal Beach in the 1960s is a bitter reminder to defend every inch of turf to the end. The ban was gradually lifted over 15 years, but many restrictions remained.

“If it comes to push or shove, we’re ready,” said Robert Howson, who owns a Seal Beach surf shop. “We’ll shove if we have to because the law is clear on this, and it favors us.”

Howson, like many of the hundred or so surfers who have joined the fight, blames Yost for a communication breakdown that has kept both groups from reaching an agreement.

“Just because we have a mayor that windsurfs and his friends who are among the well-heeled here in town, this has gotten out of hand,” Howson said.

But Yost said he is also a surfer and has no intention of kicking either group out of the river mouth.

When Boyd made his recent declaration to enforce the 10-year-old ordinance “to the T,” Yost said he was on vacation--in the surfing paradise of Hawaii.

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“The ordinance is old and it’s vague and something’s got to give,” Yost said. “Somehow people got into this thing of ‘It’s mine, it’s mine,’ and it’s starting to become a little embarrassing.”

Yost said he has invited members of both groups to Monday’s City Council meeting, where he will ask them to form a committee, along with the lifeguards, to iron out a compromise.

One idea, he said, is to allow windsurfers access to the river mouth from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. every afternoon, when winds pick up and create less than ideal conditions for surfers. In exchange, the city would let surfers use the river mouth north of the Seal Beach Pier as an all-day surfing playground. The sport is currently prohibited there between the hours of 10 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., to make room for swimmers.

So far, though, no surfers have agreed to join any committee.

“The city is going to act on this one way or another,” Yost said. “If they don’t want to talk about it, their side won’t be heard and they just might not like the outcome. That’s what the public process is all about.”

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Surf Turf Battle

Surfers and windsurfers in Seal Beach are battling over territory at the mouth of the San Gabriel River.

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