
Big Oil in California, including recent legislation brokered by Governor Jerry Brown to extend California’s cap-and-trade program past 2020, began at the Annual Legislative Fisheries Forum at the State Capitol in March of 2009.
At the forum, John Lewallen, an author, environmental leader, and seaweed harvester, raised concern about an oil industry lobbyist being placed on the panel overseeing the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative. I asked him for the lobbyist's name, and he told me it was Catherine Reheis-Boyd, President of the Western States Petroleum Association.
I discovered that Reheis-Boyd was part of the MLPA Blue Ribbon Task Force for the North Central Coast and South Coast. It was alarming to find an oil industry figure with a clear conflict of interest involved in a task force meant to protect the ocean, along with other officials with similar conflicts.
Months later, Reheis-Boyd became President of the Western States Petroleum Association and Chair of the MLPA Initiative South Coast panel after the previous chair departed.
Despite officials and corporate environmental NGO leaders describing the process as open and inclusive, Tribal leaders, fishermen, grassroots environmentalists, and public trust advocates criticized the presence of this lobbyist and others like her overseeing marine protection efforts.
These concerns were validated in December 2012 when the Brown administration finalized a series of marine protected areas on the California Coast that failed to adequately protect the ocean.