Coastal Commissioner Steve Blank profiled in Capitol Weekly


By on Mon, June 23, 2008

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Cheri Parr
Steve Blank helps with the kelp-cutting, marking the opening of the Año Nuevo visitor center he helped build.

Coastal Commissioner Steve Blank is a Democrat appointed to the commission by Governor Schwarzenegger, reports the Capitol Weekly. He opposed the toll road through a state park—a position that cost Clint Eastwood and Bobby Shriver, the governor’s brother in law, their seats on the State Parks Commission. He’s also a Coastsider, with a home across Highway 1 from Año Nuevo.

"The biggest misperception is that nobody understands that it’s zoning. It’s not that you’ve lost property rights, it’s just that zoning differs (in the coastal zone). It’s unlike any other place in the world. This is because 75 percent of the population lives within 25 miles of the coast, but it is still among the most pristine coasts in the world," Blank said. "You share the coast with 38 million people."

Using his own money—and before he had a lot of it—he purchased land from the state conservancy by mortgaging his home, and has since placed protections on that land, such as leasing it back to sustainable farmers of $1 a year. "His personal goal is to protect the land and keep it wild, but accessible to visitors so they can appreciate it and learn from it," said Kassy Perry, a media consultant who has worked with Blank.

He and his wife –a Stanford business professor and who specializes in nonprofits—also donated $500,000 to the state-of-the-art Marine Education Center at Año Nuevo. The $3.2 million facility opened this month with a symbolic "kelp cutting" ceremony with donors and state officials that included state parks director Ruth Coleman, who lauded Blank. Without Blank’s "determination, vision and cash, this center would still be a dream trapped in the middle of two historic, but dilapidated barns."