The city of Encinitas has approved an additional room tax to replenish sand on its beaches. Other beach projects in San Diego County could get state funding to do the same thing. KPBS Environmental Reporter Ed Joyce has details.
The San Diego Association of Governments or SANDAG is working on a regional sand project.
It would mimic a 2001 pilot project and put sand on 12 beaches from Oceanside to Imperial Beach in 2010.
Steve Aceti with the California Coastal Coalition says research and monitoring from the pilot project will save time and money on the new project.
Aceti: And we can show that the sites that were chosen in 2001 are environmentally-safe and they didn't harm surf grass or lobster breeding grounds and that kind of thing.
He says that research will help speed the design and permitting process for the 2010 project.
Aceti says it's possible the SANDAG beach sand project will get $200,000 from the state.
He says that money could be used to create artificial reefs as a way to keep sand on beaches longer.
Ed Joyce, KPBS News.