After receiving nearly 15,000 public comments, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) decided to continue to nominate a Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary off San Luis Obispo Countyās coast.
The proposed 140-mile sanctuary, intended to offer protections and management for marine resources between Cambria and Santa Barbara, was in jeopardy after it had not advanced from the nomination phase to the designation phase in five years.

But NOAAās five-year review of the application concluded that the sanctuary still meets the criteria for nomination. It was renewed to October 2025.
āThere are still significant threats to the area; it is still an area of national significance, and there is still broad community support for the nomination remaining on the inventory of possible designations,ā NOAA wrote in its Oct. 1 notice in the federal register.
In deciding to renew the nomination, NOAA officials cited ānew scientific informationā that backed up the ānational significanceā of the coastline and the threats its resources face.
Local elected officials and indigenous tribal leaders celebrated the news in a press release on Oct. 13.
āI am thankful this five-year extension was granted, and I urge NOAA to move forward with designating this area as a sanctuary to protect it for future generations,ā U.S. Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-Santa Barbara) said in a statement. āMarine sanctuaries play an essential role in protecting Californiaās sensitive marine and coastal areas from further oil and gas development. Designating this unique region on the Central Coast as a National Marine Sanctuary will help preserve our natural environment and cultural heritage while also helping to fight climate change.ā
Fred Collins, chair of the Northern Chumash Tribal Council, which was the organization behind the application, said that a sanctuary would make āall things connected, all things dreaming together for the abundant life of Grandmother Oceanāfor fishermen and fisherwomen, tourists, and all that dwell on the shining, magical, mysterious, majestic coastline of the Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary.ā ā
This article appears in The Awareness Issue.

