II. CONSULTATION AND REVIEW 



The panel held monthly meetings incident to Commission meetings and in conjunction with the 

 Hearings. Important in this phase of the work were the many inputs and views of consultants, reviewers, 

 and others who provided material for use by the panel. It was not possible, of course, to incorporate the 

 specific views of all consultants into the findings and recommendations of the panel. However, without 

 the expert advice and constructive criticism of the following persons the work of the panel could not 

 have proceeded. 



Consultants and Reviewers 



Joseph E. Bodovitz, Executive Director, San Francisco James B. Meaner Jr., Executive Director of Civil Works, 



Bay Conservation and Development Commission Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army 



Joseph M. Caldwell, Acting Director, U.S. Army Coastal Alfred A. Porro, Jr., Attorney, Lyndhurst, New Jersey 



Engineering Research Center Donald W. Pritchard, Director, Chesapeake Bay Institute, 

 Francis T. Christy Jr., Resources for the Future, Inc., Johns Hopkins University 



Washington, D.C. Lyie S. St. Amant, Assistant Director, Louisiana Wild Life 

 Sidney R. Caller, Assistant Secretary (Science), Smith- and Fisheries Commission 



sonian Institution S. Fred Singer, Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Interior 

 Eugene T. Jensen, Chief, Office of Estuarine Studies, for Water Pollution Control 



Federal Water Pollution Control Administration Karl K. Terekian, Department of Geology, Yale Uni- 

 Boyd Ladd, Staff Liaison, National Council on Marine versity 



Resources and Engineering Development Leon W. Weinberger, Assistant Commissioner for Re- 

 James T. McBroom, Executive Secretary, Committee on search and Development, Federal Water Pollution 



Multiple Use of the Coastal Zone, Washington, D.C. Control Administration 

 W. V. McGuinness Jr., Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army ^^^^ 



In addition to the above, Commissioner David A. Adams, although not a member of the panel," 

 participated fully in the work of the panel, for which the panel is deeply grateful. 



III. PREPARATION OF THE REPORT 



The preparation of this report, including the opinions, findings, and recommendations are wholly the 

 responsibility of the panel Commissioners. However, the vast amount of effort in assembling data and 

 presenting them is the work of many persons. 



Much of the information on uses of and changes in the coastal zone (Chapters 2 and 3) was 

 generously provided by John M. Clark, of the American Littoral Society; Joseph M. Caldwell, U.S. Army 

 Coastal Engineering Research Center; and L. Eugene Cronin, of the University of Maryland. 



Chapter 4 on pollution was compiled by panel staff associates. Captain Merlyn E. Natto, U.S. 

 Environmental Science Services Administration; and William S. Beller, Department of the Interior. 



Chapter 5, "Port Development and Redevelopment," was adapted from a U.S. Army Corps of 

 Engineers Report of the same name through the courtesy of Brig. General Harry G. Woodbury, Director 

 of Civil Works. 



Chapter 6, on basic science, represents the combined efforts of many, including John Lyman, of the 

 University of North Carolina; Joseph M. Caldwell; and WilUam I. Aron, Smithsonian Institution. 



Chapter 7, the activities of Federal agencies, came from material furnished by the agencies themselves 

 and from the National Council on Marine Resources and Engineering Development. Activities of States 

 was generously provided by Milton S. Heath, Jr., Institute of Government, University of North CaroUna. 



Chapter 8, on developing law, was prepared by H. Crane Miller, Smithsonian Institution. The work of 

 Albert H. Garretson and Ludwik A. Teclaff, of New York University-Fordham University Marine 

 Environment Legal Research Project, and of I. Michael Heyman, of the University of California at 

 Berkeley, is particularly acknowledged. 



The remainder of the report was compiled by staff associate Captain R. P. Dinsmore, U.S. Coast 

 Guard. 



III-163 



