Malibu|News|
Opponents Keep Watch Over Lagoon
Supporters of the project have also kept a presence alongside protesters, to provide a different perspective.

Email: Jessica.Davis (at) patch.com
Phone: (310) 321-8309
Facebook: Facebook.com/malibupatch & Facebook.com/santamonicapatch
Twitter: Twitter.com/malibupatch & Twitter.com/stamonicapatch
Hometown: Anaheim Hills, Calif.
Bio: Jessica E. Davis is a news reporter and multimedia journalist who has lived in Southern California nearly all her life. She is the type of reporter who likes to go beyond the surface level.
Before coming to Los Angeles County, Jessica launched Palm Desert Patch in the Coachella Valley in 2010, where she reported on environmental issues, crime, entertainment and the impact of the elimination of redevelopment on the city. She also covered the local extension of the Occupy Wall Street movement, camping out with the protesters for several days. She was the only journalist to witness the beginning of a police raid on the encampment, and provided up-to-the minute live coverage. In Malibu, she covered the Malibu Lagoon Restoration Project from start to finish, providing regular updates and behind-the-scenes features. She also covered the Santa Monica shootings, beating traditional media by 15 minutes with the early reports.
Before joining Patch, Jessica worked as a wire service reporter in Southern California, where she wrote about everything from celebrities to crime, especially celebrities committing crimes. She also started up a blog while living in Asia and freelanced photographs of Cyclone Nargis in Myanmar, which were published in The Christian Science Monitor and CBS.com.
Jessica graduated from Whitworth University in Spokane, Wash. with a B.A. in Journalism and History. While at school, she served as news and online editor of The Whitworthian. She also hosted a news radio show.
When she's not working on a story or editing video, Jessica can be found hiking, volunteering, reading a good book or hanging out with her husband.
Supporters of the project have also kept a presence alongside protesters, to provide a different perspective.

Opponents of the Malibu Lagoon project have been critical of the plan, which outlines the removal and treatment of water from part of the Malibu Lagoon.
School officials warn that girls are humiliated and harassed, while initiation for boys usually involves violence.
California State Parks, the lead agency on the Malibu Lagoon project, is including input from the Chumash people during the project, which could last four months.
The images were released as part of a new State Parks website dedicated to the project.
In the hopes of improving local water quality, the City of Malibu has established a staffed hotline where residents can report environmental and public health threats.
The overhaul of the Malibu Lagoon is permitted to begin Friday, but will likely not start until early next week.
The fundraiser is set for Thursday, May 31 at the Canyon Club in Agoura and will feature the popular band The English Beat.
The first event on Saturday, June 2 will take place at Malibu Bluffs Park with a family picnic theme.
The Malibu City Council votes to start the process of creating a Communities Facilities District to finance, design and complete environmental studies needed for the proposed Civic Center Wastewater Treatment Facility.
The plan, which still needs final approval from the Malibu City Council, hopes to open up prime on-street parking for shoppers in the Civic Center area.
Just days before the expected June 1 start of the Malibu Lagoon Restoration and Enhancement Plan, residents press the city to take further action.
The makeshift home was made up of bicycle tires, a surfboard and other scrap materials.
The protests come as an appellate court ruled that the June 1 start of the overhaul of the Malibu Lagoon can move forward, despite the appeal of a lawsuit challenging the project's permit.
Malibu High School alum Lindsay Johnson graduated from Skidmore College this month and has landed an internship at Robert A.M. Stern Architects in New York.
The Sea Save Foundation outlines problems with the Malibu Lagoon project.
Malibu does not allow BBQs, open fires or smoking at any of its parks or facilities.
Malibu High School students are serving homeless children in Kenya.
Malibu customers will receive advance notice by mail when installations are scheduled in the area, according to Edison.
Based on the large number of recommendations and votes on the Readers' Choice poll, Malibu residents overwhelming chose Malibu Seafood as offering the freshest fish.