LOS ANGELES — The U.S. Supreme Court waded into the Pacific Ocean to settle a long-running dispute Monday over where California ends and federal offshore lands begin.
The court's decree Monday will help settle federal and state disputes and prevent future litigation over oil, gas and other mineral leases.
Both sides have been trying to reach agreement since the mid-50s after Congress passed the Submerged Lands Act.
"It's a huge achievement after all this time," said Sheri Pemberton of the California Lands Commission. "Going forward there's absolute certainty about what that boundary is."
On the federal side, the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management said in a statement that it is "very pleased" with the decision that "comes as a result of many years of hard work."
The decree addresses a fight launched in 1945 when the federal government sued the state for leasing land for oil drilling off Long Beach.
President Truman said submerged lands belonged to the U.S. government and the Supreme Court agreed.
Congress eventually passed a law giving states ownership of lands up to 3 miles off the coast, but a fixed boundary was never set.