Bolsa Chica development project on the table
Danette Goulet
The Orange County Planning Commission on Wednesday will hold a public
hearing on, and even may approve, the Brightwater Project, a development
of 387 homes on the upper bench of the Bolsa Chica Mesa.
The plan before the Planning Commission is in compliance with the
California Coastal Commission’s ruling that is, even now, held up in
litigation.
Developer Hearthside Homes and landowner Signal Landmark claim in the
suit that the commission essentially took the property from them by
restricting what could be built to the point where the development is no
longer economically feasible.
Hearthside Homes planned to build homes on 183 acres of the mesa and
was limited to 65 by the California Coastal Commission in November 2000.
Although a San Diego Superior Court Judge dismissed segments of the
complaint in August, the lawsuit goes on.
Meanwhile Hearthside Homes has submitted plans for the 65-acres.
This move has many concerned -- especially members of the Bolsa Chica
Land Trust, a group organized solely for the purpose of trying to acquire
and preserve the Bolsa Chica.
“We don’t think it’s appropriate to be moving forward on the planning
process on the upper bench, when they are still in litigation on the
lower bench,” said Evan Henry, president of the land trust.
Lucy Dunn, president of Hearthside Homes, declined to comment
Wednesday.
A major concern, Henry said, is that the Coastal Commission granted
permission to build on the upper bench, which also contains
environmentally sensitive areas, as a trade off for saving the lower
bench. By moving forward with development before courts have a reached a
verdict on the Coastal Commissions ruling, that trade off may not be
taken into consideration down the road.
Land trust members also feel that the environmental report is
deficient, Henry said, and that the historical significance of the site
demands more attention.
“It is an archeological site, which they continue to dig up and
destroy,” he said. “We don’t think they’ve done proper mitigation or
monitoring.”
An 18-acre section of the upper mesa, known to researcher as “ORA-83”,
was deemed eligible to be on the National Historic Site Registry by the
state Historic Preservation Commission in November. An abundance of
artifacts found on the site suggests that the Native American village
that thrived there more than 8,000 years ago was significant.
Land trust members, and those who would save the mesa, are put off by
what they call the “piecemeal tactics” Hearthside Homes is using to build
there.
“What this is leading to is poor planning,” Councilwoman Connie
Boardman said.
But Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff, who will have to vote on the plans
as Coastal Commissioner if the Brightwater Project gains approval, said
that Hearthside Homes is not only well within its rights, but that the
move is a common one.
“I’ve seen many property owners take the step they are taking now --
it’s pretty common, or ordinary, among developers,” Dettloff said. “But
I’ve also seen property with the dirt almost turned over and the
acquisition goes through.”
FYI
WHO: The Orange County Planning Commission
WHAT: Regular meeting
WHEN: Wednesday, May, 8 at 1:30 p.m.
WHERE: Orange County Planning Commission Hearing room, 10 Civic Center
Plaza, Santa Ana
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