Reserve lands $20 million
Andrew Edwards
Irvine Co. Chairman Donald Bren picked Orange County’s first regional
park as the place to announce the donation of an additional $20
million to county open spaces on Thursday.
“We chose this setting because of the park’s deep historical ties
to our company’s open space and historical legacy,” Bren said of his
gift to the Irvine Ranch Land Reserve.
Irvine Regional Park, just outside the northwest city limits of
Orange, was donated to the county in 1897 by Irvine Co. founder James
Irvine. The land reserve, 50,000-plus acres, includes 11,000 acres
set aside in 2001.
The $20-million pledge announced Thursday set the total amount the
Donald Bren Foundation has donated to the land reserve at $50
million.
Bren, a billionaire who usually keeps a low profile, wore blue
jeans, hiking boots and Western-style belt when he made his
announcement to about 200 invited guests at the park.
Interior Secretary Gale Norton praised Bren and the Irvine Co. for
the donation and work on the land reserve.
She held up the land reserve as an example of “new
environmentalism” favored by the Bush administration, in which
private interests cooperate with the government to preserve land.
After addressing environmentalists and officials who were invited
to the announcement, Norton told reporters federal agencies are
unable to care for all land that is valuable for conservation and
recreation.
“We cannot do it alone,” she said.
In addition to the donation, Bren also announced the completion of
the land reserve’s first “Mountains-to-Sea Trail” and the formation
of a nonprofit agency to care for the reserve. Bren said he recently
made his own trek down the 22-mile trail, which travels from Weir
Canyon to Upper Newport Bay.
Following his speech, Bren said his favorite parts of the trail
were portions that pass through wetlands and the Back Bay.
“I’ve spent so much of my life around the Back Bay and watching it
in recent years; it’s been preserved so nicely,” Bren said.
The first executive director of the new Irvine Ranch Land Trust is
Michael O’Connell, who has held senior positions with the Nature
Conservancy. He said that over the next six months, the trust will
focus on adding trails, including two more that link mountains to the
ocean.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards@
latimes.com.
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