Coastal Commission recommendation could hurt Ocean View district
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Andrew Wainer
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Hearthside Homes may not be the only one affected if
the Coastal Commission cuts in half the area on the Bolsa Chica mesa
available for development -- the Ocean View School District also owns
land on the mesa.
The land -- a $12-million, 15-acre parcel near Warner Avenue -- falls on
a portion of the mesa that the commission’s staff is suggesting to
preserve as open space.
Cutting the development area from 183 acres to 65 acres, as the staff is
recommending, would be “devastating” to the district, Supt. James
Tarwater said. And, he said the district will seek “legal means” to fight
the recommendation if necessary.
Land categorized as open space by the commission must remain undeveloped,
which means the number of homes Hearthside hopes to build would be
drastically reduced.
Tarwater said the district plans to build an elementary school on the
site to accommodate the 1,235 homes the developer wants to build. However
the staff recommendation would squash those plans, and the new students
from the Hearthside development would have to be bused to a school that
has enough space.
“The closest school that has room is six miles away,” Tarwater said.
He added that parents in the area tend to be against busing, and it would
cost the district extra money to do so.
The Coastal Commission will decide on the matter in April.
If the commission approves the recommendation, Tarwater said all 15 acres
would be labeled open space and would therefore remain undeveloped.
“We are anxiously waiting for the commission’s ruling,” Tarwater said.
The superintendent added that Hearthside Homes had previously agreed to
provide, through developer fees, $6 million of the $8 million needed to
build the school. That amount would be significantly reduced, however, if
the commission moves ahead with what the staff suggests.
The law requires developers to compensate nearby school districts for the
number of new students a home development brings to a district. In
addition to the Ocean View district, Hearthside Homes is also required to
pay developer fees to the Huntington Beach City and Union High school
districts, which would also serve some of the mesa’s potential students.
QUESTION
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Do you think the Coastal Commission will agree with its staff’s
recommendation to cut in half the area of the Bolsa Chica mesa available
for development? Call our Readers Hotline at 965-7175, fax us at 965-7174
or send e-mail to [email protected]. Please spell your name and include
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