Banning Ranch foes meet tonight
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- A group of residents who have banded together in an
effort to block development on the Banning Ranch property will meet today
to discuss creating a wildlife and open space reserve instead.
Calling themselves the Santa Ana River Estuary and Bluffs Task Force,
a group of about a dozen Newport-Mesa residents are determined to stop
the proposed development on a large piece of untouched land.
“We’re pretty much a bunch of local people who would like to keep this
open space,” said Terry Welsh, chairman of the task force. “The feeling
in our group, that we hope will spread, is that this is an irreplaceable
piece of property. There is an ever-decreasing amount of property along
the coast, especially in Orange County.”
The task force hopes to find state, federal and private funding to
purchase the land for a reserve, Welsh said.
The project could coincide with another effort by the Friends of
Harbors, Beaches and Parks to create a park that would line both sides of
the Santa Ana River, stretching from Adams Avenue to the ocean.
Banning Ranch is a 412-acre plot of undeveloped, unincorporated land
that overlooks the Santa Ana River where Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
meet.
The two primary owners of the property are Yorba Linda-based Aera
Energy and a group called the Rancho Santiago Partnership, of Newport
Beach. The Newport-Mesa Unified School District owns a small corner of
the land and intends to sell it.
Taylor Woodrow Homes three years ago unveiled a plan to build 1,750
residential homes, a 75-room hotel and a 70,000-square-foot retail plaza.
“Since that time, we’ve been working to add detail into the project,
define the project’s benefits and determine the environmental impact,”
said Mike Schlesinger, the developer’s project manger.
Plans are still being studied by the Orange County Planning and
Development Department, which will also consider the possible impacts of
the project on the environment.
So far, developers have submitted an application for a general plan, a
zoning change and a coastal program, said George Britton, a county
project manager.
Even with the progress on the project, Schlesinger said selling the
land to the group is not out of the question -- if the price is right.
“It isn’t our plan to sell this property. However, sometimes someone
comes by and offers to buy it from you,” Schlesinger said. “If they
submit an offer, we will consider it.”
FYI
WHO: The Santa Ana River Estuary and Bluffs Task Force
WHAT: A public meeting to discuss the proposed development of Banning
Ranch
WHEN: 7:15 p.m. today
WHERE: 230 E. 17th Street, Ste. 206, Costa Mesa
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