EDITORIAL
When will enough be enough for Hearthside Homes and Signal Landmark?
Last month, the Bolsa Chica developer and landowner filed suit against
the California Coastal Commission, claiming the agency illegally “took”
property on the mesa, making development infeasible.
The company is seeking unspecified monetary damages, as well as an
abandonment of the commission’s decision to cut back the amount of
available land on the 230-acre mesa and return to a previous development
proposal.
In November, the commission voted to limit development on the mesa to
65 of the 183 acres planned for Hearthside’s 1,235-unit tract.
Hearthside, in its suit, is claiming that it is “physically infeasible
for Signal to build anything approaching 1,235 homes on the upper bench
[mesa] . . . ,” adding that even if it were possible to build the project
approved by the commission, it would be wholly out of character for the
surrounding neighborhood.
The claim maintains the commission’s action violated state and federal
law, and went against previous approvals of the project.
We certainly sympathize with the developer that it didn’t get all it
wanted. And while we must admit that Hearthside officials have come a
long way from their original plans, we can’t help but remind all parties
involved that the debate over this contentious development has been drawn
out almost 30 years since the state first secured about 300 acres for a
preserve in 1973.
The coastal commission began reviewing the Bolsa Chica coastal plan in
1982, and adopted an intensive development plan for a marina, motel, 500
acres of residential housing, a navigable ocean inlet, a roadway through
the wetlands and 915 acres of wetlands restoration.
Since that time, the plan has been scaled down to its current
incarnation because of appeals from conservationists and efforts by
developers, and the lower area of the wetlands has been purchased by the
ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles for preservation.
Yes, Hearthside Homes and Signal Landmark are limited as to what they
can develop on the Bolsa Chica.
And yes, what they can build is a far cry from what was originally
proposed back in 1982.
But there’s a reason for it.
This land serves as a pit stop for wintering and migratory birds each
year, including raptors and the least tern, a bird marked as endangered
by the state.
But even more importantly, the development of this land is something
that has riled public opinion probably more than any issue in the history
of this town.
Preserving this land is something many have fought to accomplish for
years, and Hearthside Homes and Signal Landmark need to really realize
this.
They should drop the lawsuit.
Whether the coastal commission did or didn’t “take” their land can be
argued again and again.
But what can’t be disputed is that the commission simply did what
many, many residents in this town have asked for. It set aside most of
the beloved Bolsa Chica mesa for preservation and in effect saved it from
development for years to come.
It’s time for 30 years of ugly name-calling and bruising battles to
end.
And Hearthside is in a great position to make that happen now. We urge
them to end the fight.
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