Environmentalists remain set against resort plan
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Paul Clinton
CRYSTAL COVE -- Irked by developer Mike Freed’s pledge to push ahead
with an increasingly unpopular resort for Crystal Cove State Park,
environmentalists are vowing to continue fighting.
On Thursday, Freed blamed opposition to his $35-million luxury resort
on a “vocal minority of people who have been told inaccuracies.”
Freed also vowed to continue efforts to shepherd his project through
the state approval process.
Freed’s comments stunned environmentalists who showed up, along with
hundreds of others, to a Jan. 18 state informational meeting to voice
their disapproval of the resort.
“If he thinks that was just a vocal minority, we’ve got to rent the
Bren Center,” Sierra Club spokeswoman Jeannette Merrilees said Friday. “I
think it’s unrealistic [for Freed to proceed], because he has no
support.”
While Freed brushed off the public outcry, state parks officials have
begun to reassess the project. Department officials under former Gov.
Pete Wilson signed a 60-year concessionaire’s contract with Freed in
1997.
The state bought Crystal Cove from the Irvine Co. in 1979 for $32.6
million.
“We have been given a huge amount of input from the public,” state
parks spokesman Roy Stearns said. “It’s a huge volume of stuff to look
through to see where we go from here.”
One option under consideration is a buyout of Freed’s deal. Freed has
said he has spent $2 million so far on design costs for the resort, which
would offer $375-per-night room rates.
A coalition of environmental groups have lined up to oppose the
project. Orange County CoastKeeper director Garry Brown said the San
Francisco developer has underestimated the resistance to his project.
“If he wants a battle, then there will be one,” Brown said. “There is
uniform opposition.”
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