Cityscape roundup
A judge has upheld a California Coastal Commission decision to bar
construction on portions of the Bolsa Chica Mesa, which are to serve as a
foraging area for wild birds.
A San Diego Superior Court Judge announced Friday that he was
dismissing segments of a lawsuit filed by Bolsa Chica landowner Signal
Landmark that alleged the Coastal Commission had unlawfully taken
property from it by allowing it to build on only 65 acres of the more
than 200-acre property.
Developer Hearthside Homes’ Vice President Lucy Dunn declined to
comment on the decision. She has said in the past that
the Bolsa Chica mesa consists of about 200 acres along Warner Avenue,
near Pacific Coast Highway and bordering state-protected wetlands. Bolsa
Chica, itself, which lies between Warner and Seapoint avenues, is on the
Pacific Flyway, offering a haven to migrating birds.
“I think the Coastal Commission made a very careful decision based on
a previous court ruling,” said City Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff, who
also is a member of the Coastal Commission.
An appeals court ruled that an area on the mesa needed to be preserved
as a forging area for the protected raptors if they were to survive.
“The area on the upper bluff could be developed but there had to be an
area left,” Dettloff said. “This judge now confirmed that was the correct
decision and that building rights were not taken away.”
Developer Hearthside Homes planned to build homes on 183 acres of the mesa and was limited to 65 by the California Coastal Commission in
November.
Hearthside, which can now submit a new plan under the Coastal
Commission guidelines, has also put up plans for 387 homes on land near
Los Patos and Warner avenues.
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