County planners OK Bolsa Chica construction
Danette Goulet
It began as a plan to build 5,700 homes and a marina on 1,700 acres of
land. Now Hearthside Homes’ plan calls for 388 homes to be built on
106-acres of land.
The significantly scaled back plan gained unanimous approval last week
from the Orange County Planning Commission. It was the fourth time the
commission approved a plan to build on the Bolsa Chica.
Known as the Brightwater project, the latest plan would build 388
homes on the upper mesa -- an area the California Coastal Commission has
already given Hearthside Homes permission to build on.
Still, the decision may not turn out to be the end to one of Southern
California’s longest running environmental battles.
Members of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust, a group formed with the purpose
of buying the land from Hearthside Homes, promise to keep the fight
going. Land trust members have said they will appeal the Planning
Commission’s decision to the Orange County Board of Supervisors.
The decision had yet to be appealed as of Wednesday, said Ron Tippets,
chief of public projects for the county.
If it is appealed, the board of supervisors would then have the option
of upholding the appeal, sending the project back to the Planning
Commission or denying it, in which case the project would move on to the
Coastal Commission for approval.
Most times, Tippets said, the board will send projects back to the
Planning Commission.
Those who started the fight more than three decades ago can scarcely
believe how far they have come in winning the battle.
Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff, who now sits on the Coastal Commission,
was one of the first to take up that battle and an original member of
Amigos de Bolsa Chica.
“When we started 35 plus years ago, the areas of the mesa were
considered to be areas that could be developed,” Dettloff sad.
At the time the group was only interested in saving the wetlands. But
that changed, she said, as they learned about the environmental
relationship between the wetlands and the mesa.
“Time has definitely been on our side,” Dettloff said. “When we
started people were unsure about concept of saving wetlands even, because
Huntington Harbour was created with nary a problem.”
Unless an appeal is filed plans for the Brightwater project will now
go to the Coastal Commission for approval. Dettloff said she as not yet
seen the plans and so can not comment.
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