State proposed compromise for Lower Bayview
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June Casagrande
A near impasse between the city and environmentalists over a senior
affordable housing project soon could be resolved.
California Coastal Commission staff members have recommended that
commissioners approve the city’s most recent request to build 120
units of affordable housing for seniors at Lower Bayview Landing. The
recommendation is a far cry from the last time the commission weighed
in, voting last summer to deny the project.
“This is very encouraging,” Newport Beach Mayor Steve Bromberg
said.
The commission at its Nov. 5 meeting will consider a request by
the city that was revised after the commission shot down the city’s
first request because of environmental concerns. Local
environmentalist Jan Vandersloot had asked the commission to deny the
request after pointing out what he believed to be three spots on
Lower Bayview Landing that qualified as wetlands.
Commission staff have agreed with Vandersloot on two of the
wetlands designations, but disagreed on a third.
The city and environmentalists also were split over plans to lower
the adjacent Upper Bayview Landing, which is the name for the bluffs
adjacent to the project site and which is slated to be developed as a
view park. City planners wanted to remove a layer of soil from the
top of the bluff in order to create a more attractive view from the
road. Vandersloot opposed this plan.
Now commission staff are recommending a compromise. The steepest
part of the bluff, nearest to the Newport Dunes, qualify for
protections under the Coastal Act, commission staff believe. That
part should be left intact, but the other portions of the park can be
lowered similarly to the city’s original plan.
“I think this is definitely a move in the right direction,”
Vandersloot said Tuesday.
But he stopped short of saying whether he would support all points
of staff’s recommendation, pending a closer read of the staff report.
Vandersloot also said he was pleased with commission staff’s
recommendation that a restored wetland on the site will enjoy greater
protections from urban runoff and will be replanted with wetlands
vegetation.
If approved, Lower Bayview Landing will have two buildings with a
total of 120 apartments for low-income seniors near the intersection
of Coast Highway and Jamboree Road.
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