Heralded program helps restore park
Deirdre Newman
When C.J. Segerstrom & Sons applied for permits to box in about 2,000
feet of the Greenville-Banning Channel behind the IKEA store for its
Home Ranch project, it had to compensate for eliminating wetlands in
the channel.
It did so at Fairview Park.
Through a program set up and coordinated by the city, developers
and public agencies that need to offset the environmental effects of
their projects can do so by either restoring parts of Fairview Park
themselves or paying into a fund for restoration of the park. The
compensation requirements are handed down from agencies like the
Regional Water Quality Control Board and the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers.
The Fairview Park Mitigation Bank Program was honored in May for
its creative design with an outstanding planning award from the
Orange County Chapter of the American Planning Assn. The program will
now be entered into the state awards competition.
The program is mutually beneficial to developers and Fairview
Park, said Paul Freeman, spokesman for C. J. Segerstrom & Sons.
“I think it’s a good program,” Freeman said. “It’s really an
effort to leverage the development of some properties that are
already in a development area to help restore natural habitat in the
context of parks or wildlife quarters or whatever, where the whole
idea is to set aside large enough areas that really are meaningful in
terms of biodiversity.”
Fairview Park is 208 acres. The area west of Placentia Avenue is
slated to be restored to its native habitat, which includes coastal
bluff scrub, vernal pools and a riparian zone along the existing
Placentia Drain.
The mitigation bank program was initiated by Development Services
Director Don Lamm and Fairview Park Plan Administrator Ron Molendyk
as a means of producing more money to finish the restoration of
Fairview Park, Molendyk said. To fully complete the restoration west
of Placentia, the cost -- which includes construction and five-year
maintenance, as required by state and federal agencies -- would be
about $10 million, Molendyk said.
The agencies that establish the mitigation requirements usually
require compensation at a 3:1 ratio, so if an entity impacts one acre
of wetlands, it typically has to restore three acres to compensate,
Molendyk said.
The mitigation fees that developers and public agencies could
choose to pay include the value of the land, restoration costs and
the five-year maintenance. If the entities chose to do the mitigation
themselves, a biologist hired by the city oversees the work, Molendyk
said.
To compensate for the environmental effects of boxing in the
Greenville-Banning Channel, C.J. Segerstrom & Sons had to fulfill two
obligations. The company met one obligation, set by the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, by restoring about an acre of vernal pool and
vernal marsh by Banning Place, which is located behind the Estancia
High School athletic fields.
Vernal pools are seasonally flooded depressions found on ancient
earth that have a solid layer like claypan or volcanic basalt. This
layer enables the pools to hold water for a longer time than the
surrounding elevated land. The pools often fill and empty several
times during the rainy season and dry up completely at other times.
Only plants and animals that have adapted to this cycle can
survive in vernal pools over time. These animals include western
toads, black-bellied slender salamanders and fairy shrimp. The
endangered San Diego County fairy shrimp inhabit the vernal pools
that C.J. Segerstrom & Sons restored.
The benefit of the Segerstroms doing the mitigation themselves is
that they used a company whose expertise was in restoring vernal
pools, Molendyk said.
“You have to go down to a certain depth, but you don’t want to
damage the clay liner,” Molendyk said. “If you penetrate the liner,
it could affect the viability of the pool.”
The company also paid the city $100,000 to help restore a riparian
habitat along the Placentia Drain. The Placentia Drain project
involves both restoration and enhancement of water quality, Molendyk
said. The enhancement would be carried out by creating a program to
pump water up to the drain and creating wetlands, thereby providing
water to the vernal pools to encourage more habitat and create a
natural filtering system, Molendyk explained.
There are also 44 acres near Swan Drive that are ripe for
restoration, which could be achieved through mitigation efforts,
Molendyk said. One of the other benefits to these efforts is that if
they generate enough revenue to finish the restoration in the park,
then the city will be able to do a better job of maintaining it,
Molendyk added.
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