Delay sought on Bolsa hearing
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Dave Brooks
Developers have asked the California Coastal Commission to reschedule
a public hearing scheduled for today on a proposal to build homes on
65 acres of the Bolsa Chica mesa.
Ray Pacini, chief executive officer of developer Hearthside Home,
said he requested the delay after commission staff recommended denial
of the Brightwater Development. Commission district manager Teresa
Henry argued in a recent report that the development restricted
public access and would be hazardous to environmentally sensitive
areas.
Pacini said the area’s landowner, Signal Landmark, would make
several small adjustments to the design of the housing development,
but would refuse to make any major changes. Instead he said Signal
Landmark would focus on a legal rebuttal to the commission’s staff
report and would attempt to prove that the 379-home development was
within the confines of the Coastal Act.
“This is primarily a response,” Pacini said. “There’s not going to
be any major changes.”
The plan is now set to go back before the commission during the
second week of October in San Diego.
Without commission approval, Pacini said his shareholders wouldn’t
support a plan to sell 103 acres of the lower portion of the Bolsa
Chica mesa to the California Wildlife Conservation Board using
funding from Proposition 50, the Clean Water and Coastal Protection
Bond of 2002.
Pulling out of that deal could jeopardize nearly $65 million in
state bonds that have been earmarked for the purchase, and, some
argue, mark the last chance for Signal Landmark to ever sell the
property. In 2000, the Coastal Commission ruled that the lower
portion of the Bolsa Chica mesa could not be developed, but Pacini
said that decision no longer holds weight because the County of
Orange never acted on the decision.
Technically, Pacini argues, Signal Landmark can still build homes
on the lower portion and is taking a big loss by selling the property
for only $65 million. If the commission doesn’t approve the
Brightwater development on the upper portion, Pacini said Signal
Landmark would scrap the conservation sale and push through plans to
develop the entire Bolsa Chica mesa.
Members of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust are carefully following
Brightwater as it works its way through the Coastal Commission.
“I’m just hopeful that the staff and developer can come to an
agreement that conforms to the Coastal Act,” Land Trust member Flossy
Horgan said.
Approval for the upper mesa plan faces many barriers. Henry argues
that the development infringes on environmentally sensitive habitats
of endangered tarplant and burrowing owl habitats, and encroaches on
a Eucalyptus grove. She also said the gated community Pacini is
developing restricts public access to most of the Bolsa Chica mesa.
Pacini said Signal Landmark plans to improve pedestrian and
bicycle access to the wetlands, but disagrees that the project is
harmful to endangered species.
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