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Showing posts with label Mount Whitney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mount Whitney. Show all posts

Thursday, June 24, 2010

East L.A. County wild spot threatened --public ownership does not always =protection

Diamond Bar to hear public's input on 30-acre site proposed for development

http://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_15296462

By James Wagner, San Gabriel Valley Tribune, June 14, 2010

DIAMOND BAR - Mary Rodriguez insists her neighborhood will change for the worse if the city approves its plan for a plot of 30 acres known as "Site D."

"Everybody that I've talked to is opposed to it," she said, of her neighbors.

Rodriguez, who lives adjacent to the site, has handed out hundreds of fliers and is planning on posting two five-foot long posters nearby warning of what she says will be increased traffic and noise.

The City Council at its meeting tonight [June 15] is scheduled to consider an environmental impact report and specific plan for the plot at Diamond Bar Boulevard and Brea Canyon Road.

The city hopes Site D could eventually hold a mix of 154,000 square feet of commercial space and 202 residential units.

The majority of the 30 acres is owned by the Walnut Valley Unified School District. The city owns about an acre and the Los Angeles County Flood Control District about two-thirds of an acre....

--more info here:

http://www.nositedsp.com/

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

----------------------------------
COURT ISSUES INITIAL RULING TO HALT
MOUNT WHITNEY DEVELOPMENT

8/31/07

DECISION POINTS WAY FOR LAND SWAP

http://srva.net/cms/

In an initial ruling released August 27 2007, the California Court of Appeals sided with Sierra Nevada conservationists and concluded that development approvals in the Mount Whitney Portal area violate state law.

The ruling clearly states, “The County failed to proceed in the manner required by law.” Once finalized, the Court action would overturn Inyo County approvals of the “Whitney Portal Preserve” project, a remote subdivision of 27 luxury homes along Whitney Portal Road , the sole paved access route for the tallest mountain in the continental United States .

SRVA Advocates for Smart Growth, the plaintiffs in the case, have long advocated for a better blueprint for development in the region. They argued that Inyo County decision-makers should have considered the possibility of a land swap, whereby the threatened landscape could be protected and growth could be focused closer to existing development.

The panel of judges agreed. “We agree with SRVA that the analysis of the land exchange alternative is legally insufficient and reverse on that ground," according to the initial decision.

“The proposed development was clearly an unacceptable threat to the Mount Whitney area and the Owens Valley ,” said Jennifer Fenton of the grassroots SRVA Advocates for Smart Growth. “We look forward to working with public agencies, private developers, and local residents to open a meaningful dialog and work on a resolution that honors the values of the region and protects the resources of the Sierra Nevada .”

State law requires that environmental review provide decision-makers with adequate information to assess the impacts of a proposed project, including alternatives to the proposal. But, according to the initial ruling, environmental review "…includes only the barest of facts…, vague and unsupported conclusions about aesthetics, views, and economic objectives, and no independent analysis whatsoever of relevant considerations.”

The decision is another important example of citizen action to stop illegal approvals of Sierra development. “We are delighted with this tentative ruling," said Tamara Galanter of Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger LLP, counsel for SRVA. "The 45 page decision reflects a careful analysis of the applicable law and recognizes the importance of considering alternatives as part of the environmental review process"

Conservationists throughout California look to the proposed project as a dangerous precedent for leapfrog development in the fragile Eastern Sierra landscape. “This is an important victory for the entire Sierra Nevada ,” said Tom Mooers, executive director of Sierra Watch. “It’s another great example of how people are standing up to defend the Sierra landscape – from Mount Whitney in the south to Dyer Mountain in Lassen County .”

Now conservationists will seek to work with the landowner to reach a collaborative resolution to the contentious issue. “Our goal was never simply to win a lawsuit,” said Fenton. “Our goal is to reach a win-win agreement that protects the land and encourages responsible development. We look forward to taking that next step.”


SRVA Advocates for Smart Growth is a non-profit organization working to promote sustainable development in the Eastern Sierra region. For more information, call (559)658-8189 or visit http://srva.net/cms/.

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