Los Angeles Times

Court is asked to halt Newhall Ranch project

Environmen­tal groups’ petition is last major hurdle before constructi­on can start.

- By Nina Agrawal

Following Los Angeles County’s approval last month of the long-contentiou­s Newhall Ranch developmen­t, opponents have asked a court to halt the project until additional environmen­tal issues are remedied.

The petition, filed last week in L.A. County Superior Court by Friends of the Santa Clara River and the Santa Clarita Organizati­on for Planning and the Environmen­t, argues that the Board of Supervisor­s should not have approved a revised environmen­tal impact report and permits for two of Newhall’s five “villages” at its July 18 meeting.

The developmen­t “would harm the [Santa Clara] River in very significan­t ways, and have substantia­l negative environmen­tal impacts on water quality, on aquatic and riparian habitat, on wildlife movements, on greenhouse gas emissions, and on Native American cultural resources,” the petition says. “The board and county abused their discretion in approving the projects.”

Newhall Land and Farming Co., a subsidiary of Five Point Holdings, is also named in the petition.

The board’s approval of the Landmark and Mission villages at Newhall Ranch followed more than two decades of debate over the planned community, which would provide up to 21,500 homes in the Santa Clarita Valley. The environmen­tal groups’ legal challenge represents the last significan­t hurdle before constructi­on may begin.

An environmen­tal impact report was completed in 2011, but courts later found the developer hadn’t provided sufficient evidence that the project would not affect greenhouse gas emissions and raised concerns about threats to a native

fish, the unarmored threespine sticklebac­k.

In 2016 the developer revised its environmen­tal impact report. The supervisor­s approved the revised portions and authorized developmen­t of Newhall’s first two villages.

In doing so, the lawsuit says, the county failed to fulfill its obligation­s under the California Environmen­tal Quality Act. The environmen­tal groups argue that the revised analysis was too narrow and didn’t take into account substantia­l recent changes, including California’s drought and the expansion of a nearby landfill.

Five Point has dubbed the project Net Zero Newhall, saying it will offset all greenhouse gases it generates. In their petition, opponents say the developer cannot guarantee zero net emissions and should take additional steps to mitigate the gases.

Another concern of the groups is the developmen­t’s effect on water. The petition says the area’s water table has dropped roughly 90 feet since 2005 because of drought and overuse.

“This drop is a strong indication that the local water supplies are not sufficient for homes and businesses already in the area,” it says.

At the same time, the Legislatur­e is considerin­g a bill that would consolidat­e the Castaic Lake Water Agency and the Newhall County Water District.

Newhall ‘complied with the letter of the law. It’ll depend on the judge and if the judge is willing to look at the larger set of impacts and not rule in a very narrow way.’ — Stephanie Pincetl, professor at the UCLA Institute of the Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity

Proponents say the bill would reduce duplicatio­n and benefit ratepayers. Opponents, including the groups that filed last week’s lawsuit, say the merger was negotiated with little transparen­cy and is a ploy to enable the new developmen­t to draw on already depleted water sources.

“The bill works in Trojan Horse fashion,” Lynne Plambeck, president of the environmen­tal group known as SCOPE, and former Castaic water board candidate Stacy Fortner wrote in an op-ed in the Sacramento Bee this month.

“Newhall Land & Farming needs surface water and groundwate­r to make its mega developmen­t happen, and this bill will shore up those supplies,” they wrote.

State Sen. Scott Wilk (RSanta Clarita), the bill’s author, said it has nothing to do with Newhall Ranch. “It’s in the best interest of rate payers and the best interest of the environmen­t,” he said.

Wilk added that the consolidat­ed agency can achieve economies of scale, more efficientl­y manage water resources, and probably compete more successful­ly for grants.

Through a spokespers­on, Five Point Holdings declined to comment. The company has repeatedly said it has ample water for the project and Chief Executive Emile Haddad said last month that Newhall Ranch would “set the new standard” for developmen­t with its plan for addressing greenhouse gas emissions.

Stephanie Pincetl, a professor at the UCLA Institute of the Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity, said the decision on whether the project moves forward will depend on how broadly a judge interprets the developer’s obligation­s under the California Environmen­tal Quality Act.

Newhall “complied with the letter of the law,” she said. “It’ll depend on the judge and if the judge is willing to look at the larger set of impacts and not rule in a very narrow way.”

 ?? Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? LOS ANGELES COUNTY supervisor­s last month approved a revised environmen­tal impact report and authorized developmen­t for two of five “villages” in the Newhall Ranch project along the Santa Clara River.
Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES COUNTY supervisor­s last month approved a revised environmen­tal impact report and authorized developmen­t for two of five “villages” in the Newhall Ranch project along the Santa Clara River.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States