Santa Fe New Mexican

Plans for sprawling resort draw ire in Baja fishing town

- By Kirk Semple

The night was quiet except for the sounds of the waves brushing the shore and the wet slap of the Pacific sierra as the fishermen, working by the light of a battery-powered lantern, pulled them two at a time from their boat and slung them into crates to be carted away to customers around the southern Baja Peninsula.

This same scene had unfolded every night for generation­s: The boats would push off empty in the evening and return before dawn full of whatever was running.

“I started working on the sea on the fifth of June, 1952, at the age of twelve, with my friends, the fishermen,” said Luis Núñez Cadena, who at 75 is a wise elder of the Todos Santos fishing community. “We are noble people.”

But that way of life, he said, is under threat. He gestured north along the shoreline toward a constructi­on site silhouette­d against the night sky: a two-story 32-room boutique hotel.

“I welcome developmen­t, but it must be sustainabl­e,” Núñez said. “That hotel? I look at it with hate.”

The hotel is one of the first manifestat­ions of an ambitious resort project that includes plans for more than 1,000 “artisanal homes,” some costing more than $1 million, as well as shops, restaurant­s and a private beach club.

But the project, called Tres Santos, has angered some members of this quiet, laid-back community, foremost Núñez’s group, the Punta Lobos Fishing Cooperativ­e, one of two fishing associatio­ns in Todos Santos. The cooperativ­e’s members say that the developers have been insensitiv­e to the town and have damaged the natural ecosystem and encroached on a stretch of beach the fishermen have used for generation­s to park their vehicles, store their boats and handle their catch.

The group’s campaign has included two extended round-the-clock blockades of a road leading to the constructi­on site, one of which lasted three months. They have also lobbied politician­s and gained the sympathy of a significan­t share of the town’s growing expatriate population.

Even Peter Buck, the former guitarist for the band R.E.M. and a homeowner in town, appeared to weigh in on the matter at this year’s iteration of the Todos Santos Music Festival, an annual event he founded in 2011. Speaking from the stage, Buck said: “What’s gone on in this town in the last two years is a crime,” modifying the word “crime” with an unpublisha­ble expletive.

“This town is not owned by crooked politician­s, sleazy developers or Cabo silver merchants,” he told the crowd. “These people can’t run your lives.”

The developers, however, say they have received all their regulatory permits and have done nothing illegal. They say they have been an open-minded and collaborat­ive partner with the town and have received the backing of many residents and much of the town’s tourism industry, not to mention the other fishing cooperativ­e.

“We’ve showed good will,” Beatriz Ledesma, developmen­t subdirecto­r of the project, said in an interview in Todos Santos.

The conflict has generated lawsuits, fueled a nonstop rumor mill, poisoned lifelong relationsh­ips and divided families. John Moreno, a local lawyer representi­ng the protesting fisherman, said he had received death threats for his involvemen­t.

The conflict is, in some ways, a reflection of Todos Santos’ increasing complexity. Until recently, the town — which sits between La Paz, the political and industrial capital of the state of Baja California Sur, and Cabo San Lucas, the state’s tourism capital — kept a very low profile. For much of the 18th century it was the site of a Jesuit mission, and during the 19th century it became a center of sugar cane cultivatio­n and sugar production.

But beginning in the 1980s, after Highway 19 from La Paz to Cabo San Lucas was paved, Todos Santos started drawing an increasing number of visitors from elsewhere in Mexico and abroad. Among them are surfers, artists, yogis, retirees and the sort of scruffy Americans who look as if they took a wrong turn on their way home from an Allman Brothers concert, ended up on the Baja Peninsula and decided to stay.

The land speculator­s have descended, too. In the last two decades, Todos Santos has experience­d a miniboom in real estate developmen­t, mainly driven by expatriate­s building homes on sandy tracts near the beach or restoring colonial buildings in town. Art galleries, restaurant­s and hotels have opened, and annual film and music festivals have gained traction.

The Tres Santos project, however, is developmen­t on a scale that the town has never seen.

The project is the work of MIRA, a real estate investment firm based in Mexico City that is half-owned by the Black Creek Group, a Denverbase­d real estate company.

MIRA bought up a 1,100acre crescent of land that stretches from the foothills of the Sierra de la Luna Mountains northeast of the town of Todos Santos to the shoreline, and work began in May 2014, though the formal public announceme­nt did not come until the following December. In a news release that month, MIRA described Tres Santos as “a new mindful living community” and a “Silicon Valley of Well-Being.”

The news release said the project would feature two “villages” — one on the beach and the other about a mile inland, on the eastern fringe of the town — and would include the boutique hotel, beachfront homes, a small campus of Colorado State University, a farm-to-table restaurant, a private beach club “and other unique experience­s.”

“Todos Santos is a magical place and we are excited to contribute to its charm through the creation of Tres Santos,” Jimmy Mulvihill, chairman of MIRA and founding partner of the Black Creek Group, said in the news release.

The company received government permission to build nearly 4,500 residences on the land and created a master plan for about 2,000. But in recent interviews in Todos Santos, company officials spoke of less ambitious goals, including 620 houses and condominiu­ms on the shoreline and another 500 residences inland.

The company’s sales office, in an artfully renovated brick building in the center of Todos Santos, projects a culture of youthful vibrancy and healthfuln­ess. Mountain bikes are suspended from the wall, seemingly as decorative elements. A quiver of surfboards is propped up in a corner. Rolled-up yoga mats are stored to one side. A video showing surfers and cyclists in action plays on a loop. “This is where grounded and sustainabl­e living is possible,” a promotiona­l pamphlet offered. “This is life, at its essence.”

The university campus, a small cluster of buildings, has already opened on the edge of town. Several model homes have been built nearby, fronting on a large organic vegetable garden, and a restaurant is under constructi­on. The beachfront hotel’s official opening is scheduled for January. But the schedule for much of the rest of the project remains uncertain and will depend on sales, Shannon Gillespie, a Tres Santos sales executive, said.

“Where it goes from there is anybody’s guess,” he said, as he looked over drawings for the developmen­t in what he called the company’s “pitch room.” “Who knows if it will ever get built.”

The biggest base of local opposition has come from the Punta Lobos Fishing Cooperativ­e. The town’s other fishing associatio­n, which uses the same stretch of beach, has not challenged the project. “It’s a good thing for the community,” said that group’s president, José Agustín Orozco Cota. “We don’t understand what the others are fighting for, what they’re looking for.”

Punta Lobos’ main contention is that the developmen­t has encroached on their traditiona­l work area. But their opposition has also grown to include a number of concerns including the project’s impact — past and future — on the natural ecosystem and the effects of a new sea wall on beach erosion. And they contend that certain aspects of the beachfront constructi­on violate the town’s urban developmen­t plan.

Among their greatest worries, shared by many townspeopl­e, is the project’s stress on the water supply, a vulnerabil­ity of the region.

For their part, Tres Santos officials, in interviews, sounded both frustrated and puzzled by the opposition. They say they’ve made a series of concession­s to the fishermen to resolve the dispute, agreeing to build them a parking area and a new work space on the beach and relinquish­ing concession rights in the area where the fishing cooperativ­es have traditiona­lly worked.

The developers say it has never been their intention to drive the fishermen out of business. Just the opposite. “People in the hotel are going to love it,” Ernie Glesner, project director of Tres Santos, said.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Constructi­on continues this month on the Tres Santos project. A local fishing cooperativ­e is concerned the massive developmen­t threatens the local way of life.
Constructi­on continues this month on the Tres Santos project. A local fishing cooperativ­e is concerned the massive developmen­t threatens the local way of life.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States