The Signal

Agency: plenty of water for Tapia Ranch

SCV Water Agency committee approved a resolution earmarking 489 acre-feet of water for housing project

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

As the developers of Tapia Ranch move ahead with plans to connect Tesoro del Valle to Castaic with more than 400 homes, they first have to ensure there’s enough water for the project.

On Wednesday, members of SCV Water’s Water Resources and Watershed Committee considered the specifics of supplying water to an area it would have to annex into its service area.

Tapia Ranch encompasse­s a hilly swath of land extending from the southernly most end of Castaic Road to the western tip of Tesoro.

At least 405 homes are scheduled to be built for the Tapia Canyon Ranch project.

It also calls for eight open space lots, one water tank, one water pump station, a park, nine lots earmarked for the Los Angeles County Fire Department, and one private street.

In November, Tapia Ranch developer — the Debt Acquisitio­n Co. of America — entered into an agreement with local water officials, asking SCV Water to determine whether there is sufficient water for the Tapia Ranch property. The short answer is: yes. In a longer answer presented to the committee Wednesday by Dirk Marks, SCV Water Agency’s director of water resources, he said: “Sufficient supplies are adequate to make such a determinat­ion.”

On Wednesday, the committee approved a resolution earmarking 489 acre-feet of water for Tapia Ranch. The decision is expected to be approved by SCV Water’s board of directors at the agency’s next meeting.

In moving ahead with the allotment of water, the committee also agreed to make arrangemen­ts for Tapia Ranch developers to pay SCV Water more than $3.77 million as reimbursem­ent for water already purchased.

“The agency acquired the water supply in 2007, in part for the purpose of providing water to potential annexation­s, including Tapia,” Marks said Thursday.

“The $3.7 million reimburses the agency for the past costs that were incurred,” he said. “Additional­ly, the developer will have to pay their share on ongoing water purchase costs that the agency incurs each year.”

Investors

The developer — DACA/Castaic LLC — is a group of investors working with Los Angeles regional planners to address a number of developmen­t issues, water among them.

One investor of the Tapia Ranch project reached by phone in Las Vegas on Thursday confirmed that the project is moving ahead.

“We are still in the early stages of project review and environmen­tal review,” Regional Planning spokesman Mitch Glaser said Thursday.

“The project was most recently reviewed by the Subdivisio­n Committee on Oct. 5, 2017,” he said.

Building Tapia Ranch would mean cutting down 12 oak trees, including two

heritage oaks, and encroachin­g on a dozen other oak trees, four of which are also heritage oaks.

Since the environmen­tal papers have not yet been prepared, a public hearing date to allow residents to express themselves is still to be set.

The nearly 490 acre-feet of water purchased for Tapia Ranch comes from water stored at SCV Water’s Buena Vista-Rosedale Rio Bravo Water Supply.

An acre-foot of water is about the same size as a football field under one foot of water.

On Wednesday, the SCV Water committee looked at other housing projects, also planned for land west of Valencia, which would also have to be annexed into the SCV Water service area.

Tesoro

The westerly extension of the Tesoro community would require 389 acre-feet of water in a year.

The project is called The Highlands and it calls for 820 homes, nine multi-family lots, 12 water quality basin lots, three water tank lots, one helipad lot, six senior recreation area lots, six linear park lots and nine private park lots, a senior recreation center, 29 lots reserved for open space and 24 private driveways.

The project is north of Avenida Rancho Tesoro, and would require moving more than 18 million cubic yards of earth at the hilly site overlookin­g the San Francisqui­to Creek.

Eleven oak trees would be cut down, for which the developer would need permission from Los Angeles County officials.

Legacy

The Legacy housing project would require 2,500 acre-feet of water each year.

The Legacy Village subdivisio­n takes up 1,758 acres and calls for 3,457 dwelling units, which breaks down to 1,011 homes and 2,446 condos.

It would require 2,500 acre-feet of water each year, according to informatio­n shared with SCV Water committee members Wednesday.

Legacy also includes a 342-bed senior assisted living facility, more than 30 acres devoted to public and private recreation areas, a fire station and commercial space that takes up 839,000 square feet.

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