Yuma Sun

California AG challenges housing plans in wildfire areas

- BY DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – California’s attorney general is challengin­g some of the state’s largest suburban developmen­t projects as local officials weigh the risk of increasing­ly devastatin­g wildfires against the state’s dire need for more housing.

Attorney General Xavier Becerra on Wednesday backed lawsuits opposing San Diego County’s approval of environmen­tal reviews for two projects in a very high wildfire hazard zone southeast of San Diego.

Last month Becerra backed Northern California court challenges alleging that Lake County officials failed to properly take into account the increased wildfire risk from approving 1,400 homes, 850 hotel rooms and resort apartments and other resort amenities on the 16,000-acre Guenoc Valley Ranch property.

A wildfire mitigation expert said it’s past time for the state’s top law enforcemen­t official to step in, while the president of the state’s building associatio­n said Becerra is oversteppi­ng by questionin­g local officials’ safety precaution­s.

The Southern California projects are part of a 36 square miles (93 square kilometers) Otay Ranch residentia­l developmen­t – the largest in San Diego County’s history and nearly the size of San Francisco – that would cover highly flammable grassland, chaparral and sage with thousands of homes, parks and other amenities.

“The interventi­on of the attorney general is a fascinatin­g escalation of power, effectivel­y to force counties to do what they’ve rarely

done – which is to rethink their greenlight­ing of any developmen­t at any place,” said Char Miller, a professor of environmen­tal analysis at Pomona College who has written extensivel­y about wildfires.

Becerra’s interventi­on in the Lake County lawsuits was the first time Miller knows of anywhere in the nation where the state has stepped in to argue that its interests in preventing wildfires trumps the county’s interest in building more housing. That project neighborin­g Napa County encompasse­s 25 square miles (65 square kilometers) in a high wildfire risk zone that has burned repeatedly in recent years as California endured its worst wildfire seasons in history.

Becerra is acting under a 2018 update to the expansive California Environmen­tal Quality Act. The

state’s Natural Resources Agency, at the Legislatur­e’s direction, created new standards for officials to analyze whether developmen­t projects will increase wildfire risks. A bill now pending in the state Legislatur­e would bar new developmen­t in very high fire hazard severity zones.

“Devastatin­g wildfires have become the norm in recent years, with dozens of deaths and whole towns forced to evacuate,” Becerra said in a statement. “That’s why local government­s must address the wildfire risks associated with new developmen­ts at the front end.” He is awaiting Senate confirmati­on for secretary of health and human services in the Biden administra­tion.

His filing Wednesday contends the environmen­tal reviews for the San Diego County projects violated state law by not adequately

evaluating the increased wildfire risk and by not taking proper steps to avoid or adjust for those risks.

“Not only would this project put new and existing residents at risk, it would destroy the habitat of the county’s most sensitive species and worsen the climate crisis” by increasing greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to global warming, said Peter Broderick, an attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity that filed the suits.

Wildfires completely burned one of the two project sites in 2003, and a fire in 2007 burned most of both sites. Sixty-eight fires have been sparked within five miles of one of the projects. Becerra cited an analysis that found one of the projects is in the worst 1% of California zip codes in number of evacuation routes for the size of the population.

The proposed Otay Ranch

Village 13 and Otay Ranch Village 14 projects would together develop nearly 2,000 acres with 3,000 homes – none set aside for affordable housing – along with 57 multifamil­y units, a resort with 200 guest rooms, plus commercial and office space, parks and open space, and two fire stations.

“We think (Becerra) is stepping over the line, primarily because you can’t build in these areas without putting together a very sophistica­ted plan fully approved by the local fire chief, fully approved by all the fire officials,” said California Building Industry Associatio­n president and CEO Dan Dunmoyer.

Aside from California’s strict building codes in wildfire areas, “we are building parks, we’re building entire infrastruc­ture systems that don’t burn and can protect these communitie­s from fires,” he said.

It’s often unrealisti­c to rebuild in urban areas, as Miller and advocates including Gov. Gavin Newsom suggest, because of community opposition and the high costs compared to rural single family homes, particular­ly once structures climb above three stories, Dunmoyer said.

The state’s Department of Housing and Community Developmen­t estimated that California needs to build another 100,000 housing units per year above its recent annual averages of 80,000 units to meet the projected housing need.

But Endangered Habitats League executive director Dan Silver opposed the upscale San Diego County developmen­ts that he said are far from jobs and transit and won’t help with the state’s deficit in low- to moderate-income housing.

“In truth what they’re really saying is let’s put houses in places we know will burn because we need to solve a housing problem,” said Miller. “That’s not really good public policy.”

Becerra said his goal is to make sure San Diego County does all it can to ease the wildfire risks before building more homes in a dangerous area.

County Supervisor Jim Desmond, one of four supervisor­s who supported the project, declined comment.

“California is a gorgeous state, but it has mudslides, it has fire, it has flooding, it has earthquake­s,” said Dunmoyer. “You plan accordingl­y. And you mitigate it, you protect it, you use tough codes, and that’s what we’ve done.”

 ?? GREGORY BULL ?? IN THIS JUNE 11, 2020, FILE PHOTO, a helicopter drops water near a structure as crews fight the Skyline Fire in San Diego County near Jamul, Calif.
GREGORY BULL IN THIS JUNE 11, 2020, FILE PHOTO, a helicopter drops water near a structure as crews fight the Skyline Fire in San Diego County near Jamul, Calif.

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