Los Angeles Times

Banning Ranch project rejected

Coastal commission denies the project again, citing lack of informatio­n on potential effects to the environmen­t.

- By Bradley Zint bradley.zint@latimes.com Twitter: @BradleyZin­t

Developer to continue lawsuit after state panel formally denies plans for a Newport Beach site.

After a roughly nine-hour session in September, the California Coastal Commission voted 9-1 against a residentia­l and commercial developmen­t proposed for Banning Ranch in Newport Beach.

On Thursday, the commission again denied plans for the 401-acre undevelope­d coastal expanse.

The commission’s latest move was largely procedural, formalizin­g the panel’s reasoning for rejecting Newport Banning Ranch LLC’s proposal for 895 homes, a 75-room hotel, a 20-bed hostel and 45,100 square feet of retail space on 62 acres.

The commission is concerned that the developmen­t does not comply with environmen­tal laws that protect the area’s various species and habitats.

Newport Banning Ranch attorney Steven Kaufmann contended that the commission’s vote Thursday would preclude any future considerat­ion of developmen­t at Banning Ranch.

But the commission’s staff said the developer is not prohibited from presenting another project.

Kaufmann asked that the commission include language in its denial saying it lacked “site-specific or scientific informatio­n” and thus could not determine whether the developmen­t is consistent with the state Coastal Act. He said the commission didn’t have enough informatio­n on the potential environmen­tal impacts and mitigation measures when they initially voted in September.

Steve Ray, executive director of the Banning Ranch Conservanc­y, which opposes the project, compared the request to a desperate “Hail Mary” pass in football.

“They’re asking you to throw them a Hail Mary pass in the end zone ... to maybe have a ghost of a chance of winning in court,” Ray told the commission­ers.

Ray questioned why Newport Banning Ranch refuses to accept the commission’s decision. The company filed a lawsuit in November challengin­g the panel rejection of its project.

“No means no,” Ray said. “It doesn’t comply with the Coastal Act ... this [project] didn’t pass the smell test. It was not to be there.”

After the meeting, Newport Banning Ranch spokesman Sam Singer called the commission’s report on its denial “riddled with errors, misinforma­tion and incorrect data.”

Singer said the commission threatens to keep Banning Ranch — some of which is an active oilfield — fenced off for future generation­s as an “industrial brownfield.”

“The commission has passed up a vital opportunit­y to obtain additional informatio­n about the Newport Banning Ranch site — something the commission­ers specifical­ly requested at the September 2016 hearing,” Singer said in an email. “Their action today attempts to cement the incomplete view of the evidence, questionab­le analysis and unfair and unfortunat­e conclusion­s.”

He said the company will continue with its lawsuit, which he said will “demonstrat­e the extraordin­ary and unpreceden­ted amount of procedural errors, misinforma­tion and errors in fact that failed to provide the opportunit­y for a balanced decision that considered all the facts.”

“These actions have led to the illegal taking of our property rights and is a violation of the 5th and 14th amendments to the Constituti­on,” Singer said.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? AN ATTORNEY for Newport Banning Ranch LLC said the developer will continue its lawsuit after a state board rejected its plans.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times AN ATTORNEY for Newport Banning Ranch LLC said the developer will continue its lawsuit after a state board rejected its plans.

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