Los Angeles Times

County OKs L.A. River Master Plan

Approval comes despite loss of support from a coalition of environmen­tal groups.

- By Louis Sahagún

After a coalition of environmen­tal groups withdrew support for the L.A. River Master Plan over difference­s with its recommenda­tions for uplifting the profile of the concrete flood control channel over the next 25 years, L.A. County officials decided Tuesday to move forward with the plan.

The groups had been threatenin­g to walk away since Los Angeles County Public Works included farreachin­g proposals submitted by famed architect Frank Gehry to transform the forlorn industrial conf luence of the Los Angeles River and the Rio Hondo in South Gate into a cultural park.

Still, the L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s voted Tuesday to adopt the final L.A. River Master Plan.

“The L.A. River Master Plan is one of the most robust, progressiv­e and community-driven planning efforts ever undertaken by L.A. County,” said Mark Pestrella, director and chief engineer of the Los Angeles

County Flood Control District.

“It addresses a wide range of priorities brought to us over three years of community engagement, including ecological disparitie­s, homelessne­ss, gentrifica­tion, and limited access to public open space and clean water,” he said. “We considered all viewpoints and perspectiv­es, and the county will continue to work with those who may not have seen their priorities elevated over those of others in the final draft of the plan.”

Jon Christense­n, an environmen­tal historian at UCLA, mused, “It would be surprising if the L.A. River Master Plan were not controvers­ial in some ways.”

“Angelenos have been debating the fate of the Los Angeles River and its future for decades now,” Christense­n said. “The Los Angeles River Master Plan takes on the nearly impossible task of reconcilin­g all those competing hopes and visions for the river and for communitie­s along the river.”

Critics are especially concerned about Gehry’s vision of “elevated platform parks” — massive, bridge-like green spaces that occupy government airspace high above the channel’s f loor, and 4 feet

above the rim of the channel walls. Constructe­d on hulking concrete planks and enormous girders, the structures would stretch nearly a

mile over both rivers and support a landscape of trees, grass, scenic ponds, horse trails and walking paths.

Gehry and the plan’s developmen­t

team regard the proposal as a way of improving some of Southern California’s poorest, most densely populated communitie­s

— and atoning for racial and institutio­nal injustices that have stymied their progress since World War II.

But influentia­l nonprofit environmen­tal groups led by Friends of the Los Angeles River, East Yard Communitie­s for Environmen­tal Justice, Los Angeles Waterkeepe­r, Heal the Bay and the Nature Conservanc­y in California would prefer to see naturaliza­tion of the river itself.

The coalition announced its decision in a recent letter to county officials and architects that said, in part, “to our dismay, the final plan fails to incorporat­e our feedback in any meaningful way.”

“We expect the county to remove our names and logos from the plan accordingl­y,” it added, “unless and until our organizati­ons are given the ability to make a formal vote and have that vote reflected in the plan.”

In an interview, Laura Cortez, co-executive director of East Yard Communitie­s for Environmen­tal Justice, summed up what she described as the coalition’s “core concern.”

“The L.A. County Public Works made us believe that through its steering committee we would have real community engagement,” she said, “and that it intended to think out of the box and not just add more concrete to the channel.”

“Instead,” she said, “our comments fell on deaf ears.”

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? THE VIEW toward what would be the L.A. River Platform Park of architect Frank Gehry’s vision.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times THE VIEW toward what would be the L.A. River Platform Park of architect Frank Gehry’s vision.
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? THE PLAN includes “elevated platform parks” that would stretch nearly a mile over the Rio Hondo and L.A. River, with trees, grass, ponds, horse trails and walking paths. Above, along the river in South Gate in January.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times THE PLAN includes “elevated platform parks” that would stretch nearly a mile over the Rio Hondo and L.A. River, with trees, grass, ponds, horse trails and walking paths. Above, along the river in South Gate in January.

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