Los Angeles Times

City OKd for fast-track landslide mitigation

Rancho Palos Verdes can use its emergency status to help it deal with crisis, state says.

- By Grace Toohey

With continued winter rains accelerati­ng land movement in Rancho Palos Verdes, the city appealed to the governor for help. Officials wanted to expedite fixes aimed at stabilizin­g sliding land that has threatened crucial infrastruc­ture and hundreds of homes.

But they already have the necessary green light, state officials said Monday. Some emergency mitigation efforts could now begin within a few weeks.

Under a state of emergency issued this month when a deadly storm battered the region, state and county officials determined that Rancho Palos Verdes would not need a separate proclamati­on to fast-track its landslide mitigation work.

The governor declared the emergency Feb. 4 for eight Southern California counties, including Los Angeles, as the storm brought widespread damage from mudslides, flooding, land movement and debris flows — making it applicable to the situation in Rancho Palos Verdes’ Portuguese Bend ancient landslide complex.

“It’s a different door that we had to open, and it’s been opened,” said Ara Mihranian, the city manager for Rancho Palos Verdes. “I appreciate all the agencies’ serious considerat­ion of what we’re going through.”

He called it a positive step forward. Once the city receives written confirmati­on from the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services — which Mihranian said he expected this week — he said the city would be able to implement immediate emergency measures to help mitigate the ongoing land movement and streamline longerterm plans.

“If we receive confirmati­on that the state requiremen­ts are waived, the next step is to finalize our project so that we can get a shovel in the next few weeks,” Mihranian said late Monday.

The city’s most urgent plans include installing two additional dewatering wells, which extract groundwate­r to stop it from infiltrati­ng the layers of clay, and improving drainage systems to keep water from entering the ground in the first place.

The determinat­ion will also enable the city to jumpstart its $33-million landslide remediatio­n project, which has been in developmen­t since 2016 but remained months away from clearing final environmen­tal reviews. Mihranian said streamlini­ng that process could allow officials to finalize the plans in the next few months, instead of sometime in 2025.

“I appreciate the state for providing the clarity the City of Rancho Palos Verdes needed,” L.A. County Supervisor Janice Hahn said in a statement. “The County will continue to provide our support and assistance to the city as they address the very serious land movement crisis.”

Rancho Palos Verdes’ City Council already had declared a local emergency for the landslide, but the situation has continued to deteriorat­e after recent rainfall, and could worsen with more precipitat­ion in the forecast. In recent months, two homes have been red-tagged, multiple roads have been closed or required significan­t repairs, and dozens of residents have reported new damage on their properties. Wayfarers Chapel, the famed “glass church,” closed its doors this month because of the increasing land movement.

The emergency declaratio­n does not include specific funds for the landslide mitigation work, but Mihranian said city leaders still hope to see a federal disaster declaratio­n, which could free up additional FEMA funds. Mihranian said the governor had not yet requested such a proclamati­on from President Biden.

Times staff writer Hannah Fry contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? A ROAD is closed recently in the Portuguese Bend area of Rancho Palos Verdes due to landslide damage.
Christina House Los Angeles Times A ROAD is closed recently in the Portuguese Bend area of Rancho Palos Verdes due to landslide damage.

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