The Signal

Judge halts Centennial project in Tejon Ranch

- By Kev Kurdoghlia­n

A judge’s ruling this week dealt a setback to the Tejon Ranch Co.’s proposed 19,000-unit Centennial developmen­t project in the upper northwest corner of Los Angeles County.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff ‘s decision on two cases filed by the Center for Biological Diversity and the California Native Plant Society will require the developer to revise the project’s environmen­tal impact report.

“The project will go through a whole new round of public meetings, the planning commission, and, if it manages to make it through, on to (Los Angeles County) supervisor­s, where the mix of supervisor­s has changed,” said Liv O’Keeffe, a spokeswoma­n for the California Native Plant Society, in a statement to The Signal.

J.P. Rose, a staff attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, also highlighte­d a changed political and policy landscape since the county’s five elected supervisor­s approved the developmen­t, including its environmen­tal impact report, in April 2019.

“Tejon (Ranch Co.) would need to go back to the county and undergo a new environmen­tal review if they wish to proceed with some version of the project,” Rose told The Signal in a statement. “The developers have to convince the supervisor­s that building a new sprawling city on fire-prone wildlands is in the interest of the public. I think they’ll have an uphill battle.”

Both organizati­ons said in a statement that developmen­ts like Centennial increase the risk

of human-caused wildfires.

“Between 1964 and 2015, 31 wildfires larger than 100 acres occurred within 5 miles of the site, including four within the proposed project’s boundaries,” the Center for Biological Diversity and California Native Plant Society said in a statement.

Beckloff dismissed 20 of the 23 claims made against the project under the California Environmen­tal Quality Act, focusing on wildfire risks and greenhouse gas emissions by vehicles.

Gregory S. Bielli, president and CEO of Tejon Ranch Co., thanked the judge for clarifying the path forward for the project.

“Environmen­tal impact reports are extremely lengthy, complex documents, and it’s difficult to get everything perfect the first time out. With the judge’s direction, we will work with L.A. County to address the few remaining issues, just as we did in Kern County when a court ruled the EIR for our Grapevine community needed additional analysis,” Bielli said in a prepared statement. “The analysis was completed, Grapevine

The project will go through a whole new round of public meetings.”

Liv O’Keeffe, spokeswoma­n for the California Native Plant Society

was reapproved, and the court affirmed the additional analysis was correct. We expect the same will be true for Centennial.”

Tejon Ranch Co. called the Center for Biological Diversity and other environmen­tal organizati­ons “extremist groups,” noting that legal challenges to the Centennial project “only worsen California’s housing shortage and drive home costs ever higher.”

The county first received plans for the proposed Centennial developmen­t plan in 2002. The project plans on housing 57,000 people when it’s completely built and would also include 8.4 million square feet of commercial space. The 12,000-acre project site runs along State Route 138, approximat­ely one mile east of Interstate 5.

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