Wetlands verdict holding up senior homes
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June Casagrande
Environmentalist Jan Vandersloot calls it mitigation, but Mayor Steve
Bromberg calls it a quid pro quo at seniors’ expense.
A group of environmentalists led by Vandersloot have temporarily
put the brakes on a senior affordable housing project at Lower
Bayview Landing by asking the Coastal Commission to rule on whether
portions of the site qualify as wetlands.
In the meantime, Vandersloot and others have presented an
environmental wish list for the adjacent Upper Bayview Landing park
to city officials. If the city agrees to the terms, the environmental
groups said they will support the city’s project at the Coastal
Commission.
“I look at this as a complete breach of trust between the
environmental community and the citizens of this city,” Bromberg
said. “What in the world are they thinking to kill a senior housing
project for nothing more than a tire track?”
Of the three spots on the property designated as potential
wetlands, critics say one is just a tire rut with a little stagnant
rainwater in it. The two other depressions, Vandersloot said, have
plants growing in them that indicate the area is naturally part
wetlands. State and local laws restrict development of such wetland
areas. In some cases, the Coastal Commission will permit development
of wetlands areas if environmental improvements are made nearby to
compensate.
“By calling it a tire track, that’s just a pejorative term they
use to dismiss the fact that these are wetlands,” Vandersloot said.
Vandersloot, along with Stop Polluting Our Newport and the Earth
Resource Foundation, initially supported the project. Plans call for
150 units of senior affordable housing on low lands at Jamboree Road
between Coast Highway and Back Bay Drive, with a park on the bluff
above, known as Upper Bayview Landing.
Two things caused the environmentalists to rethink their support.
At a Feb. 25 City Council meeting, a councilman and a parks
commissioner suggested that the city consider adding turf grass to
the Upper Bayview Landing Park. But the idea seemed to fade as fast
as it came up, and the City Council approved the housing plan without
making any changes that would allow turf grass.
The council did, however, send the matter back to the parks
commission for further consideration. Around the same time,
Vandersloot went to the spotted wetlands vegetation on the site.
Now the groups want assurances that the Upper Bayview Landing Park
will be planted with native plants instead of turf grass. They also
want the city to increase the size of a retention basin planned for
the site and to change its plans for grading the high-lying area.
In all, the environmentalists’ list of conditions comprises a
dozen items on the park portion of the land and two more specific to
the lowland area.
In exchange, they say, they’ll give letters of support to the
Coastal Commission and refrain from taking part in or encouraging any
litigation.
Coastal Commission staff, who have conducted a survey of the site,
have recommended that commissioners deny the city’s request when they
vote at their June 11 meeting.
If the city doesn’t get commission approval at the June meeting,
the project will fall under state prevailing wage laws, which will
cost the city about $500,000 more in laborers’ wages.
Bromberg has vowed that, if the Lower Bayview Landing senior
housing project dies, he’ll reverse a former position and push for
senior housing behind the main branch library on Avocado Avenue.
He had originally opposed the idea because development of the site
would obstruct views, but now believes that a senior housing project
that obstructs views is better than no senior housing project at all.
“There will be a senior housing project built in Newport Beach,”
Bromberg said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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