City will appeal court’s order
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Jenny Marder
The city will appeal a superior court order that demanded it approve
a water pipeline to the proposed Brightwater development or give
explicit reasons as to why it is denying it.
A judge ruled last month that the City Council needs to reconsider
its Aug. 4, 2003, denial of a franchise agreement with Southern
California Water to allow for a seven-mile pipeline that would
deliver water to the 388 homes developer Hearthside Homes is planning
to build on 107 acres of the Bolsa Chica Mesa.
The City Council decided 5 to 2 in closed session on Tuesday that
it would appeal the December ruling that said unless it can prove
that the application is deficient or that the company is violating
state or local law, it must approve the agreement.
Councilwoman Connie Boardman said she voted to appeal the court’s
ruling because the proposed Brightwater project has not yet been
approved for development.
“There is no project,” Boardman said. “It’s premature for our
staff to spend time working on a franchise agreement for a project
that doesn’t exist.
“It seems to me that trying to bring this franchise agreement to
fruition before there’s a project is backward,” she said.
The pipeline would run underground from Cypress to Huntington
Beach, snaking through Garden Grove, Westminster and Seal Beach on
its way.
The City Council denied a franchise agreement last year, claiming
that the company could pursue other avenues such as eminent domain to
build the pipe.
Councilman Dave Sullivan wants the council to stick to its guns.
“It doesn’t make sense to get water for 400 homes to come from a
remote area,” he said. “The community will be furious, and the flow
of traffic will be impacted for months.”
If the franchise agreement is not approved by the city, the
company will seek eminent domain, officials say.
“While we would certainly like to settle all issues, we are
prepared to go that route also,” said Lonnie Curtis, manager for the
water company’s Orange County district.
Hearthside’s proposal to build homes on the Bolsa Chica Mesa has
been decried by many environmentalists, who for years have been
pushing to have the land purchased with state grant money and set
aside as a nature preserve.
Purchase of the Bolsa Chica Mesa was singled out as a state
priority in the language of Proposition 50, the Clean Water and
Coastal Protection Bond of 2002. The state’s Wildlife Conservation
Board has been appraising the land to determine its value since March
2003.
Hearthside Homes turned to Southern California Water rather than
seeking water from the city, since the project would be built on
county-owned land.
Along with environmental opposition to the development, residents
are concerned about the effects that digging a trench down Bolsa
Chica Street will have on the area.
Bolsa Chica Street, which leads to both the San Diego and the
Garden Grove freeways, is one of Huntington Beach’s busiest
thoroughfares.
“It’s a big concern of mine because a whole section of the city
goes up Bolsa Chica Street,” Sullivan said.
Southern California Water company officials estimate that three or
four months of the 10-month construction project will take place in
Huntington Beach.
“There will be traffic impacts, but they will try to be mitigated
as much as possible,” Curtis said. “We look forward to moving the
project forward for development of this property.”
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