Savoring a Sudden Victory - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Savoring a Sudden Victory

Share via

They came prepared for battle, this upscale homeowners group, carrying protest signs and poster board maps and handwritten speeches lambasting greedy developers and the councilman who had let them down.

They were not about to let the Porter Ranch Development Co. defile their bucolic Northridge neighborhood with traffic and trash, and heaven help Councilman Hal Bernson if he tried to stand in their way.

But they had barely filed in and taken their seats at Bernson’s City Council committee meeting Tuesday when they were blindsided, hit with an about-face that propelled them to victory so swiftly it was hard to comprehend.

Advertisement

The development company was in retreat. And Bernson? Why, he was on their side.

They sat in stunned silence, listening to Bernson--who had been the builders’ advocate for nigh on 20 years--announce that the development company “has agreed to my demands†and would make a series of “concessions†in its ambitious Porter Ranch building plan.

Those concessions include a reduction in the scope of the project, the elimination of a planned apartment complex, and a promise to ease traffic by widening streets leading into and out of the compound.

And most important to the three dozen members of the Limekiln Canyon Homeowners Assn. present Tuesday: No new streets will cut through their neighborhood.

Advertisement

“We won, right?†one Limekiln woman whispered to her husband as they rose when Bernson dismissed the group. “Yeah, I guess. It’s over . . . I guess.†He looked to his neighbors for confirmation.

“So what do we do with these, have a bonfire?†another man asked, waving his sign that read “Save Our Quiet Streets.â€

“Naw,†said his neighbor. “Save it. We might need them again.â€

*

And so it was that years of community protest over what was once billed as one of the city’s largest, most important projects faded from the political landscape this week.

Advertisement

The project had been envisioned as the grandest development the Valley had ever seen. It would cost $2 billion, take 20 years to build and rival Century City, with its plush office buildings and fancy hotels.

It was conceived as “a city within a city,†one that would generate $400 million in tax revenue for Los Angeles while it was being built, and $38 million each year after that.

But that was then. This is now.

It has been almost 20 years since the developers first sat down with a citizens committee appointed by Bernson to hash out the outlines of the project that would consume the largest single parcel of open space left in the city of Los Angeles.

Proponents said the development--which would flatten the rolling hills above Chatsworth--would be an asset to the entire Valley, expanding job and housing opportunities and shoring up the area’s tax base.

But community opposition developed quickly, and controversy dogged the project at every step. Hundreds turned out at government and community meetings to consider its fate.

Nearby business owners complained that they would be forced out by the big, new stores. Homeowners worried about traffic and school overcrowding. Environmentalists said the project would increase pollution.

Advertisement

Bernson and former Mayor Tom Bradley were snagged in an ethics scandal over the developers’ campaign contributions, and Bernson came within a hair’s breadth of being turned out of office by voters angry over his continuing support for the plan.

But it was more than the community’s relentless opposition that did the mega-project in.

It was a faltering economy and depressed housing market that ultimately made the grandiose vision look like a losing proposition, and forced developers to cut their plans by half.

*

During most of this long-running battle, the folks south of Rinaldi Avenue stayed on the sidelines. After all, this was all shaking out in the hills above them, and had little to do with their neighborhood of 30-year-old homes and quiet, winding streets.

Then, six weeks ago, word began to circulate that the Porter Ranch project would not leave them unscathed. Under the new plan, the developer wanted to extend Corbin Avenue south, but only as far as Chatsworth Street--meaning it would dead-end smack dab in the middle of their housing tract.

“I guess we didn’t really pay attention until it got to the point where the traffic was going to be filtered down our streets,†said 18-year resident John Thompson. “That would mean we couldn’t get out of our driveways.â€

Telephones began ringing and letters circulating. More than 200 homeowners gathered at a local real estate office, where they pledged more than $10,000, agreed to hire a lawyer and settled on a name. And soon the “Limekiln Canyon Homeowners Assn.†began picketing City Hall.

Advertisement

And on Tuesday, the association got its first taste of victory--however tentative and unexpected--and another force for community activism was born.

Advertisement