Model homes by the mesa meet with protest
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Kenneth Ma
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Several dozen local environmentalists and
concerned residents stood at the corner of Los Patos Avenue and Bolsa
Chica Street on Friday to protest the unveiling of 16 homes adjacent to
the Bolsa Chica mesa.
Developed by Hearthside Homes, the four- or five-bedroom,
38,000-square-foot family houses, are models of what the company wants to
build on the Bolsa Chica mesa. The Hampton-style homes are valued at an
average of $800,000 each.”These houses should not have been here,” said
Doug Korthof, a protester from Seal Beach.
The City Council approved the model homes last year. The California
Coastal Commission is expected to decide in October whether Hearthside
can proceed with its plans to build up to 1,235 homes on the mesa. The
project has been the subject of rancorous debate for a number of years.
Project detractors say building homes would negatively affect the
wildlife on the mesa and would destroy American Indian artifacts that may
be found there.
But a Hearthside official said building the 16 homes has been
litigated and decided in court. The rest will be decided later this year.
Superior Court Judge William MacDonald ruled in favor of Hearthside
Homes in a lawsuit filed by the Bolsa Chica Land Trust last year. The
suit contended that development of the 6-acre property may destroy “rare”
pieces of American Indian history after ancient human remains and
artifacts were discovered on the site.
The protesters “are good people,” said Lucy Dunn, Hearthside’s
executive vice president. “I guess we just disagree.”
On Thursday, nearly 135 people filled a meeting room at City Hall to
hear members of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust and the Orange County chapter
of the Sierra Club speak about preserving the mesa.
The two groups asked people to attend a Coastal Commission meeting
Aug. 9 in at the Waterfront Hilton in a show of support. So far, 118
people have signed a commitment form to attend.
“Nobody wins a battle by acting at the last minute,” said Evan Henry,
president of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust.
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