School is out on Bolsa Chica issue
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NATURAL PERSPECTIVES
It seemed like a good idea at the time. In the 1960s, Huntington
Beach was in the midst of a massive growth spurt. Anticipating the
many children that housing growth would bring, the Ocean View School
District bought property in every quarter section. The idea was to
ensure that they had adequate land for schools.
One of the 15-acre parcels that Ocean View purchased was located
smack in the middle of the lower Bolsa Chica mesa. Development was
rapidly converting a major portion of Anaheim Bay to what is now the
residential community of Huntington Harbour. Development of the Bolsa
Chica seemed imminent. The district anticipated that it would need
land for an elementary school for all the children who would be
living in homes on the Bolsa Chica mesa and in the waterfront homes
in the wetlands.
But that anticipated development never came to pass. Along came
the first Earth Day in 1970. An environmental awakening swept the
country and activism ran rampant. Rowdy radicals in the League of
Women Voters -- people like Ruth Bailey, Charlene Bauer, Herb
Chatterton, Shirley Dettloff, Nancy Donaven, the late Ruth Finley,
Mary Ellen Houseal, Rhoda Martyn and Linda Moon -- studied the Bolsa
Chica issue. They believed that tidelands had been illegally
transferred from state ownership into the hands of a developer. They
knew something had to be done to stop development on the wetlands.
The League of Women Voters study group formed a political advocacy
organization in 1976. This group, the Amigos de Bolsa Chica, fought
to protect the wetlands. At that time, more than 5,700 homes were
slated to be built on the mesa and wetlands. The Amigos successfully
blocked development on the delineated wetlands and got the planned
housing density greatly reduced.
The Bolsa Chica Land Trust formed in the 1992 to protect the Bolsa
Chica mesa and all of the lowlands from development. They’ve
succeeded in reducing the planned housing density ever more. Now the
Amigos de Bolsa Chica and the Bolsa Chica Land Trust work together to
protect the greater Bolsa Chica ecosystem.
The lower bench of the Bolsa Chica mesa received some protection
last year from the California Coastal Commission, which turned down
the developer’s request to build homes there. Now the school district
must determine if their land on the lower mesa should be declared
surplus property. The anticipated number of children in that area is
simply not going to materialize. And even if it did, the district
already has six closed sites that could be reactivated.
Since the need appears to be gone due to a combination of changing
demographics and reduced planned housing density, the district is now
considering whether to declare the property surplus and sell it.
That’s exactly what we think they should do.
The school site is near Warner Pond, which is a highly sensitive
saltwater marsh and valuable fish-breeding habitat. When the pond
goes dry, which it does on occasion, you can see the scooped out
depressions made by the fish when they laid eggs and reared young.
There is also a little-known swale freshwater wetland/riparian area
with willow habitat near the school site. It’s small, but it’s
ecologically valuable.
But perhaps the most compelling reason to not build a school on
this site is the fact that it is traversed by the Newport-Inglewood
earthquake fault. The Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Zoning Act prohibits
building any school in an area that is likely to suffer damage during
the life of the school building. Seems reasonable. Who wants to send
their kids to a school that might fall down on them? The last big
quake on this so-called 50-year fault was in 1933. It’s overdue for
another major temblor.
Bottom line: here’s why the property isn’t suitable for a school.
There is no current need for a school in this area. If a need arises
in the future, there are six closed school sites in the district that
could be reopened. The proposed school site is on ecologically
sensitive habitat that the Coastal Commission says can’t be used for
building. And an earthquake fault traverses the property.
The Ocean View District Advisory Committee will review community
input and written comments on Wednesday. At the school board’s
regular meeting on May 6, the advisory committee will present its
recommendations to the board. Assuming the property is put up for
sale, the Wildlife Conservation Board is poised to buy the site with
Proposition 50 funds. This proposition specifically mentions purchase
of Bolsa Chica land. But the Wildlife Conservation Board would
require as a condition of purchase that the surrounding property on
the lower mesa also be available. Since Hearthside Homes, the current
landholder of the surrounding property, worked to pass Prop 50, it
would seem that they would be a willing seller.
It would be wonderful if this valuable buffer for the Bolsa Chica
wetlands could be preserved for the enjoyment of the public. Kids
might derive a lot more educational benefit from a fully functioning
Bolsa Chica ecosystem than from more roads, buildings and parking
lots.
* VIC LEIPZIG and LOU MURRAY are Huntington Beach residents and
environmentalists. They can be reached at [email protected].
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