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    Margaret Connell

    The gate to the Arroyo Hondo Preserve.


    Saving the Gaviota Coast Piece by Piece

    With Naples Project Moving, Here's a Look Conservation Efforts Just Outside Goleta


    Thursday, November 15, 2007
    By Margaret Connell
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    Starting on Monday, November 26, the Goleta Grapevine will be published on Mondays instead of Thursdays on Independent.com.

    Driving west from Winchester Canyon, you leave the City of Goleta and enter the Gaviota Coast. This glorious expanse of foothills, mountains, and coastline is facing many challenges. It is a land of farming, diverse wild life, sensitive habitats, and opportunities for hiking, surfing, and enjoying its wonderful beaches. It will take many people, working together, to keep it that way.

    Is the Gaviota Coast worth saving?

    See the results without voting.

    A few years ago, there was an attempt to create a National Seashore here, but it foundered on issues of politics and money. Today, we are looking at saving it piece-by-piece.

    A major player in this is the Land Trust for Santa Barbara County, which has negotiated conservation and agricultural easements for several thousand acres along the coast. These are areas where farmers who want to keep farming give up the right to subdivide their land in exchange for income tax credits and/or grants for environmental conservation. These easements do not open up the land to the public, but they do ensure that such land remains in agriculture or open space. At some sites, trails are being developed, but we have nothing yet comparable to the front country trails in the Santa Barbara area. This is a goal worth pursuing for the future, perhaps.

    The Arroyo Hondo Preserve snakes back in the Gaviota Coast's wooded, rocky canyons.
    Click to enlarge photo

    Margaret Connell

    The Arroyo Hondo Preserve snakes back in the Gaviota Coast's wooded, rocky canyons.

    One beautiful site with a trail is the Arroyo Hondo Preserve, protected and managed by the Land Trust. It is open to the public on certain days by reservation. Extending from the shoreline to Camino Cielo, the preserve’s steep canyon walls and running creek have been likened to a miniature Yosemite.

    Further west, the possibility is being explored of cleaning up an old oil industry site and adding it to the adjacent Gaviota State Park. This would allow new camping sites away from the flood zone.

    These are some of the ways that the Gaviota Coast are being preserved. But there is also a major development underway.

    A view of Naples, where story poles from the proposed development of seaside mansions still linger from a recent county Planning Commission visit.
    Click to enlarge photo

    Margaret Connell

    A view of Naples, where story poles from the proposed development of seaside mansions still linger from a recent county Planning Commission visit.

    A big project is being proposed for Naples, just two miles west of the City of Goleta and the urban limit line. The option of a referendum that saved El Capitan Ranch in 1972 is not a possibility here because of litigation that went all the way to the state’s Supreme Court, which ruled for the owners of the property.

    Naples, a planned town site dating from 1888, lies on 800 acres, both north and south of the freeway. It originally included 400 lots, all much smaller than the county’s current agricultural zoning would allow. After years of negotiations and litigation over lot mergers, the county and the developer, Santa Barbara Ranch, entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) for two options. The first is for a 54-unit residential development, and the second for a 72-unit rural estate, with additional acreage from neighboring Dos Pueblos Ranch. (See the county’s report on the proposed development here in PDF form.) Both would include nine mansions on the blufftop overlooking the ocean. Public access to the coast and parking is included in the plan, as are hiking, biking, and equestrian trails.

    A map showing where the Naples site is located.
    Click to enlarge photo

    County of Santa Barbara

    A map showing where the Naples site is located.

    The Naples Coalition, a collection of six environmentally oriented groups, has been seeking ways to lessen the impact of this development. As this area lies just two miles west of Goleta, the fear is that it would create a precedent for development in the intervening area, even though the circumstances at Naples are unique.

    The coalition is hoping to save some of the Naples sites through the transfer of development rights (TDRs). This process would allow denser development on more urban sites in exchange for purchase of whole or part of a site at Naples. It is a complicated process and not everyone agrees that accepting higher densities in urban areas is a fair trade-off for saving a few acres of the coast.

    While optimists may hope that all of Naples can be spared, it seems certain that some building will happen, and the result will be mansions, not “workforce” housing for the middle class. But there are many steps yet to go and hearings before the Planning Commission and the Board of Supervisors. The public still has a chance to shape this project and to preserve as much as possible of the quality of this place.

    Possible development plans for the Naples property on the Gaviota Coast.
    Click to enlarge photo

    County of Santa Barbara

    Possible development plans for the Naples property on the Gaviota Coast.

    There will be a hearing on the revised draft environmental impact report on December 10 at 6:30 pm in the Planning Commission Hearing Room, 123 E. Anapamu St. in Santa Barbara. Written comments may be submitted through January 2.

    The goal is to maintain the Gaviota Coast as primarily an agricultural community, preserve its wonderful views, protect its watersheds and diverse habitats, and allow recreation that leaves only a gentle footprint on the land. This will take reading thick reports and sitting through endless meetings. But this is what it takes to ensure that Santa Barbara Ranch at Naples remains unique and does not become a model for the rest of the coast.



    VETERAN’S DAY IN GOLETA: Goleta paid tribute to its veterans last Sunday at the Goleta Valley Community Center. Veterans from World War II, Korea, and Vietnam were recognized, along with the young men and women in harm’s way today in Iraq.

    Photo Gallery

    Veteran's Day 2007 in Goleta

    Veterans from American wars were honored at the Goleta Valley Community Center on Sunday, November 11, 2007. Photos by Margaret Connell.

    World War II and Korean War veteran Mr. MacDonald participates in Goleta's celebration with is two daughters.

    Enlarge photos | View thumbnails

    To a recorded recitation of “The Ragged Old Flag” by Lt. Col. Kenneth Todd, the old flag was lowered and folded by U.S. Air Force personnel, and a new flag raised on the main flag pole at the community center. Lt. Col. Todd passed away this year but his recitations of this and “On Flanders Field” had been a tradition on Veterans Day for many years. The old flag was presented to Hannah Todd, Lt. Col. Todd’s widow.

    Many thanks to the Goleta Valley Community Center and Randy Rosness, its executive director, for this moving ceremony.

    Related Links

    • Developer Matt Osgood's take TDRs
    • Naples Coalition's take on TDRs
    Story Help (Click-ability)
    Double-clicking on any word or phrase in this story will open a reference window with definitions and links to other reference material.

    Comments

    Discussion Guidelines

    The only acceptable solution is to have UC buyout Osgood at his purchase price. 40 mill is a drop in their expansion budget. UC can then selloff the North and South Campus property to a land trust (like the one they're about to dispoil right next door). Move all their housing expansion to the Naples area north of 101 and south of 101 can be a native habitat research and restoration area...vote for me and I'll set you free.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 0 of 0 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 0

    sa1 (anonymous profile)
    November 15, 2007 at 8:50 a.m. (Suggest removal)

    sa1 - your home has already despoiled the land it sits on, and I'd rather have UC despoil the land right next to your place than the Gaviota Coast.

    I understand that you like to take walks on the land next door to you, but it makes a lot more sense to build homes where services like sewage, water, schools, and roads already exist rather than build all that junk from scratch at Naples. Oh yes, did you ever notice that all your sewage goes to a plant once owned in entirety by UC? UC turned it over the Goleta San in the spirit of sensibility; it makes no more sense for UC to run a San plan than it does for UC to build roads.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 0 of 0 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 0

    sevendolphins (anonymous profile)
    November 16, 2007 at 5:46 a.m. (Suggest removal)

    I thought fish was good brain food...

    The grinchlike owner of SB Ranch is blackmailing the county to allow him to do what the community doesn't want.

    Apparently, by law, the county will have to build the infrastructure for him at our expense so that he can enrichen himself regardless of impact to his fellow humans (I would say neighbors but he doesn't live here.) It's not a case of either or...both developments are set to steamroll the Good Land for the benefit of a few.

    My problem isn't with having a quiet place to walk (though I have cherished that for 24 years). It's about the massive increase in housing density that is about to occur right here.

    It's about the approval of the north campus area many years ago based on Phelps Drive being continued to the west so to create a safe egress and mitigate traffic. Phelps extension is now dead so the approval for the north campus housing should also be revoked.

    It's about how Hollister degrades into a pot hole minefield within a year due to the traffic NOW. It's about the dangerous back up on to the freeway at the counties longest offramp (Storke Rd.), NOW.

    It's about how I used to enjoy the sound of waves crashing on the beach and observing the dark, star filled nights. NOW it's an orange glow till midnight and screaming soccer moms and Little Leaguers at 7:30 am.

    It's about all the commercial space for rent on Hollister yet the COG just approved another 100K+ sf commercial development in the same area. It's about all the broken promises that the Market place made to get approval and then never followed through on.

    It's about ignoring (and not counting) the impact of 10-20 "undocumented" workers living in one house and littering the streets with their broke down vehicles. It's about designing neighborhoods with no side walks so they can squeeze in an extra row of houses.

    It's about jam packing homes with no property setback (let alone a front/back yard) like that abortion on Calle Real and Patterson.

    That's just the NOW condition. What do you think my quiet little neighbor hood will be like when an additional 10K people move in over the next 6-8 years...and that's just from UCSB. How many more will move onto Bishop Ranch? 4-5 thousand?

    I'd trade 72 multimillion dollar low density homes for the UCSB/Bishop Debacle any effing day.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 0 of 0 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 0

    sa1 (anonymous profile)
    November 16, 2007 at 10:40 a.m. (Suggest removal)

    Is the beach access going to be modeled after the brilliant approach the Bacara took? 50 spaces open when they feel like it unless of course some dignitary/celebrity wants to have their party anywhere near the place and then it is all shut down by security goons and if you have anything to say about it, you can be physically threatened or you can take it to the totally ineffective city of Goleta? So in the summer time it is celebrity death match to get a parking spot? Who will monitor this "beach access"? The mansion owners? The Bacara goon squad? So wait, we will have Bacara, Craig McCaws pad, and then 9 mansions? I need to know. Maybe Wendy McCaw and Rob Lowe could be beach access consultants for these projects?
    I saw seven dolphins this morning out at Rincon cove rip thru the lineup. Two of them jumped out and went from the top of the wave to the bottom to the hoots of the people out. It was awesome.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 0 of 0 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 0

    bimboteskie (anonymous profile)
    November 16, 2007 at 3:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)

    ... I liked Goleta better when I was a kid and there was just fields and trees and far fewer people who paved over the valley to complain about others even thinking about doing what they already did.

    A pox on all of your subdivisions, especially the self-righteous.

    Readers say: Thumbs Up: 0 of 0 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 0

    wingnut (anonymous profile)
    November 21, 2007 at 12:49 p.m. (Suggest removal)

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