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Environmental Report Issued on Development

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This city’s most acrimonious development battle is heating up again after the release of a long-awaited report on the environmental impact of a proposed 572-home project in the Verdugo Mountains.

Last week’s release of a report about the Oakmont View V project has reset the clock for the project. The tentative tract map application, which was ready for review a decade ago, could now come before the Glendale Planning Commission in June.

For decades, the landowner and developer, Gregg’s Artistic Homes, has viewed the 238-acre property as one of the few remaining large parcels on which to build homes in Glendale. The project would be among the city’s largest in recent years.

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Environmentalists consider the same land as pristine habitat worthy of protection for its oaks, sycamore, deer and bobcats.

“This is the glen in Glendale,” said John Yard, a conservation chairman for the Sierra Club, as he walked past grazing deer and stands of sumac, sage and oaks at Camp Max Straus, a children’s camp bordering the Gregg property. On Tuesday, Yard was accompanied by other environmentalists and Assemblyman Jack Scott (D-Pasadena), who has decided to oppose the development.

While opponents decry Oakmont as an intrusion into one of just six riparian oak forests in the Verdugos and a negative impact on one of four permanent streams in the range, Lee Gregg disagreed.

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“We will only touch the south fork of an unnamed tributary of Engleheard Canyon,” Gregg said. “The side tributary would be filled in. . . . We won’t touch the main canyon.”

Environmentalists said last week’s fires in Glendale and La Canada Flintridge should serve as a warning that hillside development is at risk for wildfires.

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