Lawsuit may move forward against Coastal Commission
An appeals court has ruled that a lawsuit against the California
Coastal Commission filed by the developer and owner of the Bolsa Chica
mesa may proceed.
Developer Hearthside Homes and landowner Signal Landmark claim in the
suit that the commission essentially took the property from them by
restricting what could be built to the point where the development is no
longer economically feasible.
Hearthside Homes planned to build homes on 183 acres of the mesa and
was limited to 65 by the California Coastal Commission in November 2000.
In August, a San Diego Superior Court Judge dismissed segments of a
lawsuit that alleged the Coastal Commission had unlawfully taken property
from Hearthside and Signal by allowing construction on only 65 acres of
the more than 200-acre property.
That lawsuit may now go forward.
The Bolsa Chica mesa consists of about 200 acres along Warner Avenue,
near Pacific Coast Highway and state-protected wetlands. Bolsa Chica,
itself, which lies between Warner and Seapoint avenues, is on the Pacific
Flyway, offering a pit-stop to migrating birds.
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