Thursday, 02 September 2010 | News From Indian Country
Advertisement
Home
Main Menu
HomeAbout NFICAd IndexContact UsJob ListingsiCountryTVMedia KitSearch
Latest News
Special Features
Annie Mae
Leonard Peltier
Ray Robinson
Section Menu
Akiing
Archaeology/Remains
Archived Website
Blogin' w/Paul
Books
Business News
CareerBuilder.com
Casinos/Tourism
Crime/Justice/Courts & Lawsuits
Editorial/Letters
Entertainment Stories
Food & Health
IndianCountryTV.com
International News
Mascots
Missing Persons
Movies/Films
Music
Language Programs
Native Profiles
NEWS SECTION
NFIC Columnists
NFIC Supporters
Pow Wows
Sports
Subscribe
Treaty Rights
Tribal Elections
Walking On
Web Links
Wildlife Resources
Archive
Login and/or Subscribe to NFIC
NFIC News Feed
Click RSS Feed for Instructions

Buy Cialis 20mg Online

Environmentalists sue over huge California development PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Main NEWS Section - Environmental Events

By Jacob Adelman
Los Angeles, California (AP) 11-09

A coalition of environmentalists filed a lawsuit Nov. 12 to stop the development of a 5,000-acre resort community on the sprawling Tejon Ranch property some 60 miles north of Los Angeles.

The lawsuit filed in Kern County Superior Court argues that county officials ignored its potential impact on the endangered California condor while discounting flaws in the project’s water-use plan and air pollution problems from increased traffic in the now undeveloped area.

“All of California will suffer if this project gets built – more water will be stolen, the bird that graces our quarter will be doomed, our air will get dirtier,” said Adam Keats, a director at the Center for Biological Diversity, the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit.

Kern County supervisors last month unanimously approved the Tejon Mountain Village project, which includes 3,500 homes, two golf courses and resort hotels in the Tehachapi Mountains. The rustic area is along heavily traveled Interstate 5 between metropolitan Los Angeles and the southern San Joaquin Valley.

The project is the smaller of two developments planned for the Tejon Ranch Co.’s 270,000-acre property, the largest piece of privately held land in the state. A separate 23,000-home project known as Centennial is currently undergoing environmental review.

Tejon Mountain Village LLC spokesman David Crowder said county officials were right to approve the project that met high standards for conservation and sustainable development.

“We feel that the record will show that the county made a well-reasoned decision and that the courts will find in our favor,” he said.

A phone message left with Kern County spokesman Allan Krauter was not immediately returned.

Other plaintiffs in the lawsuit include the Center on Race, Poverty and the Environment and the Wishtoyo Foundation, a Chumash Indian environmental group.

Tejon Ranch made a deal last year with several other environmental groups, including the Sierra Club, to preserve a 240,000-acre, or 375-square-mile, swath of wilderness in exchange for the groups not opposing development on other parts of the ranch.

The Tehachapi Mountains are important habitat for the California condor, a giant species that soars on wings spanning 91/2 feet and almost became extinct in the 1980s.

 


Your Donation Is More Than Appreciated. It has Kept This Site Alive, Helped Train Native Students, Help Buy New Equipment and Underwritten Live Broadcasting of Native Programming That You WATCH HERE. Even a $2 donation, "MAKES A DIFFERENCE". Thank you!

Or Become a Member of the Website or Subscribe NFIC Hard Copy


Click to eBay Trading Post For Music, Clothing, Books and Native Crafts


 


Quote this article on your site

  Comment on this Article
RSS comments

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

Powered by AkoComment Tweaked Special Edition v.1.4.6
AkoComment © Copyright 2004 by Arthur Konze - www.mamboportal.com
All right reserved

 
< Prev   Next >
Google AdSense
Go to top of page Go to top of page
Google