Sunday, June 27, 2010

Lawsuit protecting Whittier Narrows wildlife sanctuary for community and nature continues

Our lawsuit targeting the controversial, expensive and destructive San Gabriel River Discovery Center project continues to protect the community’s prized Whittier Narrows Natural Area, a historic wildlife sanctuary of tremendous ecological value.

We filed the suit in February, under the California Environmental Quality Act, or CEQA, which the Planning and Conservation League calls the state’s “premier environmental law” and a “powerful tool for public participation.” The suit charges that the Discovery Center Authority failed to meet its legal obligations under CEQA and the Seismic Hazards Mapping Act when it certified an inadequate final environmental impact report and approved the project.
The authority’s own records show that meetings, VIP tours and special events aimed at water district executives and government officials make up the vast majority of new programming for the $22 million taxpayer-funded facility.
CEQA violations cited in the suit include the authority’s failure to fully disclose and evaluate the environmental harm the proposed water museum and meeting center and its sprawling compound of structures would cause. The suit also charges that the authority ignored the project’s public safety impacts from seismic hazards and failed to prepare a feasible, funded and legally enforceable plan to mitigate the project’s adverse environmental impacts.

The authority has relentlessly marketed and greenwashed the Discovery Center as an environmental project for more than a decade, yet it has done little or nothing in that same period of time to preserve or restore habitat at the natural area or to enhance existing educational programs there. And the authority’s own records show that meetings, VIP tours and special events aimed at water district executives and government officials make up the vast majority of new programming planned for the $22 million taxpayer-funded facility.

For more information on our organization, the Friends of the Whittier Narrows Natural Area, and our efforts to protect an important community resource, please see the following links:

2 comments:

  1. (Events: WEDNESDAY July 7,'10, 6 p.m-8:30 p.m., Whittier Narrows Recreation Area parking lot at Santa Anita Avenue and Lexington-Gallatin Road. THURSDAY July 8,'10, Occidental College, Thorne Hall, 3-7 p.m.).

    Obama officials coming to Whittier Narrows to talk about outdoor recreation opportunities - Whittier Daily News. By Rebecca Kimitch ~ rebecca.kimitch@sgvn.com 626-962-8811, ext. 2105
    snips:

    SOUTH EL MONTE - Officials from the Obama Administration will meet with local environmental and community groups at Whittier Narrows on Wednesday to discuss their concerns about the quality and quantity of outdoor recreation opportunities in the San Gabriel Valley.

    The event, open to the public, will cast a national spotlight on the San Gabriel Mountains and River and allow local officials to highlight the need for additional federal resources to provide outdoor opportunities to residents of the park-starved San Gabriel Valley, according to event organizers.

    The officials will be in town for a "listening session" the following day at Occidental College as part of President Obama's America's Great Outdoors Initiative..

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  2. Follow-up:
    http://www.whittierdailynews.com/news/ci_15463147 =
    Community leaders appeal to Obama administration for more park access - Whittier Daily News

    Also: http://www.whittierdailynews.com/news/ci_15526314?source=rss
    - is about the canyon-fall-death (at work, at 70!) and worthy works of of distinguished bird expert Michael San Miguel of Arcadia, in the San Gabriel Mountains north of Altadena. RIP!

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