-------------------------------------------------------------------
Greetings Commissioners, and thanks once again for your time.
You’ve
read our letters and heard our objections to this project. Based on the
high-density proposals made available to the public in the Planning
Department file, we respectfully ask you once again to deny the
application for the following reasons.
- A development of this size will:
- degrade the existing rural character of the neighborhood
- bring an unacceptable and hazardous increase in traffic to Peninsula Drive
- damage the sensitive habitat of the dunes and wetlands (the property is on a Beach and Dune Overlay parcel)
- and set a dangerous precedent for coastal development in Humboldt County.
- The project is referred to as being on 8.5 acres, but only 3.5 acres of this parcel qualify for development.
- The other five acres require special protections, as they consist of environmentally sensitive habitat.
- Talk
of donating those five wetland acres to the Manila Community Services
District as a way of mitigating damage is redundant, as the board
doesn’t want them and the wetland acreage is already protected.
- President
of the Board of Directors of Friends of the Dunes – and local geologist
– Bill Weaver has clearly stated that group’s opposition to the
project.
- The Coastal Commission stated that the findings necessary for development have not been met.
- While
we acknowledge that the legality of prior tree cutting on this property
by the applicant is still being investigated, his request for a
retroactive cutting permit only underscores how questionable this
removal was. Further:
- A
1993 map of a prior development proposal clearly shows tree habitat in
the areas that are now cleared from his cutting.
- In
April, county enforcement officer Jeff Connor sent an email to
Supervisor John Woolley regarding the cut trees. In this email, Jeff
Connor states that some of the stumps – in direct contradiction to Mr.
Riley’s claims – were about two feet in diameter and that when he asked
Mr. Riley about the firewood that Riley was supposedly chopping the
trees for, he was directed to an abandoned residence. He says he thinks
the issue has been waiting action in the Planning Department and that's
why no enforcement has yet come about.
- This
matters because more trees will need to be cut for this development to
take place, and, as Mr. Riley has said he will be attempting to sell
the property, this issue should be settled before any land transfers
hands
- We
are not opposed to sensible and fair development. We simply ask that
any development on that parcel happens with the same restrictions other
property owners have been held to.
- Do not approve the PUD.
- Houses must have a 75-foot minimum frontage requirement.
Thank you,