Carol McCarthycomments to the Scoping Meeting

Return to
HOME PAGE

Return to
PEBBLE BEACH COMPANY DEVELOPMENT PLANS

Return to
Del Monte Forest Land Use Advisory Committee (DMFLUAC)


September 25, 2002

To: Thomas A. McCue, Senior Planner, Monterey County Planning Dept.

From: Carol McCarthy, Concerned Residents of Pebble Beach and Monterey County, Advisory Committee (831-393-7333)

Date: September 25, 2002

RE: Areas of Concern: Public Scoping Meeting &endash; EIR on Pebble Beach Co. Development Projects in Del Monte Forest

 

Development of an equestrian center at Sawmill Gulch

Sawmill Gulch has two easements, a 1986 conservation and scenic easement in the Lower Gulch and a 1987 conservation easement in the Upper Gulch. The easements were conditions of approval for the PB Spanish Bay project and to ensure that the those areas were permanently made a contiguous part of the natural resources and envirionmentally sensitive habitats in the adjacent SFB Botanical Preserve and Gowen Cypress area, which includes a unique pygmy forest.

One of the most disturbing issues of Measure A is Pebble Beach Co's insistence to develop high-intensity use, full-service equestrian center at Sawmill Gulch. When asked about the easements, Pebble Beach Co. replies it'll just relocate them to some other area in the Del Monte Forest. The Coastal Commission has raised concerns that if such a relocation were considered, the substitute easement area would have to be as environmentally sensitive as the Sawmill Gulch area and that the commitment by Pebble Beach to reforest the land they mined for the Spanish Bay has not been met. To my knowledge, a substitute easement area has so far not been revealed by Pebble Beach to the public.

Comparative study of easement areas

A complete, comparative study of the proposed substitute easement area vs the proposed Sawmill Gulch development site needs to be done as part of the EIR. Some important points of comparison are:

  • Compare the existence of wetlands in the two areas. In order for the substitute easement area to qualify, it should have at least the same acreage and quality of protected wetlands in the Upper and Lower Gulches. The County did a wetland study, but failed to document the corner of the wetland that has been covered by logs dumped by Pebble Beach Co. The wetland in the Upper Gulch would be substantially impacted by high-intensity activities and events in the various arenas and buildings to be crowded into that area. The Lower Gulch would be substantially impacted by the use of the area as a combined polo field and 1,500-vehicle "special event" parking lot.

  • Compare the environmental sensitivity of the surrounding area. Is the substitute easement area an isolated patch of forest. Is it a contiguous part of a larger, environmentally sensitive area, as is Sawmill Gulch? The Upper Sawmill Gulch was made a permanent part of the 500-acre Huckleberry Hill Natural Habitat area in the 1987 easement. It is adjacent to the SFB Botanical Preserve, and the Bishop pine and Gowen cypress groves, including a unique pygmy forest. *

  • Compare the wildlife and plant life. Does the substitute area have the same abundance of wildlife and threatened status plants as Sawmill Gulch? In my walks at Sawmill Gulch I have seen Great Blue Heron and frogs in the wetland, a young mountain lion, deer, rabbits, foxes and coyotes. The Gowen cypress is threatened status.
    • * There are only a few places in the world that have the unique acidic, high-clay soil that supports a pygmy forest. The pygmy forest is right across from upper end of the the Upper Gulch. Despite the fact that the pygmy forest is considered a unique, natural treasure, the existence of the pygmy forest has been ignored in previous EIRs for the Del Monte Forest. This time the EIR needs to do a thorough study of the pygmy forest by a specialist in the field (not a general biologist), including its extension into the Upper Gulch. I suspect what has been observed as stunted or retarded growth of trees in that area is actually an extension of the pygmy forest.

      A point of interest...Gowen cypress (regular-sized and pygmy) the US Environmental Protection Agency Register lists the "Notice of Availability of a Draft Recovery Plan for Five Plants from Monterey County, CA, for Review and Commentary," Federal Register May 13,2002 (Volume 67, Number 92), which states:

      "These plants are threatened by one or more of the following: alteration, destruction, and fragmentation of habitat resulting from urban and golf course development; recreational activities; competition with nonnative plant species; herbivory from native or nonnative species; demographic stochasticity; and disruption of natural fire cycles due to fire suppression associated with increasing residential development around and within occupied habitat."

      REF: http://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/EPA-SPECIES/2002/May/Day-13/e11802.htm

      SEE ALSO: "What's So Special About Huckleberry Hill on the Monterey Peninsula in Forest Heritage, A Natural History of the Del Monte Forest, compiled by Beatrice Howitt, California Native Plant Society, Berkeley, CA, 1972.

Damage assessment of surrounding environmentally-sensitive areas

Add to the EIR the following:

  • The damaging effects on the plants, trees and wildlife adjacent to the SFB Morse Botanical Preserve and the Gowen Cypress areas caused by thousands of persons with their horses and campers/trailers attending week-long events at the equestrian center, plus the daily trips of boarded horses on the trails there need to be evaluated in the EIR.
  • The increase in potential fire damage and erosion due to increased high-traffic events and persons exploring the Huckleberry Hill area.
  • A complete count of the various species of trees that would be cut down for the Sawmill Gulch needs to be clearly presented in the EIR.

 

Development of a proposed driving range, training center, and parking lot at Spanish Bay (8C)

A complete EIR needs to be done on the following:

  • The damaging effect of golf balls hitting the wetland and the upper end of the proposed range.
  • The impact on the wildlife in that area.

 

Total assessment of trees cut down for buildout

The total amount a trees to be cut down for the entire Del Monte Forest buildout needs to be presented in an easy-to-find table in the EIR so the entire effect of the project is apparent.


| RESIDENTS | MEASURE A | COUNTY | COASTAL | EASEMENTS | P.B.CO. | MEETINGS | LAND USE | NEWS | EDITORIALS | HELP |
[Top of page]