Solstice Creek is
a year-round stream dropping 2800' in three miles to enter the Pacific at the
west end of Corral Beach in the City of Malibu. It supports an unusually well-developed riparian
forest of White Alder, sycamore, and Coast Live Oak. All but the lower
700' of the stream is owned by the National Park Service. That lower 700' is
a five acre parcel that presently supports a large restaurant set back from
the stream, which is pretty much still in a natural state on the property.
The owner of the five
acres has been trying to place additional commercial development on the property
for many years. Most recently he applied for a 27-unit motel which would be
built within 50' of the edge of the riparian habitat in violation
of both the Malibu Local Coastal Plan and the City's own General Plan, which
both require a 100' setback from the outer edge of the riparian woodland.
Furthermore, the EIR for the project did not address the potential impact of
the encroachment into the riparian buffer on the viability of Solstice as a
restored steelhead stream, in spite of our requests that it do so.
In addition, a local
resident presented photographs showing paint allegedly dumped into a sink
on the developer's property flowing out of a storm drain into Solstice Creek.
A formal complaint has been filed to investigate this.
In the spring of 2002, the City approved the motel project with little modification. The Sierra Club is currently in challenging this decision legally.
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This page last modified: 8/16/2009 |