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Pebble Beach: Mapping out proposed developmentVERN FISHER/The
Herald TOUR GIVES GLIMPSE OF FOREST'S FUTUREBy
KEVIN HOWE Scattered in the green maze of the Del Monte Forrest of Pebble Beach are fluttering red flags and strands of orange plastic netting, markers for an ambitious makeover that owners of the golf resort and high-end residential area hope to see to completion over the next two years. The Pebble Beach Co. gave a daylong guided tour Wednesday of 25 sites earmarked for development by the company's Del Monte Forest Preservation and Development Plan It drew 60 observers, including the zoning administrator, members of the Monterey County Planning Commission and Subdivision committee, company representatives and interested members of the public. The expedition assembled at the Carmel Hill fire station just inside the Pebble Beach gate at Highway 1 in a drizzling rain that quickly gave way to scattered clouds and sunshine. The tour was meant for policy makers, according to Thom McCue, county project planner, but was thrown open to whoever was willing to brave the weather, pack a sack lunch and devote seven hours to rolling through the forest in a convoy of Pebble Beach Co. vans. The show was well-prepared. Eleven stops were made at areas where "storyboards" were set up outlining what is planned in a particular area, with flags and outlining visible to show building locations and sizes. Roxayne Spruance, who handles environmental questions and complaints for the company, came along to answer questions about what Pebble Beach Co. would do to mitigate impacts. The Del Monte Forest Preservation and Development Plan calls for construction of a 216 acre, 18-hole golf course, a golf driving range, a total of 160 visitor-serving suites at the new golf course as well as at The Lodge at Pebble Beach and The Inn at Spanish Bay, relocation of the Pebble Beach Equestrian Center to a 41-acre site in the Sawmill Gulch area, creation of 33 residential lots within five subdivisions, construction of 60 employee housing units, and relocation and construction of roads and trials. The plan also calls for preservation of 492 acres ** of forest land and critical wildlife habitat. The proposed developments were the subject of a countywide ballot referendum that was approved in November 2000 by 64 percent of voters. ** The ballot measure, pushed by the Pebble Beach Co., played up the preservation of the forest land and a reduction in the number of allowed single family houses. A draft environmental
impact report prepared for the project identified four key
impact areas with mitigations including:
The project plan will be discussed by the Pebble Beach Land Use Advisory Committee at its March 11 meeting and by the county Subdivision Committee on April 8 in Salinas. The county Planing and Building Inspection Department is accepting comments from the public and agencies, including the California Coastal commission, or the company's 1,200-page draft plan ** through March 22. Copies of the report are available on the Planning and Building Department's Web site-- www.co.montere.ca.us/pbi/--and for review at the following locations:
The document may be also purchased at Kinkos, 799 Lighthouse Ave, Monterey, or 501 S. Main St., Salinas. Call them at 373-2298 or 769-9855 for a price estimate. Kevin Howe can be
reached at 646-4416 |
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