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Goodwin: Opposing Eachus View Estates PDF Print E-mail
Written by Kevin Goodwin   
Saturday, 02 February 2008

Dear Lake County Supervisors:


I write in opposition to the proposed Eachus View Estates subdivision and rezoning. There is no proven need for the subdivision of the existing agricultural property into four small suburban residential parcels with one remaining agricultural parcel.


I do not object to Mark Mitchell’s right to use his property consistent with the law. However, the property that Mr. Mitchell purchased in late 2005 is a single 90-acre property zoned for agricultural use. He has every right to use that property consistent with the existing zoning and the law. However, he now wishes to change that property into something new and fundamentally different: five pieces of property, four suburban residential parcels and one remaining agricultural piece. Before the county allows that change in the nature of Mr. Mitchell’s property it must determine whether it is in the public interest to do so. Obviously, Mr. Mitchell wants to make the change so that he can sell off the parcels and make money. However, his desire to profit from his 2005 purchase does not in any way automatically show any community need to subdivide the land and change the applicable zoning. The board must determine whether adding four suburban residential lots to the existing inventory of such lots in the County advances the public interest; it cannot consider only the very private economic interest of Mr. Mitchell.


The first question the board must ask is whether there is a shortage of existing undeveloped suburban residential lots, or the “product” to use Mr. Mitchell’s terminology, in the North Lakeport area. If there is an adequate stock of one to five acre lots, which appears to be the case and which Staff can readily confirm, then the subdivision does nothing positive for the county and its residents. All the effects are negative for everyone but Mr. Mitchell.


If, and only if, there is a significant shortage of existing home sites available for development, then the board can debate whether adding such types of properties outside the North Lakeport Community Growth Boundary is good public policy and makes good sense for the county as a whole.


Of course, as clearly developed before the Planning Commission and in the Jan. 15 hearing, it makes no sense whatsoever to subdivide agricultural lands outside the Community Growth Boundary. It makes no sense to the community to tax the aquifer and add new septic systems rather than tie to existing water and sewage treatment systems. It makes no sense to the community to take existing agricultural land and turn it permanently into suburban lots. It makes no sense to the community to jerrymander lots with inadequate buffers to future agricultural uses in the area. Even if there is an existing shortage of suburban residential lots, it still does not call for expanding suburban growth into agricultural areas. If there is such a shortage, I submit that we can count on the market to bring lots within the growth boundaries to the Planning Commission in the future.


There was considerable discussion on the Jan. 15 hearing on whether your decision in this matter would form some kind of precedent. Of course it would. As the legislative body in Lake County, all actions of the Board of Supervisors are precedent. As the owner of an agricultural property in Scotts Valley, I am very concerned about any actions that ignore the fundamental planning concept of restricting suburban growth to established growth boundaries. I am very concerned that allowing this development would encourage developers to look at Scotts Valley to put in two-acre ranchettes or three-acre “Scotts Creek View Estates.”


Lake County can and should grow. However, it must grow in a long-term cohesive and sustainable manner, not as poorly planned, one-off and piecemeal sprawl. Don’t set a precedent of allowing suburban sprawl. Take the long-term view. Don’t approve this expansion of suburban growth into agricultural lands and don’t put the private profit drive of a single individual over the good of the County as a whole.


Kevin Goodwin lives in Lakeport.


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Comments
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James - Good show Kevin Registered | 02-03-2008 09:48:50
I would like to state open spaces are not only good for humans but wildlife. Be at the meeting on FEB.5th BOS court house.
lcsage - Developers Registered | 02-03-2008 10:44:35
Will only be happy when Lake County looks like Sonoma County or "discovered" like Willits and Ukiah. Make these greedy ba$tards drive Main Street in Lakeport at "rush hour" when the traffic is backed up from Lakeport Blvd to 11th St. Makes one a little ill.
You are right on as usual, James.

Semper Fi
smurf - yup! Registered | 02-03-2008 12:05:25
you have it summed-up pretty well Kevin, hope the BOS sees it your way.
Donna Christopher - Hadn't been out IP:12.206.148.xxx | 02-03-2008 12:06:12
Scotts Valley Road for a while and had the chance to drive out there last week. Spent the rest of the afternoon profoundly depressed. Gone were the agriculture operations I have come to cherish and in their place McMansions had sprung up. Lakeports' Community Growth Boundary needs to remain where it is until a) we know how much water we have and b)we figure out how a greatly reduced number of beds at SL Hospital is gonna affect the entire community. No, adding a couple more residences will not amount to that much of difference but as stated above, you've set the precedent to allow more. Much More!! And really now, any one paying attention to how Lakeport is being 'run' lately, do we dare let them expand their area of influence? What happens if these small lots won't pass the perk test for septic. Yeah, I can hear a Supe or two saying 'not their problem if they don't' but none the less voting to allow a bad precedent. I'm so glad to see so many eyes watching these grandiose schemes.
landshark - Let's review IP:75.62.183.xxx | 02-04-2008 15:27:55
I've watched as the same people have complained, and done everything to stop any growth, at the same time they hate the slum we all call Lake county.
Well it's been tried "your" way for who know how long up here...at least the last 20 years?
Has any of the anti-growth brought:
Lower Taxes?
Lower Crime?
Lower poverty and Government dependant citizens?
Improve Employment(gainful, not more burgerflipper positions)?
Improved Healthcare?
Make Roads Safe?
Yep the anti-growth way works real well!
James - Gene pool Registered | 02-04-2008 19:31:35
If the four males of the BOS are a example of our gene pool, not hard to understand their changing one slum for another. I remined you all this you see didnot occure with out government emplees. To clean it all up you would need to displace a lot of people and the cost to clean. Its been bad government that allowed all the slums and it will take a better government than you have now to clean it all up.
lcsage - The West Side Registered | 02-05-2008 10:37:30
Scotts Valley Road and points west are starting to look like the west side of Sonoma County. This insidious sprawl should be contained. Include some parts off Hill Road East going back to town. It's looking pretty sucky to me.
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