Hikers, Homeowners
Are at Odds Over Trails
Gated communities
and recreational users are fighting over the closure of pathways
on private land in the Santa Monica Mountains.
By Jessica Garrison, Times Staff
Writer
May 10, 2006
Though the chaparral just west
of the 405 Freeway is giving way to exclusive gated communities,
many recreational users contend they have the right to keep
using the trails, especially because the trails connect to paths
in the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area.
Homeowners and developers say
they are willing to provide access to well-established trails,
but they do not always agree with trail users on which paths
are established and what sort of access ought to be granted.
The result has been a simmering dispute, punctuated by lawsuits.
Another round began this week,
when the Center for Law in the Public Interest and two other
groups filed a lawsuit demanding public access to what they
are calling the Mount St. Mary's Trail.
According to the lawsuit, the
trail runs "north from behind Mount St. Mary's College,
along the Mount St. Mary's Fire Road." The suit says the
trail is an established footway in use since at least the 1950s.
The lawsuit also says that in August, a developer erected a
locked metal gate across the trail and topped it with concertina
wire, severing a connection to the Canyonback, Westridge and
Sullivan Canyon trails and ultimately to the 20,000-acre "Big
Wild" network in the Santa Monica Mountains.
The developer tells a different
story.
"There is no official trail,"
said Frans Bigelow, project manager for developer Castle &
Cooke. "The trail they are calling the Mount St. Mary's
Trail is a fire road." Bigelow said the road was closed
in 1978 when the area was used as a landfill, not in August,
as the lawsuit alleges. What happened in August, he said, was
that the gate, which had been partially ripped out, was repaired.
The Fire Department keeps keys for gates on fire roads and for
gated communities.
Robert Garcia, a lawyer with
the Center for Law in the Public Interest, said that it is "irrelevant"
that the trail is a fire road.
"We have declarations from
20 people or more who have been using the trail back to 1950,"
he said. "We have a declaration from a nun at Mount St.
Mary's."
"This is part of an overall
trend by which wealthy enclaves think they can simply take over
public parks, public beaches, public trails," he added.
"We're not going to allow it."
Los Angeles City Councilman Bill
Rosendahl, who represents the area, declined to comment on the
dispute. Through a spokeswoman, he issued a statement: "We
are working with all parties to try and find an amicable and
mutually beneficial resolution to the issue and I'm hopeful
that can be accomplished."
But few on either side predict
harmony soon.
In February, the Canyonback Alliance
filed a lawsuit accusing the city of Los Angeles of illegally
allowing developers to erect gates on Stoney Hill Road in the
Mountaingate development.
Frank Mateljan, a spokesman for
Los Angeles City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo, said the road is not
public and does not lead anywhere.
In other instances, however,
the city has sided with recreational users seeking access to
the land.
In 2004, the city attorney's
office refused to allow residents of "the Crown,"
a 70-home community of multimillion-dollar houses atop a ridge
overlooking the ocean and the Sepulveda Pass, to put a gate
across Canyonback Road at Mountaingate Drive. The gate would
have blocked vehicle traffic into the community.
Now, the pillars remain hinge-less,
much to the annoyance of many in the neighborhood.
They say they are bothered by
car alarms and dog excrement as dozens of people drive into
their neighborhood to walk their dogs at the trail at the far
end of the development. They also complain that teenagers on
their way home from hiking have jumped the fence and used the
homeowners' association swimming pool. They are worried, they
say, that a wayward cigarette could ignite the hillsides.
"For all these reasons,
I'd like a gate," said Lois Goldberg, who has lived in
the area for nine years.
Sentiment in favor of the gates
is so strong in the neighborhood that one woman who does not
want them refused to give her name. "Do you want me to
be hanged?" she asked.
Another battle is looming. Developer
Castle & Cooke is hoping to break ground on seven new houses
in an area bisected by a popular trail.
This time, the developer has
agreed to keep access to the trail open by giving an easement
in perpetuity that would allow hikers to pass through the development.
Access groups say that's not
good enough. They say that a few years from now, homeowners
in the new development will be clamoring for a gate of their
own, and they want the trail moved so it skirts the development.
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