The judge threw a lifeline to these highly imperiled cats, who need all the help they can get. Now the city and developer have to go back to the drawing board and rethink this damaging project.
In a victory over a development that could doom local mountain
lions, a judge issued a scathing ruling against the proposed 270-acre Altair
development in Western Riverside County in California.
Judge Daniel Ottolia found that the development's environmental review
failed to properly account for impacts to imperiled Santa Ana mountain
lions. The ruling also found that the development was not consistent with
Temecula's general plan or a regional habitat conservation plan.
"The ruling affirms concerns raised by scientists and conservation groups
that the Altair development could be a death knell for local mountain
lions," said J.P. Rose, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity.
"The judge threw a lifeline to these highly imperiled cats, who need all the
help they can get. Now the city and developer have to go back to the drawing
board and rethink this damaging project."
Part of the development sits on the 55-acre "South Parcel" - one of the only
passages left for wildlife to move between coastal and inland mountains. The
court also ruled against the development on a host of other issues,
including that the environmental review incorrectly downplayed impacts on
the imperiled western pond turtle and San Diego ambrosia.
"With wildlife connectivity so restricted in southwest Riverside County,
this ruling is a positive step for mountain lions and many other species
that need this corridor to survive," said Pam Nelson of the Sierra Club's
Santa Margarita Group.
The ruling comes just days before the state fish and game commission's April
16 vote on whether to grant the Santa Ana mountain lions and five other
cougar populations initial protections under the state’s endangered species
act. The Center and Mountain Lion Foundation petitioned the state to protect
these populations in June 2019, and state wildlife officials recommended in
February that the petition move forward.
"We are grateful that this ruling came in time to protect one of the few
remaining wildlife corridors in the region," said Debra Chase, CEO of the
Foundation.
Some Southern California lion populations could disappear in little more
than a decade, according to a March 2019 study. Researchers with the
National Park Service, UC Davis and UCLA warn that if enough inbreeding
occurs, the Santa Ana population could go extinct within 12 years and the
Santa Monica population within 15.
"We're very pleased that the court recognized the importance of the corridor
to the survival of the Santa Ana mountain lions," said Vicki Long, of Cougar
Connection. "We look forward to working on improving the functionality of
the corridor so these big cats have a fighting chance."
The lawsuit was filed in January 2018 by the Center for Biological
Diversity, which represents the other conservation groups.
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