A community meeting is scheduled for Monday, August 31 at 7pm at the WLA Municipal Center (1645 Corinth Ave, LA 90025) arranged by the Brentwood Community Council and Councilmember Rosendahl’s staff. Southern California Gas Company representatives will explain their project in greater detail and provide attendees an opportunity to ask their questions. The gas company still plans to close their canyon property to the public beginning September 1, 2009 and expect to re-open the canyon when the work is complete.
Archive for August, 2009
Sullivan Canyon Closure
Friday, August 28th, 2009San Gabriel Watershed and Mountains Special Resource Study
Monday, August 24th, 2009From the National Park Service, http://www.nps.gov/pwro/sangabriel/index.htm
The National Park Service is conducting a “special resource study” of portions of the San Gabriel River watershed and the San Gabriel Mountains. Our current newsletter presents several draft alternative concepts for the area, each of which offers a different collaborative, partnership-based approach to resource protection and public use and enjoyment, while respecting existing land management and ownership. You may download newsletter #4 from this web site or you may request a printed copy from our office. If you would like to provide comments on the newsletter online, click here.
In a special resource study, a proposed addition to the national park system receives a favorable recommendation from the National Park Service only if it meets all of the following criteria:
- it possesses nationally significant natural or cultural resources;
- it is a suitable addition to the system;
- it is a feasible addition to the system; and
- it requires direct NPS management, instead of alternative protection by other public agencies or the private sector.
We will be hosting five public meetings between August 31 and September 15 in cities throughout the study area. The schedule is listed below. Please join us at one of the public meetings to learn more about the draft alternative concepts, and to share your ideas, thoughts and concerns. Your comments by mail, e-mail and internet are welcome through October 30, 2009
Sullivan Canyon Alert!
Saturday, August 22nd, 2009From Michael R. Leslie, Director, Brentwood Hills Homeowners Association (with edits by CORBA)
Starting September 1, 2009, Sullivan Canyon will be closed while Southern California Gas rebuilds their road and reinforces the high-pressure gas pipeline. The length of the project and closure is uncertain, but it will last at least through October.

Many of us in the community who hike, ride horses, and bike in Sullivan Canyon in Brentwood know that this canyon is a unique natural resource, with its huge oak and sycamore trees, pretty stream and wildlife. Because of its beauty, shady paths and easy access, Sullivan Canyon gets regular and constant use by kids, adults and senior citizens from all over West Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley, and beyond.
| Resources |
Yet, without any meaningful CEQA review or public notice to the community, the Southern California Gas Company plans to rebuild the road and reinforce the pipeline, starting September 1, 2009 and continuing at least 6 weeks. The canyon will be closed to public acces during this time. This project will have the following environmental impacts:
- Cut, prune and otherwise impact 185 protected trees, including the removal of 31 sycamore trees “up to 50 inches in diameter and 95 feet in height”;
- Grade a 12 foot wide road with wider turn-outs all the way up Sullivan Canyon from Queensferry to Mulholland;
- Import 3100 cubic yards of fill and use 2100 cubic yards of in-situ cut material for the road bed;
- Use articulated concrete mats and ungrouted rip-rap on 22 pipeline exposures and “backfill” 15 eroded sections on the road where it intersects the main stream and intermittent side streams;
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Involve at least three excavations of 40 feet long by 15 feet wide at various depths;
- Involve extensive brush cutting and vegetation removal, including the application of herbicides, all along the road construction and pipelines;
- The road construction, brush clearance and tree cutting will be done first, starting September 1, 2009.
There was no meaningful review of this project under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). The Gas Company claims it is entitled to a categorical exemption from CEQA review because the project is only a repair and maintenance project, with negligible or no expansion of use. Yet the many admitted irreversible environmental impacts make clear this exemption is inapplicable. Furthermore, the Gas Company did not notify our local homeowners’ groups or the Brentwood Community Council that it was seeking permits to conduct this project, despite the fact that many of us either live immediately adjacent to Sullivan Canyon or frequently hike, bike and ride there.
Please read the attached excerpts of the various project documents. We were only able to obtain these documents after making Public Records Act Requests to the various agencies. By the time we were able to obtain these documents, the Gas Company contended that it already has the requisite permits for the work. Their plan was to notify the community only after all permits were issued and the work is ready to be commenced.
| Update: A community meeting will be held on Monday, August 31 at 7:00 pm. At this meeting, the Gas Company will explain the project and address questions from the public. Details. |
Our only hope to have any time to review and understand this project before the bulldozers and chainsaws are unleashed in Sullivan Canyon–and our only chance to have any meaningful input into mitigating the serious environmental impacts of this project–is for all of us to immediately write, email and call the offices of Councilman Bill Rosendahl, Assemblyman Mike Feuer, Senator Fran Pavley, the California Department of Fish & Game, the Regional Water Quality Control Board and the Gas Company.
We are including contact information and email addresses below for your convenience.
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Nobody opposes the Gas Company’s efforts to properly maintain and ensure their pipelines are safe, but we are very frustrated that they just ignored the community and only planned to notify us only after the permits were issued and the project was underway. ?
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The Gas Company should welcome reasoned community input, not be afraid of it. They should agree to pause the project, hold a community meeting, and take advantage of the opportunity to educate and involve the many smart and committed people in the community, including the Brentwood Community Council, the many homeowner associations whose members will be affected, and interested environmental groups.
Please ask the Gas Company and your public officials to suspend the project and meaningfully consult with the community BEFORE they start work. Once they start work, the trees will be gone and it will be too late.
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Here is the contact information:
| Councilman Bill Rosendahl 1645 Corinth Avenue Room 201 West L.A., CA 90025 (310) 575-8461? Fax: (310) 575-8305 Councilman.Rosendahl@lacity.org norman.kulla@lacity.org |
California Department of Fish & Game Jamie Jackson, Staff Environmental Scientist Streambed Alteration Team 4949 Viewridge Ave. San Diego, CA 92123 (626) 296-3430 jjackson@dfg.ca.gov |
California Regional Water Quality Control Board Valerie Carrillo 320 W. 4th Street, Suite 200 Los Angeles, CA (213) 576-6600 Fax: (213) 576-6640 vcarrillo@waterboards.ca.gov |
Southern California Gas Company Deanna Haines Sharon O’Rourke 9400 Oakdale Avenue, SC9314 Chatsworth, CA 91311-6511 (310) 578-2669 So’rourke@semprautilities.com |
OTHER IMPORTANT PUBLIC OFFICALS TO CONTACT:
Assemblyman Mike Feuer
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Senator Fran Pavley
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Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky
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Thanks for your prompt action! Please circulate this news to your action networks and interested people.













