For  Immediate Release, May 23, 2012 
            
              
                | Contact:  | 
                 Jonathan Evans, Center for  Biological Diversity, (213) 598-1466 
Rachel Hooper, Shute,  Mihaly, and Weinberger, LLP, (415) 552-7272 
George Hague, Sierra  Club-San Gorgonio Chapter, (951) 924-0816 
Drew Feldmann, San  Bernardino Valley Audubon Society, (909) 319-6936 | 
               
             
        
            Court Rejects Southern California Mega-development Next to Wildlife Area  
            New City Would Have Hurt Wildlife  and Air Quality, Worsened Global Warming 
            RIVERSIDE, Calif.—  The Riverside County Superior Court has issued a final decision rejecting the “Villages  of Lakeview” development next to the San Jacinto Wildlife Area in rural  Riverside County. The massive development of 11,350 residential units and  500,000 square feet of commercial space would have congested roads, worsened  the region’s air quality and generated more than 175,000 tons of greenhouse gas  emissions.  
            “The county should never have approved a new city next to  one of California’s most important birding areas,” said Jonathan Evans, an  attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity. “Luring tens of thousands of  residents to the edge of the environmentally sensitive San Jacinto Wildlife  Area was a reckless idea that was properly thrown out by the court.” 
            The project posed a grave threat to imperiled wildlife on  the project site and in the adjacent San Jacinto Wildlife Area. The San Jacinto  Valley is a globally recognized biodiversity hotspot that is host to more than 300 resident and  migratory birds, including burrowing  owls, California  gnatcatchers and yellow-billed  cuckoos. 
            “The county of Riverside ignored California law and its own  local ordinances when it gave the green light to the massive ‘Villages of  Lakeview’ development,” said Rachel Hooper of Shute, Mihaly, and Weinberger, who  represented several of the plaintiffs in the case.  
            Three separate cases were filed by the Center for Biological  Diversity, San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society, Friends of the Northern San  Jacinto Valley, Sierra Club and the city of Riverside. The court found that Riverside  County had violated the California Environmental Quality Act, State Planning  and Zoning Law, and its own general plan in approving the controversial development. 
            “This project would have created a new 34,000-person city at  the edge of the San Jacinto Wildlife Area,” said Tom Paulek of the Friends of  the Northern San Jacinto Valley. “We hope that the county will reconsider its  approval of this project given that it will imperil the very species that this wildlife  area is meant to protect, as well as massively exacerbate traffic problems in  the region.” 
            The lawsuit is one of a series of court challenges brought  by the Center for Biological Diversity, often with partners, to reduce  greenhouse gases from new development through the California Environmental  Quality Act. Residents of the proposed Villages of Lakeview would generate at  least 85,000 car trips daily, which would collectively add up to 294 million  new miles of car travel each year. These car trips would significantly increase  the county’s greenhouse gas emissions and worsen air quality, which is already rated  by the American Lung Association as some of the worst in the country.  
            “The last thing Riverside County needs is more sprawl, more  empty houses and more gridlock. Planting a new city in the middle of a rural  area adjacent to the San Jacinto Wildlife Area goes against the most basic  principles of good land-use planning,” said George Hague of Sierra Club’s San  Gorgonio Chapter. “Judge Waters rightly noted that the county should have  properly analyzed the project’s environmental effects before approving such a  major change to the region.”   
               
  The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 350,000  members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species  and wild places. 
            The San Bernardino  Valley Audubon Society is a California nonprofit conservation organization  with approximately 2,000 members within the Inland Empire of Southern  California who are dedicated protecting the region’s natural heritage. 
            The Friends of the Northern San Jacinto  Valley is a  California non-profit conservation group dedicated to preserving and protecting  the northern San Jacinto Valley, the San Jacinto Wildlife Area, and surrounding  environmental resources. 
            The Sierra Club is the  nation’s oldest grassroots environmental organization. The Sierra Club is a California nonprofit  organization and has more than 1.3 million members and supporters  nationwide. The Sierra Club’s San Gorgonio Chapter has  more than 5,000 members and represents the Riverside County and San Bernardino  County region. 
            Shute, Mihaly  & Weinberger LLP, lead attorneys on the case, specializes in government, land use, natural resource and environmental  law. Since 1980 the firm has provided representation to public agencies and  community groups throughout California. Known for its commitment to promoting  environmental and community values, SMW is at the forefront of major land use  and development issues facing California. 
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