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PRESS
RELEASE
For Immediate Release: May 26,
1999 For Information Contact:
Gary A. Patton, Executive
Director LandWatch Monterey County Telephone:
831-375-7396 Email: <>
LandWatch Calls On
Monterey County Local Governments To Form A Coyote
Valley Task Force
LandWatch has asked Monterey
County governments to establish an
inter-governmental "Coyote Valley Task Force," to
make sure that the proposed industrial development
of the Coyote Valley in the city of San Jose
doesn't result in unfair and destructive impacts in
Monterey County. LandWatch also urges that Monterey
County local governments work jointly with San
Benito County and the cities of Hollister and San
Juan Bautista.
A copy of LandWatch's letter to
the Monterey County Board of Supervisors is
attached. A similar letter was sent to the Mayor of
each city in Monterey County.
Coyote Valley is an undeveloped,
agricultural area in the southern part of the City
of San Jose, near Morgan Hill. CISCO Systems is
proposing to construct a massive "industrial
campus" in Coyote Valley, creating 20,000 new jobs
in a single location. If the CISCO Systems proposal
advances, other industrial developers are also
expected to build in the Coyote Valley.
"The impacts of this kind of
development on Monterey and San Benito counties
could be staggering," said Gary Patton, the
Executive Director of LandWatch Monterey County,
and a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor. Patton
and LandWatch are urging the Monterey County Board
of Supervisors, and each of the cities in Monterey
County, formally to establish a task force to "make
sure that any proposal ultimately approved by the
City of San Jose eliminates, or fully mitigates,
housing, transportation, environmental and public
service impacts on Monterey County
communities."
Without a focused, cooperative
approach by local governments here, the decisions
that San Jose makes about the Coyote Valley will
almost certainly result in more traffic and
transportation problems in Monterey County, more
public costs, more pressures on an overdrafted
water supply, and more difficulties in providing
affordable housing for Monterey County
residents.
"It is unrealistic to expect San
Jose elected officials to look out for the best
interests of Monterey or San Benito county
residents," says the LandWatch letter. "The elected
officials from Monterey and San Benito counties
need to do that." The task force would be the best
way, LandWatch thinks, to make sure that the legal
tools available to Monterey County communities are
actually used to defend it from destructive
development pressures.
May 24, 1999
Judy Pennycook, Chair
Monterey County Board of Supervisors
240 Church Street
Salinas, CA 93902
RE: Monterey County Impacts of
Proposed Coyote Valley Development
Dear Chairperson Pennycook and
Board Members:
As you probably know, the City
of San Jose will soon be considering a proposal to
develop a new employment center in the Coyote
Valley, located in the southern part of San Jose,
close to Morgan Hill. Cisco Systems has announced
its plans to build an "office campus" with 20,000
new jobs in a single location. Other developers are
expected to follow suit, with additional proposals
for Coyote Valley industrial developments. Several
news clippings are attached, outlining the
magnitude of the current Coyote Valley
proposal.
If the proposed Coyote Valley
development proceeds as contemplated, its impacts
will be felt throughout Monterey County. While the
lucrative employment centers will be located in
Santa Clara County, and in the City of San Jose,
many of the traffic, public service and housing
impacts will be shifted elsewherenamely to Monterey
and San Benito counties.
LandWatch will soon release its
State of Monterey County 1999 report, which
documents the very significant growth-related
impacts already being experienced in Monterey
County. Water supply scarcity, a lack of adequate
transportation infrastructure, and a lack of
affordable housing are already major challenges for
Monterey County. Development of the Coyote Valley
as proposed will very significantly compound these
already serious problems.
Typically, because this
development proposal is in another county, and is
under the jurisdiction of the City of San Jose,
Monterey County local governments would not become
involved in the environmental and project review
process. LandWatch believes that the exceptional
nature of the Coyote Valley proposal demands a
different response. If Monterey County local
governments do nothing, the interests of Monterey
County residents are likely to be badly compromised
by the actions taken by the City of San
Jose.
LandWatch urges the Monterey
County Board of Supervisors, and the City Councils
of all the cities within Monterey County, to
engageactively and cooperativelyin the
environmental and project review process for the
proposed Coyote Valley development. We further urge
Monterey County local governments to ask San Benito
County and the cities of Hollister and San Juan
Bautista to join them in this joint
effort.
It is neither "inevitable" nor
fair that further industrial development in the
Silicon Valley must automatically result in a
transfer of costs and impacts to communities
located in Monterey County. However, while such
negative impacts are not "inevitable," they will
almost certainly occur unless Monterey County
communities systematically organize to do something
to change the current realities. In making a
decision on the proposed development of the Coyote
Valley, the City of San Jose will be making a
decision that will have major impacts on the
livesand the pocketbooksof residents throughout
Monterey and San Benito counties. It is unrealistic
to expect San Jose elected officials to look out
for the best interests of Monterey or San Benito
county residents. The elected officials from
Monterey and San Benito counties need to do that.
If they don't, those interests will be
disregarded.
LandWatch recommends that
Monterey County local governments take the
following actions:
- Formally establish a "Coyote
Valley Task Force," designating one staff member
or elected official from each local
government.
- Designate a lead staff
person (probably the County Planning Director,
or the Planning Director from one of the
participating cities) to coordinate staff work
for the task force.
- Designate a lead legal
advisor (probably the County Counsel, or the
City Attorney from one of the participating
cities) to coordinate necessary legal work for
the task force.
- Officially approach the San
Benito County Board of Supervisors and the
cities of Hollister and San Juan Bautista, and
ask them to participate.
- Ask the County
Administrative Officer and the City Managers of
the participating cities to recommend
appropriate budgetary actions, to make sure that
the task force will be funded to carry out its
work.
- Direct the task force, on
behalf of the various participating
jurisdictions, to follow the proposed Coyote
Valley development closely, with a specific
direction to participate vigorously in the
environmental review process.
- Direct the task force to
report regularly to all of the participating
jurisdictions, and to recommend appropriate
interventions in the project and environmental
review process to make sure that any proposal
ultimately approved by the City of San Jose
eliminates, or fully mitigates, housing,
transportation, environmental, and public
service impacts that would otherwise occur in
Monterey and San Benito counties.
The California Environmental
Quality Act requires a project proponent to
eliminate or fully to mitigate any adverse
environmental impacts, whenever it is feasible to
do so. This is a commandment that can be legally
enforced, if an adequate administrative record has
been made. It behooves local governments in
Monterey and San Benito counties to make sure the
record is made in the case of the proposed Coyote
Valley development. LandWatch is convinced that a
focused, vigorous, and cooperative effort by
affected communities in Monterey and San Benito
counties will be successful in making the record,
and in stopping the City of San Jose from exporting
the "pain," while retaining the "gain," of the
massive industrial project proposed for the Coyote
Valley.
What we are suggesting is
unusual. Normally, local governments do not play an
active role in the project approval processes being
carried out in another jurisdiction. In this case,
however, extraordinary action is required. The
impacts on Monterey County will be extraordinary if
the City of San Jose chooses to create 20,000 or
more new jobs, without adequate housing nearby, in
their own jurisdiction.
We recommend and urge the Board
of Supervisors to discuss this matter, and then to
direct your County Administrative Officer to
contact other Monterey County jurisdictions, to
implement the cooperative program we outline in
this letter. LandWatch, of course, would be happy
to be of whatever assistance we can in this
important effort.
Very truly yours,
Gary A. Patton, Executive
Director
LandWatch Monterey County
cc: Board of Supervisors, San
Benito County City of Hollister City of San Juan
Bautista Assembly Member Fred Keeley Assembly
Member Peter Frusetta State Senator Bruce
McPherson
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