Op-Ed: Setting the Record Straight About the Modoc Multi-Use Path

By Kira Pusch

***Update: On Tuesday, November 1, the Santa Barbara Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to approve the revised Mitigated Negative Declaration and authorize public works to move forward with the Modoc Multi-Use Path negotiations and planning. 53 people spoke during the public comment portion of the meeting, with a majority voicing support for Alignment B. The board supervisors likewise spoke favorably of Alignment B; Noozhawk spoke with Supervisor Gregg Hart after the meeting and quote him as saying “I’m confident that we can find a solution that protects the existing palm trees and allows a safe multi-use path for all to enjoy.”
For more information, a succinct summary of the Board of Supervisors meeting can be found on the MOVE SB County blog here.


The long-planned construction of a 0.75 mile-long multi-use path in Santa Barbara, California has recently spurred an ongoing, months-long debate amongst locals. Several media outlets have published articles about the controversy, often featuring quotes from protestors of the path. In response to these and to the oft-cited “Save the Modoc Road Trees” petition currently making its rounds on social media, the below information is provided with the aim of stemming misinformation and grounding discourse about the Modoc MUP in facts.

Overview:

*Note that all the information provided in this section can be found on Santa Barbara County’s dedicated website for the Modoc Multi-Use Path (MUP) project here, specifically in the most recent Mitigated Negative Declaration (MND) here.

The proposed Modoc MUP is a 10ft-wide paved path, with maximally 2 ft-wide unpaved shoulders. It would connect two other existing multi-use paths (the Obern Trail and Modoc/Positas Path), resulting in a total of 14.5 miles of linked multi-use paths across Santa Barbara county. The specified goal of the project is to provide safe, enjoyable, and equitable access for all, especially along Modoc Road where there are currently discontinuous sidewalks, inadequate crosswalks and narrow unprotected bike lanes next to 45 mph traffic.

It is anticipated that construction work would be initiated in 2023 and require about four months to complete. The project is estimated to cost $8 million, $5.54 million of which is provided by an Active Transportation grant given to the county by the state of California in 2018. This includes funding for the installation of a signalized crosswalk toward the eastern end of the proposed MUP.

Alignment B:

Of the two proposed Modoc MUP locations, that titled “Alignment B” is not only staff-preferred, but also widely preferred by proponents of the path as it would physically separate the path from the adjacent 35-45+mph traffic on Modoc road, remove fewer trees than the alternative, be compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and reduce the need for retaining walls. Alignment B would run along the interior edge of the Modoc Land Preserve on Modoc road, necessitate removal of 21 trees, 86% of which are non-native and all of which would be replaced with native oaks, ultimately leaving the preserve with more trees than it started with. Alignment B also involves construction of two retaining walls; two segments totaling 650 linear feet would be visible from Modoc Road, with an average height of less than four feet.

A diagram of the path to be taken by Alignment B is shown below, along with a table detailing the number and type of trees to be removed.

Table of tree removal for Alignment B

Breakdown of claims made by detractors of the Proposed Modoc MUP:

The “Save the Modoc Trees” petition mentioned above makes the following statements/claims (shown in blue):

“These 29 iconic Canary Island Date palms are threatened!”
    This statement is inaccurate. As indicated in the above table, Alignment B does not require removal of any Canary Island Date Palms. While the alternative alignment (Alignment A) would require removal of 29 Canary Date Palms, the county’s MND repeatedly states that Alignment B is the “preferred alignment.”

“The so-called Plan B is on the protected Modoc Preserve property…it does not conform to the provisions in [the Deed of Conservation Easement Agreement signed in 1999]”
    This statement is also inaccurate. Alignment B conforms to the provisions of the Conservation Easement as it permits alterations under certain specific conditions, including the construction of designated paths, fences, gates, grading, moving of water courses, installation of bridges, removal of non-native plants including trees, and restoration plantings with appropriate plants, so long as these actions are approved by the Land Trust for SB County, in collaboration with the La Cumbre Water Company for purposes such as recreation, resource management and enhancement, education, and scientific research.

Further, and as stated in the MND, “the proposed land use (multi-use trail) would not conflict with the allowed uses under the conservation easement, and would not generate significant noise, traffic, dust, artificial lighting or crowds that could impair the attributes of the Preserve.”

“It would also put equestrians, and their horses, right next to 25mph e-bikes whizzing by!”

This statement is misleading. As stated in the MND’s description of Alignment B, “A 300-foot long segment of the existing equestrian trail would be realigned by providing a three-foot-wide earthen equestrian trail with a buffer from south of the proposed multi-use path.” The concern about 25 mph e-bikes also raises the question of how said horses fare when walking adjacent to Modoc Road where cars often “whiz by” at 45 mph.

“We understand that Canary Island palms and Eucalyptus trees are non-native to California … however, they do provide very important habitat and shade canopy to many species of birds, mammals, and other organisms that dwell in the Modoc Preserve. Embracing biodiversity is a more sensible approach. Leaving well established, drought tolerant, non-natives to co-exist with natives…especially, in semi-rural to urban areas makes much more sense…”

Again, the Canary Island Palms will be unaffected by Alignment B.

There is a lot to break down here, as the issue is admittedly complicated. It is certainly true that minimizing pointless gratuitous destruction of the environment is of extreme importance; the studies comprising the MND were conducted for this precise reason, and Alignment B is a revised and greatly improved version of an earlier plan which dictated removal of a much greater number of trees.

The MND also states that while Alignment B “would result in the loss of about 1.3 acres of wildlife habitat,” said habitat is “located along Modoc Road, subject to vehicle noise, dust and exhaust emissions and not considered high value or essential habitat for any wildlife species” according to the impact assessment guidelines outlined in the MND.

Critically, the funding provided for the Modoc MUP includes the opportunity to perform native plant restoration along the path. Per the MND, “The loss of three protected coast live oak trees (at least six inches in diameter) would be mitigated by planting coast live oaks at a mitigation ratio of 10:1 for one-gallon container plants or 5:1 with fifteen-gallon container plants. Therefore, a total of 30 one-gallon plants or 15 fifteen-gallon plants would be planted.” Opponents of the path have frequently stated that they are concerned about the loss of a greenbelt as a result of the Modoc MUP’s construction, but the mitigation performed during construction will in fact leave the preserve with more trees than it started with.

Additionally, several of the eucalyptus trees identified for removal for Alignment B are actively afflicted with shelf fungus (see photo below). Shelf fungi are a major wood rotting group. Once a tree is infected, the fungus cannot be killed and the tree is at risk of falling and spreading spores to nearby trees. Removing infected trees during construction of the path therefore makes room for the MUP while also achieving preventative maintenance.

Conservation and forestry experts approve of Alignment B, and removal of non-native trees is an explicit goal of the Modoc Preserve Conservation Easement. In addition to fire risk, non-native trees like eucalyptus can use so much groundwater that they dry out wetlands, kill and crowd out other trees and plants, and require constant maintenance. Accordingly, the eucalyptus trees removed would be replaced with oak trees, which are quick-growing, and both native and fire resistant. Coast live oaks are the more sustainable long-term choice given climate change and hotter, windier conditions.

Lastly, regarding animal species in the Modoc Preserve, the MND states: “Impacts to active native bird nests shall be minimized by conducting all project-related vegetation removal prior to construction and outside of the nesting season (February 1 to August 31), if feasible.” The MND document goes into comprehensive detail of its study and approach to other species as well.

Safety:

Conspicuously absent from the above points is any acknowledgement by detractors of the safety improvements to be gained by constructing the Modoc MUP.

Data published by the National Traffic Safety Board shows that a collision between a pedestrian and a car at 40 mph is 80% likely to be fatal. As previously mentioned, there are no sidewalks along the stretch of Modoc Rd the MUP would span. And traffic on Modoc reaches upwards of 45 mph.


Source: https://smartgrowthamerica.org/what-are-complete-streets/

Left to make their way along the shoulder, cyclists are likewise at risk on Modoc Rd. There have been 9 crashes involving cars and bicyclists on Modoc Rd in the last 11 years. These are avoidable with a protected, separated bike path like the proposed MUP.

Myriad case studies demonstrate the public safety advantages of separated bike lanes. For instance, following the installation of new protected bike lanes on Pennsylvania avenue in Washington DC, 90% of users say they feel safer. This makes sense, especially considering the research conducted by the American Federal Highway Administration in 2021, which found that separated bike lanes can reduce crashes up to 30% for total crashes on urban 2-lane undivided collectors and local roads. Similarly, In 2019 a 13-year study of a dozen cities found that protected bike lanes led to a drastic decline in fatalities for all users of the road. The researchers who conducted the study found that cities with protected and separated bike lanes had 44 percent fewer deaths and 50 percent fewer injuries than the average city.

The bigger picture:

Veiling an aversion to change with a seemingly environmentally-driven argument (a.k.a. the “NOT A SINGLE TREE!” stance) is a regrettably uncompromising approach. The Modoc MUP was designed and provided funding solely with good intentions; enabling non-car-based travel from Goleta to downtown SB on a protected path is not only safer for path users, but also for the environment.

In California, 40% of emissions come from transportation, and automobile dependency is a major factor in California’s climate goal shortcomings. Conversely, cyclists have 84% lower carbon emissions from all daily travel compared to non-cyclists, and studies find that swapping the car for walking, cycling and e-biking even just one day a week makes a significant impact on personal carbon emissions. Other cities that have added safe, separated bike paths have demonstrably reduced car trips. For instance, in the city of Davis, which extended separated bike paths from its UC campus to the rest of the city, fully 20% of commutes are made by bike. Another example: 38% of people biking on Sherbourne Street in Toronto switched to biking after Sherbourne got a protected bike lane. Of those, 24% switched from driving. A third statistic for good measure: according to a study that analyzed protected bike lanes in five cities across the US, the average protected bike lane sees bike counts increase 75% in its first year alone.

Approximately 600 individual round trip bicycle rides along the 0.75 mile proposed Modoc MUP would save the carbon emissions equivalent to the 21 trees cut down to create it. So, if just one person were to use the Modoc MUP five times per week for six months (for instance to commute to a job or to school), the carbon emissions saved by that single person biking instead of driving in a compact car along just that 0.75 mile-long stretch of Modoc would be equivalent to the amount of carbon sequestered annually by 21 trees. In essence, the Modoc MUP would likely pay off the cost of trees required to build it faster than the construction itself. This is especially true if, as studies have shown, traffic along the path increases bicycle trips via induced demand.

The Modoc MUP is ultimately one of many steps being taken by the county to reduce carbon emissions and improve quality of life in order to achieve the Vision Zero goals adopted by Santa Barbara in 2018. The San Jose Creek path, the Cliff Drive path, and the Hollister interim striping project are all walkability improvement projects in Santa Barbara that have been passed unanimously within the last month. A remaining and vital missing piece in our cycling/pedestrian infrastructure is the Modoc MUP.

Fighting walkability improvements within Santa Barbara is arguably far more harmful to the environment than removal of 21 trees could ever be. Opponents and proponents of the Modoc MUP are united in their desire for a shared natural space. However, there is more to the forest than just its trees; let’s not lose this opportunity to build a more sustainable future.

Please consider signing the petition in support of the Modoc MUP here, and leaving a public comment in favor of Alignment B here.


Op-Ed’s are written by community members and local organizations. The views and opinions expressed in Op-Ed articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of edhat.
Do you have an opinion on something local? Share it with us at info@edhat.com.

Avatar

Written by Anonymous

What do you think?

Comments

0 Comments deleted by Administrator

Leave a Review or Comment

45 Comments

  1. Wow! What a great daxtual article that spells everything out about this project without pulling any punches. The sooner this project is completed the sooner we can all be safe. We are all talk about saving the environment and this project does just that. Only a tiny fraction of locals oppose this wonderful new/safe/beautiful bike path. Arguments against the project are based on emotions and feelings, certainly NOT science or facts.

    • Except that this is private land that doesn’t belong to you or the County, and on top of that inconvenient fact, the owners protected it in perpetuity with a Deed of Conservation Easement signed over to the Land Trust, back in 1999. The Land Trust has no choice but to uphold the easement as it is legally binding. Guess the County wants to go to court, to appease you single-minded bike nazis that think you can just run over private protected land with what YOU want. Why don’t you put the bike path through your own front yard?

  2. Yes, very thorough review of negative aspects from alternative B. No mention of options A or C. No sure how this sets things straight. It is a difficult task to convince locals that a scenic, small forest of century old trees should be mowed down even if they are non-native. Not very much of the SB area’s acclaimed urban forest and other landscaping is native.

  3. We are all entitled to our own opinions…but, not facts…
    This is the current landscape…
    https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-road-trees-saved-for-now
    Just saying that you are “setting the record straight”…and, then spewing lies, obfuscations, half-truths, and misstatements isn’t going to get it done…exacerbating it is the lack of acknowledgement and understanding as to what this Deed of Conservation Easement signed in 1999 for the Modoc Preserve actually is…
    The Obern Trail was already there well before 1999 when the Conservation Agreement was signed into law protecting the privately owned land of this nature preserve “forever” and “in perpetuity”from development…so, you can strike that argument…
    Public Works PIO gave us ALL of the biker/vehicle accidents on this 3/4 mile stretch of Modoc Road from Via Senda to Obern Trail…1/1/2012 – 12/31/2021…and, it equals 4…2 of which were cyclist at fault…those are the facts…
    https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-road-bike-accidents
    Don’t include Modoc Road east of Via Senda…or, further east through the Westside…or, you know as one speaker called Calle Real…”the other side of Modoc”…so, disingenuous…
    We have pushed this $8MM environmental disaster out of the protected nature preserve up on the existing asphalt infrastructure of Modoc Road where it belonged in the first place…now, the County can end all of this kerfluffle by finishing the last couple of hundred yards on Modoc Road and we can all move on…the 4.5 mile Obern Trail doesn’t have adjacent 5′ Class II lanes on either side of it…
    The MND is faulty…we proved it with our attorney comment letter challenging the veracity and completeness…this is part of the reason that Alignment A was kicked down the road…once, the County finally acknowledges that Alignment B is not viable…they will have to deal with these legal facts entered into the administrative record as they double back to Alignment A…these inconvenient truths are not going away…and, there is much more where this came from…
    https://modocpreserve.com/the-oaktober-surprise
    https://modocpreserve.com/shady-dealings

    • The $8MM MUP project in question is specifically the 3/4 mile long (1317 yards) stretch from Via Senda west to the Obern Trail…
      Talking about ridiculous…you must be L@@King in the mirror…
      We own a home a stone’s throw from the Modoc Preserve…and, L@@K out our windows at all of the iconic heritage trees that we have saved so far…
      We actually walk our dogs daily in the Preserve…of course, we bike this stretch…have since the 60’s as a kid growing up here and riding to Vieja Valley school where my mom taught…
      Question: Have you ever WALKED the Preserve?
      You want to know what ridiculous is? The fact that we fought for and won to keep this privately owned piece of land from development “forever” and “in perpetuity” back in 1999…1000’s of hours of work and raised heaps of money…to have to be fighting to preserve the Preserve AGAIN…23 years later…that is what is beyond RIDICULOUS!
      No respect for nature…or, history…short attention spans…instant gratification…Tik-Tok time bits…24 hour news cycles…broken give-a-damns…etc…no wonder half the trees on the planet have been cut down…dwindling water supplies…extinction of wildlife…etc…
      https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-preserve-deed-of-conservation-easement

  4. solid facts, proof, evidence…whatever you call it, this spells it out VERY clearly. If you read this and don’t understand it or still complain…well, sorry.
    its’ happening and good that it is happening! 3 native oak trees & a bunch of non native and invasive/diseased trees. that’s all that would be removed. I just think some of you that cried about this path, need a hobby or something better to do. you basically argued against fact and common sense.

    • ZEROHAWK: Here’s a “solid fact” for you: NO Environmental Impact Report has been done. Until that EIR is conducted, and the much-flawed Mitigated Negative Declaration is recognized as falling far short of listing the copious negative impacts removing healthy, old-growth trees and allowing bulldozers onto The Modoc Preserve —– what everyone needs to know is that this proposed project is a rush-job and a bungling, destructive mess. Shortchanging wildlife by removing their habitat, paving over wetlands and destroying healthy trees is not the answer. You making derogatory remarks about those who want to protect habitat and preserve open space only serves to show that you fail to grasp the issue.

    • In fact, CDFW states on Page 4 of their MND comments letter that the alteration of the bioswale drainage feature between the rows of trees in Alignment B, may substantially adversely affect existing surface, and/or subsurface stream or drainage patterns…and, recommended mitigation measures…
      https://modocpreserve.com/cdfw-mnd-comments
      The MND states that “No changes in creek or storm drain locations, dimensions or hydraulic characteristics would occur. Therefore, no changes in drainage patterns would occur.” This statement defies logic and physics!
      This is more than a small issue of concern regarding degradation of topsoil quality, alteration of topography, and alteration or manipulation of a watercourse, the existing bioswale biofiltration drainage…and, the County’s plan to “slightly re-align” it… incorporating it into the multi-use path design. “The drainage swale would have a top width of about six feet and depth of about two feet.”
      This Modoc Road bioswale filters the runoff feeding into the Modoc Preserve wetland off of the road and drain pipes…overflow of Laguna Blanca Lake during wet years, and recharges the groundwater…which nourishes the tree’s roots…etc…
      Bioswales provide a way to conserve water, improve water quality, minimize the pollution in waterways and improve biodiversity in our burgeoning SB concrete jungles.
      Just having heavy equipment anywhere near the soil along this important drainage would degrade the soil. The MND further states “soil disturbance associated with recent restoration activities may have adversely affected this species” and “Northern California legless lizard is unlikely to occur along the multi-use path alignment due to soil compaction associated with roadway construction and maintenance, and existing trail use by pedestrians, bicyclists and equestrians.” (Revised MND p. 37.) Yet, no mitigation is provided for this species’ impact. (Revised MND p. 37 [“Northern California Legless Lizard. Suitable habitat for this species occurs at the Modoc Preserve. However, soil disturbance associated with recent restoration activities may have adversely affected this species if present. Northern California legless lizard is unlikely to occur along the multi-use path alignment due to soil compaction associated with roadway construction and maintenance, and existing trail use by pedestrians, bicyclists and equestrians.”].)
      More evidence of this bungling and rush job is the fact that the County finally got around to consulting with CDFW on October 3, 2022…which issued it’s revised MND comments letter on October 12, 2022…2 days before the closing of the MND comment period…I will further remind you that the initial comment period for the Draft MND closed on June 17, 2022…and, there was never any evidence of consultation with CDFW…
      The County Has Failed To Consult With CDFW.
      An agency preparing an initial study must consult with all responsible agencies and trustee agencies responsible for resources affected by the project, under PRC §21080.3(a), and CEQA Guidelines § 15063(g). Consultation means the “meaningful and timely process of seeking, discussing, and considering carefully the views of others[.]” (See e.g., Gov’t. Code, § 65352.4.) Thus, consultation is more than just sending a piece of paper to the State Clearinghouse. Here, there is no evidence that the County has consulted with the CDFW on this proposed Project, especially with respect to biological impacts relating to wildlife that are of concern to the CDFW as noted above.
      This analysis, including the fact that the MND did not fully identify these impacts…is more evidence of the incompleteness of the environmental review…
      Furthermore, on Page 5 of the Deed of Conservation Easement, PROHIBITED USES: provision 4(h), it is stated: Watercourses. The alteration or manipulation of watercourses located in the Easement Area or the creation of new water impoundments or watercourses for any purpose other than permitted uses of the Easement Area or enhancement of natural habitat or wetland values.
      If the County worked so diligently to plan and design this project…then why the hell did they design it down into a protected wetland in the first place? That doesn’t show diligence…it shows ignorance and lack of respect for nature! Let alone that we had to force them to figure out that it could be done on the existing asphalt infrastructure…saving time and money.
      Halloween is over…it’s time to stop the fear-mongering over a tree’s immigration status…I’d wager that you poured some almond milk in your coffee this morning…and, then will have a handful of almonds before lunch…even if you personally don’t…millions of woke pseudo-environmentalists do…
      Pro-tip…almonds are non-native…and, are the most water thirsty subsidized export of California…
      The eucalyptus trees are not going to snatch your babies from their cribs at night and then self-detonate…
      The 2 eucalyptus trees with mushrooms growing in the pics are not slated for removal in Alignment B…only the palm trees are shown in blue for removal under Alignment A scenario…
      https://modocpreserve.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/modoc_alignment_b_eucs.jpg
      If you think this is some big dealio then why didn’t the Padre MND biologist document it in the MND? City of SB hired a very good arborist to write their tree section…calculate canopy habitat loss…mitigate tree loss with more mature trees to reduce time to replace the loss…etc…so, this further helps to show that this County MND for the Modoc Road MUP is incomplete and inaccurate…
      Bottom line is that the danger of these eucs frequently falling over is hyperbole…if the danger is as stated, then why are their 100’s of miles of them all in a row immediately adjacent to California highways and railroad tracks…immediately adjacent to sidewalks all over the city of San Francisco?
      If you lay awake at night afraid of the rats in the palm trees…you can rest knowing that they have all moved downtown and are now living under the parklets and gutters near all of the e-bike rental stations…
      We know all we need to know about the failure of CEQA and the MND…
      https://eastbayexpress.com/how-the-california-environmental-quality-act-fails-the-environment-1/
      “Another serious flaw in CEQA’s design undermines its efficacy: The reports that establish potential environmental impacts are written by private consultants hired by the developer. In this process, potential impacts of a project may be slyly downplayed, to make mitigation easier or cheaper.
      “It’s a huge conflict of interest to have the developer paying the consultant who’s writing the report…
      The community usually needs to be on their ass to make them do it,”
      The CEQA environmental review process is a sham and often fails to protect wildlife. A paperwork formality bought and paid for by Public Works to make it L@@K like due diligence was done. Signed off on internally with no objective oversight.
      In fact, if a project is in the County ROW (right of way) they simply sign off on a “categorical exemption” from environmental review internally, like they did for Phase 1 of this project.
      https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-road-bike-path-construction
      So, at the end of the day… if everyone is happy that the Modoc Preserve neighborhoods and 5400 petition supporters who have written 100’s of comments…
      https://modocpreserve.com/petition-comments
      have been able to force the County to re-design over half of the 3/4 mile long project out of the protected nature preserve and up on Modoc Road, with vehicle separation, then why aren’t the bike groups supporting us in our efforts to get the last couple of hundred yards of this MUP finished on Modoc Road as well?!?!
      https://modocpreserve.com/i-just-dont-get-it
      That’s what speaks volumes…

    • MINIBEAST: Stop making up stuff. No wetlands are being paved over. It is not at all a “rush job or bungling”. The fact that some neighbors made issues about tree removal and construction impacts and the county staff then worked diligently to re-design the plans to reduce both of those impacts speaks volumes. That is what “public input” is all about.
      Be careful what you wish for. A full EIR might very well conclude that ALL of the palms and eucalyptus and other non-natives should be removed to help promote habitat restoration and maintenance. The real impacts of allowing non-native palms, eucs and trees with fungal disease to remain might well rise above the “significant” level. Understand that a mitigated negative declaration acknowledges that there are project impacts but they have been addressed in the design and implementation of the development. That’s good thing, right?

  5. Preserve The Modoc Preserve. Don’t allow The County to set a precedent of paving over wetlands and designated open space —— open space which currently is protected by a conservation easement. Pouring 23,000 tons of asphalt into The Preserve and building 4′ high concrete walls is NOT a viable solution. Let County Public Works know that Santa Barbarans will always champion our green space and wildlife. Please sign to protect The Modoc Preserve: https://chng.it/B8qvgfNwY6

    • Having been clipped by a car before while commuting by bike, this is a fantastic project which dramatically makes traveling through this busy corridor safer for everyone.
      I am grateful that many years ago, planners made hard decisions and created an incredible bike path towards Goleta Beach even though it was in a sensitive area. The beauty of that land is still there and enjoyed everyday by many. More recently, they did the same in other places such as the Rincon parkway. These come at a cost, but they are treasures that we all continue to enjoy (and our children will enjoy).

  6. Nothing has changed…
    The nuts and bolts of a more detailed design still uses the same approximate estimated quantity, +/- of needing 2300 tons of asphalt and road base building materials along with 2000′ 2′-4′ high concrete retaining walls is not going to change the equation…the road/path/trail is required to be ADA compliant…no way around it…the requisite design to fulfill the requirement, to a reasonable person is a road…which is not allowed…
    Meredith Hendricks at Land Trust told us that what is allowed L@@Ks pretty much like what’s there now…”an unpaved path without retaining walls”…
    https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-road-bike-path-construction
    More LTSB attorney legalese…
    “Alignment B encroaches upon the Preserve,the MND should have included such analysis in determining whether Alignment B is consistent with the Conservation Easement. Such analysis could suggest potential acceptable alternatives to Alignment B. For example, the Preserve currently has public access trails for pedestrian and equestrian use, as is allowed under the Conservation Easement.25 Alternatives to Alignment B, such as unpaved paths without retaining walls, may be consistent with the Conservation Easement.
    But unfortunately, the MND does not contain such analysis. Because of that, and
    because the current description of Alignment B in the MND appears to violate the
    Conservation Easement, the County should not approve the MND. Instead, the Land
    Trust requests the County postpone approval of the MND and first provide sufficient
    information to the Land Trust for it to determine if Alignment B or alternatives are
    consistent with the Conservation Easement.
    Unless the County first provides that information, or in the absence of appropriate action by the County to take the area of the Preserve affected by Alignment B, the Land Trust cannot agree with Alignment B as described in the MND.”
    We have been having discussions about LCMWC’s sole liability for accidents and deaths on the Preserve property…substantial level of concern…especially, since we are shareholders and accidents would raise our water rates…etc…
    It’s been like pulling teeth to get an organized cleanup day on the calendar because of the liability issues…
    Keep the path up on Modoc Road out of the Preserve, like the western half is…and, all of these road blocks more or less go away…although, there are even impact considerations being discussed with that option…

  7. All very good bits of information. However why has no one discussed option D? The option to bypass the entire preserve and run a bike path parallel to the train tracks? This would circumvent this entire Modoc area. Problem solved: no cars, no environmental impacts, no upset neighbors, no tree removal, less money spent, no impacts to preserve, an alternative out of sight path which could serve as a direct backbone across town. Sometimes the simplest solutions are the best, think about it!

  8. The Land Trust has total control of management rights…that’s the whole idea…
    The day that they signed the marriage certificate, if you will, locked in what is allowed in the marriage…there basically is no divorce in this arrangement…it is binded to the land…it is “forever” and “in perpetuity”…;-)
    https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-preserve-deed-of-conservation-easement
    Meredith Hendricks Executive Director of Land Trust SB County told us personally that an Easement Agreement can be changed…it’s expensive…etc…but, it is ALWAYS to make it stronger…not weaker…
    To answer you other question…LCMWC does have discretion to make decisions about day to day operations…safety…enforcement…unhoused campers…rogue bikes…fire abatement…etc…big picture is that they are in the water distribution business to satisfy shareholder needs…but, they are bound to the same Conservation Values in the Easement Area as LTSB…LCMWC has conveyed to the Land Trust the right to preserve and protect the Conservation Values of the Easement Area in perpetuity…
    A Water Company board member explained it yesterday as not being exactly joined at the hip…more like following LTSB lead…

  9. Why these particular 29 CI Date palms on Modoc Road?
    Did a frond scratch your car or something?
    You do realize that they are in County ROW and it is the County’s responsibility to maintain them don’t you? It is also the County’s responsibility to fix the big potholes in and near the bike lanes on Modoc Road, too…
    Why not extrapolate your weak argument of eradicating them to ALL CI palms anywhere in SB, or in all of California for that matter? They have a 200-300 year lifespan…only ~ 1/3 of the way there…they were here long before you came and will be here long after you become plant food…or, dust in the wind…
    https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-preserve-harold-chase
    You do also realize that you would be eradicating special status oak trees in Alignment A don’t you? Sorry for all of the questions…
    Of course you don’t…maybe you don’t care about them either…but, the County lied to you when they hid that inconvenient fact in the MND…intentional obfuscation…
    https://modocpreserve.com/the-oaktober-surprise
    At least we agree that the FMND (Faulty) MND was incomplete…;-)

  10. ummm…you do realize that all of the houses are on the north side of Modoc Rd. and the kids that go to Vieja Valley School all cross Modoc at West Encore Dr. across from the entrance to Obern Trail in the school crosswalk with a guard? IOW, there is no stoplight…this is the Safe Route to School…any MUP that is built on the south side of Modoc would still require kids to cross Modoc Rd., also folks in wheelchairs…etc…
    We are all for a stoplight…or, hell…even a STOP sign that would solve this problem…but, the County traffic engineer won’t do it…instead they narrow the vehicle lanes and increase the speed limit! There is no traffic enforcement on this stretch…and, nobody…bikes or vehicles stop at the STOP signs at the Via Senda 3 way intersection…
    As far as costs…don’t know if you have L@@Ked at the SBCAG bike planes for 2030…2040…2050…the numbers that they are using today for a bike only overpass for HWY 101 will be an order of magnitude more when they implement them…$100’s of millions…
    The R/R alternative would use existing infrastructure…flat, fast, and direct…

  11. No record regarding the Modoc Road MUP is going to “set straight” without addressing and acknowledging the proverbial elephant in the room…the 1999 Deed of Conservation Easement signed to protect the Modoc Preserve from development “forever” and “in perpetuity”…
    Setting the “record straight” requires a basic understanding of land ownership and property rights…and, respect for those laws…that would be a good foundation on where to start…
    The County has been trying to obtain an Easement through back channels for over 2 years…no amount of wanting and wishing for it…drumming up public opinion and false marketing…etc…is going to change things…
    This isn’t just an open and abandoned field owned by the County to do with whatever they want…as so many people are led to believe…it is owned by La Cumbre Mutual Water Company (LCMWC) since 1925…the LCMWC customers are shareholders in the land…
    Harold S. Chase, brother of Pearl Chase, SB’s revered civic leader and First Lady…was it’s first president…he spearheaded the purchase of 2000 acres in and around Hope Ranch…and, had a hand in the forestation of the Canary Island palm trees along Modoc Road…
    https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-preserve-harold-chase
    In 1999 a Deed of Conservation Easement was signed between LCMWC and Land Trust for Santa Barbara County…who is now driving the boat on this issue…they hold the cards for the Modoc Preserve…
    https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-preserve-deed-of-conservation-easement
    Why don’t we just let the attorneys for LTSB set the “record straight” in their own legally backed words…in this letter to the County and LCMWC…
    “The Modoc Preserve, which is a portion of the above-referenced Property, is subject to the terms, conditions, and restrictions of the Conservation Easement, which is held by the Land Trust.
    La Cumbre Mutual Water Company as Landowner under the Conservation has the duty to comply with its terms and it may not allow others, including the County, to engage in any use or activity that violates the terms, restrictions, or conditions of the Conservation Easement. We are specifically including the County as an addressee of this letter to ensure the County is apprised of the Landowner’s obligation to comply with the Conservation Easement and the Land Trust’s legal obligation to enforce the Conservation Easement.
    Plans and other documents related to this Project appear to have been developed without due consideration for the provisions of the Conservation Easement or the terms in it that empower and obligate the Land Trust to ensure perpetual conservation.”
    Furthermore, LTSB is legally required and has an obligation to enforce the provisions of the Conservation Easement as explained below in their attorney letter:
    “The Land Trust Is Required to Enforce the Conservation Easement in Accordance with its Terms
    As the grantee of this Conservation Easement, the Land Trust is charged with enforcing its terms, conditions, and restrictions. This enforcement obligation is codified at Civil Code sections 815–816, which created conservation easements. In addition, the Corporations Code applicable to California nonprofit public benefit corporations requires the Land Trust to prevent loss of or injury to its charitable assets. The Land Trust’s interests in real property, including conservation easements, are assets of the Land Trust. The Land Trust’s obligation to appropriately steward its charitable assets is enforced by the California Attorney General through its Charitable Trusts Section. Failure of the Land Trust to competently manage its charitable assets could result in penalties or even loss of its state status as a nonprofit charitable corporation. This obligation is also a requirement of being a land trust accredited by the Land Trust Accreditation Commission, and the Land Trust is required to enforce each of its conservation easements in accordance with each of their terms. The Land Trust has adopted a written policy and developed written procedures for documenting and responding to potential conservation easement violations, is obligated to investigate potential violations in a timely manner and promptly document all actions taken, and must involve legal counsel as appropriate to the severity of the violation and the nature of the proposed resolution (Land Trust Alliance Standards and Practices, Standard 11.C)
    Section 8 of the Conservation Easement states that if there is a threatened violation, the Land Trust may resort to a lawsuit, including an injunction to stop the violation. The Land Trust will be entitled to damages and recovery of its attorneys’ fees and costs both under the Conservation Easement Section 8 and under California Civil Code section 815.7. Section 815.7 also permits the Land Trust to not only recover the costs to restore any harm to the Easement Area and other damages, but also the loss of scenic, aesthetic, and environmental values.”
    Still following along?
    Is the record getting straighter for you yet?…;-)
    “Overview of Conservation Easement Provisions
    The Recitals section of the Conservation Easement states that the Easement Area shall be preserved and maintained by permitting only those land uses in the Easement Area that do not significantly impair or interfere with identified Conservation Values. Conservation Values are defined as the natural, open space, scenic, wetlands, ecological and wildlife habitat values, which include, but are not limited to, “vernal marsh, southern willow scrub, annual grassland and oak woodland habitat” (“Conservation Values”).”
    It’s kind of hard to figure a path forward…no pun intended…;-) for an ADA compliant road/path/trail in the Preserve…using the County’s preferred building materials and methods of construction (destruction)…
    https://modocpreserve.com/modoc-road-bike-path-construction
    “Please provide trail design, construction, and management plans of adequate detail to allow the Land Trust to evaluate consistency with the relevant terms of the Conservation Easement. Please also include specific information on how, and by whom, the Project will manage the kinds of bicycles allowed to use the path, speeds, traffic intensity, and lighting, all of which may be incompatible with the protection of the Conservation Values.
    In addition, please provide information to show that the construction of and use of the bike path:
    • Will not result in soil degradation of erosion (Section 3, preamble);
    • Will not result in pollution or degradation of surface waters that significantly impact the existing wetlands, uplands, or wildlife habitat in the Easement Area (Section 3, preamble);
    • Will not result in the impairment of open space vistas (Section 3, preamble);
    • Will be consistent with the purpose of the Conservation Easement to “assure that the Easement Area within the Property will be retained in perpetuity in its natural, open space, scenic, wetlands,
    ecological and wildlife habitat condition, use and utility, and to prevent any use of the Easement Area that would significantly impair or interfere with the Conservation Values” (Section 3, preamble; Section 1); • Will prevent use of the path by motorized vehicles, such as electric bikes, which are a concern of the Land Trust (Section 4(d));
    • Will prevent dumping and garbage (Section 4(e));
    • Does not cause significant degradation of topsoil quality, significant pollution, or a significant increase in the risk of erosion (Section 4(f));
    • Will not alter the general topography or natural drainage of the Easement Area, including the excavation or removal of soil, sand, gravel, or rock (Section 4(g));
    • Will not result in the alteration or manipulation of watercourses located in the Easement Area or the creation of new water impoundments or watercourses (Section 4(h));
    • Does not generate signification noise, traffic, dust, artificial lighting, or crowds or which may impair the natural open space, scenic, wetlands, ecological, and wildlife habitat values (Section 4(i)); and
    • How public access to the Easement Area will be managed and restricted to protect public safety and the Conservation Values (Section 3(h)).”
    Again, for only a couple of hundred yards…the County could just simply put this issue to bed and get on with the bidding process and construction by extending the Obern Trail with a vehicle barrier…the remaining distance up to Via Senda…Greenbelt Alignment…win…win…win…
    Cyclists get their MUP away from cars…equestrians and horses keep their natural trail away from bikes and cars…and, pedestrian walkers…dog walkers…birders…nature lovers get to keep the trees and hiking trails away from bikes and cars…
    We all get to save a bunch of time and money spent on litigation…
    Does this make the record straight enough?…;-)
    https://modocpreserve.com/obern-trail-extension
    https://modocpreserve.com/greenbelt-alignment

    • DING DING DING!!!
      We have a winner!
      Reality and understanding is finally breaking through…;-)
      Thank you…
      “I like safe paths, but I also like knowing that if I give money to a land trust, I can trust them to keep the land they way they said they would.”
      This…
      If you can’t trust the Trust…there is no Trust…it’s that simple…
      Ranching families and large land owners are not going to enter into a Conservation Easement if these agreements are allowed to be violated in the future…in this case it has been settled law for 23 years…
      Land Trust has 54 Easements…and, has helped to preserve over 31,850 acres of natural resource and agricultural land, including the Arroyo Hondo Preserve, Sedgwick Reserve, Carpinteria Bluffs, Coronado Butterfly Preserve, Point Sal, Carpinteria Salt Marsh, and the Modoc Preserve…etc…
      These open spaces are protected with Easement Agreements…which are considered “assets”…real property…in the future, there will be digital tokens and the like for sharing in ownership for the protection of the Preserves…
      Our attorneys think that eminent domain won’t be used here…”they have to meet certain criteria, and I don’t think they would do that because it would be very, very bad optics and potentially political suicide”…
      Greenbelt Alignment = Obern Trail extension is the best option…
      https://modocpreserve.com/obern-trail-extension
      https://modocpreserve.com/greenbelt-alignment
      Again, for only a couple of hundred yards to close the gap of Obern Trail to over halfway to Via Senda which is where the MUP is now…out of the Modoc Preserve and on Modoc Road in the existing asphalt infrastructure…the County could just simply put this issue to bed…heal the divisiveness in the community that they have exacerbated by the stubborness and ineptitude to understand that the Modoc Preserve is protected from development for this generation and the generations to come…and, get on with the bidding process and construction by extending the Obern Trail with a vehicle barrier…the remaining distance up to Via Senda…Greenbelt Alignment…win…win…win…
      Cyclists get their MUP away from cars…equestrians and horses keep their natural trail away from bikes and cars…and, pedestrian walkers…dog walkers…birders…nature lovers get to keep the trees and hiking trails away from bikes and cars…
      We all get to save a bunch of time and money spent on litigation…and, get on with living our lives…outdoors doing whatever it is that we love to do…

  12. Non native trees do not provide habitat for native species. Thanks to the dozens of community members who waited hours at the Board of Supervisors to support this multi-use path project that will be enjoyed by all for generations to come.
    And thanks to Kira Pusch for laying out the facts. Hundreds of us worked hard to restore native vegetation at Coal Oil Point Reserve. This project is a chance to restore native habitat for native species at the Modoc Preserve.
    The Land Trust needs to hear from us that we want this to move forward as it is in the best interest of the Modoc Preserve and in the best interest of our community.

  13. Again, please answer the argument as to why you can’t build the MUP on Modoc Road outside of the tree line like over 1/2 of it is already designed?
    Why do you have to desecrate and destroy trees…wildlife habitat and shade canopy…and, degrade the soil in this protected nature preserve that we fought for from development back in 1999?
    Where were you at during this battle?
    Asphalt is non-native…concrete is non-native…neither supports plant life…have you ever considered that?
    I’m well aware of the Climate Crisis…which is why we are fighting for these trees!
    I have fought the fight for several decades…so, I also have an extensive environmental background…and, have used my Oceanography degree to help get Surfrider off of the ground…used my geology background to help shutdown Humboldt Bay nuclear plant…we failed at Diablo Canyon…but, there has’t been one built in this country since…unfortunately, after being slated for decommissioning it’s starting back up…you don’t win them all…
    So, now you are attacking our petition signatures and trying to negate them and all of the comments?!?! When you have the Sierra Club and bike coalition mailing lists? Oh, and all of those purported 1000’s of UCSB students using this section of Modoc Road to commute by bike to school…and, you can barely muster 1500 signatures?!?!
    https://www.change.org/SaveModocRoadTrees
    More false accusations from you…
    Alrighty then, how about a reality check?
    Here’s our SB signatures from the last couple of weeks…now, let’s see your SB signatures from the last couple of weeks…
    https://modocpreserve.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/camp_sb_sigs_5459b.jpg

  14. Land Trust and the Water Company (LCMWC) very much see eye to eye on this issue…
    Meredith Hendricks sat right next to Doug Campbell at the BOS meeting…and, were both disrespected by the County…60 seconds each to speak…rudely cut off… and, they are the landowner and the manager of the Modoc Preserve!
    Don’t think for a second that this went unnoticed…
    On top of the continued disrespect, Land Trust was never included in any of the discussions that the County had leading up to the publishing of the MND…so, there’s that…
    I’ve provided many of the answers to these questions in previous posts…
    “As grantor, do they have latitude to modify the terms of the easement one way or another?”
    Like I said before…it could be done…but, it’s expensive…and, it is ALWAYS done to make the Conservation Values of the Easement stronger…NEVER weaker…
    I don’t speak for the Water Company…I’m a shareholder who talks with the board…and, also a founder of CAMP (Community Association for the Modoc Preserve)…
    I will share these FMND comments that were submitted by them…Mr. Campbell was only allowed a few rushed seconds to get a small part of this out at the BOS meeting…public comment period shortened by countless hours of cannabis items on the agenda…
    ‘important details contained in the subject-Draft Revised Mitigated Negative
    are incomplete or inaccurate. Accordingly, LCMWC submits the comments below
    for the County to consider. Without , the County cannot properly
    analyze the Projects environmental impacts.”
    “Moreover, the Conservation Easement has specific restrictions that the County should evaluate as part of the MND. For the portion of the Project that encroaches into the Conservation Easement area, specific mitigation will be required so as not to violate the Conservation Easement or interfere with the Conservation Easement holder’s rights.
    The Project’s impacts to the Conservation Easement Area and the Modoc Preserve are not limited to physical ground disturbance or tree removal. The County should evaluate the environmental impacts caused by lighting, water management conflicts with existing uses, utility infrastructure, and utility easements.
    The statement that is not consistent with the figures provided by the County. Specifically, the trails where it encroaches into the Modoc Preserve. Specific mitigation measures should be implemented to address each of these inconsistencies and to address the other concerns expressed in the August 17, 2022, letter from the Land Trust of Santa Barbara County to LCMWC.
    For example, providing physical separation between the Project and traffic lanes and existing horse/walking trails will not reduce the impact(s) to insignificant. Significant health and safety, lighting, and noise impacts would remain unmitigated. Additionally, the County should address other environmental impacts, including, but not limited to, those related to onsite or off-site mitigation for surface disturbance, retaining walls, and asphalt.
    Section 3.1 Existing Land Use
    This section should, but fails to, describe the existing land uses on the undeveloped property that is restricted by the Conservation Easement as well as undeveloped property outside of the Conservation Easement area. Such land uses include utility infrastructure, and equestrian and walking trails. The Project would interfere with these uses and convert approximately 1.4 acres (4,000 feet in length by 15
    feet width) of undeveloped property into the new multi-use path.
    As discussed above, the MND fails to consider important Project components in its environmental analysis…(list of a number of issues)
    Accordingly, the MND and the environmental analysis contained in the MND is incomplete. LCMWC looks forward to the County addressing these issues.”

  15. Let’s break down the claims of this misinformed author…
    Our petition CLEARLY says right up at the top:
    “These 29 iconic Canary Island Date palms are threatened!”
    “implementation of Alignment A would now result in the removal of 48 trees, including these 29 mature Canary Island Date palms”
    https://www.change.org/SaveModocRoadTrees
    The author is making a misstatement when she says: “This statement is inaccurate. As indicated in the above table, Alignment B does not require removal of any Canary Island Date Palms.”
    Read it again…we never said anywhere that Alignment B requires removal of Canary Island Date Palms, as she states…we said “implementation of Alignment A would now result in the removal of 48 trees, including these 29 mature Canary Island Date palms”
    What the what?!?! This is an opening statement that impeaches her whole premise!
    These 29 palms still are threatened…the County has not taken Alignment A completely off of the table…they still can come back to it when they are denied the Easement for Alignment B…because, it is not feasible to build a paved asphalt road using concrete retaining walls in the Preserve…this would not be in conformance within the guidelines of the Deed of Conservation Easement…roads and structures are not allowed…an unpaved path without retaining walls may be allowed…but, the County wants asphalt…and, it also has to be ADA compliant.
    We say and have proved here in posts below:
    “The so-called Plan B is on the protected Modoc Preserve property…it does not conform to the provisions in [the Deed of Conservation Easement Agreement signed in 1999]”
    She says that this is inaccurate?
    “This statement is also inaccurate. Alignment B conforms to the provisions of the Conservation Easement”
    I have directly quoted several attorney’s letters to the County in rebuttal posts here that beg to differ…until Kira has an LLP behind her name…which would require a change of major…or, wants to pony up the money to challenge the Deed of Conservation Easement in a court of law…
    Pro tip: I’d suggest not publicly trying to twist yourself into a pretzel trying to twist the Modoc Preserve Easement Agreement to conform to your hopes, wishes, and desires…California Corporate Law may ultimately be the arbiter here…;-)
    We say:
    “It would also put equestrians, and their horses, right next to 25mph e-bikes whizzing by!”
    Then Kira makes several false statements in this op-ed…
    “This statement is misleading. As stated in the MND’s description of Alignment B, “A 300-foot long segment of the existing equestrian trail would be realigned by providing a three-foot-wide earthen equestrian trail with a buffer from south of the proposed multi-use path.” The concern about 25 mph e-bikes also raises the question of how said horses fare when walking adjacent to Modoc Road where cars often “whiz by” at 45 mph.”
    Obviously, said author has never been on a said horse that’s been spooked…
    This area has historically been used by equestrians since “non-native” Europeans arrived in the area…
    Currently, said horses are separated from cars whizzing by at 45mph by a wide Class II bike lane…and, a row of CI palms…that is elevated above the historic equestrian path…which still doesn’t fully guarantee that a said horse will not get spooked…
    Furthermore, the equestrian path was written into the Conservation Easement as an allowed use of the Preserve…as was pedestrian use…education use…open space use…water company use…but, clearly absent is bike use…bikes were not invented after 1999 when the Easement Agreement was signed into law…and, there is signage around the Preserve showing that bikes are not allowed…
    https://modocpreserve.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/modoc_bike21.jpg
    Then she goes on…
    We write:
    “We understand that Canary Island palms and Eucalyptus trees are non-native to California … however, they do provide very important habitat and shade canopy to many species of birds, mammals, and other organisms that dwell in the Modoc Preserve. Embracing biodiversity is a more sensible approach. Leaving well established, drought tolerant, non-natives to co-exist with natives…especially, in semi-rural to urban areas makes much more sense…”
    She again doubles down on her false assumption and misstatement…
    “Again, the Canary Island Palms will be unaffected by Alignment B.”
    Again, we clearly state “implementation of Alignment A would now result in the removal of 48 trees, including these 29 mature Canary Island Date palms”
    Again, we said Alignment A…not B, would impact the 29 mature Canary Island Date palms…
    She goes on…
    “There is a lot to break down here, as the issue is admittedly complicated. It is certainly true that minimizing pointless gratuitous destruction of the environment is of extreme importance; the studies comprising the MND were conducted for this precise reason, and Alignment B is a revised and greatly improved version of an earlier plan which dictated removal of a much greater number of trees.”
    Kira falsely assumes that the MND is complete and accurate…
    In the administrative record for this project, there are 3 legally backed MND comment letters…CAMP attorneys…Land Trust attorneys…attorney reviewed Water Company MND comments…plus, the one from CDFW (CA Dept. Fish & Wildlife) regulatory agency all punching holes in the veracity and completeness of the FMND…there are dozens of challenges to both Alignments A & B…so, don’t assume the study was a good one under CEQA law…just because it was approved without a single question…it was treated as a paperwork mechanism to trigger the next tranche of taxpayer money to fund the project before the ATP grant expired…the MND can easily be impeached…like this op-ed purporting to “set the record straight” was…

  16. “what you are proposing makes no sense at all”
    Maybe this will help?
    https://modocpreserve.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Modoc_MUP_Layout_greenbelt-scaled.jpg
    It seems like many people do not understand that the current County design at the western end of the MUP is A+B overlaid on each other…it’s up on the south side of Modoc Road outside of the Modoc Preserve…
    How does this make no sense when all we are saying is to keep going straight on Modoc Road until you hit the Preserve boundary a couple of hundred yards away…then, since it is in County ROW, we hope that they decide to keep going straight to Via Senda…or, they can finish it as drawn with A + B overlaid on each other again…
    It’s really pretty simple…
    Please explain how this is “very short sighted”…
    How does this design “shut down Modoc Road completely to any/all traffic”?
    “Modoc Preserve peeps can have it alllllll to themselves”
    How is this even possible?
    Making Modoc a one-way from Via Senda to the Obern Trail at West Encore Dr. is a hypothetical that most likely see the light of day…as is the R/R track idea…as it seems like there is no outside the box thinking going on…
    “the project is going to happen irregardless of any “petitions.””
    Regardless of your view of the petition that 5518 people have now signed, it helped to get the western end of the project out of the Modoc Preserve and up onto Modoc Road in the existing asphalt infrastructure, saving 34 trees destined for “removal”…that is depicted in dark green on the graphic link above…the purple color shows our recommendation to just keep going straight with it another couple of hundred yards…
    It’s simply an extension of the Obern Trail east on Modoc Road with a vehicle barrier…

  17. Obviously, this is a private property…rule of law issue, first and foremost…go ahead and cut a tree down on your neighbor’s yard because it’s non-native and you don’t like it…and, see what happens…
    Until people understand and respect basic private property rights, you will never solve this issue…
    “The general consensus for the vast/vast majority is that the new bike path is a good thing for nearly everyone except for a teenie-tiny handful.”
    “teenie-tiny handful”?!?!
    We have 5459 petition supporters…to 1559…that’s almost 4000 more supporters L@@King at it on our side…more than triple…
    https://www.change.org/SaveModocRoadTrees
    We have hundreds of comments…many from cyclists…who support us…
    https://www.change.org/p/save-the-modoc-road-trees/c
    https://modocpreserve.com/petition-comments
    Perhaps you should recalibrate your view of our group before accusing us of being “short-sighted”…”teenie-tiny handful”…this is what happens when you are immersed in bubble group think…and, echo chamber choirs…
    I’m still waiting for a single person from the opposition to explain to us why after the County has moved over 1/2 of the project out of the Preserve up onto the existing asphalt infrastructure of Modoc Road…that you don’t support us in wanting the County to simply complete the remaining couple of hundred yards on Modoc Road outside of the tree line?
    We are not opposed to the MUP…as long as it’s connected to the western half already designed by the County on Modoc Road, in a similar manner…
    Please someone explain why you are opposed to this proposal?
    Everyone has been happy with the Obern Trail for decades now…just extend it 1317 yards on Modoc Road with a car barrier…
    Why are you opposed to this???

  18. We still have a first amendment right to “set the record straight”…the article quoted our words and then falsely tried to rewrite and twist them publicly…every single point that she made quoting us, was impeached…
    When I hit REPLY, I’m thinking that the paragraphs written are in response to comments made…
    “clogging the comment board” would seem to reflect an individual’s opinion that fact based opposing viewpoints have less value…or, no value…whether 52 people write one paragraph each…or, one person writes 52 paragraphs…it’s still the same number of words and bandwidth…so, unless you are responding to what has actually been said in the comments…I guess this episode of Cancel Culture 2022 is over…

  19. I don’t know anything about their petition and didn’t sign it, but I still say, if the Land Trust of SB County promised not to pave over any of this land, then they have to stick to that promise. There will always be arguments promoting beneficial uses for that land, and I believe the multi-use path is a good idea. But not at the expense of the Land Trust compromising their commitment.

  20. No room?
    There’s plenty of room…the County has already proven it by designing the western end of the proposed MUP where the southern Class II lane is…
    Going inside the palms is not the “only way”…sounds like a case of having your cake and eating it too…
    The proposed MUP is 10′ wide…and, so is the 4.5 mile Obern Trail from Modoc out to Goleta Beach, that this short couple of hundred long segment Modoc Road segment is trying to close the gap with…
    Why don’t you get that the 4.5 mile Obern Trail does not have extra bike lanes on either side of it, so why would the MUP need them? That is the elephant in the room question.
    We are not arguing against cycling…or, against the MUP…make it fit…build it…ride your bike until you are blue in the face…have at it…but, rest assured…all of your inflammatory and false rhetoric and “NIMBY elitist” name calling is not going to change the simple fact that this is not your property…and, it is not the County’s property either…it is Water Company and shareholder property…under the management and protection of the Land Trust…so, build your asphalt and concrete MUP on existing County ROW asphalt infrastructure…out of the private property of a nature preserve that is protected by a Deed Of Conservation Easement Agreement “forever” and “in perpetuity”…or, why don’t you back down and please try and respect the guidelines and provisions in that Agreement signed into law back in 1999…and, accept the concept of a dirt path with no retaining walls…

  21. I get your point…but, I’m not trying to sell anything…
    We did that back in 1999 when we were battling to save this 20 some acres from development…and, won…”forever” and “in perpetuity”…not just 23 years…this is settled law…
    The Conservation Easement stays with the property until the end of time…as someone pointed out, it allows folks the peace and mind of knowing that their material contribution to Land Trust will be honored long after they draw their last breath…
    So, what I am trying to do is UNSELL (much more difficult) the months/years of false marketing from the County that obtaining an Easement for Alignment B is a viable option…they put the cart before the horse and wasted a lot of time and money getting the cycling groups all hot and bothered…chomping at the bit… by not telling them the truth…and, you clearly see the result of that here…some folks are having a hard time digesting the reality pill that the County hasn’t been forthright in their presentation…etc…
    We know this intimately because they tried to pull a fast one on the neighborhoods directly affected and got caught back in June at the 11th hour…so, they had to restart the MND comment process…where we found dozens of CEQA related issues with the revised MND…least of which was that the Land Trust was never properly notified of this project!
    That is only a small sliver of the backstory…we have a tranche of documents that jeopardize the project from happening…so, their best move is to just stay out of the Preserve and build the MUP in their ROW on existing asphalt infrastructure…
    Cyclists have their MUP protected from vehicles…the trees live out their lives producing oxygen and sequestering carbon and providing shade canopy…wildlife habitat for another couple of hundred years barring natural disaster…etc…and, this generation and future generations will get to enjoy the open space that this greenbelt oasis on the edge of urban encroachment offers…
    Food for thought for the narrow minded nativists advocating for absolute non-native plant/tree eradication…time to update their invasion biology textbooks if they really want to holistically help deal with Climate Change…etc…
    “Invasive Species Aren’t Always the Bad Guys
    For some plants struggling to keep up with climate change, invasive species may be the lifeline they need”
    https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/invasive-species-aren-t-always-bad-guys

  22. STERDOG: There are so many misleading statements made in your post, including not a few downright falsities, one hardly knows where to begin to set you straight. Nevertheless, I will endeavor to enlighten you and particularly any others who may believe the lies you are attempting to broadcast: La Cumbre Mutual Water Company cannot “build basically whatever they want.” That is lie #1. As is written in the deed —- LCMWC is NOT allowed to pave over any part of The Modoc Preserve, much less “build” things. ———– Lie # 2: Those of us who want to keep The Modoc Preserve intact, as it is meant to be a Preserve, are working hard to keep significant and negative impacts from destroying part of The Preserve. We are not “few” and we certainly are not doing this out of selfishness. Maybe altruism is not in your wheelhouse, but it certainly is in ours. Lie # 3: It is not “a pathway” that is being proposed. This statement is, at best, a lie of omission. This is your poor attempt at downplaying the negative impact of tons of asphalt and concrete. How exactly is this proposed acre of land within The Preserve going to be paved over and NOT have significant negative effects on The Preserve and bioswale and wildlife habitat? Do you envision that the bulldozers and other heavy equipment required for such work are simply going to FLOAT around next to the proposed 14′ wide “path,” while the earth is being dug up and prepared for 2300 tons of asphalt + yards and yards of concrete? Lie #4: The proposed Alignment B project is NOT going to happen. And you writing such certainly does not make it so. The Land Trust for Santa Barbara will stand firm on the conservation easement. No one has threatened the Land Trust. The Land Trust knows that to allow The County to pave over part of The Modoc Preserve would set a terrible precedent. ————— Let me leave you with this truth: Exaggeration is akin to lying. Much of what you have written has no basis in fact. I would also like to add that casting aspersions on people who care about Santa Barbara and who care about maintaining green open space is inappropriate and, quite frankly, shows that you fail to grasp the big picture.

  23. ELDORADOGIRL,
    The application for the $5.35MM ATP grant also explicitly says “The project will reduce barriers along the corridor by REPLACING SECTIONS OF CLASS II BIKE LANES WITH A MORE SAFE AND ATTRACTIVE SEPARATED PATH, suitable for people of all ages and abilities.”
    https://modocpreserve.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/modoc_atp5a-.jpg
    https://modocpreserve.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/modoc_atp5b.jpg
    REPLACING THE CLASS II BIKE LANES…
    So, just like the 4.5 mile Obern Trail from Modoc Road out to Goleta Beach does not have Class II bike lanes running on either side of it…the Modoc Road MUP was never intended to also have Class II bike lanes…this is right up on the top of the application and was used to sell the $5.35MM ATP grant to CalTrans in Sacramento…
    Page 4
    General Project Information
    Modoc Road Multimodal Path Gap Closure
    SUMMARY OF PROJECT SCOPE
    Therefore, like we have been saying…there is plenty of room on Modoc Road to build the MUP with a vehicle barrier without cutting any trees down (Alignment A) or going into the Modoc Preserve (Alignment B)…by replacing the existing wide Class II bike lanes with the vehicle separated Class I MUP. End of story.

God Rays

Multiple Injury Traffic Collision on Calle Real