Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Environment

Court Stops Proposed Housing Development Near Julian

Google Map view of Hoskings Ranch area near Julian where a developer hopes to build 40 acre home sites in this undated map photo.
Google Maps
Google Map view of Hoskings Ranch area near Julian where a developer hopes to build 40 acre home sites in this undated map photo.

A California appeals court has stopped plans to build houses on a 1,400-acre ranch near Julian.

The Appellate Court ruling overturns a Superior Court decision to let the developer build homes in the bucolic valley.

Court Stops Proposed Housing Development Near Julian
Listen to this story by Erik Anderson.

The court ruled that Genesee Properties Inc., a Colorado-based development company, cannot turn the Hoskings Ranch property into 40-acre home sites.

Advertisement

The developer ran afoul of the Williamson Act. That law gives a huge tax break to landowners who promise to limit the use of their property for agricultural purposes.

The court decided the project did not meet that standard.

Opponents of the San Diego County-approved project said the ruling will serve as a precedent that could affect a lot of agricultural lands in California.

“If you don’t have these kinds of limitations, speculators will simply use this as a tax break and just plan to develop,” said Duncan McFetridge, the founder of Save Our Forests and Ranchlands.

The developers argued, unsuccessfully, that the homesites still allowed for agricultural uses. They did not attempt to remove the lower tax rate that was awarded under the Williamson Act.

Advertisement

“This ruling allows the Williamson Act to do the job it has always been intended to do and that it has done pretty well until now. The developer here was trying to create a loophole and drag this project through it,” said Gabe Ross, at attorney challenging the project in court.

The developer can appeal to the California Supreme Court.

Attorneys for the developer and San Diego County did not return calls seeking comment.

The California Coastal Commission has encouraged cities to include a strategy called “managed retreat” in plans to prepare for sea level rise. But the commission may be retreating from that position. Plus, a California appeals court has stopped plans to build houses on a 1400 acre ranch near Julian and the post office in Poway may soon be getting a new name in honor of the longest-living Pearl Harbor survivor, who died last year.