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MALIBU SEEN

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Kim Devore/Entertainment Writer

WATT ME WORRY?

Barbra Streisand is doing her part to diffuse California’s energy crisis. The legendary local diva is using her star power to cut the power by making a call to arms. “California is the best conserving state in the nation,” notes Ms. B. “But we can do even better.”

On her celebrity Web site, Barbra suggests some not particularly glamorous, but necessary, energy-saving tasks like turning air conditioning thermostats to 78 degrees, replacing air condition filters, sealing and caulking doors, and turning off appliances when they are not in use. You can bet that Streisand’s legions of dedicated fans will take note and follow her advice to the stony end.

POLITICAL PLAYER

Actor and activist Tim Robbins didn’t mince words as he addressed this year’s Liberty Hill Foundation Gala. Robbins and longtime love Susan Sarandon were both honored with the foundation’s Upton Sinclair Award for their long-standing commitment to social change.

The actor began by defending his support of Green Party candidate Ralph Nader during last year’s presidential election.

“I was attacked by irate liberals who saw my support of Nader as a betrayal,” he recalled. “But I have come to the realization that I would rather vote my conscience than vote strategically.”

He cited causes ranging from sweatshops, to environmental destruction to the death penalty, saying, “It was not easy to support Nader, but he was the only candidate to talk about these issues and embrace this new movement as his own.”

Robbins blasted the campaign, which gave us hanging chads, a lock box and “strategury” as “corrupt, manipulative and illegal,” but not without levity. “The most surreal and humorous moment in this election year,” he noted, “was when Fidel Castro offered to send observers to monitor our election.” Nuff said.

TO THE MAXIM

The Moomba room continues to enjoy its reputation as the place for Hollywood hipsters. It was surely the place to see and be seen at Maxim magazine’s “Hot 100” happening. The lively affair drew the likes of Tommy Lee in addition to A-listers like Leonardo DiCaprio and Toby McGuire (both arriving with their entourages in tow).

Living up to its billing, the party was hot, but not as hot as last year’s bash at the Farmer’s Daughter Motel, which was unceremoniously shut down by local fire marshals as drag queens spilled into the streets and superstars fumed in bumper-to-bumper limo lines.

The Moomba gathering was a vodka and sushi-filled affair toasting today’s newest “It Girls”–a roster that includes Mandy Moore and “Dark Angel” Jessica Alba as well as the totally fabulous and absolutely famous Kate Hudson.

Contesting beach contests

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Editor’s note: The following letter was addressed to Hayden Sohm, area superintendent for the State Parks and Recreation Dept.

Thank you for a speedy reply and copies of the California Administrative Code. In receiving the code, my problem is with Section J of Code 4301 Definitions, regarding special events My take on surf contests as special events is that I don’t feel they fulfill the “best interest” of Parks and Recreation for the general public. I feel they impinge significantly on the public right to use their beaches. You might say that my criticism is unwarranted, but I hope to persuade you to the contrary.

These contests may or may sometimes not be held under a guise of charitable giving. The fundamental criticism to contests is public use versus monetary awards or prizes or rewards. Money is being traded from a public nonprofit use, which I feel has been held for the public use. Everyone is for charity, but under that guise, contest promoters, advertisers and contestants hope to gain in a monetary way.

I think you have to regard this situation as the highest and best use because that is also the way contest organizers view their window of opportunity. That opportunity is during the summer months from April to September of course. This is the period when the public looks forward to hitting the beach. The surf for the most part is best from August at full moon time and then it is best at the September full moon time. That is the peak of the summer.

These times I feel should be reserved for the public. The public who want to surf–give them the time. We are not in it for monetary gain. Rights to public surf beaches should not be purchased with entrance fees to surf in a contest. The surf contests take place at the most desirable and impacted areas of use by the general public.

Lastly, look at the numbers. At the best of periods you have a few contestants using the waters at limited and designated times. Whereas the public use is significantly greater and there are no time limits. Greater use for the greatest number for a scarce resource!

I think the public trust should lean toward these larger numbers of use and not have that use subsumed by entrance fees, advertisements and monetary gains as entitlements to use our public beaches.

I guess we are talking about priorities for best use. As an alternative, I suggest contests at the less impacted surf areas during the season or at a time of the marginal surf periods or off season.

Mitchell Lachman

Pier restoration update

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The $5 million dollar Malibu pier restoration project is facing further setbacks because of permit delays and problems with traffic flow and parking.

The final completion date is now rescheduled for September of 2002, a few months past the last scheduled completion time of July 2002.

The time frames for the traffic analysis and the issuing of a permit from the California Coastal Commission for Phase 3 of construction have both proved longer than expected.

“We’ve run into problems along the way,” explained Hayden Sohm, area superintendent of the California Department of Parks and Recreation. “The nature of this work [a major historical restoration] is such that we continue to find obstacles that delay the project.”

One of the most notable problems the restoration project has come across is the unresolved issue of pier parking.

Present parking options are the same options that have been discussed in the past by pier renovators. The parking lot that is situated directly next to the pier will most likely be used, yet it fails to provide more than approximately 100 spaces. The vacant lot across from the pier, next to the Malibu Inn, and presently for sale, according to Sohm, is also a possibility that is being looked in to.

The Malibu Lagoon State Beach parking lot, street parking, and stacking cars in the pier parking lot are all being considered as options for additional parking.

There is also the potential of a National Park service shuttle, which would make stops at Malibu Creek, Westward Beach, Point Dume, and the pier, though the idea is still a work in progress. If the idea is followed through, this shuttle could be implemented as early as next summer.

To address the parking problem as well as traffic flow, Kaku Associates, hired to conduct the traffic analysis, will gather information regarding the summer traffic flow along the part of Pacific Coast Highway the pier borders. The pier’s exit and entrance from Pacific Coast Highway is also of concern.

The final traffic analysis report is due, in draft, in the first part of August, said Sohm, and, in addition to the findings, the report from Kaku Associates will “hopefully make some recommendations” about options for pier visitor parking. Final parking recommendations should be settled by September, he said.

Phase 2 of construction is presently underway, and includes work on the structural network of the pier beneath the location where the former landmark restaurant Alice’s used to sit.

Phase 3, which was originally scheduled to commence in September, is scheduled to start by the first of next year.

Phase 3, according to John Riley, the State Parks Project engineer this phase, will entail restoration and renovation to the structures on top of the pier as well as work on the main gate and entrance.

Construction drawings for Phase 3 will be done by the recently hired Devereaux Company, and will hopefully be completed by the end of September.

Yet, for Phase 3, another Coastal Commission development permit is required. The process in order to get such a permit is a lengthy one, said Sohm.

An initial consultation regarding the pier took place four weeks ago, though a hearing date with the Coastal Commission is not expected until October, according to Riley.

Sohm said the prolonged process of obtaining a coastal permit is far from abnormal due to the large workload that the Coastal Commission is constantly faced with.

Recently, a sewer treatment plant was installed at the pier. Global Environmental Machinery Inc., a company from Ft. Meyers, Fla., constructed the plant. The plant, which will ultimately be used by the restaurant and the one public restroom soon to be installed onto the pier, collects sewage into a tank. The sewage is then aerated, filtered, and released into a leech field, which is located under the pier. The plant is designed to provide tertiary treatment of sewage at a rate of 7,500 gallons per day. State Parks plans to conduct tests of the plant during the summer.

Toxic mold: A stubborn houseguest

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“Behold, if the plague be spread in the walls of the house…” Book of Leviticus, King James Version of the Holy Bible.

Although different from the “mold” referred to in the Bible, today’s toxic mold can make people sick and force families to move out of their house, leaving possessions behind.

Recently, a Malibu family was affected by toxic mold in a home they had just purchased near a private beach. They were initially attracted to the house because it offered space for the children and it seemed like paradise for this family of five, but the dream was quickly shattered when the children became inexplicably sick, developing allergies they never had before.

Once they found the cause for their persistent illnesses, the family moved out, leaving everything behind.

The 19-year-old house was affected by mold, a tenacious, unwelcome houseguest. It climbs up bathroom walls, invades carpet and infests drywall.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, six varieties of household mold are common, and three can produce toxins. The CDC linked one of them, stachybotrys atra, to 10 cases of lung disorder in infants five years ago and 100 cases since then. Unfortunately, it’s impossible for homeowners to distinguish between toxic and the benign molds–they all look like black or gray sooty patches.

This invader usually surfaces when moisture accumulates in hard to reach areas. But not all molds are toxic. However, this Malibu family was heavily impacted by the mold in their home.

“When it rained, it became apparent that water was draining into the house and into the bedroom wall,” said the new property owner. “That construction defect was ignored for years.”

At first, the young mother did not know anything about mold, so she watched her family come down with flu-like symptoms. But two more unusual symptoms showed up in some of the family members–they began to have nose bleeds and rashes. “For a while I thought this was stress. I didn’t really understand what was going on,” she said. “In a way it’s lucky, because right after we moved we had two big storms and we noticed that the walls were wet,” she continued.

Months later, the family is now involved in a lawsuit because of the mold. Furthermore, the family’s insurance company did not compensate for losses because they stated that this was a pre-existing condition.

In an effort to save a few treasured possessions, the family recently hired a special restoration firm. “They sent in a crew of six people who went in the house with masks and saved some treasured hard furniture items and most of the photographs,” said a family member.

“Our philosophy is that it was so expensive that it became necessary for us to save only things that had sentimental value.” Soft items like couches or bedding could not be saved.

This family is not alone. Last year another Malibu resident had $100,000 worth of work done to clean up mold, said Stephen Roy, founder of Process Environmental, Inc., a company based in Valencia that specializes in environmental and structural mold detection and removal.

A few have even taken the drastic step of burning down their houses and possessions to avoid spreading the mold any further.

While there are many reasons why toxic mold may grow in a house, tight insulation could be a primary cause.

As builders and homeowners attempt to insulate homes to alleviate the costs of heating and cooling, the combination of tight insulation and inexpensive water pipes can cause leaks in a tight environment. This increase of moisture leads to mold growth.

According to Process Environmental, mold problems are always the result of a moisture problem. If mold is growing in a home, there is something wrong that needs correction to prevent recurrence. The company states, “Just as with an iceberg, the invisible portion of the contamination is often much larger than the visible bloom. It may be hidden within wall cavities or in the building’s framing.” When certain kinds of molds are present, they release micro toxins, which can what makes people sick. “Even when you kill the mold, the spores can make you sick,” said Roy.

Spores are usually everywhere in the air, but in low concentrations until mold begins to grow.

There are many areas in a home or building where moisture intrusion can take place. For example, mold will live on the backside of wallpaper in the bathroom and eat the glue.

There are 50,000 varieties of mold, of which 50 may be harmful, said Roy. But when moisture comes in and increases moisture content to more than 60 percent, then it only takes three days for toxic mold to grow.

Mold problems can be detected when someone has allergies that originate when they are in a particular building, but go away if they leave the building.

“If they went away from the home for a period of time and felt better, then that’s an indication something in the environment is bothering them,” said Roy.

A musty odor in the house can also be an indication of mold. “Always look at the air flow in the heating and A/C system,” said Roy. Mold puts out spores that can spread throughout the house, and the A/C and heating ducts are a means for it to spread.

Climate is not necessarily a factor. “It turns out there are problems in many areas,” said Roy, including desert areas because they use cheap plumbing.

In Malibu, the climate has higher moisture content and that will precipitate the growth of mold.

Because the concerns about toxic mold and its effects on people have been increasing recently, the California state Senate approved the country’s first mold bill.

Bill 732, authored by Sen. Debra Ortiz, will require a seller to disclose the existence of mold in a home in a real estate transfer.

Mold has also created another domino effect for homeowners. Insurance companies changed their policies in an effort to minimize costs, starting April 1, because of escalating claims. “But it’s much disputed in the courts,” explained Roy, because no clear cut direction exists.

More information about mold can be obtained on the Center for Disease Control’s Web site at http://www.cdc.gov/nceh/asthma/factsheets/molds/default.htm and on the Environmental Protection Agency’s Web site at http://www.epa.gov/iaq/pubs/moldresources.html.

Let’s bond together

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Last week, The Malibu Times, a strong local opinion maker, characterized the proposed $15 Million Bond Measure as “another hot potato soon to be tossed to voters.” I’d like to suggest a rethinking of that characterization.

How about seeing the Bond as a great Opportunity and Challenge for the Malibu community to show some political maturity by working together in spite of differences.

How about seeing the Bond’s passage as the first common goal we’ve had since Cityhood.

How about seeing the Bond as a great, last chance to do something to preserve land before all the large parcels are developed and to choose to build parks, ball fields, or a community center instead of another shopping center or high-density residential project.

The Bond Measure is a wonderful opportunity to stop complaining and start accomplishing something excellent for the entire community.

Mona Loo, Steering Committee member

Malibu Coalition for Parks and Land

Malibu publishing guru expands

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Dot-coms have taken a dive, financial forecasters predict gloom and doom for everything from the stock market to the federal budget, and California may face financial straits because of the energy crisis, but one man seems unfazed by it all.

Bill Curtis just bought his favorite magazine, which he intends to make better (and make lots of money on), and his bustling company is expanding across the country. All that, and he has dizzying plans for the future.

The wildly diverse CurtCo Media Labs, which includes the magazine publishing company, Malibu Studios (a post production house), a recording studio and an Internet radio station, is still growing.

Curtis projects 100 or so employees in the near future reporting to work every morning to the beautiful wood offices off Heathercliff Road. That and the offices he is building in Boston–“We’ll drop it right in there in Harvard Square”–and New York.

All of the growth is coming in response to the purchase of the Robb Report–think GQ with absurdly lavish toys–and its sister publication, Showcase–the Victoria’s Secret for luxury item connoisseurs.

The two high-end journals (the average income of their subscribers, according to Curtis, is more than $1 million per year) would be king scores to any publishing company, but are especially sweet for CurtCo Media. The expert acquisition group specializes in niche publications, that focus on a specific market or item. Curtis says, “The market is just limitless, and virtually untapped–you have houses, boats, planes, everything that the wealthy purchase.” He says he can see dozens of spin-off possibilities from the two existing magazines.

Curtis’ big move, which he calls “something really special for me,” is the latest in a string of renovation projects. The company, now named CurtCo Robb Media, LLC, has already found success in the stereo and video markets–again focusing on particular niche audiences.

“What we do,” explains Curtis, “is go in with what we refer to as the SWAT team. We have this group that infiltrates the publication on every level, getting into everything. We completely overhaul it from there.”

And CurtCo Media brings something a bit different to the table. “We have an editor in chief and the art director. And the graphics department doesn’t necessarily report to the editor. Just because you can write doesn’t mean you have any aesthetic taste, you know?”

And it does work. CurtCo Media, like a real estate developer going in renovating, then selling, has turned around dozens of publications.

After spending several years as an advertising representative for the Financial Times of London and CBS Publishing, Curtis opened his own firm in 1982 in Marina del Rey, representing clients like Inside Sports, Stereo Review and Popular Photography.

Three years later, CurtCo Media Labs was launched with Car Audio and Audio Video Interiors, both of which were aimed at markets Curtis says “simply cried out for representation.” Both were sold after they reached top positions in their fields.

In 1989 Curtis entered the computer and communications market by launching such magazines as Mobile Office, Portable Computing and Cellular Buyer Guide; again, after they achieved significant circulation, they were sold. The eight-figure deal enabled Curtis to launch Home Theater Magazine and, soon after, he formed a 50-50 partnership with Freedom Communications (publishers of the Orange County Register, 27 other dailies and owner of eight TV network affiliates), with Curtis remaining as president and CEO. Last December, Home Theater was sold to Petersen Publishing for $60 million,” according to an April 1999 article in The Malibu Times.

What does all this mean? Is there a publishing guru in Malibu?

“Yeah, yeah,” Curtis shrugs. “We do have a unique thing. We should be on Madison Avenue, I guess, but who wants that? We come to work every morning and the beach is right there, I mean it’s beautiful. We can work year round. We’re not climbing over one another screaming for a vacation. So I think we get more done out here than they do in New York. There are a lot of advantages.”

And the acquisition of Robb Report confirms the CurtCo Media phenomenon, with continued success despite the location on the West Coast. And you get the feeling Curtis is just getting started.

Drowning in the voice mail vortex

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The trouble with going on vacation for a month, particularly if you’re leaving the country, is that you have to get everything in order.

Time’s run out on all those pesky projects.

When the weather got nice, I abandoned my desk for the garden. The gray fleece sweats went into a trunk and the khaki shorts came out. There is nothing as life affirming as the feel of the sun warming the backs of your legs while tending nature’s blessings: watering, weeding, planting or just moving the rocks around.

I’m leaving for France this week–ohmigod, I’ve only got three days left-and my desk is piled high with bills to pay, tax forms to fill out, documents to find, receipts to file, catalog orders to be checked (something’s always on back order).

Every single thing seems to require an hour or more on the telephone, usually in a holding pattern, listening to elevator music interrupted every 30 seconds by an automated voice saying, “Your call is important to us, so please stay on the line. Don’t hang up, the next available idiot, er operator, will take your call.” Yeah, right.

Now there are only a few things you can do while in Bell hell. Those who find canned music soporific can doze off, at the risk of missing the next available operator. I find faux music less soothing than supremely irritating, so a quick nap is out of the question. I have a portable phone, but I can’t carry it out to the garden because if I ever get connected to a live body, they will want a zillion numbers from my invoice or whatever. So, confined to the desk, I do crossword puzzles, pondering the possible synonyms for “parapet opening,” nine letters beginning with “e” or “rendezvous participant,” seven letters ending in “r.” Maybe tryster? Dumb word.

I must limit these telephone quests to one a day or I’ll go mad. For instance: I’ve been trying to get a replacement for a defective plumbing part for about two months. A series of calls to the sales rep went unanswered, messages were not returned, etc. Finally, I reach her, tell her my sad story, give her the numbers off the invoice, and she says, “No problem. Just call Price Pfister and they’ll send you a replacement.” Oookay.

Now P.Pf. holds the all time record for long distance waiting. “Due to the unusually heavy volume of calls, you may experience longer waits than usual (about a week). Please try another time or stay on the line for the next available you know who.” Two minutes of elevator music. La, la, la. Lest we nod off: “Your call is important … blah, blah, blah.”

I’m frowning over 61 across when finally a cheery voice says, “Thank you for waiting. May I help you?” I certainly hope so.

I describe what’s wrong with the faucet, date and place of purchase and a zillion numbers from the invoice. “We should be able to send that to you, but we’ll need you to fax us a copy of the invoice.” Great. I drive two miles to my son-in-law’s shop. The fax won’t go through. Are you sure it’s the right number? I call back; get 20 minutes of la, la, la.

No puzzle, so I gaze at posters of super cross riders flying through the air on their motorcycles. This keeps me awake. Right number. “I’ll go check the fax machine.” Elevator music. “The machine isn’t out of paper or anything, so fax it again. Would you like me to stay on the line till it comes through?” Wow. You bet I would. “I got it,” she says. “It’s very faint, but I can read the letterhead.” She gives me a ticket number and I go home having spent almost three hours on this quest. Out to the garden to recapture my sanity.

Two weeks go by, no faucet, no UPS man driving up the dusty road. I lay out my crossword puzzle and dial with dread. Same drill, I’m lost in the voice mail vortex. Finally a gentleman answers. Ms. Cheery Voice has gone home. Can he find my faucet? How was it sent? He leaves the line. More elevator music. Let’s see, 24 down is “Hillary’s conquest.” Not that one! Seven letters. Oh, it’s Everest.

A voice breaks in mid-cadenza, “It’s on back order.” Fearing I will be in France and the faucet will be left on my deck by the UPS man and carried off into the brush by coyotes, I begin to whimper. “The spout will be in within a day or two, and we’ll send it right out.” That was last week.

It’s three days till blast off. The UPS man delivered my rain barrel, which has been back ordered for two months, but still no bright, chrome faucet spout.

I can’t call P.Pf. again. Today I’m calling the Bakersfield Californian to have my paper delivery stopped for a month. The puzzles are done. I turn on the French tapes. “Je suis presse parceque j’ai beaucoup de choses a’ faire avant je part pour des vacances.” A voice from the ether asks if I’d like the Spanish translation.

Sacre Bleu!

Man stabbed in the back on Tuna Canyon Road

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Kicked in the face and stabbed twice in the back, a man staggered down Tuna Canyon Road to Pacific Coast Highway, after being attacked by an unknown suspect on Saturday, according to a sheriff’s report.

A motorist insisting that a man needed help on the highway flagged down sheriff’s deputies. When they found the victim, he was barely able to speak and losing consciousness. His coat was soaked with blood. Paramedics were called and the victim was airlifted to UCLA Medical Center.

Three men had been driving down Tuna Canyon Road when they saw a man standing in the middle of the road, frantically waving his arms and calling out, “I need your cell phone. My friend has been stabbed.” He then pointed to another man standing on the side of the road, and said, “He did it!” A third man, the victim, was apparently trying to hide from the suspect in the bushes.

Thinking it was a scam and they were about to be robbed, the men in the car drove away and contacted the Sheriff’s Department. By the time sheriff’s deputies arrived at the crime scene and after attending to the victim, the suspect had fled.

The victim later told deputies that he and his friend had been sitting on a rock near Tuna Canyon Road, about one-third of a mile up from PCH, when suddenly a man appeared and said, “You have to leave.”

The victim asked the man what was going on. The suspect kicked him twice in the face and stabbed him twice with a 10-inch (approximately) fixed-blade knife. As the suspect walked away along the creek, the victim told his friend to go for help. The victim then walked down to the highway.

A nurse at UCLA said that his injuries were serious and that both knife wounds punctured his right lung. He was listed in stable condition.

The victim told deputies that he’s seen the suspect before, walking on Tuna Canyon Road, and that he’s probably a transient who sets up camp next to a fire road in the area.

Manager of Lower Topanga property threatens to sell to developers

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Responding to attempts by tenants of the Lower Topanga area to stay put on 1,659 acres that the California State Parks Department is buying and turning into a park, the vice president who oversees the property threatened to evict all tenants and sell to developers.

Fred Zepeda, vice president of LAACO, LTD, said, “I have offers from developers.”

He stated that if the deal falls through, then he would evict all tenants and sell the land to private parties.

This was after both sides agreed that the land would be in better hands with the state rather than private developers and that the acquisition of the land needs to happen soon or funds may be reappropriated ($40 million of Prop 12 funds, and additional $8 million have been obtained for the purchase). And after tenants and legal representatives continued to argue that the tenants should be allowed to stay on the land where they have lived and operated businesses for more than 30 years.

“The question before you tonight is not whether or not the land should be acquired. The question, is at what human, economic and social costs,” said Frank Angel, attorney representing tenants who face eviction.

“The sociological profile of the tenants is very different from Crystal Cove,” he said, speaking of a similar situation in Crystal Cove State Park, where tenants were recently evicted from a beachside community in Orange County. “These are not vacation homes; the tenants live in there year round.”

The law governing relocation plans would obligate the state to provide comparable housing and they cannot, explained Angel.

While there is a potential for the businesses on the property to stay, residents are hoping for the same.

Residents who live on the property, which has been owned by the Los Angeles Athletic Club since the 1920s, are asking for long-term leases from their new landlord.

In an effort to be heard, residents and businesses have gathered signatures petitioning the state to let them stay, and claim that 10,000 people have signed.

“We are really a community, not just a bunch of houses,” they said, claiming that relocation in similar housing as a community is not possible. “We are a community of artists and craftsmen with an alternative lifestyle.”

“In the past I have done ceremonies to bless your activities but not this time,” said Chokosh Auh-ho-oh, a Native American representative. “That area is sacred ground, it was a place of ceremony and it has artifacts of our people.”

“If you choose to move on these people with heavy equipment, we will be standing there to stop you,” she said, concerned that the area will be paved over for a parking lot.

Park officials first gave a Power Point presentation at the standing room only meeting, explaining why they believe this land should be acquired and preserved.

But, “This meeting is only to hear your comments, not about future land-use plans, which will be discussed later, extensively,” said Warren Westrup, manager of acquisitions for State Parks.

While State Parks receives the support of various local environmental organizations like the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, Heal-the-Bay, the San Fernando Valley Audubon Society, the Sierra Club and others regarding the acquisition, the majority of these groups did not directly oppose tenants desire to stay.

Among them, Joe Edmiston, head of the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, offered $2 million to move the people out quickly, stating that it was for their own good.

Otherwise, most of the speakers concurred that the tenants have been good stewards of the land; in fact, they have preserved it so well that State Parks is now buying it because the area continues to offer a refuge to endangered wildlife.

But tenants do not want to be relocated in a fast-paced method, they pleaded to the state once more, asking for time.

“This is land I always felt should be with State Parks,” said Scott Dittrich, co-chair of the tenants group, Lower Topanga Community. “But forcing relocation is no answer. There is no reason for this rapid transition and fast track eviction. We can co-exist.”

People can already hike the trails, and the septic systems in the houses have never been proven to be defective, he said, in response to accusations that residents were blocking access to the public and polluting the creek with defective septic systems.

At the very end of the meeting, Rusty Areias, director of State Parks, said he would support a solution acceptable for all, but the details still need to be worked out.

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