Other Articles in this Category
Most Viewed Stories
Most Commented Stories
Save & Share this Article
Heritage Partner’s ‘Gateway’ project on hold
Plans for a community of several thousand homes in southwest Colusa County are on hold, at least for now.
Pacific Cascade Group, the Orange County developer that had planned the South Colusa Gateway Community, on Friday withdrew its application for a general plan amendment to allow the project.
South Colusa, announced in 2004, originally called for as many as 6,500 new homes on more than 3,500 acres of farmland 6 miles south of Arbuckle, along the Yolo County border.
Earlier this month, Pacific Cascade and its local wing, Colusa Heritage Partners, announced a scaled-down version with 3,160 homes, meant to attract some 9,000 newcomers to a 1,000-acre site over three decades.
Project supporters said the development would bring new money to a county desperately short on cash. Opponents said a new city would cost the county its unique agricultural heritage.
In a letter dated Sept. 26, the project’s director, Bruce Bonfield, said developers decided to set aside their zoning application “for the time being.”
Bonfield wrote that two days earlier, Pacific Cascade requested a 60-day delay before Tuesday’s meeting with the Colusa County Board of Supervisors but was rebuffed.
Supervisor Kim Dolbow Vann, whose 1st District includes the South Colusa site, said her colleague Thomas A. Indrieri refused the delay because the meeting had been scheduled for nearly a month. She added that withdrawing the application means the developers have essentially scrapped the project in its current form.
“It means they would have to start over from scratch if they want consideration for anything,” Vann said Friday.
Vann expressed frustration with what she called the developers’ unwillingness to listen to local leadership about the plan.
“The county of Colusa is not going to be bullied into anything, period,” she said.
Contact Colusa County Sun-Herald reporter Rob Parsons at 458-2121 or rparsons@tcnpress.com.
See archived 'Local News' Stories »
| I say that colusa county scored a huge victory with the developers backing out, we should all celebrate and then fix up our exsisting communits and bring the people, buisnesses, money, and people to our exsisting communities |
|
| Allen - Sep 30, 2008 06:56:05 AM | Remove Comment |
| | |
| I, like ARbuckle Resident, cannot wait until Colusa County has 30,000 more residents. The crime that will come with this massive influx of newcomers will bring us badly needed jobs. More police will be hired, more detectives, more spray paint will be sold to gangbangers etc. I wonder how much money Arbuckle Resident is losing because Heritage Partners is backing out? Is Arbuckle Resident a landowner that wants to sell to developers? |
|
| al anon - Sep 28, 2008 11:01:59 AM | Remove Comment |
| | |
| Dear Arbuckle Resident you don't get it. The whole point is that Colusa Heritage would be a no brainer with jobs only in an already zoned industrial area. Which it currently is. It is when they try to shove thousands of homes down our throats without guarantees of a jobs housing balance do people get upset.
Their tactics of buying off groups from other communities with gateway signs and promises of philanthropic heaven would be yours if you pass this tiny little monster new city that would shift the voting demographic dramatically south.
Does Colusa even realize that they would most likely share a supervisor with Maxwell and Princeton the other in Williams Stonyford Arbuckle and three supervisors on County Line Rd?
I for one am looking forward to someone being straight forward and bringing jobs not BS. |
|
| true arbuckle resident - Sep 28, 2008 12:50:07 AM | Remove Comment |
| | |
| Sorry but the first commenter doesn't speak for ALL colusa county residents. Many of us would have liked to see what the developer was going to bring to the county in the form of retail business. Farmers and crop owners aren't the only voice in this county. I hope that when the economy does begin to get better that the Heritage partners still finds this county attractive enough to lure business owners to the county line. Just a couple of days ago Supervisor Vann was trying to lure Hollywood types to the area to spend money here. Spend money on what? If you try to keep businesses out NOBODY will want to come spend money because there won't be anything here to attract them! |
|
| Arbuckle Resident - Sep 27, 2008 11:05:03 PM | Remove Comment |
| | |
| Great needs to get his head out of his know what and realize that people in Colusa County believe that Agriculture is important and will do what it takes to protect it. These out of town developers do not have your best interest in mind when coming here to Colusa County to sell this bag of goods. Well, maybe they had yours in mind if the hired you to spread their propoganda.
Bottom line "Great" they are here to make money and a whole lot of it at the expense of the County and its citizens if they had not been checked by the fine citizens of Colusa County. |
|
| Mark - Sep 27, 2008 07:44:22 PM | Remove Comment |
| | |
| LOOKS DOWN AT RESENT COMMENT, Bad grammar but point is every so true! |
|
| willus - Sep 27, 2008 05:31:16 PM | Remove Comment |
| | |
| It means we are in a depression valley ranch is in forclosure so is ccmyers and timing is everything the developer didn't need to have a bankrupt city projsct, plain and simple out and out bad idea right now. |
|
| whatutalkinboutwilliams - Sep 27, 2008 05:28:07 PM | Remove Comment |





