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UPDATE: The San  Mateo County Parks Foundation is helping raise the $3 million necessary  to complete the purchase of Mirada Surf for a community park.

 

 

Mirada Surf –  Community park emerges from long battle
by Lennie Roberts

For 25 years, coastal activists have worked  to protect a jewel known as the Mirada Surf property. Comprising 49 acres,  this parcel reaches from the coastal bluffs just south of Surfer's Beach  to a forested slope behind El Granada and Miramar, in the Mid-Coast area  of San Mateo County. Residents and visitors alike have enjoyed walking  along the bluffs, picnicking, or viewing the ocean as they drive by.



Back in 1978, the Mid-Coast Community Plan designated this site as a community  park. The Mid-Coast has a deficiency of local parks, but until now, there  haven't been the necessary ingredients to make this park a reality. Last  December, in a rare moment of harmonic convergence, the landowners agreed  with CGF's suggestion that they should cooperate with the County in seeing  that this site be acquired as a park.

Here's how it happened. For several years, the land has been owned by  a partnership that sought to develop the property. The owners first proposed  a large hotel and 86 homes, which they soon revised to a 263 unit RV park,  tent-camping sites, and a driving range. Massive community opposition  stopped the projects. Eventually, the owners proposed 35 houses on part  of the property, but discovery of extensive wetlands on the site halted  this plan as well.

Since any development proposal would require rezoning and changes to both  the General Plan and Local Coastal Program designations, there was no  guarantee that the owners would succeed in their plans. The owners also  announced they would bring an inverse condemnation suit against the County  - on the grounds that for 24 years the land had been designated as a park,  and the owners had been deprived of the use of their land, since the County  had failed to purchase it. Either way, it was clear that a long and difficult  battle would lie ahead, and once the battle began, there would be little  incentive to find middle ground.

Last December, one of the partners in the project approached CGF and asked  if we would support a reduced development proposal, plus dedication of  the beachfront area to the County. We replied that this was a step in  the right direction, but that the whole site should be purchased as a  community park by the County, nothing less. We agreed that the County  would need to have an independent appraisal, and that the County should  pay fair market value based on that appraisal.

To our surprise, the owners were interested in this idea. We next approached  Supervisors Rich Gordon and Mike Nevin, who were supportive of this positive  solution. In August, the Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to authorize  the County Manager to negotiate to purchase the property.

Mirada Surf's significance to the community  and the region cannot be underestimated. Its wide expanse of beach and  bluff area west of Highway One could provide desperately needed parking  and other amenities for the thousands of users of Surfer's Beach. The  Coastal Trail is already informally in place, as many people walk through  the area now. The meadow and wetland area east of the highway is large  enough to allow for playing fields and passive recreation.

Many people need to be thanked for this fortunate  turn of events. The partnership that owns the land is at the top of this  list. Right up there with the owners is the County Board of Supervisors,  the County Manager, and the Parks and Recreation staff. Without their  cooperation and enthusiasm, this land would remain a battleground for  many years - and the ultimate outcome would be very different from what  the community had been promised. The prospect of Mirada Surf at long last  becoming a community park is tremendously exciting for Coastal activists  and everyone who appreciates open space.


Published November 2001 in Green  Footnotes.
Page last updated April 11, 2002 .

 

 

Copyright 2001 Committee for Green Foothills

Photo courtesy Half Moon Bay Review.