Officials dedicate new trailhead for Ahmanson Ranch
A separate road linking new homes draws protests
By Daniel Wolowicz
danielw@theacorn.com
 | | PHOTOS BY JANN HENDRY/Acorn Newspapers
MILESTONE—Local and federal officials, including U.S. RepBrad Sherman, third from right, open the new Victory Road
trailhead at the old Ahmanson Ranch. Below, a proposed
emergency access road through the open space led to a protesby environmentalists.
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Concerned residents and several local and county officials are
protesting a recent request by
Faye Huang, a Woodland Hills
developer, to construct a milelong emergency access road
through Ahmanson Ranch.
About two dozen members
of Save Open Space voiced
their displeasure with the road
during a dedication ceremony
last Saturday at the ranch’s
new Victory Road trailhead.
 | | BLESS THIS PLACE—Mati Waiya, a Chumash Indian, gives
thanks for the Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space trailhead.
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Ahmanson Ranch is now
known as the Upper Las
Virgenes Canyon Open Space
Preserve.
Huang wants to build 30 homes
on a 58-acre site near the Ventura
County/Los Angeles County border
in the West Hills area. The property backs up to the new
Ahmanson Ranch/Las Virgenes
preserve.
Los Angeles County officials
say the access road is necessary to
meet local fire safety requirements.
The only road servicing homes
in the area is Kittridge Street and
fire officials said if the Huang subdivision is added, one street would
be inadequate during an emergency
evacuation.
Los Angeles has refused to allow the emergency road through
city parks, which leaves the Las
Virgenes property as the only route
available.
Joe Edmiston, executive director of the Santa Monica Mountains
Conservancy, the agency that oversees the Las Virgenes open space,
told Donald P. Baker, attorney for
the developer, that because of the
high-profile campaign to stop the
Ahmanson Ranch development the
request to build the emergency road
would be “difficult to honor.”
Earlier this month, Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger asked the Conservancy to reconsider Huang’s request.
Some suggest that Gov.
Schwarzenegger asked for reconsideration because Huang and her
law firm have contributed over
$30,000 to the governor’s various
funds. But Baker said neither his
law firm, Latham and Watkins, nor
his client, Faye Huang, expected favorable treatment from the governor because of contributions.
“I think this thing has been totally blown out of proportion,”
Edmiston said.
According to Sandy Cooney,
deputy secretary of communications for the State Resources
Agency, which oversees the Conservancy, “There is a process in
place that will be followed to review this proposal and that process
will not be deviated from for this
developer or any others.”
In 2003, the state bought the
2,900-acre ranch for $150 million
from Washington Mutual Bank and
declared the property a state park.
As part of her proposal, the developer has offered to help pay for
visitor amenities at the park’s new
trailhead located off Victory Boulevard.
Emergency road
Baker said the new road would
be built on a dirt road already at the
ranch and would be used only in
an emergency.
State officials said requests to
build roads through state parks are
not unusual, but they are often denied.
Ventura County Supervisor
Linda Parks said if the proposal is
accepted, it would set a dangerous
precedent that may encourage further development.
California law supercedes city
and county law regarding state
parkland issues, but the Ventura
County Board of Supervisors still
plan to use their July 12 meeting to
send the governor a letter objecting to the road, Parks said.