No More Loss of Private Property in Inyo County!

  • Author:
    n/a
  • Send To:
    Inyo County Supervisors, Los Angeles Mayor & City Council
  • Sponsored By:
    Greater Owens Valley Community
  • More Info at:
The Inyo County General Plans GOAL GOV-3 states: To provide opportunities for the private ownership of land by maintaining (and expanding when possible) the amount of privately owned land available in the County.

However, this policy is not enforceable by ordinance, and Inyo County elected officials have not acted to defend it.

Case-in-point: The Inyo County Board of Supervisors and the Los Angeles City Council have been passive as The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP) has proceeded to make a serious offer to acquire 100+ acres of privately-owned residentially-zoned property on Oak Creek Road, Independence.

The percentage of property privately-owned in Inyo County is extremely low, less than one-half of what DWP possesses. DWP owns 250,000+ acres in Inyo County, constituting approximately 25\% of the Owens Valley floor 100 miles from Lake Crowley to Haiwee Reservoir.

While many Inyo residents and visitors savor the open space maintained by this condition, the shortage of freely developable and affordable property undermines Owen Valleys economic independence and sustainability. The population of fewer than 20,000 (in an area larger than New Jersey) has remained virtually unchanged for over 30 years, but shifting increasingly toward Bishop and leaving Central to Southern Inyo to slowly decay.

Many observers believe there is not a critical mass of population and employment opportunities here, significantly due to the lack of available, affordable, and appropriately-zoned land for development. DWPs has no interest in new local development that uses water, when its mission is to minimize local use and increase water rights holdings so its primary customers in Los Angeles do not have to worry about conservation or higher rates.

If not for the tourist trade, the few consumer businesses on the 395 corridor from Olancha to Big Pine would likely be reduced to a hardscrabble minimum. Inyo has been called a ghetto County, as it does not produce enough goods and services to satisfy its own population, forcing it to outsource, often at inflated costs. Without commercial land in private control, even more businesses properties, such as three recently demolished by DWP in Lone Pine, are likely to be lost.

Under the Long Term Water Agreement of 1991, DWP agreed to put up some 75 acres for auction, but in eighteen years only a small fraction has been sold to private parties, primarily due to DWPs unrealistic auction prices and slow responsiveness.

There is a need for action here. The Owens Valley community is in a struggle for its livelihood and must not allow any further reduction in the amount of private property in the County. No net loss of privately-owned property is currently stated as a goal in Inyo Countys General Plan, which as such is not an enforceable law and does not protect the little existing private property.

Much more pressure must be put on Los Angeles and the other government bodies who control 98.3\% of Inyo County to help it grow enough to sustain a viable population and corresponding local economy. Inyo governments own plan for economic viability must be re-evaluated, and an objective economic analysis must be conducted with a corresponding sustainability plan to be devised and followed.
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By signing this petition, on paper or online, you agree that:

Inyo County must not allow further reductions in private land ownership.
The City of Los Angeles must cease its pursuit of more Inyo County land and/or water rights.
Inyo County Government must champion economic viability and independence.
Owens Valley needs an objective sustainability plan in order to chart a viable path into the future.

__________________________________________________________________

download printable version at: www.sierraeast.com/petition.pdf
(this petition supercedes that at: www.petitiononline.com/INYOvDWP/petition.html)

101 Signatures

  • Jenifer Castaneda
    • Comments
    • We can not afford to lose any more privately owned property! We MUST protect what little we have!
  • scott palamar
    • Comments
    • This is what the people of Inyo want and deserve!
  • Tracy Michigami
    • Comments
    • Hold on to what you have!
  • Beate Nilsen
    • Comments
    • No more stolen water! Look where it got you in the lake!
  • Patrick Roach
  • Bruce Spencer
  • Olivia Moreno
    • Comments
    • What DWP has done to this Valley is unforgiveable the damage they caused can never ever be repaired, it is a shame to keep allowing them to take whatever they want, we must stop them and be the land's voice.
  • Chuck McWilliams
  • Kelly Brown
  • Mark Mason
  • Leslie Roach
  • Katharine Rose Sabo
  • Dee Younger
  • Jim Walters
    • Comments
    • That the City of Los Angeles agrees to a "no net loss of land in Inyo County" is the right thing to do.
  • Mary Vomund
  • sean treloggen
  • Ann Ashbrook
  • Christina Karolyi
  • Amanda Arioto
  • Virgil Van Skyock
    • Comments
    • Don't want the Owens valley destroyed by lack of water resources
  • Amy Rarig
  • Cherie Foraker
  • Anne Bothwell
  • Dan Morse
    • Comments
    • DWP=RECALCITRANT HERO
  • Marcia Mack
    • Comments
    • Stop the rape of the Owens Valley!
  • Irv Dierdorff
    • Comments
    • I am an Inyo County homeowner in Darwin, Calif.
  • claire bresnihan
  • Coralee Bennett
    • Comments
    • It is very disturbing to me that Inyo County is a shell of what it could be. It is shocking to me that the State of California would rather use the water from this valley for LA, an environmental nightmare on the pollution aspect alone, instead of allowing land to be available for housing/business. What happened to the right to choose where you live? It is virtually impossible to afford or even find suitable housing in Inyo County. Businesses are being lost because people dont find this area viable. If DWP insists on hoarding land then at least they should consider using that land for farms to feed the population in this state! Thus providing jobs and an economic sector. Hello, water is precious these days, is it really that important that the already huge LA population can water their palm trees?
  • Anna O. Zacher
  • Marta Elise Johansen
    • Comments
    • В
  • Beth Niehaus
  • James Niehaus
  • Elaine Delaney
  • Milton R Jones
  • Coale Johnson
  • Ronald James
  • Nick & Sally Alvarez
    • Comments
    • My family has been fishing, hiking and camping the Lone Pine, Independence and Big Pine areas for over 25+ years. I do not want what is left of the area to be destroyed commercially, environmentally and economically by the DWP.
  • Cody H Christenson
  • John Connolly
    • Comments
    • sign me up!
  • Leigh Ann Belloli
  • Susan Headlee
  • Patricia-Ann Le Tallec
  • Leslie M. McQuade
  • Connie Rothgarn
  • Jill M. Williams
  • Martin C. Newman
  • Bill MacBride
  • Laura Geraci Malloy
  • John Kepford
  • Ross Hursell