header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
December 7
1921 - William S. Hart (57) marries actress Winifred Westover (23) [story]
Bill and Winifred Hart


The California Supreme Court has agreed to review Mission Village, a 4,055-home phase of Newhall Land’s planned 21,000-home Newhall Ranch community west of Interstate 5.

The decision comes on the heels of the high court ruling last month that sent the entire Newhall Ranch project back to the drawing board for new greenhouse gas estimates and river encroachment permits.

A separate, ancillary lawsuit challenging the Mission Village phase was already in the pipeline and had been going in the developer’s favor when the high court went the other direction in the main case.

Located south of State Route 126, the Mission Village phase would include a mix of residential, commercial, and non-residential uses, including 4,055 residential homes, 1.56 million square feet of mixed-use commercial space, an elementary school, a fire station, a public library, a bus transfer station, parks with a variety of sports fields and playgrounds, open space, natural habitat preserves and trails.

The county Board of Supervisors approved Mission Village in October 2011; it was subsequently litigated by several environmental groups including Santa Clarita Organization for Planning and the Environment. The groups lost at the lower court level, and the appeals court upheld the lower court ruling in September.

Now the state Supreme Court has agreed to look at Mission Village primarily for water availability and conformity with the county’s Development Monitoring System.

A Newhall Land spokeswoman said the company had no comment at this time.

In its Nov. 30 ruling, the Supreme Court held that the entire Newhall Ranch project lacked sufficient evidence on greenhouse gas emissions and did not adequately protect the endangered unarmored threespine stickleback. It also ruled that the plaintiffs weren’t given ample time to review the project.

The addition of 21,000 housing units and other buildings through the Newhall Ranch project would add 269,053 tons per year of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere, according to the court.

“These decisions will help bring statewide attention to the fact that land use patterns as well as building and transportation efficiency must change if we are ever to get greenhouse gases under control,” SCOPE President Lynne Plambeck said of the November ruling. “Non-point source and point source pollution generated by inefficient urban sprawl are major sources of greenhouse gases. As the carbon dioxide levels continue to rise, projects like these should at least require substantial mitigation to reduce such impacts or no longer be an option.”

The ruling took into account not only the various Newhall Ranch phases but also all past approvals, current development projects and probable future projects to determine the full impact the Newhall Ranch development could have on the environment.

 

 

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

8 Comments

  1. Are you kidding me…and just how do they think they will get to their new homes….skateboard…the traffic is ridiculous now…can you imagine once this opens…oh…let’s not forget the water that we do not have going to this project..

  2. watter watcher says:

    Interesting that the News decided to use a different picture than the one they used from the EIR the last time that shows all the oil well pads. SCOPE also opposed this phase because an old oil field is not a good place for residential housing.

    • SCVNews.com says:

      we used a stock image of Mission Village because this was about Mission Village. The story about the “whole project” lawsuit ran in November with the appropriate stock image.

  3. Marc copp says:

    Henery Mayo Hospital is the only hospital in Santa Clarita ,so with all this extra land and more people why not build another Hospital to acomadate more people.Having a 2 Hospital would help the crowding of traffic.

  4. macroview says:

    Last time I checked we are in a SERIOUS drought. Where exactly will these 4,055 homeowners (and their families consisting of about 12,000 people) get their water??

    Same goes for the total 21,000 homes in the development (80,000 more people.) If Sacramento and LA County really gave a hoot about the drought they would stop ALL such development. This is absolutely insane.

  5. John Gilbert says:

    Where did quality of life revolve around 20,000 more McMansions and cookie cutter corperate stores? NLF is a insatiable beast bent on turning the SCV into another overbuilt SFV, SGV, etc. accompainied by the social problems that that brings.

  6. EvangelineShaw says:

    Little noticed a while back, the California Supreme Court decided it would review the appeal of the County’s approval of Newhall Ranch’s 1st phase, called Landmark. So the slate could be wiped completely clean.

    The “bad guys” are frantic. They have filed 2 “Petitions for Rehearing” of the November 2015 Supreme Court decision on greenhouse gases, endangered fish and the rights of Native Americans to due process under NEPA, since the Fish & Game EIR was also a Federal Environmental Impact Statement.

    Side bets are being taken on whether individual California Supreme Court Justices can be bribed, or if favors given to their family members can make any difference.

    In other news, Wall Street was quaking last Friday and Monday when a “mutual fund” which invested in junk bonds cut off its investors and went into liquidation. The manager of that fund is Third Avenue Management LLC, the same investment management bank that Newhall Land bragged about attracting as an investor when it came out of bankruptcy in 2009.

    Third Avenue’s real estate fund, called Third Avenue Real Estate Value Fund, is not the one which collapsed, and Newhall Land only forms a small part of that fund’s portfolio.

    But keep your eyes peeled folks because Third Avenue Managment is an “activist investor” whose founder and eminence grise Marty Whitman has been seen at court hearings, Board of Supervisors hearings, and Regional Water Quality Control Board hearings involving Newhall Land. Third Avenue Real Estate Value Fund claims to have invested $28.8 Million cash in “Newhall Intermediary Holding”, but under Wall Street accounting, they’ve valued that investment at $109.98 Million on their current books. http://www.bloomberg.com/quote/TAREX:US

    Third Avenue Managment is supposed to write a quarterly report to its investors in the Third Avenue Real Estate Value Fund. The next report is due to come out in January 2016. It will be interesting to see if they write about the goings-on at the California Supreme Court.

    Google Martin Whitman, aged 89, and watch for a very unhappy version of him at local government agency meetings near you. He and his Board of Directors fired Third Avenue Management’s President last Friday 12/11/15.

    And while you’re googling, go to Third Avenue Management’s website, and type “Haddad” in their search engine. You’ll see a Newhall Land related executive bloviating about the wonders of real estate investments.

Leave a Comment


SCV NewsBreak
LOCAL NEWS HEADLINES
Friday, Dec 5, 2025
West Coast Health Alliance Recommends Hepatitis B Vaccination for Newborns
The West Coast Health Alliance strongly supports that hepatitis B vaccination continue to be routinely offered to all newborns, with the first dose of the vaccine given within 24 hours of birth for newborns weighing at least 4 pounds, 7 ounces, followed by completion of the vaccine series.
Friday, Dec 5, 2025
Dec. 11: ‘Artmas: After Dark, After Hours’ Popup Art Show in Old Town Newhall
Weird Gallery presents Artmas: After Dark, After Hours, a student‑led art show featuring College of the Canyons and California Institute of the Arts students.
Friday, Dec 5, 2025
Dec. 9: City Council to Install New Mayor in Annual Reorganization
The Santa Clarita City Council will hold a Special Meeting in open session on Tuesday, Dec. 9, at 5 p.m. at Santa Clarita City Hall to conduct the annual Council Reorganization event, when the gavel will be passed to a new mayor.
Keep Up With Our Facebook

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
1921 - William S. Hart (57) marries actress Winifred Westover (23) [story]
Bill and Winifred Hart
1864 - Actor William S. Hart born in Newburgh, New York [Hart Index]
Wm. S. Hart
The West Coast Health Alliance strongly supports that hepatitis B vaccination continue to be routinely offered to all newborns, with the first dose of the vaccine given within 24 hours of birth for newborns weighing at least 4 pounds, 7 ounces, followed by completion of the vaccine series.
West Coast Health Alliance Recommends Hepatitis B Vaccination for Newborns
Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan J. Hochman has credited the combined efforts of law enforcement, public health leaders, educators and community advocates, along with his office’s sustained campaign to expose the dangers of fentanyl, for driving a historic 22 percent decline in overdose and poisoning deaths across Los Angeles County.
Los Angeles County Sees Sharp Decline in Overdose Deaths
Poets, dreamers and storytellers, the deadline for the 2026 Sidewalk Poetry Project is on Sunday, Dec. 14.
Dec. 14: Sidewalk Poetry 2026 Deadline to Submit
Rock Bottom Media and JMV Productions will host free photos with Santa for the whole family including pets, 4-7 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 7 at Locale Studios.
Dec. 7: Bring Pets for Free Photos with Santa at Locale Studios
Weird Gallery presents Artmas: After Dark, After Hours, a student‑led art show featuring College of the Canyons and California Institute of the Arts students.
Dec. 11: ‘Artmas: After Dark, After Hours’ Popup Art Show in Old Town Newhall
The city of Santa Clarita invites residents to enjoy a new holiday light show now illuminating the River of Lights at Central Park.
Holiday Magic Lights Up Central Park
Lucky Luke Brewing and Good Vibes Events L.A. presents its Ugly Sweater Holiday Market, 3-8 p.m. Saturday Dec.13 at Lucky Luke Brewing, 25108 Rye Canyon Loop, Santa Clarita, CA 91355.
Dec. 13: Lucky Luke Brewing, Good Vibes Ugly Sweater Holiday Market
The Santa Clarita City Council will hold a Special Meeting in open session on Tuesday, Dec. 9, at 5 p.m. at Santa Clarita City Hall to conduct the annual Council Reorganization event, when the gavel will be passed to a new mayor.
Dec. 9: City Council to Install New Mayor in Annual Reorganization
Sky Zone Trampoline Park will hold its grand opening and ribbon cutting 4:30-5 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 18 at 26573 Carl Boyer Drive, Santa Clarita, CA 91350.
Dec. 18: Sky Zone Trampoline Park Grand Opening, Ribbon Cutting
Detectives from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Missing Persons Unit are asking for the public’s help locating At-Risk Missing Person John L Brown.
LASD Asks for the Public’s Help in Locating Missing Santa Clarita Man
Last week we kicked off the boys and girls Foothill League soccer seasons, noting that there were a number of league games coming up on Dec. 2 and 4. Now that those have been contested, here is where things stand:
Foothill League Soccer: Hart, Saugus Rolling
1938 - County Supervisors award construction contract for jail at Wayside Farms in Castaic, later called Pitchess Detention Center [story]
Wayside
The city of Santa Clarita will present its latest art exhibition, “Let Go,” by Dani Samson, on view now through Feb. 4, at the Canyon Country Community Center.
Explore ‘Let Go’ Art Exhibit at Canyon Country Community Center
College of the Canyons celebrated the 25th anniversary of its Mathematics, Engineering and Science Achievement program on Tuesday, Nov. 25, with an event held in the Aliso Hall courtyard.
MESA Celebrates 25 Years of Student Success at COC
Kaiser Permanente joined the Saugus Union School District recently to honor its outstanding achievement in health education; all 15 SUSD district schools earned America’s Healthiest Schools All-Star Recognition from the Alliance for a Healthier Generation.
Kaiser Presents $10,000 Community Health Grant to SUSD
JCI Santa Clarita is seeking volunteers to support its annual Santa’s Helpers program, a beloved community tradition that brings holiday joy to children and families in need throughout the Santa Clarita Valley.
JCI Santa Clarita Seeks Volunteers for Annual Santa’s Helpers Toy Drive
"Fatherless No More" is a new faith-based documentary that has been officially accepted for an Oscar-qualifying theatrical run at the Laemmle Theater in Old Town Newhall.
Dec. 5-11: ‘Fatherless No More’ Begins Oscar Campaign at Laemmle
The Master's University will present "Alleluia! TMU Come Christmas Sing" on Saturday, Dec. 6 at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. in The Master’s University Music Recital Hall on the college campus is Placerita Canyon.
Dec. 6: ‘Alleluia! TMU Come Christmas Sing!’
The Santa Clarita Valley Water Agency Water Resources and Watershed Committee will meet on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 1 p.m.
Dec. 10: Water Resources and Watershed Committee Meeting
College of the Canyons cross country had a combined 10 student-athletes earn All-Western State Conference honors for the 2025 season, with all seven members of the women's team earning recognition.
Canyons Cross Country Teams Combine for 10 All-WSC Selections
College of the Canyons had eight players earn Southern California Football Association (SCFA) All-League awards, with three players recognized as First-Team selections.
Canyons Football Sees Eight Earn SCFA All-League Recognition
College of the Canyons women's volleyball was recognized with six players named to the all-conference team, with freshman Katelyn Nelson and sophomore Morgan Dumlao both taking home All-Western State Conference, South Division First-Team awards.
Canyons Features Six Players on All-Conference Squad
SCVNews.com