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
September 20
1954 - C-46 cargo plane crashes at Saugus Drunk Farm; Civil Air Patrol chaplains parachute to safety [story]
chaplains


bouquetcanyonroadclosure10312016A 3.5-mile stretch of Bouquet Canyon Road is closed indefinitely due to the continued silt buildup in the creek that has caused safety concerns.

“The road is going to remain closed all through the winter at the very least,” said Los Angeles County Public Works spokesman Steven Frasher. “We fully understand the inconvenience it causes. The creek is leaking on the road all of the time now. We have to ensure public safety, so we can’t have the road open anymore.”

The closure begins 2 miles north of Vasquez Canyon Road, or just south of the Big Oaks Lodge and ends 5.5 miles north of Vasquez Canyon Road, or about 6 miles south of Spunky Canyon Road. This section of Bouquet Canyon Road is owned by the U.S. Forest Service and is operated under permit by LA County Public Works, according to a news release.

The road closure began Thursday evening, when rain came through the Santa Clarita Valley.

“This storm that came through over the weekend forced our hand at with an earlier than planned closure,” Frasher said.

The road is closed to all through traffic, including cyclists, with the exception of emergency vehicles, Frasher said. The closure is expected until at least April 15, which officially marks the end of the winter storm season.

No homes or businesses are in the closed stretch.

Silt has been building up in the creek, which gets its water from the Bouquet Reservoir, since 2005 when heavy flooding came through the Santa Clarita Valley. The federal government has not allowed cleanup of the creek in order to protect the endangered unarmored three-spine stickleback, which is only found in the SCV.

The Reservoir not only fills the creek, but through the creek, fills the wells of homes and businesses in Bouquet Canyon. Businesses including Lombardi Ranch and LARC Ranch have been severely impacted.

Several propositions have been made to clean the creek, including realigning the road and hooking up Bouquet Canyon homes and businesses with municipal water sources.

In 2014, two gates were installed at both ends of the 3.5-mile stretch and were closed when water was let out of the creek or when storms came through the area.

Assemblyman Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale, introduced Assembly Bill 353, in 2015 and was signed into law. The bill allows for the removal of wildlife from the creek and allow for officials to restore the creek and wildlife to to pre-flood conditions.

Public Works released a proposal for public review in August of 2016 but was turned down by public comments and officials were sent back to the drawing board, Frasher said.

 


 

CHP (Monday 3:27 p.m.)

The condition of Bouquet Canyon Creek is prompting an extended closure of a portion of Bouquet Canyon Road within Angeles National Forest. The road, which was closed Thursday, October 27, due to predicted rain, will remain closed to all traffic at least through winter storm season, which officially ends on April 15.

This section of Bouquet Canyon Road is owned by the U.S. Forest Service and is operated under permit by LA County Public Works. There are no homes or businesses within the closure area.
Several years of sediment and vegetation build-up in Bouquet Canyon Creek have compromised the creek’s ability to properly convey water within the canyon. Even minor creek flows lead to inundation of some sections of the adjacent roadway, creating potentially unsafe driving conditions for motorists. These conditions, and the arrival of storm season, necessitated the decision to close the road.

The c losure extends from the gate approximately six miles south of Spunky Canyon Road, (near Mile Marker 12.55, just south of Big Oaks Lodge), to the gate near the southern boundary of Angeles National Forest (near Mile Marker 15.97, two miles north of Vasquez Canyon Road).

Plans for the restoration of Bouquet Canyon Creek are being developed through a rigorous environmental review process. In August, LA County Public Works released an environmental document referred to as an Initial Study and Mitigated Negative Declaration (MND). Stakeholder comments received on the IS/MND are being discussed with regulatory agencies to further develop creek restoration plans.

Motorists are advised to seek alternate routes.

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.

91 Comments

  1. Not sure if you take this way ever but just in case Kaitlin and Deborah Sue

  2. Jeff Selph says:

    What a joke! Vasquez still closed and now this. I’d hate to live in the AV> I know someone who lives in the cabins and has to drive all the way around to get her kid to Saugus

  3. Ryan Mullen says:

    Robert Bert’n Savage Alise Mullen

  4. Mike Harris says:

    Dennis McWilliams Jr

  5. SandyI know you take Sierra, but your ride just got busier.

  6. Christian Velez Michael Simmons

  7. So forget the stupid fish or frog and clean out the riverbed.

  8. Well this just made a lot of people’s days a lot worse.
    Fix the creek ASAP!

  9. TravisandCandice Bibeau

  10. Dean Wise says:

    Bunch of bullcrap by the forest service

  11. Kurt Knechtel Morgan Knechtel

  12. Kurt Buck says:

    Bill Leitzell…Bad news for you! David Stolp?

  13. WTF? Oh crap that sucks big time, I was wondering, they been blaming it on the weather

  14. Kerry Meyer says:

    The Liberals have destroyed California ..

  15. Bobby Cobb says:

    Veronika Tesarek

  16. Wendy Wellfonder says:

    I guess we don’t get our Mail with Bouquet being
    Closed?

  17. Ryan Tew says:

    Sarah Elizabeth Tew

  18. Grant Oge says:

    Flo DuBack Shephard

  19. Marie Cooper says:

    How do we get to Big Oaks? Doesn’t the closure affect their business?

  20. Ralph Green says:

    Oh man. This is absolute bs. City has gotta do something to fix these routes

  21. I used to fish ? and camp with my dad back there in the 80’s and it was a real beautiful area. but then it started being destroyed by people either just driving through or people who would throw dirty diapers in the water not caring that it was once a pretty good spot to fish trout. Im happy they closed it maybe time will heal this once gorgeous spot in LA.

  22. I am so upset about this!

  23. Debbie Craig says:

    Add more traffic to Soledad and Sierra Hwy. Vasquez needs to be fixed, it has been almost a year.

  24. Hasn’t stopped people from using Bouquet Cyn. I see a ton of cars come up this way daily

  25. The sticklebacks have not been seen out of a lab at UC Davis for years and many believe what were ID’d were mis-identified

  26. Mike Morgan says:

    This is total BS…Pull up your girlie pants liberal loons!

  27. It’s so peaceful like it used to be. I can actually hear the wild life in the morning and evening instead of the hum of traffic and sirens.

    • Pattilee Michaud says:

      For 20 years i lived in 1 of the cabins. No traffic just peace and quiet. Then Antelope Valley found a new route down Bouquet. Rush hours were not safe to be walking along the road any more. Then came the big washout in the early 80’s. Bouquet was closed for a long time to put the road back together again. peace and quiet had returned once more. I am positive the cabin owners are happy once again.

  28. Barbara Paterson do you know about this?

  29. Trilce Eli says:

    Grace Martinez Daneyi Ceron Ortega oh oh! No more short cut ? (actually long cut)

  30. Don Teller says:

    You guys forget this whole area all the politicians are Republicans they are the ones f****** you

  31. Skip Wickersham Kerry Wickersham

  32. Brenda Lee says:

    For anyone who would like to take a stand against the closing of Bouquet, please call or email these people (nothing will change without effort!):
    Gail Farber, 626-458-4002, gfarber@dpw.lacounty.gov
    Michael Antonovich, 661-726-3600
    Steve Frazier 626-458-3974
    Gail Farber is the person who made the decision to block the road, so she is most important to contact!

  33. John Chan says:

    Now 2 riding routes closed

  34. Nina Selkirk says:

    Stephanie Garrett fyi

  35. Monica says:

    Bouquet road closure.
    There are homes in this area being severely affected. Approx. 50 seperate residences
    #1 this is a vote by mail district and with mail service being shut down we cannot vote.
    #2 special needs school children who ride the school bus have been left home since Friday with no way for bus to pick them up.
    #3 Food deliverys, water deliverys have been shut down leaving residents in this canyon in dire straights. We are on well-water and must have fresh drinking water supplied.
    All services such as garbage removal have been stopped.
    Residents who may have medical emergency would also prevent help from arriving or at a minimum significantly delayed
    Please help us

  36. Toni Spangler-Boscia Chace Boscia ? this sucks

  37. Monica says:

    I have made a report of voter suppression as we cannot send in our ballots as bouquet canyon is a vote by mail district. I have called or emailed everyone from president Obama to candidates, congressman, senators, county supervisors and every news outlet I could think of. Please do the same if your on bouquet. This is wrong what they are doing. They could shut down one lane at a time and still accomplish the same task. Please write or call anyone you can

  38. John Dagg says:

    Everyone can debate all the other issues but at least don’t start your article stating it’s because of SAFETY. IT’S NOT! State the real reason it is closed. The habitat of the never seen fish.

  39. Doc Orro says:

    Hopefully, the Big Oaks can stay afloat!

    • Joe Madge says:

      Hopefully they do something about the water that likes to linger in the road which caused me to crash into the guard rail

      • Andria says:

        The water didn’t cause you to crash…the crash was your fault because you drove too fast for roadway conditions. The signs are CLEARLY posted warning drivers of the potential for water to be in that area. If the water caused the crash, then every single driver going through that area would have crashed too. It’s drivers like you that have cause the County to close the road.

  40. Ron Gorman says:

    Just means more antelope vallites effing up the commute on Soledad, Sand, and Placerita Cyn.

  41. No!!!! I take this everyday. Crap

  42. Cory Woods says:

    Glad our tax dollars are hard at work

  43. John Urso says:

    Maybe they should have thought about this type of closure and others 20 years ago when they decided to stuff 25000 new homes into SCV area which was already over crowded.

    • Pattilee Michaud says:

      1979 there were 25,000 in SCV. 20 years later 250,000 with the same roads as in 1979. At what point do you reach absolute saturation?

  44. Brenda Lee says:

    There is a Facebook page to petition to reopen Bouquet Canyon, along with a lot of other information:
    http://www.facebook.com/bouquet.canyon.9

  45. Michael Schneider says:

    What a shame this small section of road cannot be fixed. businesses are suffering commuters are burdened and yet we still pay the taxes to fix these problems. Common these get it together USA.

Leave a Comment


SCV NewsBreak
LOCAL NEWS HEADLINES
Friday, Sep 20, 2024
SUSD Committee Adjourns Meeting Due to Unruly Crowd
The meeting of the Saugus Union School District Asset Management Advisory Committee was adjourned after a large crowd reportedly became unruly during the public comment session.
Thursday, Sep 19, 2024
COC Receives $300,000 NASA Grant to Expand Student Access to STEM Fields
The College of the Canyons Aerospace and Science Team has received a $300,000 grant from NASA’s Mentoring and Opportunities in STEM with Academic Institutions for Community Success program.
Thursday, Sep 19, 2024
Sept. 26: Community Invited to David March Park Expansion Groundbreaking
One of the city of Santa Clarita community’s most cherished parks, David March Park is set to expand, Thursday, Sept. 26, at 10 a.m., 28310 North Via Joyce Drive, Santa Clarita, CA 91350 with a groundbreaking ceremony.
Keep Up With Our Facebook

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
The meeting of the Saugus Union School District Asset Management Advisory Committee was adjourned after a large crowd reportedly became unruly during the public comment session.
SUSD Committee Adjourns Meeting Due to Unruly Crowd
1954 - C-46 cargo plane crashes at Saugus Drunk Farm; Civil Air Patrol chaplains parachute to safety [story]
chaplains
The College of the Canyons Aerospace and Science Team has received a $300,000 grant from NASA’s Mentoring and Opportunities in STEM with Academic Institutions for Community Success program.
COC Receives $300,000 NASA Grant to Expand Student Access to STEM Fields
Bring along a furry friend to the Santa Clarita Child & Family Center's Purple Walk Domestic Violence Awareness 5K on Saturday, Oct. 5 from 8-11 a.m. at the Center’s main facility 21545 Centre Pointe Parkway, Santa Clarita, CA 91350.
Oct. 5: 5K Purple Walk Dogs Against Domestic Violence
Written and directed by Braddon Mendelson, produced by Heather Mendelson, and co-produced by Olive Branch Theatricals and Noisivision Studios, "Provenance" will take stage at the The MAIN, 24266 Main Street, Santa Clarita, CA 91321, Friday through Sunday, Sept. 27-29.
Sept. 27-29: Braddon Mendelson to Present ‘Provenance’ at The MAIN
The Master's women's volleyball team opened Great Southwest Athletic Conference play on the road in Prescott, Ariz. on Wednesday, Sept. 18, defeating the Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Eagles in straight sets 28-26, 25-22, 25-18.
TMU Women’s Volleyball Opens Conference Play with Road Win
College of the Canyons freshman Sahya Kitabatake shot a two-under-par round of 70 to tie for medalist honors while helping the Cougars place fourth at the Western State Conference tournament at Sterling Hills Golf Club in Camarillo on Monday, Sept. 16.
Kitabatake Medals, Canyons Women Take Fourth at Sterling Hills Golf Club
One of the city of Santa Clarita community’s most cherished parks, David March Park is set to expand, Thursday, Sept. 26, at 10 a.m., 28310 North Via Joyce Drive, Santa Clarita, CA 91350 with a groundbreaking ceremony.
Sept. 26: Community Invited to David March Park Expansion Groundbreaking
SRD Straightening Reigns, a therapeutic organization offering equine assisted psychotherapy, has been awarded $278,870 from the California State budget to improve mental health services.
California Awards $278,870 in Funding to SRD Straightening Reins
The Santa Clarita Community College District Board of Trustees appointed Carlos Guerrero to fill the board seat in Area 5, effective immediately, at its special Wednesday, Sept. 18 meeting.
COC Board of Trustees Appoints Carlos Guerrero to Area 5 Seat
California Institute of the Arts alums Alyssa Dressman Lehner and Clara Plestis captured Emmy Awards at the 76th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards.
Two Calartians Win 2024 Creative Arts Emmy Awards
Valencia High School's Choir will hold a fall concert, "Broadway, Movies & Media" at 7 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 26 at 7 p.m. and Friday, Sept. 27, 7 p.m. at the Saugus High School Theatre, 21900 Centurion Way, Santa Clarita, CA 91350.
Sept. 26-27: Valencia High Choir Presents Fall Concert ‘Broadway, Movies & Media’
As my wife, Virginia, and I stroll through our magnificent city, we admire the beautiful paseos and the expansive open spaces, but what really catches our eye, is the diverse works of art at every turn.
Bill Miranda | Santa Clarita Arts, a Journey Through Creativity
The California Department of Public Health is encouraging all Californians to get vaccinated this season to protect themselves and loved ones from respiratory viruses.
CDPH: Stay Up to Date on Vaccines
The Friends of Santa Clarita Public Library in collaboration with Santa Clarita Valley Libraries will have a silent Book Auction beginning at 9 a.m. Monday, Sept. 30, through 10 a.m. on Monday, Oct. 7.
Sept. 30: Public Libraries to Host Silent Book Auctions
1863 - Gen. Edward F. Beale loans money to A.A. Hudson and Oliver P. Robbins to erect toll house in Newhall Pass [story]
toll house
The Counties of Los Angeles and San Bernardino today announced the opening of multiple joint Local Assistance Centers to assist residents impacted by the Bridge and Line Fires.
Joint Assistance Centers Open for Residents Impacted by Bridge, Line Fires
Valencia Gynecology Associates, owned by longtime Santa Clarita Valley OB-GYN physician Don Nishiguchi, MD, has joined the Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital network. 
Valencia Gynecology Assoc. Joins Henry Mayo Network
JCI Santa Clarita is proud to announce the upcoming Veteran’s Resource Fair, scheduled to take place on Sept. 21 at William S. Hart Park. 
Sept. 21: JCI Invites All Veterans to Upcoming Resource Fair
A "friendies" field tournament  is being  hosted by the Saugus Instrumental Music program, with support from Valencia High, later this month. 
Sept. 21: All Valley Showcase Comes to Valencia High
Public, member-supported 88.5 FM The SoCal Sound, Southern California’s leading Triple-A (adult album alternative) format radio station has announced the lineup for its inaugural “Year-End Bash” taking place on Saturday, Dec. 7.
Dec. 7: CSUN Owned 88.5-FM The SoCal Sound Announces “Year End Bash” Lineup featuring Ben Gibbard
The Master's University cross-country teams continued their successful 2024 campaigns with strong finishes at the BIOLA Invitational on Friday, Sept. 13 at Craig Regional Park in Fullerton, Calif.
TMU Women Win, Men Place Second at XC Invitational
Sheriff’s Department Announces New Law Enforcement Gang Policy
LASD Announces New Policy on Law Enforcement Gangs
The biology department at California State University, Northridge has stayed committed to promoting STEM research carried out by K-12 students and teachers in the Los Angeles Unified School District.
CSUN Student Research Journal Celebrates 28 Years of Inspiring Scientific Imagination
SCVNews.com