The Falcon/Peyton Small Area Master Plan Advisory committee met Sept. 12. Carl Schueler, manager of the county’s long-range planning division, and Aaron Briggs, a consultant from HB&A and committee member, reported on the individual stakeholder meetings conducted with Falcon Highlands developer Greg Timm, Meridian Ranch developer Doug Woods, Santa Fe Springs developer Ray O’Sullivan and Cherokee Metropolitan District general manager Kip Peterson.Highlights from the stakeholder meeting with Greg Timm:
- Retail stores south of Highway 24 are not a good idea and retail development along Woodmen Road might not be workable
- Falcon Highlands has city wells with rights to roughly 400 acre-feet of water.
- Falcon Highlands has been approved for a wastewater treatment plant that will be used for commercial and retail irrigation and treat sewage from the development to a non-potable standard; construction could start next year.
- Woods has a 50 percent interest in the Cherokee Metropolitan District’s wastewater treatment plan and plans to use that interest to provide wastewater treatment services to other developments in the area.
- Woods may apply for a surface water diversion permit to capture surface water from Meridian Ranch and offer it to another developer or provide it for recharging multiple aquifers.
- Woods supports a requirement that new developments demonstrate availability of water, sewer, roads and other services because such a requirement would ensure all developers contribute to impacts. The current methods do not require small developments, such as a 40-acre parcel divided into eight five-acre parcels, to share in the cost improvements like roads.
- O’Sullivan would like all of the Santa Fe Springs development to be in the Falcon fire district.
- The wastewater treatment facility planned for Santa Fe Springs will be expandable and could serve other developments, but O’Sullivan does not want to be in the water and sewer business.
- The master plan could set thresholds for certain types of development based on the provision of services. For example, if no central services are provided, the minimum lot size might be 5 acres. If central water but not sewer is provided, the minimum lot size would be two and a half acres, and if central water and sewer are provided, the minimum lot size could be less than two and a half acres. This kind of system would allow developers to make decisions based on the options available to them.