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Gaviota Plan Coalescing

Advisory document includes homes, trails, fracking, incentive plans for ranchers and residents.

Gaviota Plan Coalescing
<b>THE BIG PICTURE: </b> A complicated balancing act called the Gaviota Coast Plan — weighing agriculture, development, conservation, and public use across more than 100,000 acres — is slowly approaching the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors. Their critical vote on the plan may happen as soon as November 1.

Years of stakeholder spitballing about the fate of the Gaviota Coast is coming to a head as Santa Barbara County planners joust with landholders and environmentalists over designations and regulations across more than 100,000 acres of some of the most picturesque and hotly contested oceanfront property in the world. The end result will be the long-awaited Gaviota Coast Plan, now in the honing stages on a spectrum of issues affecting the region, including public trails across private property, streamlined permitting for farm stands and small campgrounds, the balance of ranching and farming with the protection of endangered species, and whether to allow the owners of mineral rights the opportunity to frack, just to name a handful.

As it stands in draft form, the plan includes better protection of those grand land- and seascape views visitors and residents alike can take in from certain vantage points along Highway 101. While county staffers didn’t heed community calls for square-footage caps on the size of new homes, there is language restricting home height and guidance on properly screening new construction behind tree lines and other natural features.

On the farming front, the plan abides by some of the desires of stakeholder group Gaviota Coast Planning Advisory Committee (GavPAC) ​— ​formed in 2009 ​— ​in terms of easing restrictions on farmers and ranchers wanting to diversify their income sources within the greater realm of agriculture. For example, said Phil McKenna with the Gaviota Coast Conservancy, “You can have an 800-square-foot farm stand with a simplified permitting process so you can test the waters to see if there’s a market.” Other farm- and ranch-related businesses ​— ​such as composting and firewood operations ​— ​are also under consideration, as well guidelines allowing landowners to open up their property to tent camping and perhaps even a small number of RVs.

Guner Tautrim