Protected Tree Ordinance under threat as court decision favors property developer

This report was written for the Santa Monica Mountains Task Force by Sara R. Nichols, a Sullivan Canyon resident and environmental activist involved in the lawsuit against real estate developers who violated state laws in pursuit of erecting mansions on top of the old-growth forest and natural wildlife habitat of a Santa Monica Mountains hillside.

An update on the status of the properties at 1834 and 1838 Old Ranch Road was inevitable. Sadly, the update is not in our favor. As you may have heard, Sullivan Equity Partners (SEP) wants to build an approximately 15,000 square-foot house with horse barn, swimming pool and guest house on each of these lots. They intend to build a 1,000-foot-long retaining wall on the east side of the lots just under Bayliss Road, Eric Drive, Westridge Terrace and Westridge Road. The lots are two thirds of the way up Old Ranch Road in a steep, wooded canyon. The proposed construction would destroy the natural state of these lots, which can be seen from many homes in the area and enjoyed from paths and trails nearby. Our ultimate aim — endorsed by the Santa Monica Mountains Task Force — is to preserve them as a small park to benefit the public. The Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy has expressed interest in assuming ownership should we ever have the good fortune to get the far!

In 2014 SEP removed 56 trees from the property, including three trees (one, a huge legacy sycamore on City property) they had no permit to remove under the Los Angeles Protected Tree Ordinance. As a result, the City, after hearings in 2016 in front of the Bureau of Street Services and the Board of Public Works, asked the Department of Building and Safety to revoke SEP’s building and grading permits for five years, a penalty provided by the Protected Tree Ordinance. SEP sued the City in both state and federal court for damages and to try to force the City to reinstate their permits. 

SEP won the state-court case and in late January 2020 a judgment was entered ordering the City to rescind its permit revocations and its decisions that SEP violated the Protected Tree Ordinance. After settlement talks between the City and SEP that were held behind closed doors, the City decided to appeal the Superior Court’s decision favoring SEP. The outcome of that appeal has not been determined. We are hoping that the Bureau of Street Services and the Board of Public Works will decide in the upcoming months to hold new hearings on SEP’s violations. 

We are grateful to all of you who spoke up for the environment by taking our poll and contacting City officials to let them know of your opposition to this wildly inappropriate and dangerous development and asking them to hold new hearings. 

We are concerned that the Protected Tree Ordinance could become a legal fiction if it can’t be enforced. The court’s overturning of the City’s enforcement makes a mockery of the City’s duty to protect the environment all over the City, never mind just in places like Sullivan Canyon. That said, as Sullivan Canyon is in a high-risk fire zone, this development deserves special scrutiny. Eighteen-feet-wide Old Ranch Road has been on evacuation orders twice in the last two years.

Climate change is making the risk of catastrophic fires all the more likely with each passing year. Imagine a fire truck trying to access a fire in the canyon with even one cement mixer or hauling vehicle on the road, never mind the hundreds this development would necessitate. Moreover, nationwide, there are almost 4,000 construction site fires every year. Who can guarantee that this site will be fire-free? Those homes on the top of the ridge, up-wind from the construction site, would be the most vulnerable.

In the meantime, there are ways to fight to protect 1834 and 1838 Old Ranch Road from this improper, dangerous and hideously disruptive development. We are asking for donations to pay our attorneys to represent us against this potentially terrible environmental assault.

We have managed to hold the line against this development since September 2014 and we still have a good chance to stop any inappropriate development if we muster our resources and voices at this critical point. 

Please give as generously as you can to our law-firm partner in this saga, Advocates for the Environment. (see link for P.O. Box address and option to donate online). Good attorneys are not cheap! It is a 501(c)(3) non-profit, so your donations will be tax-deductible. I still hold out hope that we will be able to raise enough money to be able to purchase the land and turn it over to the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy to forever protect the land from development and our community from the nightmare that an inappropriate development of this magnitude guarantees.

Santa Monica Mountains: an island of nature

Something remarkable is unfolding in the mountains above our urban sprawl — something for the ages. Parcel by parcel, acre by acre, we have amassed the largest swath of protected open space of any major metropolis in the nation. Its a text-book example of collaboration between federal, state and local officials who worked hand-in-hand with grass roots groups dedicated to protecting the area from the kind of development that overtook the Hollywood Hills. For Zev Yaroslavsky, the preservation of the Santa Monica Mountains is both political and personal.

Click here to watch this enlightening video (run time 6:32), published online ten years ago by former LA County Third District Supervisor, Zev Yaroslavsky.

Ron Webster receives Lifetime Achievement Award from Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council

Ron Webster and Ruth Gerson, October 2019 | Photo by Rachel Glegg

The Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council recognized Ron Webster with a Lifetime Achievement Award at their 2019 Annual Dinner Meeting, held in Agoura Hills on Thursday, October 24th.

Ron himself, however, was unable to attend the dinner. Therefore, SMMTC President Ruth Gerson (pictured right) along with SMMTC trail crew leader Jerry Mitcham joined Ron on Sunday, November 10th for a celebratory breakfast at his favorite local spot, La Dijonaise Café in Culver City. They presented him with a certificate (you can read the text below) and an engraved clock.

The Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2019.


Conservationist, Leader, Visionary – Ron Webster has devoted his life to the establishment, protection and maintenance of the trail system in the Santa Monica Mountains.

Ron’s interest in trails began over forty (40) years ago in the early 1970’s. Ron and his wife, Mary Ann, worked tirelessly with others to help establish State Parks and the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area (SMMNRA). Then, Ron directed his full attention to developing the trail system. Under his leadership and inspiration, the Sierra Club trail crew, the Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council trail crew, and many other organizations have contributed hundreds of thousands of volunteer service hours to the trail system in the Santa Monica Mountains and nearby jurisdictions.

Ron has an incredible list of trail building accomplishments. Most importantly, he defined the alignment, and then designed and supervised the construction of over 30 miles of the 67-mile Backbone Trail, which was designated a National Recreation Trail upon its completion. Ron collaborated with National Parks, State Parks and other land use agencies throughout his trail building years; and, consequently, he is a vast storehouse of knowledge, skills and techniques related to trails. Long ago, Ron became the “go to guy” on virtually any question regarding trails in the Santa Monica Mountains; and, fortunately, he has transferred much of this information to other trail building crews. The Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council trail crew often joins Ron and his Sierra Club trail crew on work projects. In addition, the Trails Council trail crew frequently seeks Ron’s advice on trail projects.

Ron has a unique ability to define just the right alignment for a trail. He always finds the route that gives the trail user the maximum exposure to natural resources while also protecting those resources. Ron’s mantra is that a trail should “lay lightly on the land.” He avoids using heavy machinery to build a trail, favoring hand tools and manual labor in all trail construction.

Ron Webster’s commitment to his vision of a trail system in the Santa Monica Mountains is extraordinary. Not only has he worked continuously to accomplish this goal, he has inspired and led thousands of others to assist in expanding this vision. In the past 40 years that Ron has advocated for trails as well as designing and building them, he is probably the most important individual contributing to the development of the hundreds of miles of trails in the largest urban park in the nation. He is a true Trail Champion.

Ruth Gerson, President
Santa Monica Mountains Trails Council
October 2019