By Gurajpal Sangha | May 7, 2025 | ABC 10
“It is farmland, it is habitat, it is next to a school in a neighborhood, and it is not suited for warehousing. It needs to go somewhere else,” Fargo said.
By Gurajpal Sangha | May 7, 2025 | ABC 10
“It is farmland, it is habitat, it is next to a school in a neighborhood, and it is not suited for warehousing. It needs to go somewhere else,” Fargo said.
On May 5, 2025, comments were submitted on behalf of 350 Sacramento, California Native Plant Society, California Wildlife Foundation, Central Valley Bird Club, Defenders of Wildlife, Habitat 2020, Sacramento Audubon Society, and Sierra Club on the Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) for the proposed Coyote Creek Agrivoltaic Ranch Project.
On May 7, 2025, ECOS submitted a letter to the Sacramento Local Area Formation Commission (LAFCo) regarding the Continued Public Hearing To Consider And Certify The Environmental Impact Report And Approve The Respective Amendments To The Spheres Of Influence For The City Of Sacramento And Sacramento Area Sewer District (LAFCo Project #2023-03).
Click here to read our letter.
You can read the recap and/or watch the recording of their last meeting on this here.
Sign the Airport South petition here.
By Tom Philp | April 1, 2025 | The Sacramento Bee
Now opponents are crying foul before a decisive vote over this expansion proposal on Wednesday before the Sacramento Local Agency Formation Commission, also known as LAFCO. They have good reason: This has all the fingerprints of Howard Chan, now the former city manager of Sacramento, acting yet again as if he was as powerful as the mayor when he most certainly was not.
Read more at: https://www.sacbee.com/opinion/article303190516.html#storylink=cpy
April 2, 2025
LAFCo is scheduled to vote on Airport South Industrial on April 2, 2025. Please be there to help protect open space.
The Sacramento Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFCo) will vote on including the acreage proposed for Airport South Industrial (ASIP) into the City’s Sphere of Influence (SOI). This is the first step to approving the landowner’s request to build warehouses on agricultural land west of the City limit.
If five people on this commission vote yes, they will undo decades of public planning of land use in our community without the Sacramento City Council ever having a public hearing. We need to put a stop to this outrage. We must be there in large numbers to ask Commissioners to vote NO on expanding the City of Sacramento at the request of one landowner.
ECOS opposes this project for its inconsistency with every plan approved in the region for the last 25 years including: the City General Plan, the County General Plan, the SACOG Metropolitan Transportation Plan, the Urban Services Boundary line, and the Natomas Basin Habitat Conservation Plan. In addition, according to the draft Environmental Impact Report, the three main issues that CANNOT be mitigated to an acceptable level are the increased air pollution, the loss of farmland and loss of aesthetic value of open space. Sacramento already has some of the dirtiest air in the nation and the City should not put industrial warehouses with their trucks and pollution next to an elementary school and residences.
Perhaps most important is that ASIP is the first of three major proposed projects in Natomas, and if approved, would provide precedent and justification for the following two, which would add up to 70,000 new residents and several million square feet of commercial development.
On March 30, 2025, at 5 pm, ECOS will hold a Zoom meeting to review the project and talk about how to make a spoken or written comment to LAFCo.
At our presentation at Paso Verde School 50 people and two TV stations were present. Heather had a great interview, with the proposed site for ASIP in the background. See the CBS interview here.
If you want to learn more about the Airport South Industrial Project – An article by Heather was recently reprinted in N Magazine. Nmag.net It is on page 8.
Dennis Spear, publisher of N Magazine, wrote an article about the meeting at Paso Verde school. Find it here, on Facebook.
Thanks to all of you who have attended meetings, organized meetings, passed out flyers at meetings and more.
You can see the letter ECOS submitted in preparation of this meeting here.
