Politics & Government

Workshop on Quail Brush Power Plant Hears from a Worked-Up Public

"I might be a person to lie down in front of a bulldozer if it comes down to that," says one speaker at Thursday's workshop.

If work started on a peaker power plant on the San Diego-Santee border, “I might be a person to lie down in front of a bulldozer if it comes down to that,” one speaker said at a six-hour workshop Thursday.

Calls could be heard that others would do the same as an audience of 200 applauded at the Mission Trails Regional Park visitor center. 

The planning process has begun for the Quail Brush Quail Brush Generation, touching the eastern edge of , but Santee residents say they won’t let it happen without a fight.

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A crowd of mostly Santee residents made its presence known at a  ending at 11 p.m. that detailed the proposed Quail Brush Power Plant and explained how the planning and permitting process will proceed.

More than 60 public speaker forms were submitted, and every one of the speakers expressed their wish for the applicant, Cogentrix, to withdraw its application for the plant or for the CEC to deny them a permit.

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A stack of more than 1,000 signatures gathered online and in person were submitted to the board.

The main concerns from the public revolved around various health impacts, especially air quality, the proximity of the plant to residential housing, West Hills High School and other schools, the visual affect of the plant and the impact on housing prices in the area.

Amongst the public speakers were many engineers, doctors, firefighters and other professionals with insight into the potential affects on the community, which are far ranging.

One of the biggest concerns expressed by Santeeans was that because the plant is technically within City of San Diego borders, but would most affect Santee, that this is another case of Santee being used as a “dumping ground.”

The city and its residents are still sore about the Las Colinas Detention Facility expansion, Sycamore Canyon Landfill and other “undesirable” projects being located in their town, and are wary of another such project.

Eleven specialists working with the energy commission—experts in various fields such as biology and air quality—made up the panel that presented a power point and answered questions. This was followed by a Q&A with Cogentrix representatives.

The panel said the workshop was convened in response to more than 80 formal comments from the public sent to the commission over the past couple months—a huge response, according to the panel.

Speakers at the workshop represented Santee City Hall, Grossmont Union High School District, San Diego Mountain Bike Association, Preserve Wild Santee and more. The grassroots Stop the Santee Power Plant organization was out in full force with signs and speakers at the meeting.

Pepresenting the City of Santee was Councilman Jack Dale, who said the council will likely take a position against the project when it is discussed at next week’s council meeting.

Rudy Reyes, injured in the 2003 Cedar Fires and candidate for county supervisor, was one of many speakers who emphasized the risk of wildfires in the area—the very fire that injured him tore through the area where the plant would sit.

The public speakers—hikers, bikers, residents and lovers of nature—did not hold their tongues; through tears and anger they voiced their thoughts about a power plant.

One speaker asked if the plant would be visible from the top of Cowles Mountain, sad to be the most popular urban hiking spot in the country. Though not definitive, all indications show it would be.

The commission said that at least one workshop will be held a month while this process goes on, and the public is welcome to those as well.

The next scheduled meeting of importance to the project is April 26 before the San Diego Planning Commission, where a decision might be made whether to change the zoning of the site from open land to industrial use.

One speaker summed up the feeling of the audience at the meeting: “You have not yet heard the wrath that will come from Santee.”


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