Tejon Ranch

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Tejon Ranch Company is the largest private landowner in California. It was incorporated in 1936 to organise the ownership of a large tract of land originally comprising four Mexican land grants, and began ranching in the 1840s. It now controls over 270,000 acres (1100 km²) in the southern San Joaquin Valley, Tehachapi Mountains, and Antelope Valley. Tejon Ranch grows almonds, pistachios, walnuts, wine grapes, and several varieties of row crops. Depending on the season, up to 12,000 head of cattle can be found grazing on the Ranch. Cattle leases cover about 250,000 acres (1000 km²).

Its principal activity is land development and agribusiness, increasing the value of real estate and resource holding on this land. The company operates in four segments of the economy:

[edit] Tejon Ranch's Future

In 2003, Tejon Ranch Company announced its intentions for the future of the Ranch. As outlined by Ranch leaders, Tejon Ranch's stated vision begins with a commitment to conservation, including the permanent preservation of up to 100,000 acres (400 km²) of Ranch land[citation needed] - the largest conservation effort in California in many decades.

The company's plans include what the company characterizes as the limited, environmentally-sensitive development of just a small portion of the Ranch. Those plans include an expansion of the Tejon Industrial Complex – a commercial/industrial business park – and the development of two new communities: Centennial, a planned city of up to 70,000 residents near Interstate 5 and Highway 138 in Los Angeles County, and Tejon Mountain Village, a low-density mountain residential/resort community. Tejon Ranch is also donating 500 acres (2 km²) in the northern portion of the Ranch for a National Veteran's Cemetery. Tejon Ranch's plan includes the continuation of its historic ranching and farming operations.

Some environmental groups have objected to the proposed developments, claiming they would impede wildlife corridors. Several environmental groups sued Kern County, contending the planned construction of the Tejon Industrial Complex-East would destroy over 1,000 acres (4 km²) of farmland and wild grassland in one of the planet's ecological hotspots, the California Floristic Province. However, the project was approved by the Kern County Board of Supervisors and the legal challenges to the Environmental Impact Report were ultimately dismissed by a superior court judge in March, 2006.

Many conservationists also say the Company's plans will affect the high biodiversity in some areas, and are concerned with the fate of such endangered and rare species living as the Tehachapi slender salamander, California Condor, Bald Eagle, and Heermann's kangaroo rat.

Due to the steep decline in the housing market in both Southern California and the Central Valley, Tejon Ranch's proposals seem unlikely to be pushed further at this time.

In June, 2005, the Tejon Ranch Company offered to sell roughly a third of its land holdings to either public or private agencies for the preservation of these ecosystems. Several state and federal agencies have expressed the desire to purchase the land, but their ability to do so depends on budgetary factors, including whether California voters will approve bonds.

On May 9, 2008, a deal was announced between the Tejon Ranch Company and a coalition of conservation groups to preserve over 240,000 acres, or 90% of the company land holdings, for eventual creation of a state park. As part of the deal, the remaining lands would be open to development.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ 'Conservation on a Staggering Scale' at Tejon.. Peter Fimrite, San Francisco Chronicle, May 9, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-09.

[edit] External links