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County Rules Out 3 Canyons as Landfill Sites

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Conservationists and residents living near some Santa Monica Mountains canyons no longer need worry about the county putting a garbage dump next door.

Formally killing off what already was regarded as an unlikely possibility, the Los Angeles County Public Works Department has officially eliminated the Mission, Rustic and Sullivan canyons as possible sites for county landfills.

County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky announced Monday that Harry W. Stone, director of public works, has told him that he will not include the three canyons in the final drafts of the county’s landfill plans.

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Stone said in a letter dated Nov. 4 to Yaroslavsky that federal law prohibits locating sites within a national park. Mission, Rustic and Sullivan canyons are in the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area.

Using the scenic Mission Canyon as a backdrop, Yaroslavsky said Stone’s letter removes a nagging threat that has hovered over the mountains since late 1957.

“Nobody could come up here to this site and be in their right mind and recommend that you turn this into a garbage dump,” he told a gathering of city and county officials, homeowners associations representatives, state Sen. Tom Hayden (D-Los Angeles) and Brad Sherman (D-Sherman Oaks), recently elected to Congress from the 24th District.

“The county is giving it up,” Hayden said. He credited a coalition of residents and public officials for the decision.

Despite the hoopla on the mountain Monday, many of those involved already regarded the chances of locating landfills in the three canyons as slim.

“I don’t think the county has ever seriously considered them,” said Joe Haworth, spokesman for the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts. “If we were seriously thinking about going out there with a landfill, the federal law would not be the highest hurdle for us.”

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Carole B. Stevens, a longtime opponent of the landfills who was at Monday’s news conference, conceded that she has not been too worried. But she called the county’s decision significant because “it brings closure” to a long battle.

It also removes the threat posed by the possibility that Congress could repeal the federal law that prohibits putting landfills in national parks.

“There was always the threat,” she said.

The county purchased Mission Canyon land as a dump site in the late 1950s and it was used primarily for garbage from the city of Los Angeles until the City Council refused to renew the county’s permit in the 1970s, Haworth said. In the meantime, the county bought land in Rustic and Sullivan canyons as additional possible dump sites.

The prospect of putting landfills in the area has sparked an outpouring of opposition from homeowners, environmentalists, officials of the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and others.

The county’s decision still leaves the question: What to do with the 38,000 tons of solid waste the people and industries of Los Angeles County generate each day?

Yaroslavsky said recycling has reduced the problem significantly in the last several years. Other landfill sites are still available, he said, and other alternatives, such as rail-hauling the wastes to desert sites are being considered.

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