The Gold Line construction authority sees the Storage Centers site as the best location for a parking structure because of its proximity to downtown San Dimas, its access
Planners try to minimize the displacement of residents and businesses, said Lisa Levy Buch, a spokeswoman for the construction authority.
"The agency is responsible through planning for all the facilities that we need for the project," Levy Buch said. "We try to do it as scientifically and subjectively as possible."
San Dimas previously considered a station near Bonita and Cataract avenues, close to the existing Pacific Railroad Museum, but residents in the area nixed the idea.
That led to the proposal for a station near San Dimas Avenue, and the city's redevelopment agency tried to play into the concept with Grove Station, a mixed-use development project that stalled, half-completed, during the recession. There is still undeveloped land northwest of Storage Centers, closer to the tracks.
"It is incredulous that our business, which is longstanding and successful, would be picked for parking when many other options exist in the area, such as the empty land at Grove Station and elsewhere, unleased buildings, the city maintenance yard and an existing park-and-ride lot," Kehr said.
San Dimas doesn't want to use the vacant land because it has a plan and entitlements in place to meet state-mandated housing requirements. The construction authority studied other locations and found problems such as pedestrian safety.
Still, the proposal is a long way from becoming final.
"If (the Kehrs) are not a willing seller it would be part of the environmental report," Levy Buch said.
Eminent domain is a possibility if the location plan remains unchanged through the long approval process, though the construction authority considers that a last resort.
The solution could require some outside-the-box thinking, Councilman Jeff Templeman said. The City Council on Tuesday bounced around the idea of building a parking structure on top of the storage business, despite height restrictions that have limited the proposal to two stories.
"I strongly believe there's a way to not make (the storage business) a loser," Templeman said.
james.figueroa@sgvn.com
626-962-8811, ext. 2236
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