At first glance, the potential problems associated with building
a seven-square-mile city between Hollister and Gilroy seem so
insurmountable that it’s easy to believe the project will never be
approved.
At first glance, the potential problems associated with building a seven-square-mile city between Hollister and Gilroy seem so insurmountable that it’s easy to believe the project will never be approved.

Certainly the proposed development of Rancho San Benito faces many hurdles, including water supplies, sewer connections, potential flooding, traffic and environmental impacts, worries about noncontiguous development and schools.

But let’s not be fooled. There’s a high-powered development company “betting on the come.” DMB Realty, the Arizona-based company behind the proposal and which owns the 4,500-acre Rancho San Benito property off Highway 25 near the San Benito-Santa Clara county line, is not new to this game.

It has already built similar communities, and has spent a boatload of money to purchase an option to buy the Union Pacific tracks between Hollister and Gilroy.

This company knows what it is doing, and it wouldn’t be spending money if it thought Rancho San Benito was doomed to failure.

The continued development pressure on land in San Benito County near the border with Santa Clara County proclaims the obvious: Leaders and representatives from Hollister, San Benito County, Gilroy, Santa Clara County and Morgan Hill should formally schedule a three-times-per-year regional planning meeting. That’s what’s needed to keep everyone up to speed on projects from Coyote Valley to the north to Rancho San Benito to the south.

It behooves our leaders to get to know one another, to think regionally and to act locally to make sure that any proposals for the region, and in particular the San Benito-Santa Clara county line, are good for all of us. The flurry of recent proposals, which include the Indian casino and Sargent Ranch proposals, is an alarm bell for our communities. Let’s heed the warning.

The potential impacts are numerous: Economic, educational, environmental, transit, and more, will be affected by these proposals.

Working together, we can pool our resources to influence any projects to be as beneficial as possible for the South Valley. If we allow piecemeal proposals to guide our course, the results will be hodgepodge planning and an urban environment no different than what’s 40 or so miles north of us.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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