Commissioners approve Eternal Hills Cemetery expansion

By: PAUL SISSON - Staff Writer | Tuesday, December 4, 2007 12:19 AM PST

OCEANSIDE -- Commissioners approved plans to expand the Eternal Hills Cemetery, but not without making space to preserve what little remains of a historic Luiseno Indian Village.

The commission voted 4-1 to approve plans that would allow the cemetery to add 18 acres -- enough room for seven mausoleums and more than 15,000 additional burial plots -- to its existing operation at El Camino Real and Fire Mountain Drive. Managers with the private for-profit cemetery and mortuary say they will run out of space for new burials in less than two years if the expansion plans are not approved.

But neighbors, and the local Native American community, voiced their objections to the plans.

Many noted that, along a ridgeline on the western edge of the site, are traces of a Luiseno village that could have once supported up to 1,000 people. As the cemetery's expansion plans were originally drawn, the site would have been graded.

Mel Vernon, a member of the San Luis Rey band of Mission Indians, whose family history extends to native sites throughout the river valley, took affront to the notion that grading plans for the expansion would scrape away the remainders of the ancient village site.

"That's just basically erasing us from existence there," Vernon said. "We shouldn't be made to feel like we are foreigners in our own land."

Commissioners agreed, directing city staffers to work with Eternal Hills so that 1 acre of land along the ridgeline will be preserved.

Afterward, Vernon said he was pleasantly surprised with the commission's decision.

"I guess we didn't get buried by Eternal Hills," he said.

Neighbors also complained that plans called for the 18 new acres of land to receive a rough grading soon, even though the cemetery will not actually use the land for years to come.

Commissioners agreed and directed Eternal Hills to work on a modified grading plan that would clear 5- to 7-acre parcels of land as needed rather than all at once.

Eternal Hills managers went out of their way to work with the community, holding two public meetings and modifying their design to help preserve views from homes on Fire Mountain Drive. Twenty-foot-tall mausoleums that were to be built close to the road were pushed further north on the sloping site, making their bulk less likely to block views. Likewise, many landscaping plants, including tall trees, were removed from plans after neighbors complained that they would block views.

Many who spoke Monday evening supported Eternal Hills' expansion plans. Ann Mortland, who said she has live in the Fire Mountain neighborhood for years, said she would much rather have a cemetery near her home than other types of development.

"Please consider the kinds of dreadful development that could be put on that property," she said.

But others advocated an alternative design that would shift development to the site's eastern edge, away from most nearby homes.

Cemetery manager Debbie Allen reminded all present that the cemetery serves a vital need.

"Eternal Hills serves not only Oceanside, but all of North County," she said. "We are the only public cemetery in North County."

-- Contact staff writer Paul Sisson at (760) 901-4087 or psisson@nctimes.com.

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Randy wrote on Dec 4, 2007 6:51 AM:The Indians wrote a letter in the EIR stating that they agreed with data recovery, not preservation. Then they come to the meeting and ask for an acre of land for no consideration. The commission steals the use of the acre from the cemetary. The Indian land will be buried under 7 to 9 inches of sand for perpetuity. Sounds like a win-win for everyone!

Bill wrote on Dec 4, 2007 8:18 AM:It's not going to be buried. You obviously were not listening.

Randy oh brother! wrote on Dec 4, 2007 8:36 AM:Didn't the Eternal Hills group steal the land from the Luisenos? How insisitive you are.

Fred H wrote on Dec 4, 2007 10:01 AM:We were told as kids that Indians on Palomar could clearly see the campfires (between the cemetary & the existing water tower). And THAT is why the area is referred to as "Fire Mountain" to this day. If not true, it is a great story. So lets' build another Wal Mart!

Just for dead people wrote on Dec 5, 2007 4:27 PM:I'm truly shocked that this development crazy city didn't want to build smart growth at the cemetery...what the heck..they are ruining the best habitat anyway...pretty soon only dead people will be able to enjoy our city becaue the quality of life will be gone.

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