Click here to see what action you can take now! ✉️✍🏽
Why build more warehouses when nearly 1,200 Riverside County warehouse workers were laid off in February? 🤬 Read more here!
Click here to see what action you can take now! ✉️✍🏽
Why build more warehouses when nearly 1,200 Riverside County warehouse workers were laid off in February? 🤬 Read more here!
Save Temescal Valley Mission Statement
Save Temescal Valley (STV) is a grassroots organization of residents advocating for responsible development. We are specifically working to see the warehousing component of the Serrano Business Complex downsized, stopped, or repurposed to develop more community-benefitting and less impactful businesses. STV supports responsible and balanced development that doesn’t sacrifice the quality of life, that is less harmful environmentally, and in particular does not affect our health, safety, and well-being.
Disadvantaged communities are areas throughout California that suffer most from a combination of economic, health, and environmental burdens. These burdens include air and water pollution, presence of hazardous wastes as well as high incidence of asthma and heart disease. https://oehha.ca.gov/calenviroscreen/sb535
The Serrano Commerce Center is a proposed 6 million square foot warehouse complex in Temescal Valley, California, located between Corona and Lake Elsinore. The project will run 1.5 miles parallel to the I-15 Freeway, south of Dawson Canyon Road and east of Temescal Canyon Road. If built, the project would be one of the larger logistics projects in Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
How large is a 6 million square foot warehouse complex?
For perspective, buildings the superimposed on this site plan comprise the Promenade Temecula shopping mall.
Building 7, on the proposed Serrano Industrial Park, is one of the largest buildings at 1,124,000 square feet. It is large enough to fit almost 20 football fields inside!
How will the Serrano Commerce Center negatively impact Temescal Valley?
"Warehouses are not standalone buildings; they take in goods and move them out again – mostly with trucks, which burn fuel and clog up streets and highways."
https://calmatters.org/commentary/2023/01/inland-empire-california-warehouse-development/
We are already a "disadvantaged community," meaning an area identified by the California Environmental Protection Agency that is disproportionately affected by environmental pollution and other hazards that can lead to negative health effects, exposure, or environmental degradation.
https://codes.findlaw.com/ca/health-and-safety-code/hsc-sect-39711/
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