Protesters take fight to company HQ
- Share via
June Casagrande
A few protesters waved signs and shouted slogans at John Laing
Homes’ headquarters Thursday to protest the company’s attempt to
remove a 400-year-old oak tree near Santa Clarita and its plans to
build a housing project on a Seal Beach site where Native-American
remains have been found.
Signs marked “Save my bones from John Laing Homes” and “Save the
oak from John Laing Homes” were waved by five protesters.
Organizers assembled the event on short notice Thursday morning
after receiving news that the company had taken a tougher stance in
the battle over an oak tree near Santa Clarita that the company wants
to remove to widen a road there.
On Thursday, John Laing Homes announced it had secured the area
around the oak tree and filed suit against tree sitter John Quigley
for trespassing.
In a statement, the company cited safety as its main reason for
demanding that Quigley leave the perch he has occupied for more than
two months.
John Laing Homes President Bill Rattazzi also pointed out that
visitors to the tree, on private property, have created a nuisance to
neighbors.
“The number of people who are being invited to visit and even
climb into the tree would continue to result in unsafe conditions,”
Rattazzi said in the statement. “Ongoing property damage and
neighborhood disturbances continue to occur.”
Protesters counter that the company’s moves are overly harsh, in
part because they cut off food and water supplies to Quigley.
“They have decided to come down in a heavy-handed manner,” said
Doug Korthof, an environmentalist and organizer of the informal group
of protesters. “It’s not just this tree. This tree is a symbol of the
endless paving over of Southern California.”
John Laing Homes has offered to replant the tree in a nearby park.
Opponents believe it would be better to leave the tree in place and
build the road around it.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.