The right-wing mediasphere bashed the world's largest wildlife crossing for delays. It now has an opening date
LOS ANGELES - Right-wing pundits and politicos recently attacked the gargantuan wildlife crossing being constructed over the 101 Freeway in Agoura Hills over ballooning costs and delays.
A March 18 post in an outlet published by a conservative think tank set the outrage in motion, calling the now $114-million project a "bridge to nowhere" and "jobs program for environmentalists." The Murdoch-owned California Post republished it and social media lit up. In an X post, U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy compared it with the state's long-delayed, budget-busting high-speed train.
In short, they painted it as a boondoggle. One that might never get done.
But now the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing has a completion date: Dec. 2, announced at an Earth Day news conference held on the structure rising over a 10-lane stretch of the freeway. Cars whizzed by below.
That's when the ribbon will be cut and mountain lions suffering from a lack of genetic diversity are expected to get their ticket out of the freeway-locked Santa Monica Mountains to seek mates elsewhere. Lions there have already shown alarming signs of inbreeding, including kinked tails and deformed testicles. The population could go extinct without intervention, and state wildlife officials listed the pumas as threatened earlier this year.
"This is a visionary project that was the impossible dream," said Beth Pratt, California regional executive director with the National Wildlife Federation and the public face of the crossing. "This is something that's captured the imagination of Angelenos, captured the imagination of the world."
Driving under the crossing feels unremarkable; just another concrete behemoth. But it's another world on top. Under a blue sky and puffy clouds, a gentle wind blew through a sea of about 6,000 native plants - Santa Barbara milk vetch, golden yarrow and purple sage.
It melts into the surroundings - and that's the point. Soil that was hauled in was inoculated with the same microbes and mycorrhizal fungi that thrive in the nearby hills. The plants were grown just for the crossing, with another 40,000 on the way.
Miguel Ordeñana, senior manager of community science at L.A. County's Natural History Museum, who discovered the late, great mountain lion P-22 in Griffith Park, saw the whole thing unfold.
Standing atop the suspended habitat, he envisioned bobcats hiding behind the bushes and ambushing ground squirrels: "I can see it now as this thing is coming to life."
The event drew representatives from Caltrans, National Park Service, Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy, Agoura Hills City Council and other partners.
There's still significant work to be done before bobcats can come aboard.
Crews are currently building a second overpass over Agoura Road.
Once that's completed over the summer, they'll haul in 3 million cubic feet of soil - enough to fill half of SoFi Stadium - to bridge the gap between the two structures. Berms will be constructed to block out noise and light.
Like many dreams in California, the project didn't come cheap. When it broke ground in 2022, it was expected to cost nearly $93 million. That held until last spring, when bids for the second stage of the project went out and "came back through-the-roof high," Pratt told The Times earlier this year. The current estimate is $114 million but could potentially top out several million higher.
The surge came amid inflation and tariff-driven price increases. The National Highway Construction Cost Index, a figure calculated by the Federal Highway Administration, has increased by 67% since 2021. Torrential rains in 2022 and 2023 delayed the completion by a year.
There's also the scale: It's the largest wildlife crossing in the world, with two structures that together span roughly 320 by 175 feet.
The effort appears to be paying off. Driving down to L.A. earlier this month, Pratt was distressed because she was hitting painted lady butterflies in the midst of their long-distance migration. When she ascended the crossing the following day, she saw the dainty orange, black and white insects fluttering about. It moved her to tears.
They weren't the only lepidoptera. American lady butterflies were laying eggs and white-lined sphinx moth caterpillars were inching along plants.
Then there's Bob, a western fence lizard that's taken up residence at the top of stairs that lead to the crossing. A rattlesnake has claimed the bottom. Birds like yellow-rumped warblers and California scrub jays round out the initial cast.
"I can say with some certainty that this is going to be the most popular reality show that L.A. produces," Pratt said. Cameras will capture the action, though it won't be broadcast live because "this is L.A. and someone will go try to pet the mountain lions."
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This story was originally published April 23, 2026 at 1:54 PM.