Editorial
Many may wonder why anyone would complain about charging a buck to ride a
2.5-mile stretch of the San Joaquin Hills toll road.
After all, in these times of economic boom, we barely flinch when gas
prices near $2 a gallon or when the gate fee for a day at Disneyland
edges close to $50.
But like everything else, there is a some history to this tale.
In 1993, when Newport residents learned that a stretch of Newport Coast
Drive was to be swallowed by the new San Joaquin Hills toll road, you
could practically hear the commuters screeching to a halt.
That action would force drivers to start shelling out 50 cents one way to
ride what was once a free road, dedicated to the public by Don Bren
himself.
It was not a popular decision.
Locals complained to city and county officials that drivers wouldn’t pay
the toll and instead would either stay on East Coast Highway and clog up
Corona del Mar, or take side streets through the neighborhoods on the
east side of the bay.
But their cries of protest were ignored by tollway officials.
Despite years of arguments and an unsuccessful lawsuit to stop it, the
2.5-mile stretch became part of the toll road when it opened in November
1996.
At that time, the creators of the bright, shiny new road that cut a
jagged swath through Newport Coast and Laguna Canyon beamed with pride
and optimism, claiming unrealistic expected ridership. Today 50,000
drivers, tomorrow 120,000, they boasted.
They weren’t even close.
The truth is, toll officials reached about half of that initial
projection, leaving many wondering how to keep happy the bond holders who
invested in the road .
Even Lockheed Martin, the contractor that agreed to operate the toll
booths, has cashed in its chips, as ridership on the road continues to
slump below the estimates.
So what’s the toll officials latest answer to this conundrum? Hike the
fee on Newport Coast Drive to $1 each way, placing the onus on local
commuters to make the road financially viable.
That is no way to run a toll road.
The whole reason we cut through some of the most pristine land in South
County was to relieve traffic congestion, not create a private road for
the super rich.
We need to encourage people to use the toll way, not drive them away by
charging them more to do it.
Come to think of it, a $1 fee would be the perfect solution to the toll
road woes.
But it should apply to the entire San Joaquin corridor (which is $2.25
and counting)--not just a tiny stretch in Newport Beach.
If toll road officials use that thinking, they may go a long way toward
solving their ridership problem.
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