Costa Mesa officials bemoan stalled bridge study
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT-MESA -- Newport Beach development politics and inadequate
county-level leadership are leaving a report on proposed Santa Ana River
bridges mired in delays, a Costa Mesa councilwoman said this week.
The report, being prepared by the consultant firm of Kimley-Horn &
Associates, is intended to clarify the potential effects to traffic of
creating bridges across the Santa Ana River at 19th Street and at Gisler
Avenue in Costa Mesa.
But the report on bridges, which have sparked heated emotions among
local residents for years, is taking longer to prepare than was initially
anticipated.
At its Aug. 7 meeting, the Costa Mesa City Council approved a year’s
extension to the consultant’s contract for the $200,000 study. The
original deadline for project completion was August 1999.
Costa Mesa isn’t happy about the delay.
Mayor Gary Monahan wrote last week to the Orange County Transportation
Agency and the other cities involved with the study -- Newport Beach,
Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach -- expressing concern about “the
lack of adequate progress and timely completion of the project.”
And Councilwoman Heather Somers was even more outspoken on the subject
of the delay.
The holdup, she argued, is not merely a consequence of the project’s
complexity; she said she believes it’s a product of poor leadership from
the county and what she called “stonewalling” on the part of Newport
Beach city officials.
“Part of it is what’s going on right now [in Newport Beach] with their
TPO and Greenlight,” Somers said, referring to competing initiatives on
the November ballot that have the potential to dramatically affect the
nature of development in Newport.
“Newport Beach is in a position where they really have to see what the
vote is going to be in November, and they really can’t do much of
anything until that time” because of the way the bridges might interact
with larger traffic patterns in the city, she said.
But the outspoken rhetoric of the recent letter, said Rich Edmonston,
transportation and development services manager for Newport Beach, was
surprising.
“I don’t believe that anybody at the city is dragging their feet,”
Edmonston said. “It’s an extremely complex project. I’ve not heard any
word from any of our elected officials to do anything different from what
we’ve historically done.”
Edmonston pointed out that Costa Mesa officials, who oppose the
bridges, have their own agenda for wanting the study to be completed:
they hope, he said, to get the possibility of construction wiped off the
political radar as soon as possible.
Additionally, Glen Campbell, a senior analyst with the Orange County
Transportation Authority, said the delays sprang from the difficulty of
trying to address the concerns of the four cities involved in the
project.
“We had to get all four cities and the community groups essentially
all on the same thought process with this when they basically have
opposite interests,” he said.
Campbell said he did not believe Newport Beach was stalling in its
contributions to the report.
“We’re aware that those [growth-related] issues exist in Newport
Beach, but I don’t think it’s affecting things here,” he said.
The vice president of Kimley-Horn, Herman Basmaciyan, said that delays
were the result of “unanticipated issues with what the future land uses
and trip-making characteristics” in the cities involved.
Asked whether Newport Beach was trying to delay the study, Basmaciyan
replied “I couldn’t comment on that. I don’t know what the city’s
thinking is. I couldn’t even speculate.”
This is hardly the first disagreement on the subject of bridge
construction on 19th Street.
Costa Mesa residents were organizing as early as 1987 to oppose
development of bridges at 19th Street and Gisler Avenue, claiming they
would increase traffic in what are residential neighborhoods.
Newport Beach officials, however, have argued in years past that the
bridges are simply the part of the county traffic burden that Costa Mesa
needs to bear.
Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach officials have said they hope to see
the bridges eliminated from the county’s transportation plan, while
Newport Beach and Fountain Valley support their construction.
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