Road plans are not set in stone
Lolita Harper
The City Council laid the groundwork for a $4.7-million road
improvement project Monday night, but finding all the funds to
complete it won’t be easy, officials say.
Council members unanimously approved $318,492 for the design of
three road rehabilitation projects on portions of Red Hill Avenue and
Bristol, Bear and 17th streets, without a word of discussion.
Various portions of all three streets are in desperate need of
total repaving, and the final cost, including construction, is $4.7
million. The city will have to keep a strict timeline to receive
grant funding for nearly half of it, officials said.
Bill Morris, the city’s director of public services, said that
although Costa Mesa was recently awarded $2.1 million from the Orange
County Transportation Authority for the three separate projects, the
city must put them out to bid by June to receive the money.
That means the council must find room in the 2003-04 budget for
$2.5 million in matching funds to bring the projects to fruition.
Councilman Gary Monahan, who is likely to hold the key leadership
position on the dais during the budget process next year, is in favor
of finding the money for the projects, but warned it wouldn’t be
easy.
State officials are looking to balance their budget woes on the
backs of local governments, and the city must become more careful
about how it spends it money, he said.
Councilman-elect Allan Mansoor, who campaigned heavily for basic
road repairs, said he would try to find room for the road
rehabilitation projects on the 2003-04 budget.
“What I would like to do is start from scratch and zero out the
budget by examining, closely, everything that is in it, instead of
just carrying things over from year to year,” Mansoor said. “Street
improvement is the very least people should be expecting from their
government.”
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