ON THE AGENDA FAIRVIEW PARK Council...
ON THE AGENDA
FAIRVIEW PARK
Council members will discuss various portions of the Fairview Park
master plan tonight, including accomplishments, fundraising, grants
and future goals.
Fairview Park Plan Administrator Ron Molendyke, who was hired to
educate the community about the park, will report to the City Council
on the city’s progress on Fairview Park and potential plans.
The Fairview Park Master Plan was adopted Dec. 15, 1997. Since
then, numerous aspects of the plan, including proposals for paved
trails, parking structures, a cultural museum, botanical gardens and
the railroad, have been debated in City Hall.
City leaders have spent hours in the last few years reviewing
questionable items, holding public hearings and hiring experts to
conduct community workshops.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Residents are expected to offer ideas for the park and urge the
council to hurry up and implement the plans or stop spending money on
it and leave it alone.
AIRPORT FUNDING
Councilman Chris Steel will ask his colleagues to reconsider
funding a regional airport authority tonight, although city leaders
omitted the expense from the budget.
The Orange County Regional Airport Authority is a joint powers
organization with 14 member cities that was established to address
county air transportation needs. Steel is Costa Mesa’s representative
on the board.
Jack Wagner, executive director of the airport authority’s board,
has asked the city to continue its voluntary funding of $1,000 per
month to fund ongoing business operations.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Because of the anticipated belt-tightening due to state budget
woes, don’t expect the council to throw any money at an airport
battle, which is thought by most to be dead.
CENTERLINE OPTIONS
The council will decide tonight whether to send a letter to county
transportation officials formally requesting an underground rail
system option be studied.
Councilwoman Libby Cowan, who has worked diligently over the past
year to launch a light rail system that would link Costa Mesa with
Santa Ana and Irvine, said city business owners support examining the
option to put portions of the rail system underground and that city
leaders must convince their counterparts in other cities of the
benefits of at least studying it.
The cost to study that preference would be shared by all three
cities, though, arguably, the option would only benefit Costa Mesa.
That imbalance will deter endorsements from other city leaders and
cause a political battle, she warned.
But the 11-mile rail, set to run from Santa Ana to Irvine, cannot
be built without Costa Mesa, which links the two, Cowan said. It is
important that Costa Mesa be given the opportunity to at least study
the underground option, which city officials predict is the best
option.
Peter Naghavi, city transportation manager, said the option to
underground would tack on another $150 million. County transportation
funds secured by Measure M offer $345 million over four years for the
project, Naghavi said. The city of Irvine added $126 million to the
pot, he said. The rest of the money would come from federal grants.
The Centerline light rail system is set to travel -- for the most
part above ground -- from the Santa Ana transportation center,
through the South Coast Metro portion of Costa Mesa, to John Wayne
Airport and finally ending at UC Irvine. Cost estimates of this
latest proposal are about $1.3 billion, officials said.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Council members are expected to support the letter.
-- Compiled by Lolita Harper
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