Eastside wasn’t always a jewel
Lolita Harper
On any given day, you will see a family taking a walk down Orange
Avenue or pushing a stroller across 18th Street, or a child riding a
bike on Santa Ana Avenue.
The Eastside of Costa Mesa has long been considered a gem because
of its cozy neighborhood feel, and that atmosphere is in large part
because of aggressive action taken by the City Council in 1960.
Forty-three years ago, the City Council enacted a series of 1911
Act projects, in which it elected to widen many of the streets and
add sidewalks, curbs and gutters.
Bob Wilson, an expert on city history, was on the council in 1960.
He would later become mayor. He said he and his colleagues took the
lead to make the Eastside what it is today.
“It was the reason Costa Mesa turned out to be the jewel that it
is today,” Wilson said. “We didn’t do everything right, but we did a
good job, all things considered.”
The 1911 Act, in essence, says a City Council can simply enact
various projects in small increments, attacking certain problem
areas. Residents have the right to protest and force it to an
election, but they must have 51% opposition to halt it.
In the case of the Eastside, opposition never surfaced, Wilson
said, and as more and more was accomplished, the demand for the
projects grew.
“We spent hours and hours meeting with the community and
communicating to them the value of this act,” Wilson said. “As things
got done, more and more people were asking for it in there
neighborhood.”
All of a sudden, the Eastside had curb gutters and sidewalks, and
the city “cleaned up its act,” Wilson said. That action, more than
two decades ago, is still largely responsible for the high property
values in that part of the city and makes it attractive to young
families.
Wilson admits the various councils he served on, as well as those
that followed, ignored the Westside of the city. He hopes today’s
council can use the same foresight as in 1960 and use the 1911 Act to
transform the city again.
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