Trolley service good, inaction bad
Carolyn Wood
Recently the following announcement appeared on the city’s website,
under Ken Frank, city manager, Friday updates:
“Weekend Trolley Service: In accord with a grant which we received
two years ago from Orange County Transportation Authority, the city
will be initiating a 10-month pilot project for weekend parking at
the Act V lot with tram service to the Downtown. This project was
approved some time ago and the funds are included in the current
year’s budget. The program will start on Labor Day and run through
next June. All of the costs are paid by the OCTA pilot grant.”
At first glance, I thought this was good news. The idea of a beach
shuttle came up more than four years ago as a way of freeing up
Downtown parking spaces from beach parking to increase availability
for residents, visitors and shoppers. This idea fell on deaf ears,
but gained support with the success of the free shuttle experiment
when shuttle ridership more than doubled over the previous year. In
accordance with this success, Councilwoman Toni Iseman again
presented the idea of the weekend/holiday beach shuttle to the
Parking, Traffic and Circulation Committee. The committee voted to
recommend to the council that the city apply for a grant from OCTA.
This issue was on the council agenda for Dec. 17, 2002. Prior to
this meeting city staff had decided to add another project. Rather
than supporting the Parking, Traffic and Circulation Committee’s
recommendation, staff recommended purchasing a new trolley to expand
services farther south along the highway during the summer. Steve
May, director of Public Works/City Engineer, said that “staff did not
support the [Parking, Traffic and Circulation Committee]
recommendation on the basis that it would not provide sufficient
service to induce visitors to use the service and that parking in the
Downtown is not a great problem in the nonsummer months.”
Councilman Wayne Baglin noted one of the criteria for the grant
money was to reduce commuter trips and the Parking, Traffic and
Circulation Committee recommendation would encourage motorists to
stop at Act V rather than coming into Downtown. In response, Frank
commented, “that if the goal is to get more people out of their cars
and on the bus, there are thousands of parking spaces on the weekend
in Aliso Viejo and hundreds of surplus buses.”
After much discussion of the pros and cons of each proposal,
Councilman Steve Dicterow moved, Baglin seconded, and with Iseman’s
support, the council voted 3 to 2 “to direct staff to submit two
applications to the OCTA.”
Now for the bad news. The grant for weekend shuttle service for
beach-goers was approved, but the city has no implementation plan;
the money is in, but to date, the council has not even discussed a
pilot project. Staff refers to the project as “tram service to the
Downtown” and anticipates having the tram travel only between the Act
V parking lot and the bus depot, which misses the original intent of
a weekend beach shuttle to serve beachgoers and remove beach parking
from Downtown streets.
Without any promotion and without taking passengers all the way to
Main Beach Park, the beach shuttle will be dead on arrival, another
piecemeal decision without any planning that will result in a doomed
project and a waste of taxpayers’ money.
* CAROLYN WOOD is a Laguna Beach resident, a member of the
Parking, Traffic and Circulation Committee and president of the
Laguna Canyon Conservancy.
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