Sales tax plan may fund freeway fixes
Costa Mesa officials have started a two-pronged lobbying effort to
help relieve congestion on the streets where the Costa Mesa Freeway
(55) ends.
Step one: Make a fix for the freeway one of the centerpiece
projects of an extension of the Measure M transportation tax.
Measure M is a 20-year, half-cent sales tax that expires in 2011.
It has generated millions of dollars for large freeway projects as
well as routine street maintenance in Orange County’s 34 cities, and
the Orange County Transportation Authority has been floating trial
balloons to see whether voters would support an extension.
A reauthorization of Measure M would likely go to voters on the
November 2006 ballot. The transportation authority started asking
cities in June what projects they’d like covered by the tax
extension, which could be proposed for 20 or 30 years, said Orange
County Supervisor Bill Campbell, who chairs the transportation
authority’s board.
Costa Mesa officials are working through the League of California
Cities and the transportation authority to get a 55 Freeway project
considered.
“One of the reasons why we feel that the timing is good on this is
that most of the county freeway projects have all been completed,”
Costa Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder said.
Exactly what the 55 Freeway project would be is still uncertain,
but one concept involves several express lanes that would tunnel
under Newport Boulevard from just north of where the freeway now ends
at 19th Street to somewhere between 16th and 17th streets, Roeder
said. No cost estimates are available for such a project.
“I don’t think in looking at the tunnel option any of us
realistically look at it as a means of handling all of the traffic on
the 55,” Roeder said, but he added that it could help ease backups at
the four traffic lights on Newport Boulevard between 19th Street and
17th Street.
There’s also been talk of a plan for elevated ramps, but
“aesthetically it leaves a whole lot, I suspect, to be desired,”
Roeder said.
Business owners also worry commerce on Newport Boulevard would dry
up if some of the traffic is taken away. But congestion has already
spilled onto surrounding streets -- including East 19th Street and
Broadway -- and that’s a concern for the residents, Roeder said.
The city also has asked Caltrans to take an older plan for a 55
Freeway extension out of a master plan for the area.
The older plan would have extended the freeway east of Newport
Boulevard and cut through residential areas, swinging back toward
Newport south of 17th Street.
A recent telephone poll commissioned by the transportation
authority showed 69% of those polled would vote to extend Measure M
if they knew exactly what it would pay for. Respondents were
especially interested in improvements for the Santa Ana (5) and
Riverside (91) freeways.
Campbell said a final list of projects to be covered by the next
Measure M will likely be ready in March.
QUESTION
Which freeways should get priority for projects paid for with
Measure M funds? Call our Readers Hotline at (714) 966-4664 or send
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* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or [email protected].
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