Meeting draws unexpected crowd
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Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- City officials got a surprise this week when more than
60 homeowners stuffed a tiny meeting room to discuss city plans for
widening East 17th Street.
The monthly meetings have drawn fewer than 10 people since they began
in January.
“I wish I had known there would be so many people,” said Mayor Gary
Monahan, who ran Tuesday’s meeting. “I would have moved it to the Council
Chambers.”
The meetings began after the city formed a committee of merchants and
homeowners in January to discuss its plans for widening East 17th Street
from four to six lanes.
But in a string of contentious meetings with city transportation
officials, the committee overwhelmingly opposed the plan. The group
instead has pushed for bus turnouts and new landscaping.
But the city could potentially lose $4.5 million in federal grants if
it does not widen the road, Peter Naghavi, the city’s director of
transportation services, has said.
Naghavi predicts even more traffic will flood the area in the next 20
years.
Since the initial discussions began, Naghavi and transportation staff
have created a compromised plan -- one they say would not necessarily
preclude the grants.
The “hybrid” plan calls for six lanes on East 17th Street from Orange
Avenue to Santa Ana Avenue only.
Monahan on Wednesday said the hybrid plan shows transportation staff
and the committee are moving closer to an agreement.
“It solves the traffic flow problem and would have much less of an
impact on merchants and businesses there,” he said.
But Dan Perlmutter, who owns the shopping center that includes
Mother’s Market, said the compromise still doesn’t work for business
owners.
“It would create more problems,” said Perlmutter, who said he is
afraid a six-lane thoroughfare would destroy the street’s “mom-and-pop”
feel. “It destroys something beautiful, and that’s not going to fly.”
Despite his differences with city officials, Perlmutter still dropped
by Monahan’s recently opened restaurant for corned beef and beer after
the meeting.
“We made niceties,” he said. “And agreed that two gentlemen can
disagree and still shake hands.”
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