Activists gather signatures to block 17th Street widening
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Andrew Glazer
EAST SIDE -- Banners are flying, petitions circulating and momentum
building in opposition to city plans to widen East 17th Street.
“This is a strip shopping center street, not a highway. This is not
the place to just blow traffic through,” said Brett Hemphill, owner of
Hemphill’s Rugs and Carpets on East 17th Street and member of the 17th
Street Merchants and Community Assn.
The recently formed association, made up of residents and business
owners, has in about a week gathered more than 1,500 signatures of people
who oppose the expansion plans. They hope to deliver 5,000 names to the
City Council by the end of the month.
The city plans to widen 17th Street from four to six lanes because of
surging traffic levels.
Peter Naghavi, Costa Mesa’s director of transportation, has said the
city could lose $4.5 million in federal grants if it does not widen at
least part of East 17th to six lanes.
The city formed a committee of East Side merchants and homeowners in
January to help engineers plan the project. The citizens committee and
engineers have remained at an impasse even after seven sometimes very
heated monthly meetings.
“We’ve been talking about the same issues over and over,” Naghavi
said. “We agreed that we may disagree, but we both understand each
other’s concerns. We’re hoping to get closer to something workable.”
But merchants and homeowners in the area overwhelmingly oppose any
street widening; they formed the association to have a voice in the
issue.
The merchants, who met with Naghavi on Tuesday, say a wider East 17th
Street would threaten the streets “mom-and-pop” feel. They advocate
planting new trees and adding bus turnouts along the street.
Members of the city-formed committee -- who in the spring, feeling as
though discussions with the city were going nowhere, spun off into a
grass-roots neighborhood organization -- are hanging bold-lettered
banners from their shops and gathering signatures from other project
opponents.
“We’ll get thousands more signatures if we need to,” said
environmentalist Doug Bader, who has helped organize the
signature-gathering effort. “We’ll march the streets. We’re just not
going to go for it. We won’t concede this thing.”
The neighborhood association also commissioned a volunteer to develop
an alternative plan for the street.
“I’d be happy to see any plan,” Naghavi said. “But we have spent
hundreds of thousands of dollars on consultants and had our own staff --
all degreed engineers, architects and planners -- putting our heads
together. I’d be interested to see any plan that satisfies the level of
[traffic] service we need to provide and the businesses equally.”
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