Highway onramp has residents concerned
Torus Tammer
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- Residents and the California Department of
Transportation are one step closer to resolving a dispute over highway
construction.
After meeting last month with residents who live near the Warner
Avenue onramp to the San Diego Freeway, Caltrans has agreed to put up a
concrete safety barrier. The agency also will stop working at night, said
Beth Beeman, Caltrans’ spokeswoman. The residents had been concerned
about noise and loss of privacy since Caltrans began widening the ramp in
July.
Duane Kasulka, whose backyard faces the ramp, was one of the residents
unhappy with the project. He took action when a Caltrans bulldozer began
removing foliage from behind his house that had served as a privacy
shield and noise barrier between his home and the freeway. Kasulka said
he jumped a fence, approached a contractor and insisted that the work
stop until he could meet with Caltrans officials.
“He got two cuts at it before I got over the fence to talk to him,”
Kasulka recalled.
Residents enlisted the help of Councilwoman Laurann Cook, who
contacted Caltrans District 12 Manager Ken Nelson and informed him of the
residents’ concerns.
“I relayed the concerns of Kasulka and other citizens who felt that
they hadn’t been sufficiently notified about the project and its
magnitude,” Cook said. “Mr. Nelson stopped everything and promised that
no further vegetation removal would occur until a meeting took place.”
Despite the Caltrans concessions after the Aug. 10 meeting, the
residents say they would like to see more changes.
“We want the ramp further away from our houses, but Caltrans had
planned for them to be closer,” Kasulka said.
Cook said she and her city colleagues agree with the residents.
“We have a good dialogue with Caltrans,” she said. “Mr. Nelson has
agreed to use two impartial engineers to look at the redesign of the ramp
and has expressed hopes of finding a solution within the next few weeks.”
Beeman has also met with city officials and residents about their
concerns.
“We have two customers to consider here,” she said. “The users and the
neighbors.”
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