ON THE ISSUES
- Share via
* NEW CODE REGULATIONS
Worthington said he favors using code enforcement officers to urge
voluntary compliance and would prefer that the city concentrate on one
code concern at a time instead of “an entire menu.”
The process has worked well for the sanitary district, he said, as
code enforcement officers first encourage people to remove trash
containers from the street before requiring them to be out of view
between trash collection days.
* WEST SIDE SPECIFIC PLAN
The city should “clean up the area first and go after owners who are
not keeping their sites up to code second,” Worthington said.
He said he supports discouraging excess numbers of people in homes by
limiting services to support only the number of people who should be
living in a residence.
* 17TH STREET IMPROVEMENT PLAN
Worthington said he is against widening 17th Street because “too many
businesses and too many residents do not want this street widened” but is
in favor of bus turnouts, center divider islands, left-turn signals and
landscaping.
* CITY BUDGET
He said he is opposed to Measure O, which would allow the City Council
to raise hotel taxes from 6% to 8%, because the tax does not benefit the
hotel industry.
“Were these dollars used to create tourism and increase hotel stays,
they would have positive purpose,” he said.
Instead, Worthington said he supports franchising city trash
collection services to help generate tax-free revenue for parks.
* TRAFFIC PROBLEMS
Calling Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue the worst two streets in
Costa Mesa, Worthington said he favors looking into a variable lane plan.
He said removing traffic islands between Brookhurst Street and Harbor
Boulevard would allow six lanes.
In the morning, two “control lanes” in the middle could be used for
eastbound traffic, increasing the number of eastbound lanes from two to
four. In the evening, those middle lanes could by used for westbound
traffic, Worthington said.
Traffic lights should be reset to accommodate more cars, left-turn
signals should be added and the speed limit should be reduced from 50 mph
to 40 mph, he said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.