Newport wary over proposed CenterLine
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- They’re not sold on light rail.
Worried about the potential for increased passenger loads at John
Wayne Airport, city officials have questioned the environmental review on
the $2.3-billion CenterLine project.
The city’s concerns about the project come on the eve of the Orange
County Transportation Authority’s expected decision to choose a route for
the massive public works project.
“The fact that there’s a light rail connection may make Orange County
more attractive” to visitors, Mayor Gary Adams said. “To the extent that
it contributes to John Wayne, we have some concerns long term.”
Newport Beach joins a host of other cities that have expressed
concerns, or outright opposition, to CenterLine. Orange, Santa Ana and
Anaheim have led the charge. On Tuesday, the Anaheim City Council voted 3
to 2 -- with one council member calling the project “a colossal waste of
money” -- to back the project.
One day before the agency’s deadline for public comments, on Feb. 14,
Newport Beach submitted a report citing its concerns with the county’s
environmental analysis.
The report, prepared by a city advisory committee, criticized the
transit agency’s environmental review, saying it “fails to discuss,
identify, analyze and mitigate the project’s impacts of increased
passenger loads to John Wayne Airport” and “the jewel of Newport Beach --
San Diego Creek and the Back Bay.”
At its March 12 board meeting, the transit agency is expected to pick
a section of the 28-mile route to build.
None of the proposed sections of the route cut across any Newport
Beach boundary, OCTA spokesman George Urch said. Agency officials don’t
agree that the rail line will automatically add passengers at the
airport, Urch said.
“We don’t feel it’s going to add capacity in any form,” Urch said. “It
sounds like we need to put them on our radar screen.”
Costa Mesa, in contrast, has backed the rail project, along with
Fullerton and Irvine.
Newport Beach officials said they aren’t necessarily against
CenterLine, they just want their concerns addressed. Any perception that
the project would lead to some form of expansion at John Wayne sets them
on edge, Vice Mayor Tod Ridgeway said.
“It goes to the perceived fear rather than the reality,” Ridgeway
said. “It demands more study. If there is an impact, you have to mitigate
it.”
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