Residents cheer 17th Street plan
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- To the sound of uproarious applause from a standing-room
crowd Monday, the City Council unanimously approved a plan for East 17th
Street that many community members hope will block any future attempts to
widen the road.
Before voting, the council listened to about an hour of public
comments on the issue while the rowdy City Hall audience cheered, booed
and waved double-sided fliers that read “Plan B is better. Vote tonight!”
and “Four lanes forever! Vote now!”
“There’s something inherently wrong about this plan, and you need to
recognize that,” said Mark Rogers, a Costa Mesa resident and a planner
for TRG Land Inc. in Newport Beach.
The council had to choose between two options. Plan B, the one the
council chose, has narrower turn lanes and bus bays -- between 10 and 10
1/2 feet wide -- and the option for a pedestrian-oriented shopping area.
Plan E called for wider turn lanes and bus bays -- between 11 and 13 feet
wide -- and the option to add two lanes to the street at a later date.
A main differences between the two plans is that Plan E would allow
the city to apply for Measure M money.
Approved by voters in November 1990, Measure M raised the sales tax by
half a cent for countywide transportation improvement projects. The
Orange County Transportation Authority administers the Measure M sales
tax revenue.
In 1999, the agency pledged to distribute close to $4 million in
federal grants if the street is widened to six lanes.
The city won’t receive any of that money, although they still could
reapply for other funding.
The city could have been eligible for enough to cover at least the
design costs, estimated at $250,000, if the council chose the option with
wider lanes.
The most of the 20 or so speakers supported Plan B, saying that Plan E
would have paved the way for the street to be widened to six lanes in the
future, which they think would increase traffic and hurt businesses and
property values.
Many also said they think widening the street would only benefit
Newport Beach residents who use the street to get to the Costa Mesa
Freeway, adding that Newport Beach should solve some of its own traffic
problems, possibly by lengthening the the freeway.
Mayor Libby Cowan said the city now will have to come up with other
plans for the area. She has not supported six lanes on East 17th Street.
“We have work to do,” she said. “We are going to have to take the
widening off the master plan of arterial highways if we don’t want to go
to six lanes. I too am tired of unilateral moves by Newport Beach. But I
think staff has taken a lot of heat on our behalf by the community, all
of it undeserved.”
Not everyone supported Plan B, however.
Charlotte Johnson, a Costa Mesa resident on the East 17th Street Ad
Hoc Committee, was one of a few who spoke in favor of Plan E.
“I’m not for six lanes either,” she said. “Some of you are talking
like Plan E is six lanes. I hate to admit it, but traffic is there and at
some point in the future, they are going to widen it and it is going to
take taxpayers’ money. Right now, there will be no money for anything if
we choose Plan B. And with Plan E, we’ll get improvements, traffic
signals and bus turnouts.”
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