Letter to the Editor
If Newport Beach were a house, it would have star quality . . . at
least for the TV series “This Old House.” The city’s circuits are
overloaded. The owners insist that the infrastructure is so bad they
can’t plug in any more big appliances like an expanded Koll Center. It
needs remodeling.
What really came through from the Greenlight supporters was their
anger over the city’s failure to address their needs.
Newport Beach’s underlying problem, I submit, is the same as Costa
Mesa’s: These two built-out cities have accumulated side effects from
urbanization that are already intolerable, and their citizens see little
reason to hope that their quality of life will get any better in the
future.
The need is the same in both cities: Roll back the side effects from
the carpet of urbanization that has been unrolled over us. Fix our
circulation systems so that going out to pick up a carton of milk is no
longer a major expedition. Restore the suburban look and feel of the
community . . . the more human scale of decades ago. In a word: Don’t
just accommodate the status quo, get proactive.
That Newport Beach is not more proactive about quality of life issues
is surprising. For a sandbox so full of heavy hitters, I’m surprised
there’s so little thinking outside of the box. Where are the high
concepts and follow-through on, for example, traffic?
Stupefying traffic congestion contributes to Newport’s reduced quality
of life: Coast Highway congestion drives away customers from Mariners
Mile businesses, Newport commuters fume over the inordinate time it takes
to get to and from the Costa Mesa Freeway. Need we mention summer season?
Here’s a high concept, Newport: Don’t build an aboveground freeway
that bypasses Mariners Mile and West Newport. Rather, build it
underground, under Costa Mesa. Be able to zip up to Costa Mesa -- beyond
Triangle Square -- in under a minute from entrances near Coast Highway at
Dover Drive, Newport Boulevard and Brookhurst Avenue. Or, when you want
to go up coast, enter at Dover and exit at Brookhurst without stopping.
Cost? About $45,000 per foot is a good rule of thumb . . . the amount
some Newport Beach frontages go for. Where to find the money? First of
all, fill 90% of the pot with grants from higher governmental levels.
Then exploit the talents of your doughty citizens and city staff who
recently were able to acquire the Sunset Ridge property from Caltrans at
its 1966 price.
And don’t forget the large amount of “other peoples’ money” that your
resourceful city staff found to help pay for the Arches rebuild, even
when the project didn’t qualify for the usual transportation grants. Of
course Goat Hill’s downtown would benefit, so Costa Mesans would want to
join their Mackerel Flats brethren in promoting the underground freeway.
And finally, don’t forget your lobbying power in Sacramento and D.C.
You were able to keep freeways out of Newport when you wanted to; you
should be able to put them back in -- and underground -- if you want to.
If you remodel your old house, maybe in the future you won’t have to
forego plugging in useful appliances.
TOM EGAN
Costa Mesa
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