Cutting at a piece of modern art
Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- It’s a mystery that has baffled city officials and
Caltrans workers for years.
And they all have the same question: “Why would anyone do something
like that?”
Sure, there have been more gruesome mysteries than the rusty padlocks
that adorn the fences erected on top of the city’s freeway bridge.
And officials are not even sure if it amounts to vandalism or
graffiti.
But they do want to know why.
Early Thursday morning, Caltrans maintenance workers removed more than
40 padlocks that were snapped on to the fences on the Bay Street bridge
that runs above the tail-end of the Costa Mesa Freeway.
It wasn’t the first time, nor will it probably be the last, that these
locks will have to be cut, said Bill Morris, the city’s public services
director.
“If somebody finds out why people put these locks up there, I’d like
to know why on earth they do it,” he said with an exasperated laugh.
He said the padlocks do not pose a public hazard or problems to
freeway traffic.
“It’s just an eyesore,” he said. “And we always get complaints about
it.”
Morris guessed that maybe somebody is using the fences as an outlet
for their creative urges.
“Maybe they think it’s modern art or something, I don’t know,” he
said. “But I’m very, very curious.”
The fences that are part of the overpasses, however, fall under
Caltrans’ jurisdiction.
The last time workers found these locks in Costa Mesa was on the
Fairview Road bridge above the San Diego Freeway about a year and a half
ago, said Rose Melgoza, spokeswoman for Caltrans.
The padlocks were not uniform but seemed to be of different kinds in
terms of shapes and sizes, she said. Some were regular square locks that
are opened with keys, and a few others were number locks.
But the problem is not what Caltrans would consider serious or a high
priority, Melgoza said.
“It’s probably just schoolkids who have nothing better to do,” she
said. “We don’t treat it as any real type of vandalism. It’s just
unsightly.”
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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