Newport does toll roads
Paul Clinton
Paying for a quicker trip from point A to point B doesn’t seem to
cause much consternation for residents in Newport Beach, who trail
only Rancho Santa Margarita as top users of Orange County toll roads.
“We’re a wealthy community,” Mayor Tod Ridgeway said about the
news. “We find convenience over cost to be the choice.”
Officials with the toll road operator, the Transportation Corridor
Agencies, discovered the data after analyzing driving habits by
county residents for the month of June.
Newport Beach ranks No. 2 on the lists of cities with residents
who have the highest number of the FasTrak transponders, highest
number of FasTrak accounts and also the percentage of city residents
who use the devices.
The transponders are beige-colored square sensors, about 2 inches
by 2 inches in size, that can be placed in a vehicle’s window. When a
vehicle with one of the devices passes under the antennae of a toll
station, the transponder device register the vehicle as having
traveled on the roadway.
Drivers are given the transponders if they open an account with
the toll road operator, a private company. Tolls on the paid roadways
cost $2.50 per trip with a device, a 50-cent savings from the $3 toll
for those who pay with cash.
Once residents open an account, they can apply for multiple
transponders. Ridgeway said he has “one on every car.”
Newport Beach’s 18,865 FasTrak accounts ranks No. 2 on the county
list.
About 46% of Newport Beach’s residents use a transponder. In
Rancho Santa Margarita, 88% of the residents possess a transponder.
Despite the high number of accounts, Newport Beach ranks much
lower on the list that ranks revenue from each city. It comes in at
seventh on the list. During June, city residents spent $296,500 in
tolls for the paid roadways, which include the San Joaquin Hills toll
road and Foothill toll road.
Toll road operators said the city ranked low on the toll totem
poll because much of the city is at the end of the road. There are
many other freeway options, including the San Diego Freeway, Costa
Mesa Freeway and Santa Ana Freeway.
Further inland, the toll road is the only option.
“Newport Coast is utilizing just a section of the toll road,”
spokeswoman Lisa Telles said. “It’s at the end.”
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