Utility lines going under the ground
Lolita Harper
The unsightly orange cones and annoying traffic delays on 19th
Street are necessary evils for bringing the city a long-awaited
utility project that rids the Westside of towering utility lines.
Bill Morris, the city’s director of public services, said the
project will improve aesthetics on the Westside and free up a lot of
sidewalk space where the poles once stood. The project provides the
kinds of improvements residents wouldn’t necessarily notice until
they were done.
“Visibly it is very noticeable, or I should say not noticeable,”
Morris said.
The $2.3-million project, designed to place all phone, cable and
energy lines underground on 19th Street and Placentia Avenue, is
underway after various problems between the city and a financially
strapped energy company worked themselves out.
The result is a highly anticipated collaboration between Pacific
Bell, AT&T; Broadband and Southern California Edison -- which are
funding the project with money from rates charged specifically for
underground projects -- to put their overhead lines out of sight in
time for a street rehabilitation project for the same area, Morris
said.
The initiation of the utilities portion of the improvements paves
the way for a subsequent street repair project, for a Westside
facelift to cost about $10 million, Morris said.
City Councilman Gary Monahan said he was pleased to see the
fruition of a longtime council goal and hopes it would be the start
of a general trend of progress on the Westside.
“It’s taken some time with the problems with [Southern California]
Edison to finally get it started but it’s a great project,” Monahan
said. “Then the public area improvements will be finished and
hopefully that will roll into some private enhancement also.”
If the city was unable to coordinate plans to move utilities
underground on 19th Street and Placentia by June 30, 2003, it stood
to lose $2.95 million in federal grants.
Two years ago, the City Council approved two expensive projects:
the moving of utilities underground and the rehabilitation of areas
on 19th Street and Placentia.
The projects were seemingly unrelated, except that they would both
tear up the same areas of the streets. Officials said they wanted to
put the utilities underground before they rehabilitated the streets
so they could avoid cutting up streets they would have just spent
millions to fix.
The trouble stemmed from the schedule of each project’s funding:
Each was covered by different sources, with Southern California
Edison fronting about $2.1 million for the utility work, cable and
phone companies offering their piece and the subsequent street
improvements coming from federal grants and matching city funds,
officials said.
The city had secured its federal funding, competing against other
cities in the region for money allocated through the Orange County
Transit Authority, Morris said. However, the state’s energy crisis
put Southern California Edison in a poor financial position and, for
a time, the company was unable to commit to the project.
With its financial woes lessened, Edison recommitted to the work
and joined the phone and cable companies to provide the funding for
the work being done now.
Arizona pipeline was hired to do the construction required to
complete “the considerable amount of work,” Morris said. Workers will
wire new underground cables for the phone, cable and power company,
at which time each service provider would need to switch its systems
to use those channels, and then the existing overhead lines and poles
would be taken down.
Morris said the city will time its street rehabilitation project
to start accepting bids just as Arizona Pipeline is finishing up the
utility portion of the recabling.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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