City gets set for Centerline fight
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Lolita Harper
City leaders Monday warned of a looming political battle over
plans for a regional transportation line, saying partnering cities
most likely would not support spending $1 million to study an option
to underground the track through Costa Mesa, an idea that council
members predict would be most favorable.
The campaign for a Centerline light rail system may require a
hard-line stance from city leaders to ensure the city’s best
interest, Councilwoman Libby Cowan said while updating her council
colleagues on the project’s progress during a City Council study
session on Monday.
Cowan, who has worked diligently over the past year to launch a
light rail system that would link Costa Mesa with Santa Ana and
Irvine, said city business owners support examining the option to put
portions of the rail system underground and that city leaders must
convince their counterparts in other cities of the benefits of at
least studying it.
“If indeed Centerline is going to be successful and be built, they
cannot build it without Costa Mesa,” Cowan said. “And it is essential
that we have the undergrounding studied in the preliminary stage.”
The cost to study that preference would be shared by all three
cities, though arguably, the project would only benefit Costa Mesa.
That imbalance will deter endorsements from other city leaders, she
warned said.
“This will become a political battle,” she added.
The road toward a light rail system serving Orange County has been
fraught with political potholes. The project was once envisioned as a
grandiose, 28-mile system that would link the county from north to
south, but the plan was shelved after much opposition.
During her tenure as mayor in 2001, Cowan reignited Centerline
discussions and sparked the interests of the Santa Ana and Irvine
mayors -- the latter of whom is Cowan’s indirect boss, as she works
for the city of Irvine.
The three city leaders prompted renewed interest in the project
from Orange County Transportation Authority officials. Plans for an
18-mile Centerline were back on track. Political opposition abounded
in Irvine from residents who opposed a rail running through the heart
of the city, and plans were again reworked.
Leaders finally compromised on an 11-mile system from the Santa
Ana transportation center, through the South Coast Metro portion of
Costa Mesa, to John Wayne Airport and finally ending at UC Irvine.
Cost estimates of this latest proposal are about $1.3 billion,
officials said.
Peter Naghavi, city transportation manager, said the option to
underground would tack on another $150 million. County transportation
funds, secured by Measure M, offer $345 million over four years for
the project, Naghavi said. The city of Irvine added $126 million to
the pot, he said. The remainder of the money would come from federal
grants.
Considering the scope of the regional project -- which would offer
unparalleled benefits as far as traffic and the environment go -- the
$1-million to $2-million difference in price to study the possibility
of underground tracks is insignificant, Cowan said.
“When you look at a project that will be in the billions, that is
really nothing,” she said.
The council will decide Monday whether to send a letter to county
transportation officials formally requesting the underground option
be studied.
Costa Mesa’s request for the underground study does not mean city
officials have predetermined the outcome, Naghavi said.
“[It] doesn’t necessarily mean we want to underground, but just to
study questions we may have 10 to 20 years down the road,” Naghavi
said. “And if we don’t, we’ll lose that window and those questions
will never be answered.”
County officials hope to have the Centerline project under
construction by 2007, with the first segments running by 2009,
Naghavi said.
That is, if everything goes according to plan, he said.
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