Council pens retort to Fountain Valley plan
Lolita Harper
The City Council wasted no time Monday retaliating against a
surprising blow from Fountain Valley officials about the construction
of a bridge at Gisler Avenue, a strike Costa Mesa officials said
undermined a long history of cooperation between the two cities.
At the prompting of many residents, council members took emergency
action to draft and approve a resolution that strongly criticized
Fountain Valley for an attempt to study a bridge that would link the
two cities by crossing the Santa Ana River.
Fountain Valley officials are requesting $500,000 from the Orange
County Transportation Authority for “preliminary engineering,
environmental review and design funds spanning the Santa Ana River
from Garfield Avenue to Gisler Avenue,” a Fountain Valley staff
report read.
“Any action to apply for OCTA funding at this time is wholly
inconsistent without cooperative history,” read the Costa Mesa
council’s resolution.
Fountain Valley leaders’ approval of such a request would “force
Costa Mesa to take action at each and every step to oppose this
action,” the resolution stated.
Costa Mesa leaders also blasted Fountain Valley for trying to slip
the item through the political process without prior notification or
a public hearing. The $500,000 request was placed on the “consent
calendar” portion of the Fountain Valley City Council agenda, which
contains various items that are considered routine city business and
are generally passed in one fell swoop.
Costa Mesa Assistant City Atty. Tom Wood said the council was
fully within its right to call for an emergency action because the
issue was something that came to the city’s attention after Friday,
when Costa Mesa’s agenda was publicly posted.
Fountain Valley City Manager Raymond Kromer on Monday denied any
implication that his city was trying to sneak anything through and
said he called Costa Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder Monday to give
him a heads up. The call came after Roeder had already heard about
the request from concerned residents.
The emergency resolution was to be sent immediately to Fountain
Valley representatives Tuesday because the council was expected to
make its decision on the item last night, to meet a Dec. 20 grant
funding deadline.
Cindy Brenneman, president of the Mesa Verde Homeowners’ Assn.,
said she would work diligently to oppose Fountain Valley’s effort and
gathered a group of residents who planned to speak out against the
proposal at Fountain Valley’s meeting.
“You bet I’ll be there,” she said Monday.
Paul Freeman, spokesman for C.J. Segerstrom and Sons and South
Coast Plaza Partnership, said the dynasty family would opposed the
Gisler Avenue bridge and planned to send either a representative or a
letter to the Fountain Valley City Council meeting.
Bridges at Gisler Avenue and 19th Street that would cross the
Santa Ana River are included in county transportation plans, but
Costa Mesa and various other cities have been working for years to
get them removed.
Costa Mesa officials have largely led that fight, contending that
either bridge would simply create a “cut-through” for drivers looking
for a shortcut to the Costa Mesa Freeway.
Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach
commissioned a study -- named the Santa Ana River Crossing Study --
to research the effects of removing the bridges from the county
master plan.
A consensus among Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley
would be required to remove the Gisler bridge, while Newport Beach,
Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa would have to agree to delete the
19th Street bridge.
No agreement among the cities has been made on either bridge.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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