19th Street bridge plan needs study
Robert Graham
One of the major issues confronting Costa Mesa today is how to
improve the Westside.
It’s not just about the perceived fears of an anxious few who live
close to 19th Street. It’s not about what is best for Newport Beach
or Huntington Beach or the Eastside. It’s about the Westside and
solving the Westside’s problems, which entails understanding all
Westside opportunities and pursuing those that best suit Westside
needs.
One opportunity that has never been considered objectively is the
idea of extending 19th Street to the beach.
This requires more than a traffic study. This needs to be an
all-inclusive study, looking at the economic and social benefits,
including employment changes and housing changes, that might result
from 19th Street going through. Many questions need to be asked and
answered before our city leaders should act on this issue, and the
answers can only come from a competent study done by knowledgeable
people.
A vocal few are against extending 19th Street to the beach and the
economic advantages this would bring to the area. In fact, they are
even against a study of the issue. What they advocate is what
presently exists: no connection to the beach, no economic
revitalization, isolation, stagnation and a failed Westside. How is
this the answer to the Westside’s problems?
Does the Westside have a problem? The Costa Mesa Redevelopment
Agency (which is the same people as on the City Council) thinks so.
It is considering increasing the size of the Westside Redevelopment
area by hundreds of acres, authorizing the condemnation of private
property, and rezoning a large area of existing commercial property
to residential.
Before this happens, shouldn’t the City Council know that
extending 19th Street to the beach might relieve the isolation and
stagnation that underlies the Westside’s problems? Could this
significantly increase property values and preclude the need for
massive government redevelopment?
Would 19th’s going through to the beach remove the need to widen
Victoria Street to three lanes in each direction? Would better beach
access increase individual Westside home values $100,000 to match Eastside home values?
Would 19th Street connecting to south Huntington Beach create a
large enough customer base to support a major shopping center with a
Vons or Albertson’s at 19th and Placentia Avenue? All these questions
need to answered.
To suggest that there is not widespread support for extending 19th
Street to the beach is not true. Four years ago, 386 Westside Costa
Mesa residents responded to a mailer regarding extending 19th Street
to the beach and 305 (79%) responded favorably.
Costa Mesa’s own city planning staff wanted a study of the
“implications, both positive and negative, to the Westside of not
extending West 19th Street across the Santa Ana River to Huntington
Beach” to be included in the Westside Specific Plan. Last month, 75%
(25 of 33 members) of the Community Redevelopment Action Committee
voted to ask the Costa Mesa City Council to do a study of the
economic and social implications of extending 19th Street to the
beach.
Many others have expressed support for a study of this issue in
letters to the newspapers and in speaking at City Council meetings.
Fixing the Westside is too important, affects too many people and
will define our city for too many years for us to fail. If extending
19th Street to the beach is one of the options we have that will
contribute to the revitalization of the Westside, it needs to be
understood and acted on.
* ROBERT GRAHAM is a Costa Mesa resident and longtime support of
plans to build a bridge at 19th Street.
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