County officials mull CenterLine options
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Deirdre Newman
Voters in Irvine rejected the CenterLine route through their city on
Tuesday, prompting the Orange County Transportation Authority board
to reexamine the entire project.
On Tuesday, 52% of Irvine voters opposed the CenterLine route. In
a ray of hope, though, 52% of voters also rejected an initiative that
would have banned the city’s participation in any light rail system.
The CenterLine project calls for an 11.4-mile light rail system to
connect Santa Ana, Costa Mesa and Irvine. Irvine’s portion would have
included a route from UC Irvine through the Irvine Business Complex
to John Wayne Airport.
In response to Irvine’s rebuff of the CenterLine route, the board
will consider the future of the light rail system at its July 14
meeting, including ending the route at John Wayne Airport, shifting
its efforts to bus and other rail options or terminating the project
altogether.
Costa Mesa and Santa Ana still support the project, Councilwoman
Libby Cowan said, adding that she spoke with Santa Ana Mayor Miguel
Pulido on Wednesday.
“We’re both very excited about the potential of CenterLine for our
communities,” Cowan said. “We also have several other cities like
Garden Grove and Anaheim and Fullerton and others who have also
expressed interest in being the next segment.”
Opposition to the light rail in Irvine started in the Woodbridge
community, but that area of the project was deleted from the route
and from the city’s general plan. The two initiatives were still put
on the Irvine ballot.
On Monday, the Costa Mesa City Council pulled a CenterLine item
from its consent calendar, where it would have been approved
automatically. The item involved a cooperative agreement with the
authority supporting preliminary engineering of the light rail
system, which began last June.
Cowan said one of the reasons the council delayed a vote on the
agreement was that city leaders are still meeting with the South
Coast Metro business community to confirm the route.
As it stands, the CenterLine route through Costa Mesa would enter
the city from Santa Ana from an elevated position headed south on
Bristol Street and then turn onto Anton Boulevard. After a stop on
Anton, it would begin going down to at-grade near Sakioka Drive and
continue at-grade until just before MacArthur Boulevard and Main
Street, where it would be elevated again.
“We’re looking at some alignments as opposed to Bristol to Anton,”
Cowan said. “The business community remains very supportive of the
CenterLine project.”
The council will reconsider the agreement at its June 16 meeting.
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