Who wants to buy a bridge?
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To bridge or not to bridge ... Is that the question? No. First we
need to know where we want to end up, and then we can decide whether
bridges over the Santa Ana River at Gisler Avenue and at West 19th
Street will take us there or to some place we definitely don’t want
to go.
What kind of city do we want Costa Mesa to become? Like Downey,
“where the freeways meet?” Like the cities you pass through on the
freeway on your way to somewhere else: Carson, City of Commerce, City
of Industry, Vernon? Where the grinding of trucks and the din of car
and motorcycle traffic starts at 5:30 in the morning and roars on
until after midnight? Or would you rather live in a place with air
you can breathe and homes you can be at ease in, a place where you
hear children at play in the daytime and the rustling of leaves at
night?
Why are these two bridges still on the county’s Master Plan of
Arterial Highways long after Newport Beach saw to it that the
proposed Coast Freeway and the extension of the Costa Mesa Freeway to
Coast Highway were deleted? Is it because the powers who want to keep
the bridges on the county plan are losing sleep over the
long-suffering commuters stuck in traffic? Hardly.
Having those bridges on the county plan allows neighboring cities,
specifically Newport Beach and Fountain Valley, to develop their
lands to maximum intensity. They can treat those paper bridges in
their environmental reports as though they were real. This allows
them to approve major, high-intensity development projects that they
could not otherwise approve because of their traffic impacts.
As long as the Gisler and West 19th Street bridges remain on the
county plan, higher-intensity development in neighboring cities will
bring more and more regional commuter and truck traffic to Costa
Mesa’s streets, including residential streets. The increased traffic
will eventually force the widening of those streets and increase
pressure to actually construct the bridges.
For example, those paper bridges will allow Newport Beach to
approve major new development while keeping a narrow,
pedestrian-friendly Coast Highway corridor through Mariner’s Mile and
Corona del Mar. Regional traffic could be diverted away from Coast
Highway to drive through the heart of Costa Mesa’s Eastside and
Westside. (Motorists would avoid Coast Highway by using Dover Drive,
then traveling west along East 19th Street, across Newport Boulevard
and then over West 19th Street and the bridge to Brookhurst Street in
Huntington Beach. The return trip would, of course, cover the same
route in reverse.) As a result, residential streets in Costa Mesa’s
Eastside as well as the residential portion of West 19th Street
(Freedom Homes, Newport Terrace and Marina View tracts) from Federal
Avenue westward, would carry the additional regional traffic.
Raise your hand if you think the developers who want the bridges
at Gisler and West 19th are worrying their heads about the plight of
commuters -- Newport Beach and Fountain Valley may have a bridge to
sell you.
ELEANOR EGAN
Costa Mesa
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Eleanor Egan is a former Costa Mesa planning
commissioner.
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