City offers alternative to bridges
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The City Council reinforced its opposition to two proposed bridges on
the county’s master highway plan Monday, pledging support instead for
a series of highway improvements.
The proposed bridges would cross the Santa Ana River, connecting
Costa Mesa to Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, one at Banning
Avenue and 19th Street and another at Garfield and Gisler avenues.
The bridges are on the Orange County Transportation Authority’s
Master Plan of Arterial Highways, which maps out the county’s future
transportation system, but the environmental report is stalled, since
there’s no agreement between involved cities to push anything
forward.
“This city, along with Costa Mesa, opposes the bridge over
Garfield and the bridge over Banning, but Newport Beach doesn’t,”
Mayor Connie Boardman said at Monday’s meeting.
The council requested that city planners assume that bridges
aren’t on the traffic model for future planning purposes and
recommended an alternative compromise in which all city would undergo
street improvements to make up for the removal of the bridges.
Improvements could include adding lanes or widening streets to
accommodate future traffic growth.
The city hopes that supporting the alternative will break the
deadlock between the cities and allow deletion plans to move forward,
city officials say.
“The process is now at a standstill, and there’s the potential for
it to completely unravel,” said Ed DeMuelle, president of the
Southeast Huntington Beach Neighborhood Assn. “The compromise with
the city of Costa Mesa allows us the possibility to move forward.”
Public meetings scheduled for Pacific City project
A massive development project slated for nearly 31 acres of
beachfront property in Downtown Huntington Beach will be the object
of discussion at a series of public meetings scheduled next month.
Pacific City, to be built in the lot bound by Pacific Coast
Highway, Atlanta Avenue, Huntington and 1st streets, will include 516
condominium units, a 400-room luxury resort and 240,000 square feet
of shopping, restaurants, entertainment and office space.
Plans for Pacific City show the area spotted with swimming pools,
parks and tree-lined pedestrian walkways that lead to the retail
promenade and to Downtown Huntington Beach. Groundbreaking for the
project is scheduled for 2004.
The Planning Commission will hold its first study sessions on the
Pacific City project a 5:15 p.m. Sept. 9 and 23 in Room B-8 at City
Hall. The public comment period for the environmental report is
scheduled to start in late September, and the Planning Commission’s
public hearing process is set to begin in February 2004.
For more information on the proposed project, contact Scott Hess
at (714) 536-5554.
Parkside Estates parcel under city jurisdiction
A state agency approved the transfer of five acres in Huntington
Beach from county to city jurisdiction. Once the annexation is
finalized, the 40-acre parcel slated to become Parkside Estates will
be managed by the city, rather than split between city and the
county.
Landowner and developer Shea Homes will no longer have to seek
county approval to build Parkside Estates, which would have 171
single-family homes, 8.2 acres of public parks and 3.3 acres of open
space.
Local environmentalists hope that a transfer of land from city to
county hands, will lead police to crackdown on paintball players.
City police, rather than county sheriffs, will be responsible for
patrol of the area.
“Maybe now, with more police enforcement, police could respond to
paintballers,” Bixby said.
The swap was approved by the Local Area Formation Commission on
Aug. 13, but still needs City Council approval.
The project was approved by the City Council last October and is
now awaiting approval by the California Coastal Commission. The
Coastal Commission has not yet set a public hearing date.
Huck Finn Fishing Derby at the pier Saturday
The Pacific Ocean is far from the Mississippi River, and the sand
hardly the frontier, but no one will care this weekend when children
dressed like Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer and Becky Thatcher flock to cast
their lines into the water.
Children are invited to dress in their favorite frontier garb and
bring their own fishing poles for the 40th annual Huck Finn Fishing
Derby on Saturday.
The event will be held at the Huntington Beach Pier from 9:30 a.m.
to noon, with registration starting at 8 a.m. A small amount of bait
will be available. More bait can be purchased at the pier.
Prizes include fishing poles, bicycles, fishing passes and
skateboards.
For information, call Dottie Hughes at (714) 536-5262.
Commission resignation leads to Livengood return
When Planning Commissioner Don Stanton resigns his seat on the
board next week, a familiar face will take his place.
Former planning commissioner Tom Livengood, who served on the
board for eight years, will replace Stanton, who is moving to
Victorville.
Stanton’s resignation is effective Aug. 29. Livengood will take
over at the next meeting.
Livengood made an unsuccessful bid, at the urging of many
residents, for Dave Garofalo’s seat when the former councilman and
mayor stepped down in January 2002.
Councilwoman Cathy Green, who appointed Livengood, believes that
his experience will be an asset to the commission, which has been
grappling with the fate of the controversial desalination plant since
May.
“He certainly knows planning, he’s willing to do it, and he’s got
so much experience that he can hit the ground running,” Green said.
“Right now, there’s so many things going on in planning, I think he
can really take a leadership role.”
New restaurant
opens its doors
A new multi-ethnic restaurant opened in Surf City this month, the
first of what owners hope will be a chain.
The Lazy Dog Cafe is owned and operated by restaurant veteran Tom
Simms and his son, Chris. They describe the restaurant, which serves
Chinese, Italian, South American and French dishes, as American with
a touch of Asian sophistication and European flair.
“The menu’s more upscale, there’s more to choose from, and they
have a full-on bar,” said Ann Oullette, spokeswoman for the Lazy Dog
Cafe.
The Lazy Dog Cafe is at 16310 Beach Blvd., south of the San Diego
Freeway in the Target/Pavilions shopping center. For reservations,
call (714) 500-1140.
“You can bring your family, but if you want to go for a romantic
dinner, you can do that also,” Oullette said. “They cater to both.”
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