Costa Mesa’s tunnel vision
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Geoff West
So, what is it with the Costa Mesa City Council and tunnels?
First, it was the ill-advised CenterLine project, which they want
to bury and hide from view in our city as it snakes its way past the
Performing Arts Center. I can’t blame them too much for that because
I wouldn’t want to see that constant reminder of yet another bad
idea, either.
Now they unanimously endorse something called the Tri-Tunnel
Express, which is being proposed by the Orange County Regional
Airport Authority as a solution to our air transportation problems.
Let me see if I understand this: A tunnel solving air transportation
problems. It’s an interesting concept. Their plan is to chew three
huge tunnels -- 36 to 55 feet in diameter, depending on which company
is doing the chewing -- through the Santa Ana mountains, from Irvine
to the Inland Empire and Riverside County, to provide easier access
for South County residents to the airports in Ontario and one
proposed at the former March Air Force Base. The airport authority
apparently thinks this will go a long way in resolving our
transportation difficulties. It’s my understanding that the facility
at March -- now called the March Inland Port -- will be a cargo-only
facility, with no passenger traffic planned.
The airport authority spokesman tells us that this tunnel complex
will cost $3 billion and will be funded by bonds. He presented
graphics, which showed just what a moneymaker this project will be,
then went on to say, “If it doesn’t pencil out, it won’t be built.”
Seems to me that we already have a solution to Orange County’s air
transportation problems in place -- it’s called El Toro. That perfect
location is, of course, now all but dead and buried as a commercial
airport, and will apparently become the site of what should be called
the Larry Agran Memorial Park -- by far the biggest flimflam foisted
off on the people of Orange County since the bankruptcy.
By all means, let’s make it easy for our neighbors to the south to
get to an airport. These are the same folks who foreclosed the chance
of El Toro becoming a regional airport and the solution to our air
transportation problems. I certainly wouldn’t want them to be
inconvenienced as they drive to an airport in the Inland Empire on
their way to catch a flight to some exotic place.
To further complicate things, the proponents of the Tri-Tunnel
Express want to accelerate the study of this plan because, according
to them, we will be in total gridlock by 2010. Their solution is to
pay a bonus to the contracting consultants to complete this study in
a year, not the three years anticipated. Yes sir, that’s a great
idea. If you have a questionable plan, of course, you will want to
rush the study so citizens don’t have a shot at it until it’s a done
deal. As I watched the presentation before the City Council on Nov.
3, I found myself wondering how eager I will be to drive through a
tunnel under the mountains to Riverside knowing that this tunnel
complex will include a gas pipeline and cross at least four fault
lines? Do you recall the scare tactics used by the anti-El Toro
folks, showing the photo of an airliner apparently heading for a
crash into the mountains? How about a little geological shift (that’s
an earthquake for you newcomers) along the proposed route of this
tunnel complex? The explosion following the sheared gas line would
blow Saddleback Peak all the way to Catalina.
When this concern was addressed at the council meeting, the glib
airport authority spokesman gave us a quote from Charles F. Richter
of Richter Scale fame, in which he stated that the safest place to be
during an earthquake was in a tunnel. I’m thinking the good doctor
probably didn’t have in mind a tunnel filled with flammable liquids,
crossing fault lines.
I’m all for finding solutions to our growing demand for air
transportation that don’t include the otherwise inevitable expansion
of John Wayne Airport. The last thing I want to see is a 747
lumbering off the runway at John Wayne and passing in front of my
window at 1,000 feet. El Toro was, and still is, the best solution to
Orange County’s air transportation needs.
This triple tunnel is literally just another hole into which we
will dump millions of dollars with no assurance of success. History
shows us -- as evidenced by the precarious financial condition of our
toll roads - that our local politicians don’t quite have the knack
for making good transportation decisions for us.
I suggest our City Council get over this gopher fixation, pull
their collective heads out of the ground, and pay more attention to
the issues on the surface that cry out for attention -- the great
bridge debate, for example. Election Day is now just 12 short months
away.
* GEOFF WEST is a Costa Mesa resident.
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