Centerline protest held at South Coast Plaza
Deepa Bharath
A handful of people protested at a street corner outside South Coast
Plaza on Friday afternoon against a proposed underground section of
the CenterLine light rail system.
The Costa Mesa City Council is poised to vote on the issue on
Monday.
A final public hearing on the environmental report for CenterLine
was held Monday. The Orange County Transportation Authority has been
gathering feedback on the report, which delineates the four main
routes for CenterLine as well as an option not to build a light rail
system.
The authority will vote on the preferred route on Dec. 8. The
light rail is designed to go from Santa Ana through Costa Mesa to
John Wayne Airport.
On Friday, the busiest shopping day of the year, the protesters
stood at the corner of Bristol Street and Anton Boulevard holding
signs that said “Segerstrom, don’t bury CenterLine” and “Light rail
to the Plaza.”
Roy Shahbazian, who led Friday’s protest, said he was opposing the
underground project on behalf of the pedestrians, who will have to
walk a longer distance to get to their jobs.
“It’s a tough and tricky road to walk,” he said. “It’s a street
where traffic is heavy and there are no sidewalks.”
The city originally approved a resolution supporting a route that
would elevate the light rail along Bristol Street. But the major
property owners in the area worked intensively with the city to
hammer out another route that would divert CenterLine away from South
Coast Plaza onto Avenue of the Arts. They were concerned that having
the light rail buzz through South Coast Plaza would interfere with
existing developments.
Shahbazian, a teacher at Santa Ana College, said this was one of
the most traveled routes in Orange County. Burying the rail system
will also cost more money, he said.
The underground route would disrupt traffic on Sunflower, said
Chris Kroells, a Newport Beach resident who said he rides the bus and
is a potential user of the light rail system.
“And Avenue of the Arts is going to be insane,” he said.
Councilman Gary Monahan said a light rail system going down
Bristol “just doesn’t work.”
“We can’t shut down the street,” he said. “We’ve looked at this a
lot and this is the best route we’ve come up with.”
Monahan said he cannot imagine that shoppers who take the light
rail would have to walk with heavy shopping bags to the train
station.
“The Segerstroms are aware of what it’s going to take to get
customers to the plaza,” he said.
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