Is CenterLine useful after all the cutbacks?
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Its route is paved with good intentions, but the CenterLine light
rail system needs more than a noble goal to make it viable.
Costa Mesa officials have been at the forefront of CenterLine
light rail planning since day one. When it was envisioned, the light
rail system was going to be a regional transportation alternative
that would link a large part of Orange County and get people out of
their smog-producing cars. Political and economic pressures began to
mount from the cities of Fullerton, Anaheim and Orange, and the
regional transportation project was shelved.
The forward-thinking politicians of Irvine, Santa Ana and Costa
Mesa -- in large part, Councilwoman Libby Cowan -- revitalized
interest in a light rail system, arguing that a route connecting the
three cities would still cover a large portion of the county and
serve as a viable transportation tool. That 20-mile route was
expected to connect the Santa Ana Civic and Transportation centers,
the South Coast Metro area, Irvine Business Complex, John Wayne
Airport, UC Irvine and the Irvine Medical and Transportation centers.
Again, politics reared its ugly head and the proposed route was
further condensed to its present size of 9.3 miles, from the
transportation depot in Santa Ana to the John Wayne Airport, with a
stop at the Performing Arts station in Costa Mesa. The preferred
route, which was decided by the Orange County Transportation
Authority this month, bypasses South Coast Plaza -- with the closest
station on Anton Boulevard -- and could call for the demolition of
some of the businesses in the Lakes Pavilion business center.
While we applaud Costa Mesa leaders for their commitment to
innovative transportation alternatives, we urge them to take a step
back and realistically examine the project’s worth, especially the
portion that runs through the city they are elected to serve.
CenterLine is nine miles of rail line, averaging about $100
million per mile. It’s nine miles of rail line that connects only
four stations in three cities. It’s nine miles of rail line that
could cost business owners their livelihood.
Costa Mesa officials are making a billion-dollar wager that these
nine miles of light rail will reinvigorate countywide interest in the
project, when the past has shown that the appeal just isn’t there.
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