Traffic studies will predict more of the same
- Share via
Newport Beach developer and Mayor Tod Ridgeway’s statements to the
Pilot, “Greenlight targets another building,” on March 13, appear to
lack credibility in supporting the city’s attempted subversion of the
Greenlight law.
In pushing for the conversion of a gigantic west side industrial
usage property to partial, or possibly complete, high-traffic- and
high-parking-generation office usage, he makes personal attacks on
concerned opponents and claims traffic studies should be completed
before the project is evaluated. However, as an informed city
servant, he must be aware of the new comprehensive 60-page “Executive
Summary” draft traffic analysis, recently prepared as part of the
Newport Beach General Plan update. This study forecasts massive
traffic increases, gridlocked traffic and makes the need for another
study questionable.
Among its findings: Seven Newport Beach intersections are
currently operating below acceptable levels of service (categorized
letter D), mandated by city laws. Newport Beach traffic will increase
by 170,000 trips per day or 25%. Upon completion of 2 million feet of
additional construction, including more than 1 million feet of office
space, permitted under the current plan, 19 intersections will be
operating below a D level of service. And many will be operating at
an even worse “F” level of service, which is gridlock. Moreover, this
report assumes construction of the proposed 19th Street Bridge in
Costa Mesa, expansion of Coast Highway in Mariners’ Mile and
extension of the Costa Mesa Freeway, south of 17th Street -- all
politically dubious prospects.
Our mayor would also presumably be aware of the recent Costa Mesa
traffic study projecting that four intersections on southern Newport
Boulevard in that city, near the subject project, will operate at an
F level of service. However, he wants to increase density for
unplanned office, traffic and parking.
In doing so, he apparently wants to avoid a Greenlight vote and
support developers by dancing the municipal three step: 1) Ignore the
general plan and use restrictions upon which the city infrastructure
and traffic planning is based; 2) Convert an industrial building to
offices (already completed); and 3) Convert offices to
higher-trip-generating offices, in multiple steps, below the
Greenlight thresholds.
Traffic studies suggest the city’s current and new general plan
should reduce, not increase, office building entitlements to mitigate
prospective traffic problems. More trip-generating office buildings
will only benefit developers and further damage our city and its
residents. Publicized studies show first, that our fully employed
city does not need them; second, they bring more nonresident traffic
to congested areas; and third, they cost more for the city to support
in services than they yield in municipal revenue.
Our concerned voters do not need more traffic studies. They need
more representation to preserve our quality of life.
GEORGE J. JEFFRIES
Newport Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: George Jeffries, a retired attorney, was a former
Greenlight Steering Committee member who is no longer affiliated with
the group.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.