Future of Corona del Mar eases down the road
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June Casagrande
Now that the city has decided it will take over Coast Highway in
Corona del Mar, the biggest hurdle to the Corona del Mar Vision
beautification plan has been leveled. But now what had been the
second-biggest hurdle is looking more enormous by the minute.
The $12-million plan only has about $600,000 set aside in the city
budget and another $40,000 pledged from the business community. A
five-year plan for city funding will cover about $2.5 million only if
the City Council approves funding each year.
Thus, the best-case scenario is a $9.5-million shortfall.
“One of the first things we’ll be doing now is looking for money
from state and federal funding sources,” said Ed Selich, a city
planning commissioner who has been helping push for the Vision plan
in a volunteer role for years.
But while the distant future holds much uncertainty for the plan,
the shorter term is much more likely to produce some results, albeit
preliminary ones.
The $600,000 set aside could go to work as soon as this fall,
paying for new medians and landscaping on Coast Highway in Corona del
Mar. Vision, a plan of the Corona del Mar Business Improvement
District, calls for replacing medians that are just painted lines
with elevated, landscaped islands complete with electrical wiring and
irrigation lights and flowers.
It’s one small step on what continues to prove a very long and
arduous journey, but it’s a step that appeared next to impossible
before the City Council agreed to take ownership of Coast Highway
just two weeks ago.
“We’ve been trying for two years to get the permits under
Caltrans. It’s been unbelievable,” Selich said.
Caltrans told the Corona del Mar business community that if it
wanted to remove the painted medians, the new ones in their place
would have to be 2 feet narrower. Instead of two 11-foot-wide lines
on either side of Coast Highway, this could have meant one 11-foot
lane and a 13-foot lane. It could also have meant two 12-foot lanes,
but no one was talking about re-striping the highway.
MORE THAN JUST BEAUTY
The plan was renamed Corona del Mar Vision after its first name,
Corona del Mar Vision 2004, proved to be a misnomer: No way was the
work going to be done by the end of this year, leaders decided.
The plan is actually an extensive program for not just
beautification, but improved pedestrian safety.
Crosswalks with flashing lights, like some in Laguna Beach, are a
central element to the plan. At least some lighted crosswalks are
funded by the $600,000 already in hand, and work to install them
could also begin this fall, City Manager Homer Bludau said.
When more money is in the bank, the next step will be to replace
street light poles with decorative ones. Then comes the street
furniture: new benches, trash cans and bus shelters. After that, the
plan calls for new entry monuments, signs welcoming visitors to the
village of Corona del Mar. Resurfacing sidewalks with a
yet-to-be-decided decorative surface will be the finishing touch.
Some city work planned for the stretch of highway that’s not part
of the Vision plan could also begin this year.
Most notably, the city will have jurisdiction over the
streetlights so it can synchronize their timing. The signal situation
is a little convoluted, Bludau explained. In a number of
intersections, the north-south signals are owned by Caltrans because
they’re actually on Coast Highway. At the same intersections, though,
signals at cross streets are owned by the city. Thus, in a poignant
metaphor for the entire situation, sometimes the city says “go” and
Caltrans says “stop.”
The city has long taken on the expense of sweeping the street,
which it will continue to do.
A DIVIDED VILLAGE
Council members had struggled with the decision of whether to take
ownership of the highway between Newport Coast Drive and Jamboree
Road for reasons of, what else, money. Caltrans was offering to give
the city $3.5 million to cover the costs of maintaining the highway.
Some city leaders felt that, if the city was going to take on the
expense and liability of owning the road, they should get a lot more.
In the end, it was a near-unified voice of the local business
community that sealed the deal.
“Caltrans just doesn’t care about us as we care about ourselves,”
John Blom, chairman of the Corona del Mar Business Improvement
District, told council members. “That highway divides our city right
in half and it prevents us from being a village.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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