The right track leads to ballot
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What is the Orange County Transportation Authority afraid of?
A 9.3-mile light rail, which runs from Santa Ana to John Wayne
Airport -- through Costa Mesa -- should be left for the voters to
decide on.
Instead, the board voted 5 to 4 Friday to keep CenterLine -- the
$1-billion transportation proposal -- from being on the ballot in
November.
A plan to put the project on the ballot, had the board voted that
way, would have needed approval from the Board of Supervisors. The
Transportation Authority vote was only advisory. But it spoke volumes
about the apparent hesitance among the authority’s members -- a group
of mostly elected representatives from all over Orange County -- to
take a more populist stand on CenterLine.
Are transportation board members afraid of the scrutiny of the
projects’ critics during the campaign season? Killing a ballot push
makes it looks that way.
If the project is sound, let it stand on its merits. If not, then
go back to the drawing board and make it better. But if CenterLine is
public transportation, the public should be able to weigh in on it.
Santa Ana Mayor Miguel Pulido -- an authority board member --
aptly pointed out that just putting the measure out there to “see
what happens” puts the measure’s future in a precarious spot,
especially after almost half of the cost has been set aside in
Measure M funds.
Indeed it does. But even though Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, who
represents Costa Mesa, said he would not support federal funding for
CenterLine -- even with a majority vote from the public -- the
public’s backing of the light rail at the polls could resonate with
Orange County’s congressional delegation. That could mean federal
dollars and the project’s opening by 2009.
“If CenterLine is going to be the next decade-long commitment for
the federal government in Orange County, that will move aside any
other priorities, we need to have solid backing of public opinion in
order to sustain the course,” said Rep. Chris Cox, who represents
Newport Beach.
Hope still exists in a ballot measure.
Supervisor James Silva -- also an authority member -- has not
given up on putting the proposal on the ballot, and is considering
ways to do just that.
We urge him to persevere, and put the project on the right track.
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