Transportation bill includes ramp plan
Alicia Robinson
A ramp to exit the northbound San Diego (405) Freeway at Susan Street
could be built later this year, once the Senate approves a
$284-billion federal transportation bill the House passed on
Thursday.
In addition to more than $73.6 million for Orange County
transportation projects, the bill includes language to authorize
construction of the ramp. Congressional authority was needed to
override the Federal Highway Administration’s rejection of the
project.
The city of Costa Mesa and Caltrans support the Susan Street ramp,
but the ramp’s most active proponents have been officials with C.J.
Segerstrom & Sons, who pledged the ramp as part of a development
agreement for their Home Ranch project. The development included the
IKEA furniture store and a new headquarters for data storage company
Emulex.
“We fought them for nearly two years administratively,” Segerstrom
spokesman Paul Freeman said of the highway administration. “They kept
raising various objections; we’d go back and redesign it.”
The ramp will start at the collector/distributor lanes leading to
the Fairview Road and Harbor Boulevard exits and end on Susan Street
behind the IKEA store.
Freeman expects it to reduce congestion on the Fairview and Harbor
exits and to give truck traffic a better route that doesn’t pass
residential neighborhoods such as Wimbledon, which is off Fairview
near the freeway.
“It’s certainly going to help with some of the inbound IKEA
traffic,” said Bruce Garlich, a Wimbledon resident and chairman of
the city’s Planning Commission. “It’s definitely going to help; it’s
not going to hurt anything.”
The project has been both lengthy and costly for the Segerstroms,
who are funding it. While the ramp itself will cost less than $1
million, at least $4 million has been spent on environmental studies,
design, lobbying and other related work, Freeman said.
Freeman will head back to Washington, D.C., Monday to meet with
the chairmen of a House/Senate conference committee, which will draft
a compromise integrating what the House approved with a Senate
version of the bill. He wants to get language in the Senate bill that
suggests expediting the project.
The transportation bill could be on President Bush’s desk within
the next two months, Freeman said.
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