M is for major road upgrades
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Alicia Robinson
Costa Mesa can begin more than $30 million in road improvements, with
about half of the money coming from federal grants and county Measure
M dollars.
The Orange County Transportation Authority on Monday voted to
disburse $218 million for roadwork and other transportation projects
in the county’s 34 cities.
Costa Mesa will receive $16.1 million from the transportation
authority -- the fourth-largest amount granted -- and will match that
amount with local dollars.
Newport Beach’s portion of the transportation authority funding
will be $2.4 million.
This is the last major round of grants from Measure M, the
20-year, half-cent sales tax that expires in 2011.
“We figured with this being almost the last round for money unless
Measure M is reauthorized, we wanted to go for everything we could,”
Costa Mesa transportation manager Peter Naghavi.
The work will include rehabilitation projects on 19th Street,
Baker Street, and Red Hill and Sunflower avenues, but drivers are
likely to see the biggest impact on Newport Boulevard.
Pending approval by the Costa Mesa City Council, the Newport
Boulevard project will add a fourth northbound lane between 17th and
19th streets and a fourth southbound lane from 19th street to
Broadway as well as upgrades to landscaping, sidewalks and street
lighting, Naghavi said.
In Newport Beach, Measure M money will be spent to upgrade traffic
signals on MacArthur Boulevard and on Coast Highway in Corona del
Mar.
The bulk of the funding is federal dollars to fix arterial
highways, and that will go toward replacing pavement on parts of
Jamboree Road, North Bristol Street, Placentia Avenue, Birch Street
and Hospital Road, City Engineer Bill Patapoff said.
The OCTA might seek voter approval to renew Measure M. The
transportation authority’s board could take up the subject in 2006.
Meanwhile, the OCTA is seeking drivers’ input on how and where to
improve traffic. Residents can take a survey online at
https://www.octa.net/extreme/intro.asp, and make suggestions on a new
hotline at (714)560-5900.
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