Road to Vision 2004 gets clearer
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Paul Clinton
Newport Beach is inching closer to getting just the piece of Coast
Highway it needs to bring the community’s Vision 2004 plan into sharp
focus.
City leaders have been able to move forward on long-standing
negotiations with state highway officials to secure a section of East
Coast Highway for beautification, thanks in part to the efforts of
Assemblyman John Campbell.
As the discussions stand now, Newport Beach planners hope to nail
down the transfer of 3.3 miles of the historic state highway from the
California Department of Transportation to the city by early next
year.
City leaders want to incorporate the section of highway into the
Vision 2004 program, a $12-million package of roadway, landscaping
and other improvements to the Corona del Mar village.
“I’ve always thought Corona del Mar is a place of special charm,”
Campbell said Friday. “I think the Vision 2004 plan is spectacular.”
A framed poster of the plan hangs on a wall of his district
office, Campbell said.
The section of the highway from Newport Coast Drive to Jamboree
Road could be delivered to the city only after Campbell successfully
added a paragraph of legislation, also known as a “rider,” to a state
transportation bill last year.
“If Assemblyman Campbell didn’t put the effort out, we wouldn’t
have gotten as far,” Planning Commissioner Ed Selich said. “It gave
us the ability to sit down with the local Caltrans people and get an
agreement.”
Campbell offered his legislative help about a year ago. The
assemblyman, who represents the area in his 70th Assembly District,
added the legislation to Senate Bill 290 last year.
The bill authorized Caltrans to relinquish the strip of highway.
Before the bill, Caltrans had hoped to unload all of East Coast
Highway and West Coast Highway between the Laguna Beach and
Huntington Beach borders.
City leaders rejected that proposal, wanting just a mile-long
stretch through Corona del Mar.
Talks hit another roadblock in March, when Caltrans said it would
give the city the Newport Coast section of East Coast Highway, since
the bill said the agency could hand over the section from Corona del
Mar to the “southern city limits.”
Of course, those limits changed in January, when Newport Beach
annexed Newport Coast.
Campbell again offered his aid, writing a March 12 letter to
Caltrans Director Jeff Morales.
“The language was drafted to give some flexibility to negotiators,
however, the Legislature intended for those negotiations to focus on
an area in Corona del Mar,” Campbell wrote in the letter.
Regional Caltrans officials now are putting together an agreement
to map out the handover, spokesman Albert Miranda said.
“Caltrans is developing a document for the city to review as part
of the negotiations that will return the existing roadway to a state
of good repair before it’s relinquished,” Miranda said.
Selich has been negotiating with Caltrans to flesh out the details
of the handover, including how much money the agency will give to
cover maintenance and construction costs.
A preliminary deal should be in place, if all goes well, within 30
days, Selich said. The City Council is expected to consider a final
deal in October.
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