OCTA board turns down CenterLine request
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Deirdre Newman
A lack of federal funding has derailed the city’s effort to study
undergrounding its portion of the CenterLine light rail system.
On Monday, the Orange County Transportation Authority board voted
8 to 1 to reject an in-depth study of an underground alternative
based on a lack of confidence about obtaining federal funding for
construction. Santa Ana Mayor Miguel Pulido was the only member to
support the study.
The light rail system calls for an 11.4-mile route through the
cities of Costa Mesa, Irvine and Santa Ana.
The South Coast Plaza business community led the charge for the
undergrounding because it feared any other option would interfere
with existing developments.
While the vote killed the undergrounding study for now, the board
left alive the opportunity for more dialogue if federal funding
materializes.
“If we knew there was some ray of sunshine, I’d be more willing
[to support the study],” Chairman Tim Keenan said. “It’s foolhardy to
put up the [funds] if the federal money doesn’t become available.”
Councilwoman Libby Cowan, the council’s leading advocate for
undergrounding, said she was disappointed, but not surprised by the
decision.
She reaffirmed that the city and business community would fully
support the light rail project even without the undergrounding. Cowan
said it’s imperative for interested parties to monitor the rest of
the authority’s preliminary engineering process to ensure Costa
Mesa’s needs are met with an elevated light rail, including broader
spans and additional aesthetics.
“Some of those things have actually gone out the window, so we
have to make sure those things stay in as the costs and project are
tweaked,” Cowan said.
The preliminary engineering phase started in June after Costa
Mesa, Irvine and Santa Ana revived the CenterLine concept, which had
fizzled from lack of support. The original incarnation called for a
28-mile system that ran from Fullerton to Irvine. The 1998-99 Orange
County Grand Jury also criticized the original proposal.
A new grand jury report released last week found that the county
has sufficient population density to support a light rail system. But
it also asserted that Costa Mesa’s desire to underground its portion
would add to the construction cost.
Also last week, a group of 21 former and current elected officials
sent a letter to the authority asking it to reconsider its support
for the light rail project, claiming it could become a “fiscal black
hole.” County Treasurer John Moorlach, a Costa Mesa resident, and
Assemblyman John Campbell were two of the signees.
The authority countered with public opinion polls from its own
staff and from UC Irvine that show a lot of public support, said Ted
Nguyen, media relations manager. There are 15 other cities in the
county that have expressed interest in joining an extension of
CenterLine after the first installment is up and running, Nguyen
added.
The CenterLine route through Costa Mesa would enter the city from
Santa Ana from an elevated position headed south on Bristol Street
and then turn onto Anton Boulevard. After a stop on Anton, it would
begin going down to at-grade near Sakioka Drive and continue at-grade
until just before MacArthur Boulevard and Main Street, where it would
be elevated again.
Costa Mesa officials and business representatives had hoped the
authority would at least study the underground option again. Their
main concerns with an elevated route include a loss of surface
parking, loss of lane capacity and significant traffic and pedestrian
issues based on the line’s proximity to major freeways and commercial
centers.
The authority conducted a study in the last year that explored two
above-ground and three underground options. It concluded that it’s
technically feasible to put the rail line underground, but not cost
effective. The underground options studied would ratchet up the
project cost $150 million to $235 million, the analysis found.
Ted Bischak, senior vice president of CommonWealth Partners, which
owns part of South Coast Plaza, said the previous study was based on
“premature assumptions.”
“I frankly think the information [the authority has] is inadequate
and if they had all the facts and we would proceed with preliminary
engineering, they would understand better that we’re trying to
improve quality of life [by putting the line underground],” Bischak
said.
The public-private partnership between city officials and South
Coast business representatives will continue to discuss CenterLine
options, City Manager Allan Roeder said.
Some of the key features of the elevated option for Costa Mesa are
a greater track height to reduce site-line effects for the existing
developments and long column spacing -- up to 150 feet apart -- for
aesthetics.
The authority will also study the Sunflower alignment, which
instead of turning onto Anton Boulevard, would come south on Bristol
Street and turn on Sunflower Avenue, then turn south on Sakioka
Drive, cut back and continue down Anton.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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