Residents hope light means safety
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June Casagrande
Inexperienced drivers making a left turn out of Sage Hill School will
have a safer path thanks to a traffic signal turned on Tuesday.
The $400,000 signal was installed in front of the school on
Newport Coast Drive near the Corona del Mar Freeway offramp just as
the young school has its first senior class. The city paid about 75%
of the cost of the signal, with the school paying the difference.
Public Works Director Steve Badum said that the signal was expensive
because it was more complicated than most.
The unusual layout of the intersection actually required equipment
for two different traffic lights to help drivers exiting the freeway
offramp to make their way to the school entrance.
“It’s essentially two signalized intersections,” Badum said. “It
was a complicated design, and we think it will work very well.”
Jim McGee, chairman of the Newport Coast Advisory Committee that
represents Newport Coast residents to the city, hailed the move as an
important step in the relationship between Newport Beach and its
newly annexed residents -- a step above and beyond the city’s
obligation. The traffic signal was the first public improvement by
the city in Newport Coast. And it’s notable, he said, that the work
was not required by a pre-annexation agreement.
“I think it shows that they are interested in improving traffic
safety in Newport Coast,” McGee said, “and it shows that they’re
responsive to the concerns of the residents.”
Newport Coast was annexed to the city in January 2002 after many
residents agreed that the move could bring services better than the
county was providing the unincorporated area.
“We were quite surprised the county had not required a signal
there in the first place,” Badum said.
With the yearlong process of planning and installing the traffic
signal behind them, city staff are now looking toward improving a
hazardous traffic situation near the entrance to the New Crystal Cove
Promenade shopping center on Coast Highway. Badum said that drivers
who want to enter the shopping center often think they see an
driveway entrance where there isn’t one.
Badum said the city is working with Caltrans to install barriers
and improve striping there to prevent any problems before they occur.
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