Survey says: Crowds stifling
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Deirdre Newman
About 45 million people will compete for jobs, jostle for freeway
space and scour the state for affordable housing in 2025, according
to a statewide survey released today.
The survey, conducted by the Public Policy Institute of
California, said more than half of the poll’s participants feel the
population increase will have an adverse affect on them and their
families. Some Newport-Mesa residents are equally pessimistic about
the region’s ability to accommodate the expected infusion of people.
“We are woefully behind the eight ball, at least in this point in
time, in being able to service that amount of people in the state in
terms of our public institutions, from the bottom up -- whether that
be education, infrastructure, services -- the whole gamut of what
we’re responsible for as public agencies,” Costa Mesa City Manager
Allan Roeder said.
The institute surveyed 2,506 Californians to raise awareness and
foster discussion of the growth-related challenges confronting the
state over the next two decades. When the survey answers were divided
by region, Orange County and San Diego County were grouped together.
In this region, 23% of survey respondents said the most important
issue facing people in California today is the multi-faceted issue of
economy, jobs and unemployment. Newport Beach Planning Commissioner
Barry Eaton cited the state budget deficit as his No. 1 issue.
“It’s not getting solved as quickly as [Gov. Arnold]
Schwarzenegger promised,” Eaton said. “It’s just creating more
carry-over to future years. Clearly, there needs to be an effort of
structural reform. Everyone agrees with that in principle, but the
devil is in the details in terms of getting things done. That’s
related to jobs and the economy because Schwarzenegger is clearly
relying on the economy coming back in a big way in order to pay down
some of those deficits.”
In a transportation-related question, 38% of Orange/San Diego
respondents favored freeways and highways, while 28% favored a light
rail as a surface transportation project that should have the top
priority for public funding as the region gets ready for the growth
that is expected by 2025.
That ranking reflects the priorities of the Orange County
Transportation Authority, spokesman Ted Nguyen said. The agency has
used 75% of funds from Measure M, the county’s half-cent sales tax
for transportation improvements, for freeways and streets. Transit
projects, including the CenterLine light rail system project, receive
the other 25%, Nguyen added.
“I think that’s a pretty good example that people want both
streets and roads and rail,” authority board of directors Chairman
Greg Winterbottom said. “I think it’s an important issue for us,
especially since we had guaranteed the voters that they would have a
rail component in the [Measure M] expenditures.”
And while 48% of Orange/San Diego respondents said they felt the
public education system in their region will get worse, Costa Mesa
Planning Commissioner and parent Katrina Foley thinks otherwise.
“I think it will improve because there are a lot of people working
to improve it and because property vales have increased so
dramatically that the income of the families in the city will be
higher, which will result in, I believe, improved education,” she
said.
Seventy-four percent of Orange/San Diego respondents feel local
governments should work together and have a common regional plan.
While that’s already started, there is definitely more that needs
to be done, Roeder said.
“Probably, the No. 1 issue, and I suspect most people would agree,
is transportation,” Roeder said. “There are efforts in that
direction, but it’s still anything but a comprehensive effort. We’re
nowhere close to doing real serious, long-range, regional
transportation planning.”
And 79% of Orange/San Diego residents surveyed feel the
availability of affordable housing will get worse. Eaton agrees the
lack of affordable housing is a long-term problem.
“It’s really tough,” Eaton said. “I don’t think you can change the
way the market works, and people who own homes don’t want the market
to change because their property values are going up. A lot of
programs are put together to make housing more affordable, but the
higher prices go, the tougher it is and the more stretched [those
programs] become.”
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