Downtown traffic study to be studied
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Barbara Diamond
City officials went down a different road Tuesday in their quest to
cure traffic snarls Downtown.
“Where did we go wrong?” Councilwoman Toni Iseman asked.
The City Council voted unanimously to reroute the focus of the
Downtown Specific Plan Area Traffic and Parking Study to include how
long it takes to get through an intersection.
Council members were dissatisfied with the consultant’s traffic
analysis based on vehicle volume presented to them and the Planning
Commission on June 8. They asked for modifications in the existing
contract with RBF Consulting to develop a more Laguna-specific,
delay-based traffic model. The California Coastal Commission required
the study as a condition of the specific-plan certification.
“The main criticism was whether the count was accurate,” said City
Manager Ken Frank. “It probably was accurate, but the question is
whether the methodology was appropriate for Laguna. A different
measure is what is now proposed.”
Community Development Department Director John Montgomery said the
consultant used the same measure as Orange County. Iseman described
it as one-size-fits-all.
The consultant subsequently proposed to use the Highway Capacity
Manual methodology.
“HCM measures how long it takes to get through an intersection,
which is what residents want,” Montgomery said.
The proposed change in data collection will not increase the cost
of the study, which has about $50,000 left of the $127,000 approved by the council for the study. Two other recommended changes in the
consultant’s scope of work would have increased the cost by about
$17,000.
Those changes were parked until the Planning Commission and the
Parking, Traffic and Circulation Committee can review them.
“This has been bungled badly,” said Councilman Wayne Baglin. “We
are spending $147,000 and not getting one more parking space. We are
doing it to satisfy the Coastal Commission.”
Montgomery said the analysis will provide a description of the
problem, a forecast of what can be expected in 2030, and a list of
recommended actions.
“At least it will start the debate,” Montgomery said. “The change
order admits there is no silver bullet.”
The consultants were authorized Tuesday to collect pedestrian
counts at 20 Downtown intersections and the Laguna Canyon crosswalk
to Irvine Bowl Park, matching the time frames used to collect
vehicular traffic at each intersection.
In a separate action, the council voted 3 to 2 to pay RBF
Consulting up to $12,000 to complete a traffic study on the
relocation of the corporation yard and city employee parking.
The Coastal Commission requested the study at the July meeting
when the city presented the relocation project.
Iseman said the cost estimate of about $5 million was undoubtedly
out of date and no new estimate was available.
She also asked Frank if ingress and egress would stay the same for
the facilities and functions that would remain at the existing
maintenance yard.
“I am going to give a speech because every one else has,” Frank
responded. “We have a project before the Coastal Commission. They
asked for 190 public parking spaces (Downtown). We showed them we
could do it.
“I have a sketch. Has the council seen it? No.”
Frank said the council would see a proposal when the commission
approves a project, which will have a long list of conditions that
could be approved or denied by the council.
He said the 190 spaces could be provided if every building now in
the maintenance yard stayed.
The last cost estimate, Frank said, was made when the city thought
the project was going forward with the approval of the county (before
an appeal of the approval was submitted by Iseman to the Coastal
Commission on which she sits).
Then, with a sheepish grin, he said, “I apologize. I have
forgotten your question.”
When prompted, he continued that ingress and egress will remain
the same at the existing yard.
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