Neighborhood is up for underground utility lines
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Deirdre Newman
The almost decade-long effort to put utility lines underground on two
streets in this equestrian neighborhood will take a few strides
forward later this month.
At the next Newport Beach City Council meeting on Nov. 23, council
members will schedule a public hearing to start the process of
getting the utility lines underground on Cypress Street and Mesa
Drive.
The fact that it’s happening at all is heartening to residents of
the Santa Ana Heights Project Advisory Committee, who have been
trying to get the utility lines underground since 1995. The committee
is made up of residents in both the already-annexed eastern portion
of this area and the western portion, which the city is still hoping
to pull within its limits.
Getting the lines underground is a priority for aesthetic and
safety reasons. Both equestrians and pedestrians have had to snake
their way around utility poles on the horse trails and the sidewalks
on these two streets, committee secretary Barbara Venezia said.
“We’ve been trying to get them underground forever,” Venezia said.
In 2002, the county Board of Supervisors approved forming a
utilities district to move the lines underground. But when the city
annexed east Santa Ana Heights in July 2003, the process had to be
started again, since city leaders now had to approve a district being
formed.
First, the city hired a consultant to study the feasibility of
putting the lines on Cypress Street and Mesa Drive underground. The
consultant found it was a viable option, assistant city manager Dave
Kiff said.
The next step is a cost analysis.
The residents in east Santa Ana Heights won’t have to shoulder all
of the typically steep cost of the project. Since their neighborhood
is part of the county’s redevelopment area, the county’s
redevelopment district is paying the bulk of the cost, Kiff said.
Only the homeowners on the two streets involved will have to
contribute, Venezia said.
Another priority for the Santa Ana Heights area is a community
center.
The city has been working with the YMCA on University Drive to buy
its facility and set up an agreement for the YMCA to operate the
facility, while the city developed plans for turning it into a
community center.
The operational agreement is proving tricky, though, City Manager
Homer Bludau said, adding that the city is now focusing on giving the
planning process more time to evolve before it moves forward with any
deal.
“The YMCA wants to operate it long-term,” he said. “We want for
that to happen. But we aren’t far enough along for them to know if
they will feel comfortable or uncomfortable operating it.”
The city will also be revisiting the annexation of west Santa Ana
Heights in the near future. City Council members had asked staff
members to wait until after the election to bring this issue back for
their consideration.
The issue has been contentious in the past because both Costa Mesa
and Newport Beach covet west Santa Ana Heights, which falls in Costa
Mesa’s sphere of influence.
In February, the Costa Mesa City Council approved continuing its
effort to annex a 288-acre area including west Santa Ana Heights, the
Santa Ana Country Club and a mostly residential area south of Mesa
Drive between Santa Ana and Irvine avenues, which contains two
parcels already within Costa Mesa city limits.
The residents of west Santa Ana Heights held a protest vote in the
fall of 2002 and by a 70% margin chose not to be annexed by Costa
Mesa.
Newport Beach staff members will be bringing the annexation issue
back to their council as early as Dec 14, Kiff said. The country club
will not be part of the annexation package council members will
consider at that time because of Costa Mesa’s opposition, Kiff added.
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