Infrastructure committee may miss self-imposed deadline
- Share via
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The city’s infrastructure committee said it probably
won’t meet its self-imposed December deadline for getting recommendations
to the City Council.
“The more we learn, the longer this process is going to take,” committee
chairman Dick Harlow said.
The committee has spent more than a year studying everything from sewers
and sidewalks to streets and storm drains. Because the problems are so
complex, the group probably won’t be able to finish its work before
March, said Gary Drysard, a consultant for the city.
The group met last week to discuss how to finance the replacement of
crumbling or damaged walls throughout the city.
The city owns 68 miles of block walls that stand adjacent to public
sidewalks along arterial streets such as Slater and Talbert avenues, said
Don Noble, the city’s maintenance manager. Over the years, the walls have
deteriorated, and the committee blamed some of that wear and tear on
adjacent private owners who have built against and on top of them.
Many committee members agreed those property owners should pay for at
least part of the estimated $32 million required to replace the walls.
“The responsibility is clearly there,” committee member Chuck Scheid
said.
One way to charge these property owners would be through an assessment,
which requires voter approval, Dysard said.
The ownership of these walls could be transferred to the adjacent
property owners, who would then be responsible for its maintenance,
Harlow said.
Block walls are only a small part of the city’s infrastructure, which
will require an estimated $1.3 billion in repairs over the next 20 years.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.