COMMUNITY COMMENTARY -- Tom Egan
Costa Mesa doesn’t look very broken at first glance, but it is. And
Newport Beach has its problems.
The basic problem is that Costa Mesa has run out of room. Our frontier
attitude has told us there was always time and space to fix problems
later, but “later” is here and our initial resource -- cheap land -- is
spent. There are few green fields left on which to build more shopping
malls, tilt up more office parks and plant more subdivisions.
Overnight, it seems, we’ve become a real city. Rapid development has
made us a small city with many of the nasty problems of a metropolis.
We’ve even achieved a certain notoriety: We are recognized by the Fannie
Mae Foundation as one of 53 so-called “Boomburgs” in the U.S. -- suburban
cities that face extreme degrees of development-related problems.
We’re swamped with urban problems: traffic congestion; gangs;
crumbling, overcrowded housing stock; creaky business stock; shoddy
streets and alleys; and schools that don’t measure up. The fact that we
still have tough problems proves that the well meaning “If you don’t
build it, they won’t come” approach hasn’t really paid off.
The problems suggest that we break out of the mold we’ve been in for
50 years and think afresh. And any such fresh thoughts had better start
from the reality that it takes resources to fix problems. A way to get
resources to fix growth problems is, paradoxically, to keep on growing.
Growth expands the tax base and brings in more municipal revenue. But
growth must be done cleverly so that problems are solved, not worsened.
And this is where systematic and comprehensive planning becomes
important.
To get the ball rolling, some logical, albeit outrageous, ideas: If we
can’t expand horizontally, then we expand vertically. Let’s plant some
40-story high-rises in the industrial area of Westside. This would allow
us to keep existing businesses while adding new ones. We could focus on
new kinds of businesses that aren’t so traffic-intensive and whose
workers value alternative forms of transportation, such as walking,
bicycling and mass transit.
A new class of high net worth individuals would be attracted by the
penthouses and the sweeping views from upper-story units in the
high-rises. A bonus: high rises in the city on a hill might forestall
expansion of flights out of John Wayne Airport.
Proper infrastructure would support the growth. This might include a
free shuttle/jitney that runs every 10 minutes down the spine of
southtown -- West 19th and East 17th streets -- connecting Newport
Terrace on the west to Westcliff on the east. Free package delivery to
the customers, as in subway-dependent Manhattan, would be part of the
infrastructure.
We could reduce traffic while improving mobility. Low-income residents
would have more freedom of choice and wouldn’t need shopping carts. We
can go down, as well as up. If the rest of the Costa Mesa Freeway were
built underground and branched out, we would immediately reduce southtown
traffic problems to nil. We could reclaim our downtown, and Newport Beach
could reclaim its Mariner’s Mile from the hordes of commuters. Traffic
that now creeps through Eastside would speed underneath it. West
Newport’s traffic problem would disappear under Costa Mesa’s Westside and
the Santa Ana River, emerging at Brookhurst Street.
Cost? High, but what’s the cost of not doing it?
Let’s grasp the nettle. It’s time to be bold -- as bold in solving our
developed city problems as Costa Mesa’s early leaders were bold in
finding ways to attract developers.
* TOM EGAN is a Costa Mesa resident and Westside activist.
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