COMMUNITY COMMENTARY -- Wayne J. and Helice Subcasky
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I have two words for the Greenlight Implementation Committee’s efforts
for the expansion of the Koll properties -- deceptive and misleading.
Concerning the proposed project’s effect on traffic, the committee, in
its literature, stresses the idea that the project is miles from coastal
residential areas and will not affect coastal traffic. What about the
many Newport Beach residents in neighborhood communities like Newport
North, the Bluffs, Eastbluff, One Ford Road, Big Canyon and even Harbor
View Homes that are much closer to the project? And I bet even coastal
residents occasionally use MacArthur Boulevard or Jamboree Road to get to
the airport, the freeways or central and northern Orange County.
The proponents of the Koll expansion brag about providing “more than
$3 million for traffic solutions at various locations including the
MacArthur-Jamboree intersection.” Yet city staff has estimated that if a
grade separation is needed to remedy the traffic problems caused by the
expansion, it would cost $15 million. Guess who pays the other $12
million? Some members of the City Council are even suggesting the
possibility of an overpass at the MacArthur-Jamboree intersection. How
much would this cost? And who would pay for it?
The developer has put forth the idea that the additional traffic
caused by the project is only a small increase percentage-wise in the
total traffic in the area, that the $3-million donation is far greater
than this percentage increase and, therefore, he is doing more than his
fair share. However, it is not the percent increase that is important, it
is the effect of an additional incremental overload on an already
congested area and intersection. When a river overflows its banks, it is
the additional foot of water that causes the damage, not the 50 feet of
water that might normally flow in the river during non-flooding
conditions.
The developer has argued that most of the traffic generated by this
expansion will be from Irvine and Santa Ana to the north and therefore
will have minimal effect upon traffic to the south of the
MacArthur-Jamboree intersection. I am sure that additional traffic
signals will be needed at the entrances to the expanded project on both
MacArthur and Jamboree to aid access to the project and to promote
safety. These traffic signals will, of necessity, decrease the time for
free flow of traffic along MacArthur and Jamboree. The result will be an
increased backup of traffic all along these two streets south of their
intersection.
Currently, it takes three to five minutes to pass through the
intersections of Jamboree with Eastbluff-University Drive, Bayview Way,
southeast Bristol Street, north Bristol and MacArthur during afternoon
rush hour. I know these are correct figures because I currently travel
through these intersections twice a week. With the proposed expansion,
this lost time could be expected to double. Using the methods of
transportation authorities to estimate the cost of lost time due to
traffic tie-ups and assuming 6,000 cars per day use these intersections
after the expansion with an increased transit time of only five minutes,
the value of the additional lost time is more than $5,000 per day. This
does not include any costs associated with increased gasoline
consumption, pollution or increased accidents in these heavily traveled
intersections.
We have seen through the misleading and deceptive propaganda of the
Greenlight Implementation Committee. We are voting “no” on Measure G.
WAYNE J. and HELICE SUBCASKY
Newport Beach
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