River park close to reality
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June Casagrande
If you can visualize a 1,000-acre park shaped like the Jolly Green
Giant, with Costa Mesa’s Fairview Park as its head, you may be
dreaming, but you’re not crazy.
The super-ambitious plan for an Orange Coast River Park has become
even more realistic as promoters roll out their vision to local
governments and as an assembly bill offers hope for some funds.
Representatives of several environmental groups plan to give a
presentation to the Newport Beach City Council on Tuesday about the
park they hope will someday sprawl across three cities, with
preserved wetlands, ponds to naturally treat urban runoff before it
goes into the ocean, and an elaborate system of trails and restored
habitats. Rough estimates of the cost start at an optimistic $10
million and could exceed $20 million, depending on how much of the
land for the park must be purchased.
“We’re not suggesting that owners give us the land or that cities
tax themselves to pay for the purchase,” said Nancy Gardner, one of a
coalition of local environmentalists promoting the part concept to
local agencies. “We’re looking for funding through a number of
sources including grants.”
The Orange Coast River Park was conceived in the late 1990s by the
countywide Friends of the Harbors, Beaches and Parks.
The group has completed its concept plan for the park. The plans
were developed in part by funding from local governments, including
$5,000 each from the cities of Huntington Beach, Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa, $10,000 from Orange County and $15,000 from the
California Coastal Conservancy. Friends of the Harbors, Beaches and
Parks has been showing off the concept plans to local governments in
hopes of winning the blessing of the local governments.
The lands that would make up the park are now owned by the cities
of Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa, the county of Orange, the federal
government and private companies. A portion of the county land is
slated to eventually be annexed to Newport Beach, but is not
projected to be annexed anytime soon.
A bill being considered by the state Legislature could help create
an umbrella organization to manage development and ownership of the
park. Assembly Bill 496, introduced last month by Assemblyman Lou
Correa (D-Santa Ana), would create a conservancy to manage and
protect 96 miles of the Santa Ana River. The agency would be similar
to the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and could help tap state
money to purchase the parklands.
“This would allow us to be in a position get more state bond
money, to come forward for what’s needed,” said Jean Watt, a member
of the group working to make the park happen. “And if it passes, that
more or less establishes the working arrangement and the governance
for the park.”
The park would stretch from Fairview Park toward the ocean,
encompassing the county-owned North and South Talbert Park, and has
two “legs” that extend across Coast Highway. One leg is largely in
Huntington Beach’s jurisdiction, the other is in the privately owned
Banning Ranch property, which the county has labeled as within the
city of Newport Beach’s “sphere of influence.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE is a reporter with Times Community News. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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