Cities have little time in bridge fight
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Deirdre Newman
City officials are redoubling efforts to get two long-planned bridges
deleted from county maps to avoid having a decision on the
controversial construction made for them.
The two bridges at issue would connect Gisler Avenue to Garfield
Street, which divides Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, and 19th
Street to Banning Avenue in Huntington Beach.
On Monday, the Orange County Transportation Authority postponed
for 30 to 60 days its decision on providing funding to Fountain
Valley to study the Gisler bridge.
The delay was to give the three cities that would be affected one
last chance to come to a consensus. Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach
oppose the bridge.
The only way to agree to eliminate the Gisler bridge is to agree
to eliminate the 19th Street bridge, since both removals have been
examined previously, Costa Mesa Mayor Gary Monahan said. This
requires coming up with ways to lessen the traffic in the region
without bridges and is also predicated on the approval of Newport
Beach, since it supports the 19th Street bridge.
Fountain Valley’s request for funding is forcing a decision on
thorny issues that have stalled for years, which is a positive step,
Monahan said.
“Costa Mesa does not believe the bridges needs to be built and is
doing everything we can to delete them,” Monahan said. “There will be
give and take on both sides. There will be some mitigation measures
we may not be happy with, but they will be better than a bridge and
less expensive, and the cities need to sit down and hammer it out so
it’s not hammered out for them by [the authority].”
The Gisler bridge pits Fountain Valley against Huntington Beach
and Costa Mesa.
Costa Mesa officials and some residents are concerned about
cut-through traffic racing through their neighborhood to the Costa
Mesa Freeway. Residents on the Huntington Beach side of Garfield
Street also adamantly oppose the bridge. But officials in Fountain
Valley, which owns the other side of Garfield, want to alleviate
increased traffic in their city.
The 19th Street bridge pits Newport Beach against Huntington Beach
and Costa Mesa.
Newport Beach wants the bridge to expedite traffic flow between it
and Huntington Beach. Residents around Banning Street in Huntington
Beach are against it, and Costa Mesa officials again fear it will be
only used as a cut-through.
A study of the bridges, the Santa Ana River Crossing Study that
the four cities commissioned to research the effects of removing the
bridges from the county master plan, was completed in June 2001. But
none of the four City Councils have approved it.
Now is the time, city officials urge.
The next step is for representatives from all four cities to meet
and try to fast-track a solution by taking a broad perspective, Costa
Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder said.
“I think that the goal is not, if you will, to bridge or not to
bridge,” Roeder said. “I think the goal is: How do we meet the
traffic demands? How do we meet the transportation demands? I think
that is the principal focus. It certainly needs to be the focus of
our conversations with our adjoining cities of Fountain Valley and
Newport Beach when we talk of the bridges.”
Yet Fountain Valley’s request for funding to study the Gisler
bridge does involve various options, said Michael Litschi, media
spokesman for the transportation authority. Those options include a
bridge, the status quo and how to improve traffic flow on congested
streets without a bridge.
Fountain Valley is requesting $1.25 million from the authority for
the preliminary engineering, environmental work and design study,
which costs about $1.5 million total, Litschi said.
Authority chairman Tim Keenan said the board decided to hold off
on the Fountain Valley request and is urging consensus because it
“doesn’t want one city jamming something down another city’s throat,
theoretically.”
That said, Keenan added the board can still vote on the Gisler
bridge study in the next two months if a consensus is not reached
because the authority staff and technical experts from all three
cities recommend the study be done.
Huntington Beach Councilwoman Debbie Cook said she is not pleased
with the prospect that funding for the bridge study could still be
approved when two out of the three cities involved are against it.
“What it looks like to me is that if everyone doesn’t agree to
remove a bridge, they’re going to build a bridge, which I find
amazing,” Cook said. “Why would you fund this if you’ve got Costa
Mesa and Huntington Beach’s [populations] far outweighing Fountain
Valley?”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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