Bigger cities seek power on OCTA
Jenny Marder
A bill approved by the California Assembly earlier this month would
boost Surf City’s political muscle on the governing body that makes
major decisions about transportation.
The bill, AB 710, authored by Assemblyman Lou Correa (D-Santa Ana)
and approved by the Assembly on May 15, would expand the Orange
County Transportation Authority board to include board members from
the five most populous cities in Orange County -- Huntington Beach,
Anaheim, Santa Ana, Garden Grove and Irvine.
The bill would expand the 11-member board of directors, which now
consists of four county supervisors, six city council representatives
and a public member selected by the other 10, to a 16-member board.
The one public member would then be appointed by a majority vote
of the other 14 members. There would also be one nonvoting member
appointed by the governor.
It has been 15 years since Huntington Beach has had a
representative on the board.
“There’s nothing like having one of your own council members on
[the board] to guarantee that Huntington Beach gets a fair share,”
said Ralph Bauer, who served on the Huntington Beach City Council
from 1992 to 2002.
The OCTA’s mission is to improve transit, streets and freeways in
the county. The agency also administers Measure M, a half-cent sales
tax approved in 1990, which provides funding for street and freeway
improvements and new transportation projects.
“I think it’s only appropriate that larger cities have guaranteed
representation on the board,” said Assemblyman Tom Harman, who
supports the legislation.
Harman, who served on the Huntington Beach City Council from 1994
to 2000, said he recalls times that representation would have
affected the amount of grant money Huntington Beach received from the
organization.
“Sometimes Huntington Beach wouldn’t get what they thought was
their fair share,” Harman said. “You have to ask why. Perhaps it’s
because they didn’t have any representation. I think we did get
probably less than what we would have gotten if we had representation
on the OCTA board.”
Past board decisions might have taken a different course had Surf
City been represented on the board, Bauer said, citing improvements
to the Garden Grove freeway as an example.
A Huntington Beach representative would have pushed to make
connecting the Orange County CenterLine, a light rail system the
authority is developing, with Los Angeles a priority item, he said.
The CenterLine would run from Santa Ana to Irvine through Costa Mesa.
“Had Huntington Beach been represented, it much more likely would
have put connectivity to Orange County on a higher priority,” Bauer
said.
The OCTA board of directors normally meets on the second and
fourth Monday of every month at the Orange County Planning Commission
Hearing Room in Santa Ana. Meetings are open to the public.
The bill will now go before the state Senate”This is a very
important issue,” Harman said. “I hope we’ll be able to work this
through the Legislature and get the governor to sign it.”
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