Costa Mesa tepidly backs bridge
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Alicia Robinson
The Orange County Transportation Authority gained the city’s blessing
and voted Monday to commission an environmental study and preliminary
design of a bridge linking Gisler Avenue in Costa Mesa with Garfield
Avenue in Fountain Valley.
The transportation agency’s board voted Monday to spend $250,000
on study and design work. Costa Mesa officials have long detested the
plan for a bridge over the Santa Ana River, believing it would make
their city a dumping ground for Fountain Valley’s traffic without
solving congestion problems for anyone.
That position, which led city officials to oppose funding for the
same study in 2003, hasn’t changed, Costa Mesa City Manager Allan
Roeder said. What’s new is that the transportation authority will
head the project rather than Fountain Valley, and the study will be
bound by the same constraints as the earlier Santa Ana River Crossing
study, Roeder said.
That means each of four cities involved -- Costa Mesa, Fountain
Valley, Huntington Beach and Newport Beach -- have to sign off on the
study before the transportation agency could move ahead with any
recommendations.
“We removed our objections so long as we retained a veto in terms
of going the next step, if you will, in terms of doing any kind of
construction,” Roeder said.
Fountain Valley officials are pleased with the approval to study
the bridge, which they believe will provide relief from pass-through
traffic clogging their streets, Public Works Director Bill Ault said.
“This isn’t building the bridge,” Ault said. “Fountain Valley’s
just interested in getting the information and completing the study,
so we can have more information on which to base our decisions.”
The environmental analysis is likely to take about 18 months,
Roeder said. He expects it to support what Costa Mesa has been saying
all along, that smaller-scale traffic improvements such as new
left-turn lanes will make more sense than a multimillion-dollar
bridge that will just move congestion around, he said.
Orange County Supervisor Jim Silva, who is on the transportation
agency’s board, said officials also will look at alternatives to the
bridge in case it doesn’t work.
“We have bottlenecks, and we have to relieve those wherever we
can,” he said. “My feeling is the [environmental report] will come
out and say what Costa Mesa would like for it to say.”
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