Countdown to 2000: 1980s Politics
Danette Goulet
As the Newport-Mesa area continued to grow in the 1980s, an increasing
number of people began to see development as a liability.
Many residents of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach felt their cities were in
danger of being swamped by traffic generated by the commercial growth.
The resistance to growth was stronger than ever in Newport Beach as a
result of the proposed Newport Center expansion.
For years, developers had paid for the roads surrounding their projects
as incentive to gain city and taxpayer approval. For the Newport Center
expansion plan, the Irvine Co. had pledged to build $40 million worth of
roads, including a long-discussed Corona del Mar bypass. But even with
the bypass as incentive, the voters rejected the project, sending The
Irvine Co. back to revise the plans.
Meanwhile in Costa Mesa, John and Margaret Gardner had taken the city by
storm. They were part of a group called Costa Mesa Residents for
Responsible Growth.
“They were fighting development all over the city -- of any kind,” said
former Costa Mesa Mayor Donn Hall.
At the time, the city council was in favor of controlled development,
Hall said.
“It wasn’t a struggle between pro-growth and anti-growth. It was a
struggle between building a mature community and shutting the city down,”
he said.
The group effectively blocked plans for an IBM national headquarters
between Sunflower Avenue and South Coast Drive and very nearly stopped
the development of Crystal Court and several other projects.
Despite any success the groups had in blocking growth in the area,
transportation and traffic congestion was a growing problem.
In one attempt to ease congestion, the city of Newport Beach instituted a
trolley system in 1986. It lasted only seven months before it became a
financial burden and was shut down.
Beginning in the mid-1980s, a trend that the cities were helpless to
control made traffic even worse. “Cruising” had become the fashionable
thing to do. It was the end of the decade before the traffic problems
would begin to abate.
Sources:
Donn Hall, former Mayor of Costa Mesa; John Cox Jr., former Mayor of
Newport Beach; “Newport Beach, The First Century 1888-1988,” James P.
Felton, 1981; Daily Pilot.
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