Development funding can’t hurt traffic needs
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Gridlock. Trip budgets. Mitigation. The Gisler bridge.
The words have been thrown about in the Home Ranch debate since the
most recent incarnation of the development surfaced this year, sparking
resident concern and, possibly, misunderstanding.
Somewhere between the public relation strategies and scare tactics
lies a realistic assessment of the added traffic and the need -- or lack
of it -- for the lump sum of $8.6 million being offered for specific
projects.
Those opposed to the project say the number of cars on the road will
be unbearable, and they charge the environmental reports did not
accurately assess the traffic situation.
Those in support of the project say the $8.6 million the Segerstrom
family is offering the city -- upfront -- for proposed street improvement
will more than accommodate the added traffic and allow the city to fund
the projects in advance.
City Manager Allan Roeder said the money would be nice, but the city
would not be destitute without it.
Some of the improvements include the widening of the Fairview Road
bridge and the necessary adjustments for a new Harbor Boulevard and Susan
Street exit from the San Diego Freeway. Roeder said the necessary traffic
projects would still be built if the Home Ranch project were not
approved.
“But they would take longer,” he added.
Transportation Manager Peter Naghavi agreed, saying that a large lump
sum is helpful but not crucial to alleviating some of the city’s traffic
woes. While the Segerstroms are offering the money upfront, the city
would not use the money until developments started and improvements were
needed.
With a 20-year development agreement, some projects wouldn’t be
started for years, Naghavi said.
“For 12 years, I’ve been doing this job without upfront money and it’s
worked,” Naghavi said. “But it’s better to have it than not have it.”
Naghavi and fellow staff have recommended approval of the Home Ranch
project.
Without the Segerstrom money, projects such as the widening of the
Fairview bridge would depend largely on whether the city could get grant
funding, Roeder said. He is confident Costa Mesa could obtain most of the
money over the next 10 years, he said.
Carol Hoffman, a spokeswoman for the developer, said the city would
benefit financially from a large lump sum.
“Costa Mesa can gain interest on the lump sum while designing and
getting approval for the projects,” Hoffman has said.
Robin Leffler sees it differently. The vice president of Costa Mesa
Citizens for Responsible Growth, a community group opposed to the
development, said residents’ quality of life is too much to gamble.
“Traffic mitigations are designed only to get things back to the way
they are now, not make them any better,” Leffler said. “And then what
happens if the estimates were wrong?”
Naghavi said he is confident the proposed projects will not only
offset the added traffic but make some surrounding intersections less
congested than they are now.
A Susan Street offramp is also being sought by C.J. Segerstrom & Sons,
but it is not included as part of the development agreement. If the
offramp is approved by the California Department of Transportation, the
developers have agreed to fund it completely.
The proposed offramp is designed to drop traffic into the heart of the
Home Ranch development -- obviously helping the tenants of the property
-- but it is also designed to take truck traffic off Fairview and Harbor,
Naghavi said.
“It certainly helps our city, and we support it very much because it
greatly reduces traffic at surrounding intersections,” Naghavi said.
Residents and council members alike have expressed concern over the
use of the Gisler bridge in environmental reports and analyses. Opponents
charge the report is not accurate because it assumes the bridge will be
built at the same time the City Council is working to get the bridge
taken off the city’s master plan.
Naghavi said that to comply with legal requirements of an
environmental report, the city had to evaluate the traffic effects
according to the general plan, which includes the bridges. However, in an
additional study, Naghavi said traffic from the Home Ranch project will
not require the bridge to be built.
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