Light-rail system was too short and too slow to work
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The county plan to build a 9.3-mile long light-rail system rightly
died a needed death last week, even if some county supervisors simply
couldn’t get themselves to admit it. The short and too-slow
CenterLine system, which was set to run from John Wayne Airport,
through Costa Mesa near the Performing Arts Center and South Coast
Plaza to Santa Ana, was not going to do enough people enough good for
its $1.1-billion price tag.
It certainly was not going to make life in Newport-Mesa any
better.
The rail line, despite running somewhat parallel to the Costa Mesa
(55) Freeway, was going to be too short and too inconvenient to make
any serious dent in the terrible backlogs of cars that are the norm
these days on the 55. It wasn’t going to pull so many cars off the
freeways that a proposed extension of the Orange (57) Freeway from
the Santa Ana (5) Freeway into Costa Mesa and possibly as far as
Coast Highway could be scrapped, as it should for the sake of
maintaining the quality of Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach
neighborhoods.
Yes, we can count ourselves fortunate that CenterLine will not be
built. But we should count ourselves all losers that a truly useful,
expansive rail system appears to have died, as well.
Originally, CenterLine appeared to offer some salve to our traffic
woes. But that was back when it was 28-miles long, running from
Fullerton to Irvine. Irvine residents nixed the project in their
city, setting the stage for the inevitable.
And it is worth wondering if even the 28-mile version would have
been enough help. The Los Angeles Metro Rail System is more than
73-miles long, stretching from Long Beach to north Hollywood and
Pasadena. More than 200,000 people a day ride the rails. Orange
County officials failed to aspire to such heights.
But imagine the benefits from such a rail system. South Coast
Metro could have become a true focal point for Orange County as
people took one of several rail lines to a nexus here. A drive from
Dana Point or Fullerton or Mission Viejo through the heart or Orange
County could have been replaced by a quick drive to a rail station
just miles away from people’s homes. The traffic that now passes
through Newport-Mesa, clogging the freeways and roads, might have
dropped significantly.
Given the fact there was not the political capital or muscle to
build a 9.3-mile, $1.1-billion rail line, there is little hope for a
vast system of real use. Lacking that then, county leaders are going
to have to find some option for handling our ever-worsening traffic
problems. Adding bus lines when our buses already are empty isn’t a
solution worth talking about.
Each day that passes, the price of a public transportation system,
one of real worth, rises. And our traffic problem just gets more
difficult to solve.
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