Officials reject plan to extend a local freeway
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Dave Brooks
Transportation officials axed a controversial proposal to extend the
Orange (57) Freeway to the Pacific Coast Highway.
In a 12-4 decision with Supervisor Bill Campbell absent, the
Orange County Transportation Authority voted to exclude the extension
from a list of transportation projects to be analyzed in a $1-million
study to alleviate traffic congestion in Central Orange County.
Transportation staff recommended killing the proposal after early
data showed that few motorists would actually use the new highway.
The transportation authority did, however, approve a plan to look
at connecting the 57 Freeway with the San Diego (405) Freeway
“That’s good news for Costa Mesa,” said Mayor Alan Mansoor, who
joined his four other council members at an April 19 City Council
meeting to unanimously oppose any extension of the freeway past the
405.
A study to extend the 57 to the 405 freeway is not without its
controversies, but it’s a study that needs to be done, said Costa
Mesa City Councilman Gary Monahan, who serves on the transportation
authority’s board of directors. Monahan voted with the majority of
the board to consider extending the 57 to the 405.
“We don’t even know if it’s possible, and we need to find out once
and for all,” he said. “It doesn’t make sense to leave such a vital
clog out of this study.”
Huntington Beach City Councilwoman Cathy Green disagrees. She and
the entire Huntington Beach council oppose any extension of the 57
and want local government officials to develop a plan to kill the
proposal once and for all.
That might require an act of the state Legislature, which in 1959
mandated that the 57 freeway be connected to a proposed coastal
freeway that was never built. For decades, highway planners have
considered extending the freeway past the “Orange Crush” -- where the
57, Garden Grove (22) and Santa Ana (5) freeways meet -- to the 405
Freeway, and diverting the highway down the Santa Ana River,
eventually connecting it with Pacific Coast Highway.
In 1991, a construction group led by Ross Perot was given the
franchise rights to extend the 57 freeway 11 miles south to the 405
and operate it as a toll road but eventually lost the deal after a
decade passed without any work being done.
A recent survey commissioned by the transportation authority
showed that local residents were ambivalent about the project with
only 53% of voters saying they approved the extension when presented
with arguments for and against the project.
That could translate into a lot of money for the OCTA, which is
looking at ways to renew a 15-year-old half-cent county sales tax set
to expire in 2011. Orange County Supervisor Lou Correa said it would
be impossible to secure the required two-thirds voter approval to
extend the sales tax if local residents thought the money would be
spent on extending the 57 Freeway south to Pacific Coast Highway.
Instead the $1-million transportation study will look at a number
of proposals to alleviate congestion in Orange County, expected to
grow by 600,000 residents by the year 2030. Those proposals include
increasing public transportation availability, adding a carpool lane
on the 5 from the Orange Crush to the 55 freeway or even widening the
55 freeway.
“It will take about four months to get a consultant on board” to
begin the study, transportation authority community liaison Alice
Rogan said. “I think we’re going to try and get as much information
about the 57 freeway as soon as we can to see if extending it (to the
405 freeway) is even possible.”
* DAVE BROOKS can be reached at (714) 966-4609 or by e-mail at
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