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Rosansky, Banning Bridge plan. Abort?
How do you abort a project that was never going to be built anyway?
This might seem like a trick question, but in the world of Orange County planning, there is a lot of money riding on dotted lines drawn on maps.
If you can pretend that you are going to extend the 241 South, you can temporarily rescue the failing 73 toll road by giving them a massive prepayment of revenue they might potentially lose in the future.
And if you can keep a dotted line on the Master Plan of Arterial Highways that goes from 19th Street in Costa Mesa to Banning in Huntington Beach, you can pretend that some day you will have the traffic capacity that will support development you want to do right now.
If you are smart, you do just enough to keep these unbuildable boondoggles on the plans, without ever really calling attention to them.
But Steve Rosansky, termed out and looking for something he could call a legacy, decided to push for construction of a bridge.
Rosansky probably thought this was a good idea, and he enlisted Big John Moorlach in his quest. Moorlach can’t resist a Big Idea where he can imagine that he will play the pivotal role in solving an intractable problem. He has never actually succeeded with any of his big ideas, but when you have an ego as big as the moon anything seems possible.
But Rosansky should have left well enough alone.
Once he started pushing for actual construction of this imaginary project, people took a closer look at it.
OCTA developed a cost estimate for construction, giving this a price tag of $140 million to $150 million. This may seem like a lot of money when you think of this as a bridge, but it makes sense once you look at a real project, which is to build an elevated aqueduct from the sandy bluffs down the hill and then across the wetlands, with the final leg of construction through the Orange County Sanitation District with its massive pipelines. Forty miles of pipeline crisscross the landscape, one part of an entrenched oil operation that will require a cleanup estimated at $30 million or more, according to the developer.
Then there’s the fairly significant problem that the cities on either end of the bridge, Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach, have actively fought against this idea for decades. They know that it’s really just a ploy for Newport Beach to allow development without having the traffic impact Newport Beach streets or neighborhoods.
Which brings us back to the real need for the bridge – development of the Banning Ranch property – 412 acres including wetlands and bluffs along the Santa Ana River. The landowners, Shell Oil and Exxon (through their Aera Energy partnership), think they can gain approval for almost 1400 homes, a hotel and commercial development.
There would be 14,000 vehicle trips a day that have to get out of this proposed development. The major entrance was going to be a new road constructed from the bluffs down to Pacific Coast Highway, but Newport Beach was recently bitch-slapped by the Coastal Commission when they tried to gain approval for this road.
Would the developers come up with $150 million to build this bridge? Not a chance. They want taxpayers to foot the bill.
Is there money in Measure M to pay $150 million for this boondoggle. Again, not a chance. Under Measure M, the money for projects like this is awarded competitively and there is no way that a project that benefits one proposed development, opposed by the cities at both ends, would ever qualify for this funding.
Now that there is a $150 million price tag, opponents have a perfect argument to OCTA to either remove the bridge from their long term plan or show some funding source in the foreseeable future.
Da Mayor! Doin’ the Right Thing!
This is why I love local government more than I do bronchitis — but not much more.
“Moorlach can’t resist a Big Idea where he can imagine that he will play the pivotal role in solving an intractable problem.”
Perfect. A kindly, but dead-on Moorlach epigram.
Yeah, I had a chuckle at that too. Unfortunately, Johns big ideas tend to be expensive and create more problems than they were purported to solve.
As Quimby continues, “He has never actually succeeded with any of his big ideas, but when you have an ego as big as the moon anything seems possible.”
That’s funny, as I type this, Chris Matthews and Howie Fineman are making fun of Gingrich wanting to colonize the moon.
I hear that Moorlach wants to end homelessness by 2020. Good luck with that. I also hear he wants to try to grab another term as Supervisor. That may not go over so well.
The energy against the 19th street bridge is immense. There are so many haters,…it would be hard to document them all. When you think on it…..you have to go to Adams and check out the numbers. Have much traffic is there really? We always wondered why the big push for 19th street. Are there some big companies that have some major plans or what? Maybe the Sultan of Dubai is after that property. The reality is that no person that lives in Costa Mesa wants the 19th Street Bridge. Find two…..and let us know who they are…..Dave Ellis and who else?
You two know as well as I do … Dave Ellis lives in YOUR town, not Costa Mesa!
http://www.dailypilot.com/news/tn-dpt-0126-bridge-20120125,0,3294963.story
Newport Beach Councilman Steve Rosansky met with Orange County Supervisor John Moorlach and Costa Mesa Mayor Pro Tem Jim Righeimer last year to talk about the project.
mmmmm,….I wonder…
could it be…..???? Riggy strikes again.
*The folks in Newport Beach…..really could care less, one way or the other. Regardless of the Dave Ellis home address, political issues aside……the residents of Costa Mesa don’t want the traffic. Have any of you ever been in those residential neighborhoods…..with their many dead end streets and speed bumps? Brutal really.
One thing is for certain, if IKEA had been in the same area…..it would have never
happened. How many years has the 19th Street Bridge and throughway been an issue? We first recall the flumoxness in 1994! Someone even sent us $5 bucks for
City Council Campaign …..”If” we would vote NO….on any future attempts at even creating a further study of the 19th Street Bridge!