Forum explores traffic ordinance
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Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- It doesn’t sound like the most exciting way to spend an
evening: gather together some engineers, developers and environmentalists
and discuss the minutia of traffic flow modeling.
But that’s the kind of soiree the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce
has been throwing lately in an effort to raise awareness about the
Traffic Phasing Ordinance.
The Traffic Phasing Ordinance is a city regulation intended to ensure
that developers whose projects generate traffic contribute to the cost of
solving traffic problems.
The chamber held its first meeting, which was well attended, on April 3.
An encore performance, which drew a crowd of only 15 traffic aficionados,
took place Wednesday evening at the Mariners Branch Library.
Many people are not aware that the ordinance exists, said Richard Luehrs,
the chamber’s director. The chamber hopes that giving the ordinance a
higher profile might persuade residents that other measures, such as the
Protect from Traffic and Density initiative -- also known as the
Greenlight initiative -- are not necessary to preserve the quality of
life in Newport Beach.
The initiative proposes to give voters the final say on certain
large-scale projects in the city.
Environmentalists such as Susan Caustin, who sat on the panel at
Wednesday night’s meeting, are somewhat less inclined to tiptoe around
the issue that lurks behind all the traffic talk.
Caustin said the traffic ordinance would be a good idea, if it works.
“I don’t think it works. ... I see more traffic despite the laws on the
books. It feels out of control,” Caustin said.
The people on the other side of the debate, not surprisingly, see things
differently.
Philip Bettencourt, a real estate development planner who also sat on the
panel, called the traffic law “the toughest ordinance we do business
with.”
“There isn’t any more exacting traffic ordinance in Orange County,” he
said.
As the sparse crowd trickled out from the meeting Wednesday night, only
one thing seemed to have been resolved with any certainty: traffic flow
makes for an extremely complicated night of chitchat.
“It’s a real problematic issue to try to get your arms around,” Luehrs
said.
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