Saturday, May 25, 2024

Undergrounding another Trojan Horse

SR-133 Protect Connect Project
Undergrounding another Trojan Horse  
or Bikelanes for $11,000 per foot

Remember the fire-and-fear campaign of 2018 led by a city Subcommittee to place a $500 Million bond measure before the voters for city-wide undergrounding of SCE electric power utilities? If we don't  underground our utilities they said, Laguna will burn like Paradise CA, but then in a 2018 referendum vote Laguna defeated the bond measure.  Well today they are at it again, rather than a Covid-like campaign the Protect and Connect Project will couch the undergrounding campaign in eco-friendly bikelanes and a transit route down both sides of Laguna Canyon Road (LCR), from Canyon Acres to El Toro Road.   

 

This brief summary is taken from the August 2022 Approved Project Study Report approved by the city manager and Caltrans. Of five alternative designs the preferred design Alt-5 shows the existing 34-foot travelway will expand to add bike-way and sidewalk improvements on both sides, a bus route with 10-stops. The existing right-of-way (RW) is from 68 to 95-feet, the project will consume all of it, even Big Bend at 53 feet grows another 9-feet. The SCE Distribution Transmission and Telecom lines are located in vaults at the maximum RW boundary, in some cases on private property. Here's a typical section of the roadway from Caltrans Alternative-5:

Roadway Section Alternative-5 Option

The Level of Service (LOS) is a Caltrans measure of roadway performance for moving cars (not people bikes bus-passengers or rickshaws). A traffic analysis shows the Level of Service (LOS) for traffic will not improve remaining at 'F' in year 2030 and 2050, the LOS for biking and walking improves over the present no-provision condition. No increase in traffic volume is planned and the speed limit will remain at 40mph. The construction costs estimated are $40 Million, RW Acquisition costs are $78M, the Alt-5 project total is $141 Million.  
 
On Tuesday 6 May the Laguna Beach Public Works department hosted a Suzi-Q public workshop inviting the public to review design alternatives. The meeting was heated and emotional with 100 attendees pushing back the lack of transparency, planning, scale, cost, and disruption to rural Laguna Canyon. Two days later the Mayor's Newsletter said  the meeting was well attended and "a Success"!

Hired city consultants Mark Thomas said of this project: "This will require easements from various [property] owners throughout the corridor to locate the underground facilities outside of the right-of-way. This will be cost prohibitive and potentially require the use of eminent domain and should be considered infeasible."
 
Hired city consultants HDR said of this project:
"The results of the benefit-cost analysis for the Utility Undergrounding alternative generally support the conclusion that a utility undergrounding project along Laguna Canyon Road may be economically worthwhile under certain conditions if such a plan fits the City’s vision for the Laguna Canyon Road corridor, but also that such a project is unlikely to generate benefits well in excess of project costs." UPDATE: By October 2023 Mark Thomas recommended the project move ahead: "With the cumulative benefit of relinquishment and the ability to effectively mitigate risk to the greatest extent possible, it is recommended that the City formally request Caltrans to immediately initiate the relinquishment process of Lag una Canyon Road ." -Agenda Report 9 January 2024.


During the 2018 fire-and-fear campaign there were three project alternatives for SR-133 proposed in a city staff report, Alternative 1-No build option, 2-Underground power utilities $90M, 3-harden the high-risk LCR utility poles for $2M. Alternative 3 would meet the objective for fire protection yet our Subcommittee nary anybody else ever mentioned it again. "Way-to-cheap for canyon beautification"  goes the argument. 

Protected Power Poles Option
 
Finally, since March pending legislation now before the California Senate Appropriations Committee (SB-960 Weiner) will force Caltrans to implement Complete Streets on the entire length of LCR and PCH. Indeed all California highways under their control must conform to this Caltrans mandate Deputy Directive 64, this means CALTRANS MUST provide a multi-modal solution for LCR WHETHER OR NOT LAGUNA PURSUES UNDERGROUNDS.  
 
Given pricey consultants hired for expert project recommendations, shouldn't our city Subcommittee heed the advice? Is modifying LCR for no traffic improvement worth the project cost? Just Wondering.

Les Miklosy
Resident


Monday, May 13, 2024

UBER Unlocks Cities

 "Let's Ride Together"

2018 UBER-mercial

Concerning LB Facilities Master Plan, it's not a Caltrans problem, it's our problem. Let's unlock cities together rather than apart.  

-LS

Saturday, May 11, 2024

Car Culture Recognizes National VRU Day

 

 

Thursday May 8 was National Bike Walk and Roll to School Day, who knew?  In car-culture we are known as VRU's "Vulnerable Road Users".

-LS

Friday, May 3, 2024

Laguna Canyon Road Protect and Connect Workshop

Are you concerned about preserving the wilderness, the small scale residential neighborhood, the business district, the CALTRANS/City transportation plan for Laguna Canyon Road? Then please join the public workshop about the CALTRANS realignment of our Canyon Road. Bring your questions, concerns, and values to this public workshop sponsored by the City of Laguna Beach and Department of Public Works.   

UPDATE: 15-Questions Protect Connect Workshop 

 UPDATE: 15-Answers to Questions by LB Public Works

-LS

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Laguna Canyon Road Survey


Have you taken the Laguna Beach LCR survey?  The City has embarked on an ambitious plan to improve a portion of LCR from Canyon Acres to El Toro Road with infrastructure for cyclists and pedestrians while beautifying the canyon by undergrounding overhead utility poles. The Protect and Connect program is looking for input from stakeholders and roadway users.

-LS

Sunday, April 28, 2024

Pledge to Ride WIN a eBike!

Win a eBike!

May is bike month in Orange County, pledge to ride a bike and win an eBike!   OCTA sponsored check this out.

The Pledge is here.

Cosponsored by AVENTON,  JAX BICYCLE CENTER and SPECTRUMOTION

-LS


Saturday, April 20, 2024

EV Trucks are Earth Day Panaceas?

FYI Folks:

GVWR is the maximum weight of the vehicle including occupants and cargo.

GCWR is the maximum including occupants cargo and trailer.

  • Toyota Tacoma: GVWR = 5,600 lbs
  • Ford Ranger: GVWR = 6,050 lbs
  • Nissan Frontier: GVWR = 6,012 lbs
  • Ford F-150 Hybrid: GVWR = 7,350 lbs
  • Toyota Tundra Hybrid: GVWR = 7,660 lbs
  • Rivian R1T: GVWR = 8,532 lbs
  • Nissan Titan XD: GVWR = 8,800 lbs
  • Chevy Silverado 2500: GVWR = 10,850 lbs

 courtesy of TFL Truck.

Just in-time for Earth Day.

-LS

Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Is Household Transportation Cost Affordable?

On 25 March 2024 Streetsblog posted " How Car Ownership is Keeping  Americans from Financial Security" and reference supporting data from a study conducted by the US government Bureau of Transportation Statistics.

In the government study the cost of U.S. transportation includes the different modes of transportation like rail, transit, ferry, taxi, and private automobiles. These costs represent the total amount households spend on transportation.

Transportation cost is a measure of transportation affordability compared to other household expenditures. A transportation cost burden measures the percentage a household budget spends on transportation after taxes. After taxes is  a better measure of what a household has available to spend on transportation. 

Households are divided into five groups (quintiles) by household annual gross income. The groups are Highest > $245,000  and Lowest < $25,000.

In 2022, transportation was the second largest household expenditure behind housing, accounting for 15% of average household spending. The cost burden fell hardest on households in the lowest group, the household making less than $25,000 spent 30% of their after-tax income on transportation while those in the highest fifth spent 12%, see the chart.

Burough of Transport Statistics

More take-aways from the study:

  • Percent of after-tax income spent on transportation, two cases:
  • Households No Vehicle: Lowest Income -3%  Highest Income -5%
  • Households Owning Vehicles: Lowest Income -45% Highest Income -12%
  • Vehicle ownership is the greatest burden on low income earners
  • The cost burden for rural and urban households is about the same for any income earner but a greater burden for lower earners.
  • Over 65 age households cost burden is about 45% of income after taxes.

-LS

Tuesday, March 26, 2024

CICLO Irvine Open Streets Event

CICLO Irvine Open Streets


CicloIrvine, Irvine's first-ever Open Streets Event, will take place Saturday, May 4th, from 11:00 AM to 4:00 PM. It will temporarily close streets to cars and open them up to people on foot, bikes, skateboards, wheelchairs, and other active transportation modes to repurpose them into a temporary re-imagined public space.   On Barranka from Harvard to Creek Road, see map. 



Map care of Councilwoman Kathleen Treseder and City of Irvine. 

-LS

Sunday, March 17, 2024

Support Cal Senate CALTRANS Complete Streets Bill


In April the 2024 Complete Streets Bill will come before the California Senate Transportation Committee, the bill requires CALTRANS to address the safety needs of all roadway users; walkers, bikers, transit and motorists. The Senate Bill is COMPLETE STREETS POLICY for Caltrans in Laguna Beach, that's Route -133 and Hwy -1 South Coast Highway.

Show your support with a one-click (finished) letter to the Senate Transportation Committee or add your comments. Here's a letter sample:

I join with CalBike in asking you to support SB-960, the Complete Streets Bill before the Transportation Committee. My community Laguna Beach is separated by two major CALTRANS highways with no provisions for other mobility modes; walkers, bikers, and transit. At the same time our community ranks the most dangerous in 103 similar communities due to these Caltrans highways.  SB-960 would address these issues. 


Here's the link to SB-960 

Here's the CalBike link to send your letter.   

UPDATES:  SB-960 votes in August 2024:

Passed Assembly 58:17

Passed Senate 31:9

 

 -LS