Most Popular

SLIDESHOWS

Recent Articles

Recent Articles by Jorge Casuso

National Features >

  • Riverfront Times

    The Pope of Pork

    Old-school hog farming makes a comeback, thanks to some fine swine from Frankenstein.

    By Kristen Hinman

  • Broward-Palm Beach New Times

    The Lost Season

    Here's how you become one of those people who screams at his kid's coach.

    By Bob Norman

  • SF Weekly

    Border Crossers

    Transgender hookers with rap sheets are successfully fighting deportation--by asking for asylum.

    By Lauren Smiley

  • Houston Press

    Deadly Evidence

    First, Houston's DNA lab became a laughingstock. Then its controversial director was murdered.

    By Randall Patterson

Be Social

  • rss

Santa Monica: The Gridlock Wars Are Here

The city is an inaccessible moat. Residents are going batty

By Jorge Casuso

Published on July 09, 2008 at 7:02pm

MARK KREHER IS FED UP WITH Santa Monica traffic. When the streets are congested, it takes him less time to walk from his home on Ocean Park Boulevard to the Third Street Promenade — 30 minutes — than it does to drive and park. Public transit is no better. It took him 50 minutes recently to ride the bus home from nearby UCLA.

He is stuck inside the inaccessible moat that is the Westside. “I can’t go to a Dodgers game anymore. I can’t see my godson for his birthday in Pasadena. I haven’t seen my best friend in Glendale in two years,” says Kreher, who has lived in Santa Monica for 10 years. “We’re losing our greater community. It’s being sealed off.”

Now, Kreher is part of a growing movement taking its frustration to the ballot box this November. But instead of seeking money for improved streets or alternate modes of transportation, sponsors of the Residents Initiative to Fight Traffic (RIFT) are targeting what they see as the root of their rush-hour woes — uncurbed commercial development.

The measure on the November 4 ballot, which caps office towers and other commercial development at 75,000 square feet a year for 15 years, with some exceptions, garnered the signatures of more than 10,000 traffic-riled Santa Monicans in 10 weeks, far more than the 5,957 signatures needed.

And it has drawn the ire of liberal city officials who normally extol public involvement but now quickly denounce a measure that threatens their own plan to battle traffic while continuing to develop Santa Monica. Last week, Santa Monica City Council members grudgingly placed the slow-growth initiative on the ballot. But in a move that indicates how bitter the battle will be, they put forth a controversial “overnight study” filled with ammo that seeks to back a pro-growth approach.

But City Hall’s PowerPoint presentations and mind-numbing number charts (which purport that there is little Santa Monica can do about what is essentially a regional problem) may not be enough to counter the raw emotion engendered by sitting stalled in a car as the signal lights cycle.

“If we had 20 weeks, we could have had twice that many signatures,” says Diana Gordon, one of the leaders of the anti-traffic crusade. “It’s a phenomenon. Runaway development is killing the city, and this is the best opportunity to take it back. We got signatures from people with no spare time. They understood something big was at stake.”

RIFT’s sponsors say the groundswell is fueled by City Hall’s failure to stem development that has turned a quaint beachside town — once jokingly referred to as “Oshkosh by the sea” and a city for the “newlywed and nearly dead” — into a world-class shopping destination, and the home of media giants Google, Yahoo and MTV.

They accuse the supposedly green-minded City Council of ignoring calls by almost every neighborhood group to impose a moratorium on commercial development until after public and city leaders finish wrangling over the blueprint for long-term land use in Santa Monica. That blueprint, known in official jargon as the “Land Use and Circulation Element,” will shape Santa Monica’s skyline and business-district density for two decades.

Leaders from the city’s burgeoning slow-growth movement argue that the blueprint — which calls for much greater density in Santa Monica business districts — flies in the face of many residents’ wishes.

Yet as the debate raged on in “workshops” for more than three years, city officials approved commercial building after building, prompting Susan Hartley, a member of Santa Monica’s Airport Commission, to lecture the council several days ago that the workshops were merely “a charade. We’re going through the motions, and it’s already decided what the results will be.”

Echoing others, Hartley says, “Residents want less development.”

“There’s a failure to listen to the residents,” says Mary Marlow, who sits on the Ocean Park Association board. “We asked to keep a small-town feel. Let’s not become a regional center for media, for hospitals, for hotels. We’re not listened to. RIFT is the answer.”

In fact, Santa Monica’s population of 85,000 more than doubles each day as commuters press into an 8.3-square-mile city jammed against the Pacific Ocean, served by only one freeway and with no easy exit. Critics say it’s a terrible place to concentrate density.

“I’m outraged by the commercialization and gridlock in Santa Monica and the 11th District,” says Los Angeles City Council member Bill Rosendahl, whose district borders Santa Monica. “We have 200,000 cars going through every block in my district to get to work in Santa Monica.” A resident of Mar Vista, Rosendahl adds, “They raise revenue for their little town at the expense of gridlock on the Westside. My people are fed up with development.”

1   2   Next Page »