City slugfest: L.A.'s 'Subway to the Sea' runs aground in Beverly Hills
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| Beverly Hills, Calif.
Los Angeles, America鈥檚 city of cars, is experiencing a roadblock over a subway line.
A key section of the subway 鈥 known originally by its romantic marketing term, 鈥淪ubway to the Sea,鈥 but now by the more mundane 鈥淲est Side subway extension鈥 or 鈥淧urple Line鈥 because it never really reaches the ocean 鈥 is being held up with a lawsuit by Beverly Hills.
Because the track is slated to pass 70 ft. beneath the 1927-built, Beverly Hills High School 鈥 which itself was built on active oilfields 鈥 the tony zip-code is spending millions to fight the project for reasons, it says, of safety.
鈥淢ethane gas, toxic chemicals and teenagers don鈥檛 mix,鈥 says the opening line of a PTA-produced video, which blends computer-generated images of exploding fireballs with newsreel footage of an actual methane fire that ignited nearby in 1985 and burned two city blocks for five days.
鈥淏ut this dangerous combination is on the verge of exploding at Beverly High, turning the school into a mega-disaster.鈥
The city of Beverly Hills, which reportedly has spent $2 million in legal and public relations fees, filed suit last month to force the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) to reroute the link 1,000 ft. away, eliminating the need for a tunnel.
The MTA says it has ruled out the alternative route because it would attract fewer riders and is dangerously close to an active earthquake fault, and subway backers are denouncing the Beverly Hills campaign.
鈥淭he insanity that has engulfed this city for the last year and a half, [is] the result of this hysterical campaign being run about explosions and migrating methane gas, that were designed to inflame and alarm the public,鈥 L.A. County Supervisor, Zev Yaroslavsky, said to The New York Times.
Advocates of the tunnel route聽say Beverly Hills is just full of rich people used to getting their own way, citing a fierce political battle in the 1960s in which the city blocked a 10-lane freeway link that would have connected nearby skyscrapers in Century City to Los Angeles.
Opponents of the tunnel, meanwhile, are saying, 鈥渇ollow the money,鈥 pointing to investigative reports that have traced the influence of developers that stand to benefit from the project. One such developer, Chicago-based JMB Realty Corporation, raised nearly $300,000 for Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who heads the MTA.
According to an investigative cover story in Los Angeles Weekly, the sub-school tunnel would enable the project to run 鈥渁lmost to the lobbies鈥 of two high rises built by JMB, with a third, just a half-block away.
According to the PTA-created video, the Beverly Hills Unified School District is happy to support an alternate route that would avoid the entire problem, and require transit users to walk perhaps two-and-a-half minutes.
Mayor Villaraigosa 鈥 who is rumored to be interested in becoming US secretary of transportation if Obama is reelected 鈥 says the project is part of his vision to ease the region鈥檚 stultifying traffic congestion, and says residents are just creating a climate of fear.
There are other snarls as well.
In 2008, Beverly Hills approved $334 million in bonds to help the school district modernize and renovate the high school, which won a National Blue Ribbon School of Excellence Award by the US Department of Education in 2004. School officials say the Metro project could seriously hamper plans to build new buildings聽and drive up construction costs by untold millions.
Both the city of Beverly Hills and the school district have filed separate California Environmental Quality Act lawsuits challenging the subway route under the high school. This should be resolved, after appeals, in about 20 months.
Lewis Hall, a recently elected board member of the Beverly Hills Unified School District, says the school district is discounting MTA's claim that the alternative route would put the subway and the subway station on an active fault. 鈥淲e claim the evidence is flawed and we have produced our own evidence showing that MTA's science is wrong,鈥 Hall says.
"If MTA won't聽seriously consider聽the seismic studies submitted by Beverly Hills, showing the alternative route聽as safe, hopefully a judge will,鈥 he says.
The Los Angeles Times has weighed in with two editorials, both supporting the under-the-school tunnel.
One reads: 鈥淭he Westside needs the 鈥楽ubway to the Sea,鈥櫬燼nd the NIMBYs of B.H. should get on board.鈥
The other says, 鈥淥pponents of the planned route under Beverly Hills High are wasting time and money.鈥