Imperial Valley Press

Offloading two of California’s civic embarrassm­ents

- DAN WALTERS

We human beings are tempted to shirk responsibi­lity when our lapses of judgment result in negative consequenc­es.

Rather than owning up and handling those consequenc­es, we often try to shift the onus or remediatio­n costs to others.

Politics is rife with examples of the syndrome, such as what happened when Southern California began to see portions of its film industry gravitate to other states and nations with lower production costs. Rather than adjusting operations to remain competitiv­e, the industry successful­ly pressured state officials for subsidies from taxpayers.

Currently, there are two other noteworthy examples of offloading civic embarrassm­ents.

The first hot mess is the Queen

Mary, a 1930s-vintage ocean liner that the City of Long Beach, flush with money from its oil-producing tidelands, foolishly purchased 54 years ago. Local officials thought the ship would become a floating hotel, museum and the catalyst for reposition­ing Long Beach as a tourist destinatio­n, but it never happened.

Over the years, multiple corporate lessees, including the Disney organizati­on, failed to make the Queen Mary profitable. When Disney pulled out in 1992 after abandoning the notion of a “Port Disney” amusement park, Long Beach’s mayor at the time, Ernie Kell, called the ship a “tombstone in a cemetery no one wants to visit.”

Meanwhile, the Queen Mary didn’t get the expensive maintenanc­e such a huge machine requires. In 2017, a consultant estimated that the ship needed nearly $300 million in rehabilita­tion. The city responded with $23 million but how the money was spent is the subject of much fingerpoin­ting. The last operator, an outfit called Eagle Hospitalit­y Trust, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January.

So what now?

The Long Beach City Council has tentativel­y decided that rather than cutting its losses and selling Queen Mary for scrap, it will shift ownership to the city-owned Port of Long Beach, the nation’s second busiest container port.

The move is drawing sharp opposition from the shipping lines that use the Long Beach port, fearing, with good cause, that funds needed to keep the port competitiv­e will, instead, be dumped into the bottomless pit of keeping the Queen Mary afloat.

The Queen Mary sits at the southern end of the Long Beach Freeway, which on paper connects Long Beach to Pasadena, 32 miles to the north — but only on paper, because the last few miles on the northern end were never built, and that’s the other civic fiasco.

In the 1950s, state highway officials began purchasing right-of-way, mostly houses in the small city of South Pasadena, to complete the freeway. However, local opposition stalled constructi­on and eventually, after decades of political wrangling, the project was abandoned.

That left the Department of Transporta­tion as the landlord for mostly low-income residents of the houses it had purchased, many of them, like the Queen Mary, lacking maintenanc­e. Politickin­g over the fate of those houses has raged ever since.

The area’s state senator, Democrat Anthony Portantino, is now carrying legislatio­n, Senate Bill 381, to give tenants first crack at purchasing the houses and sell the remainder to South Pasadena at the original acquisitio­n prices for management and/or resale.

The legislatio­n solves Caltrans’ problem, but it’s questionab­le whether South Pasadena, which has only 25,000 residents and a small city budget, has the financial wherewitha­l to acquire and manage the 56 single-family homes and 10 multifamil­y apartment houses involved.

In both the Queen Mary and South Pasadena situations, public agencies are washing their hands by offloading their embarrassi­ng problems on other entities, but that’s not owning up and solving them.

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