San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

DEL MAR’S UTILITY UNDERGROUN­DING PANEL TO RESUME

- BY LUKE HAROLD Harold writes for the U-T Community Press.

Del Mar’s Undergroun­ding Project Advisory Committee is scheduled to resume next month with some changes, including a reduction from nine members to five and reducing term lengths from five years to three.

The committee hasn’t met since March 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic put a stop to committee meetings. Its members are tasked with overseeing the city’s utility undergroun­ding project, which began with a recently completed Tewa/10th Street segment, and advising the City Council. The Tewa segment included 1,000 linear feet of overhead wiring, 1,345 linear feet of joint trench and 10 poles to be removed.

A ceremony to commemorat­e the completed Tewa project, which ended up costing more than anticipate­d, is scheduled for later this month.

The Undergroun­ding Project Advisory Committee meeting schedule is Feb. 16, June 8, Sept. 14 and Dec. 14 at 10 a.m., with the potential for additional meetings as necessary.

The city still has to determine whether the four existing UPAC members want to continue serving terms that will run through March 2025, and appoint someone to the empty seat. According

to a city staff report, council members will appoint someone to the vacant seat during their Feb. 6 meeting if they receive enough applicatio­ns.

“Rolling forward, the vision is that as new areas come on board for the utilities to go undergroun­d, we would look for some rotation on the committee but balancing keeping the expertise, keeping the experience but rolling through our various areas,” said Del Mar Councilmem­ber Terry Gaasterlan­d, one of the council liaisons to the committee.

The next phases of the utility undergroun­ding project are area X1A, located by Crest Canyon, and area 1A, which runs along Stratford Court South. Areas X1A and 1A were going to be the first segments of the project before the council voted last year to add Tewa as a pilot project.

The utility undergroun­ding is funded by Measure Q, a one-cent sales tax ballot measure that Del Mar voters approved in 2016.

No expertise on undergroun­ding is required to serve on the committee.

“If you care about your community and your neighborho­od, you qualify,” Del Mar City Councilmem­ber Dwight Worden said.

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