League of Women Voters of California
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Measure U Transportation Projects City of Hayward General Plan Amendment 11320 / 61.6% Yes votes ...... 7069 / 38.4% No votes
See Also:
Index of all Measures |
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Results as of Nov 15 4:54pm, 100.0% of Precincts Reporting (103/103) |
Information shown below: Impartial Analysis | Arguments | | ||||
Shall the General Plan of the City of Hayward be amended, as provided in the measure, to enable the Hayward City Council to pursue implementation of transportation projects which may include alternatives to the Route 238 Bypass and which would qualify for funding from Measure B and other sources?
The proposed Measure would modify the City's General Plan by deleting reference to the route specified in the 1987 Draft Environmental Impact Report for the Foothill Freeway (DEIR) and would require the City Council to pursue the implementation of transportation projects, including alternatives to the Route 238 Bypass, that would relieve traffic congestion in the City of Hayward and would qualify for funding from Measure B and other sources. The Measure also authorizes and directs the Council to make future amendments to the City's General Plan necessary to accommodate the implementation of such traffic congestion relief projects.
If this Measure is adopted, the City Council would be allowed to amend the
City's General Plan to accommodate traffic congestion relief projects, other
than the route detailed in the 1987 Foothill Freeway DEIR, funded by Measure
B and other funding sources. If the Measure is rejected, the City's General Plan
would continue to require that the City Council support construction of the
Foothill Freeway as described in the 1987 Draft Environmental Impact Report.
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Arguments For Measure U | Arguments Against Measure U |
Vote Yes on Measure U!
Traffic! Traffic! Traffic! Hayward is faced with a serious traffic problem. For 40 years, the Route 238 Bypass (Foothill Freeway) has been considered the solution to this problem. Today, we are no closer to starting construction of the Freeway than we were in the 1960s when it was first proposed. The truth is, it is unlikely the Foothill Freeway will ever be built. Still, the traffic problem is worse. The Courts have ruled that $111 million set aside to pay for the construction of the Freeway cannot be used to build it. As a result, Hayward loses twice: we lose the money and the traffic problem gets worse. Do not let this happen!
Vote Yes on Measure U!
Vote Yes on Measure U! Keep these dollars in Hayward!
Measure U will amend the General Plan to allow the Hayward City Council, your elected representatives, to work with the community to carefully consider various transportation projects and select the one which best solves our traffic problem. A YES vote means that existing tax dollars collected from Hayward taxpayers remain in Hayward. A YES vote means that by working together a project acceptable to the community can be developed. A YES vote means relief from long delays due to traffic congestion.
Vote YES on Measure U!
| This measure asks you to remove from our General Plan all reference to 238
Bypass and concurrent council obligations imposed by 1992 passage of
Measure L. Success at this present election would stamp approval upon
Council's desire to pursue an unsatisfactory idea. An inherent difficulty, not
openly revealed in the ballot measure, lays with the fact that the `alternative' is
handicapped by lack of technical study.
This election is premature! Voters need real information. The extension of BART may make more sense. A large problem is the lack of a revealed time line between start of construction and completion of all work involving underpass extension along Jackson from BART tracks to a point near Foothill and `D' street. It needs an overpass at Watkins and another at Mission. Jackson requires widened excavation to accommodate access and exit ramps at Mission. Construction area traffic detours would be horrific and last five years, perhaps longer! No detour around that intersection is available east of Mission. Examination of any city map reveals the potential catastrophe. Add to this mix, the peak hour traffic increases we will experience with completion of San Mateo Bridge occurring one month after the election. We gain appreciation of that nightmare only after the election. Why would we want to allow City Council full discretion over undetermined money amounts, (Measure B and 238 Bypass land sales), without considering negative effects of the alternative that were not found in 238 Bypass plans? Council repeatedly ignores requests to undertake a highest and best transportation use study which might indicate validity of Hayward airport conversion to a truck stop. Jobs and economic benefit might increase with opportunity for trucks to voluntarily avoid commute traffic thus providing greater, healthier and longer lasting traffic relief than presently popular alternatives.
Defeat this measure. Vote NO!
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