El Toro boosters again challenging antiairport measure
Jenifer Ragland
Proponents and detractors of a measure that could derail the county’s El
Toro airport plans will be in court today to once again duke it out over
the initiative’s merits.
A lawsuit filed by Newport Beach airport supporters alleges that Measure
F -- which would require a public vote on the construction of new
airports, jails or hazardous landfills in residential areas -- violates
the state’s single-subject rule for initiatives.
Former Newport Beach Mayor Tom Edwards, one of the attorneys representing
the initiative opponents, declined to comment on the content of his
petition.
The California Constitution prevents more than one subject from being
submitted to the voters under one initiative, said James Harrison, one of
the San Francisco-based attorneys representing initiative proponent
Jeffrey Metzger.
But Harrison said Measure F in no way violates that rule.
“This challenge falls far short of coming close to invalidating the
initiative,” he said. “It’s reforming the procedures by which the county
approves large-scale development projects that affect the health and
safety of surrounding communities.”
Harrison also said that California is full of cases that have upheld
ballot measures much broader than the Safe and Healthy Communities
Initiative under the single-subject law.
One of those was the political reform act of 1974, which included
lobbyists activities, ballot measures and campaign spending measures in
one initiative. The California Supreme Court found that the measure did
not violate the single-subject rule, Harrison said.
But just this month, a California Superior Court judge invalidated a
statewide initiative under the single-subject rule.
The measure, Proposition 24, included a provision that would cut
legislator compensation and one that would move the ability to draw
congressional districts from the Legislature to the Supreme Court.
“In that case, there’s no relationship between the two whatsoever,”
Harrison said, adding that the proponent admitted to including the pay
cuts in order to make the other provision more popular with voters. “This
measure is not that.”
This is the third time airport supporters have challenged the measure in
court since its release last spring.
In June, they alleged the initiative violated five areas of California
law. The judge allowed the measure to go on the ballot, but expressed her
own serious doubts about the measure’s validity.
Airport boosters also alleged that Measure F should include a copy of
Measure A -- the 1994 ballot measure in which voters agreed to plan an
airport -- in the text. That petition was denied Dec. 10.
Today’s hearing is set for 10 a.m. in Orange County Superior Court.
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