Anti-El Toro measure marches on
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Noaki Schwartz
SANTA ANA -- A judge Thursday threw out a last-minute lawsuit filed by
local El Toro airport supporters that tried to stop the initiative aimed
at preventing the airport’s construction.
Orange County Superior Court Judge Richard M. Aronson cited lack of
evidence and time as the main problems with the petition.
The lawsuit was filed less than a week before the initiative was set to
go to the printers in order to appear on the March ballot. Aronson was
asked by the registrar of voters to make his judgment Thursday, or by
Monday at the latest.
“I’m intrigued by some of the issues, but I don’t know enough to say one
way or another,” he said, adding that he was compelled to throw out the
suit rather than make an uninformed decision on its merits.
The lawsuit claimed that the proposed Measure F violates the state’s rule
on single-subject initiatives. The California Constitution does not allow
more than one subject to be submitted to voters under one initiative. The
measure proposes requiring a public vote on the construction of airports,
jails or landfills in residential zones.Attorney Barbara Lichman --
representing the group of Newport Beach pro-airport residents -- claimed
the measure’s supporters didn’t show a connection between airports, jails
and landfills. She also said they pose no more of a health risk than the
construction of an apartment block.
“Anything could fall within the rubric of public safety,” Lichman said.
The initiative’s supporters said that the three issues were linked as
large-scale public development projects. However, Lichman argued that a
landfill is not a development and a jail is often merely one structure.
“They threw in jails and landfills in order to appeal to more people,”
Lichman said, stressing that the real purpose of the initiative was to
stop the development of El Toro.
Despite her arguments, the attempt to torpedo Measure F failed. Because
of the lack of time, the lawyers who filed the lawsuit were unable to
compile any evidence supporting their case.
“I have no idea if airports are important to the health of children and
adults,” Aronson said. “How am I going to decide this issue?”
With only two days and no evidence, there was simply no way to make an
informed decision, he added.
Aronson pointed out that in a recent Supreme Court judgment in which a
statewide initiative was ruled invalid under the single-subject rule, the
court had six weeks to review ample evidence.
That particular measure, Proposition 24, included one provision that
would cut legislator compensation and another that would move the ability
to draw congressional district from the Legislature to the Supreme Court.
“Preelection challenges as a rule are discouraged,” said attorney James
Harrison, representing Jeffrey Metzger, the initiative’s proponent. “I
don’t think any extra time would’ve made any difference.”
Still, after the ruling, Lichman said that she is considering appealing
the decision.
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