Are police copping to Measure F stance?
Greg Risling
NEWPORT-MESA -- The signs are scattered throughout Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa: “Cops Say No on F.”
Printed by the Newport Beach-based Airport Working Group Political Action
Committee, the signs, have been distributed to thousands of residents
during the past couple of weeks.
“We sold out in two days,” said David Ellis, a consultant for the local
group. “The signs are on reorder right now, but there will be 4,000 signs
up by the end of the week.”
Ellis said the “cops” in the signs do not refer to the local police
departments, but to Orange County Sheriff Mike Carona and Dist. Atty.
Tony Rackauckas, who oppose the measure.
If approved March 7 by voters, the measure would require a two-thirds
vote before the county could build new jails, hazardous waste landfills
and commercial airports. The measure is designed to block the county’s
plans for a $2.9-billion airport at the closed Marine Corps air base at
El Toro.
But, at least in Newport-Mesa, the two police departments haven’t weighed
in on the issue. And don’t expect an announcement any time soon.
“We stay out of these situations because it is inappropriate for us to
take a position,” said Newport Beach police Sgt. Mike McDermott. “We will
keep politically neutral.
“We have, in the past, thrown our support behind a City Council or
judicial candidate, but even those we are straying away from.”
Newport-Mesa residents have a keen interest in the outcome, because most
fear John Wayne Airport will undergo an expansion if a second airport
isn’t built.
However, El Toro advocates have shifted more attention to the measure’s
impact on law enforcement than its controversial airport proposal. Fliers
have flooded mailboxes and garden-variety signs have been plastered on
telephone poles and front lawns in recent weeks.
Airport proponents who launched an anti-Measure F campaign have said if
the measure passes, criminals could roam free in every neighborhood
because there are not enough jail beds. They argue that the measure could
prevent more jails from being built and convicts could be let out early
to make room for new criminals.
The message, along with the name of the Orange County sheriff, is
prominently displayed on anti-F fliers. The sheriff and the district
attorney are not only law enforcement officials, but they are politicians
who are elected to their positions.
Many other police officers are not considered a part of the political
arena.
For instance, Santa Ana Police Chief Paul Walters recently announced that
some campaign literature incorrectly used his statements to say he
supported the measure. Walters said the quotes, from his 1998 campaign
for sheriff, were taken out of context and should never have been applied
to the Measure F debate.
Walters plans to remain neutral, as most chiefs, including those in
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, have done.
“I think getting police on your side during a political campaign
strengthens the argument,” said Costa Mesa police Lt. John Fitzpatrick.
“We aren’t taking any sides, though. We don’t mix politics with
business.”
The “cops” signs are the most noticeable addition to the anti-Measure F
campaign in the last two weeks. Some residents hoped the signs would be
more specific instead of using police in a general sense, leaving others
questioning if their department has taken a stand against the measure.
“It’s probably misleading to the average Newport Beach resident,”
McDermott said. “We don’t get too worked up about this stuff unless the
portrayal is completely outrageous.”
Some residents were floored by the purported law enforcement stance. Gay
Wassall-Kelly has received the anti-F mailers and couldn’t believe the
airport proposal wasn’t even mentioned. Although she sides with the
measure’s opposition, she thinks law enforcement has not been correctly
depicted.
“It’s probably not the way they want to be presented,” she said. “The
airport project should be a separate entity on the ballot. I don’t see
how all of these important things can be lumped together.”
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