READERS RESPOND -- South County should share air traffic needs
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AT ISSUE: Measure F, on Tuesday’s ballot, which is aimed at derailing the
county’s El Toro airport plans.
Should the people of South County not share in the need for expanded air
transportation -- a need brought on by the growth of South County? The
cities of Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Tustin, Orange, Santa Ana,
Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Orange and yes, Irvine, will be
subjected to the new environmental impact report, Plan F or G, dated
December 1999.
Plan F, the least invasive, will subject those within a five-mile radius
of John Wayne to triple the noise and pollution. There are 180 or more
schools, child-care or children’s facilities within a five-mile radius of
John Wayne. Are our children less precious than the children of South
County? The closest home to El Toro is six miles, and El Toro has a
14,000-acre buffer zone, while John Wayne has none. South County, we
under the flight path need your cooperation, not your constant barrage of
opposition.
JOHN DI BELLO
Newport Beach
I believe that the perfect solution to end the El Toro debate is that if
Measure F is passed and El Toro airport is not built, the county shall
restrict the use of John Wayne Airport to those that live in the areas
north and west of the city of Irvine.
This proposal would include the requirement to show proof of residence in
order to purchase a ticket for departing flights from John Wayne. The
400,000-plus residents of South County would have to make other
arrangements such as LAX, Ontario or San Diego for their travel plans.
This plan would help alleviate the pressure to expand John Wayne, as
those who chose not to have an airport in their own backyard will not be
able to travel from a convenient location. It is very sad to me that
anyone would want to squander such a golden opportunity to have a
facility as convenient and safe as El Toro would be.
JEFFREY W. WILCOX
Newport Beach
As a resident of Newport Beach who lives under the flight path of John
Wayne Airport, I can surely empathize with South County residents.
However, Orange County is rapidly expanding and will continue to do so.
As the county grows, more people will need to travel for business and
want to travel for pleasure, and more cargo will have to find its way
into the county. Any notion that this county will not have to expand its
airport capacity in the next 20 years is shortsighted. The El Toro
Airport plan goes a long way toward solving some of these problems at far
less of a social cost than any expansion of John Wayne Airport.
Should the El Toro plan not go through, two alternatives have been
devised for expanding John Wayne Airport. An expanded John Wayne will
create air and noise pollution in an already crowded residential area, it
will force the condemnation of hundreds of homes and businesses, it will
negatively impact the Back Bay wildlife refuge, it will create traffic
congestion on crowded surface streets and will detrimentally impact more
than 250 schools within a five-mile radius of the airport. There is no
buffer zone around John Wayne and there never will be, unlike El Toro,
which has an 14,000-acre buffer zone around the perimeter of the airport.
The airport issue is regional, and a levelheaded approach is needed more
now than ever before. It is simply too easy to say “Not in my backyard”
and ignore the realities that face an ever-expanding Orange County.
Moreover, it would be unfair for the residents of South County to utilize
an expanded John Wayne Airport, while not shouldering some of the burden
themselves.
At the very least, I hope that the same South County residents who so
vigorously oppose an airport at El Toro will stand up and oppose any
expansion of John Wayne with the same energy level.
JON W. GURKA
Newport Beach
I have lived in Newport Beach for 20 years. I have lived with airplane
noise for that entire time. Unlike the comments I have heard from reading
the El Toro airport opponents, the following has been my reality in
living 20 years under the glide path:
1. No known diseases have been contracted by my children as the result of
airplanes going overhead. They are normal, productive American citizens.
2. My home hasn’t gone down in value. In fact, the planes fly over some
of the most expensive homes in the United States.
3. My employer not only liked the airport being nearby, but actually
located the company in Newport Beach because it was near an airport.
4. The planes fly over one of the most beautiful parks and wildlife
preserves in California, the Back Bay. I have seen no evidence in 20
years of riding my bike around this vast parkland that the planes have
damaged anything at all.
5. The noise pollution, paranoia and outright lies coming from otherwise
educated, normal people should be the true study undertaken, not how loud
the planes are.
6. I would venture to say that many people near John Wayne Airport live
with far more noise and potential risk than anyone ever would at El Toro.
More importantly, they don’t want any more.
And that is the real issue here. The folks in Irvine, Mission Viejo and
El Toro want to have their cake while they’re eating ours. They want
thousands of new homes that are built on every empty lot to have flight
access from John Wayne. I say we have done our fair share. It’s time for
others to help out. Has everyone in South County forgotten how loud the
jets were that used to land there since El Toro opened? I remember the
Marines on maneuvers during the Gulf War. The commercial jets would be a
picnic by comparison.
7. El Toro was built as an airport. I have been there a number of times.
It is vast compared to John Wayne. And in many cases the planes would be
much, much higher over El Toro than they are here. Most of the time they
would be flying over the Cleveland National Forest. In Newport, in Santa
Ana conditions, the planes come in so low over the back bay I can
practically read the in-flight magazines from my front porch.
The bottom line is this: Does Orange County need a bigger, better
airport, yes or no? The answer appears to be yes. If Orange County will
need to move more air travelers in the next 20 years, where are they
going to fly in and out of? Right now most of the people from South
County are really assuming its going to continue to be over my house. I
don’t think so.
Let’s assume for a moment that all of the hysterical distorted and
paranoid lies I have read in fliers printed by El Toro opponents are the
truth. Why then should I and others be subjected to them because
thousands of additional flights are required to accommodate all the new
homes in South County in the next 20 years.
In short, why is it bad for them but good for me? How many people on an
average flight out of Orange County are from South County? My biggest
problem with all of the arguments I have heard is that I took a logic
course during my undergraduate training.
ED CARELS
Newport Beach
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