LEONARD KRANSER -- Community commentary
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The Daily Pilot points out the solution to Newport Beach residents’
airport concerns (“Time for a new look at El Toro,” March 9). It says,
“Newport Beach leaders need to strike a deal with their South County
enemies: If you help us freeze John Wayne in its current state, we’ll
stop our push for an airport at El Toro.”
Don’t call South County “enemies”; we are offering that “deal.”
First of all, we wrote Measure F to require a two-thirds vote of the
people before the county could:
* Increase the operation of any existing civilian airport beyond its
current legally permissible and authorized level of operations
* Affect the physical expansion of the facilities of any existing
civilian airport beyond the current and legally authorized size
* Make any expansion or change in operations at any existing airport.
Measure F effectively prevents a John Wayne expansion.
So why is the Newport Beach City Council spending taxpayers’ money on a
lawsuit to overturn Measure F?
The 2-to-1 win for Measure F says El Toro will not be built, because the
people will not allow it. The most recent polls by UCI and Cal State
Fullerton show opposition to El Toro airport exceeding support, which is
dwindling. And Newport Beach Congressman Christopher Cox’s 47th District
voted 74.3% in favor of Measure F.
The alternative to building El Toro airport need not be expansion of John
Wayne, unless the Newport Beach strategy backfires. Talk of John Wayne
doubling or tripling comes only from El Toro promoters. It’s their
“boogeyman” to scare residents to their pro-airport side.
Supervisor Thomas W. Wilson tried to take John Wayne expansion off the
table, but the Newport Beach City Council asked the county to leave it
on.
Realistically, there is little need for increased airport capacity in
Orange County. The much-exaggerated growth in regional air travel demand
will arise from remote and growing areas of the Inland Empire and Los
Angeles County, closer to March, Ontario and Palmdale airports.
The Southern California Assn. of Governments predicts Orange County’s
population will grow by only 14% in the next 20 years. This is no
justification for doubling, tripling -- or in the case of El Toro --
quadrupling county airport capacity.
Orange County is expected to add only 385,000 men, women and children to
its population, but the county proposes to expand airport capacity for 28
million passengers. The El Toro plan depends on importing these
passengers from other airports and other counties.
If Newport Beach persists in its litigation and promotes a counter
initiative against Measure F, your opportunity for a “no John Wayne
expansion -- no El Toro” deal will evaporate. We urge Newport Beach to
abandon doomed, costly attempts to promote an El Toro airport and focus
on just limiting John Wayne.
As Steve Smith said in his March 13 column, “We shouldn’t reject South
County’s olive branch, noted that the eight cities of the El Toro Reuse
Planning Authority already have offered to fight against expansion of
John Wayne, if only Newport Beach leaders would agree to a ‘deal.’ ”
Talk to us. We oppose airport noise, pollution and traffic -- in all our
backyards.
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