RYAN WILLIAMS -- Community Commentary
This letter concerns the El Toro Airport debate. The problem raised by
noise pollution over Eastbluff and the Back Bay by an expanded John Wayne
Airport is real and needs to be addressed. The noise now is horrendous.
Every three to five minutes a plane takes off. If you are outside,
walking your dog, horseback riding, or among a class of students enjoying
the spring sun, all conversation ceases as these planes roar overhead. An
expanded airport at John Wayne, the alternative of no airport at El Toro,
will surely increase the noise and decrease housing prices in the local
neighborhoods.
The opponents of building the airport at El Toro, many of whom would
rather expand John Wayne, seldom discuss noise pollution and its burden
on the citizens of Newport Beach. As it is now, real estate prices
incorporate and reflect John Wayne’s presence. This is true because
buyers of property in Eastbluff understand there is noise associated with
the particular location. This becomes one of many factors in the price of
the property.
Currently, the largest airplane that flies out of John Wayne is a
Boeing 757 and it flies only between the hours of 7 a.m. and 11 p.m.
Under some proposals, this will change. Expanding John Wayne will have
two implications. The first regards the size of planes; no longer will
757s be the noisiest and heaviest planes taking off. With larger planes,
some unable to execute the rapid, extremely vertical, stomach-dropping
takeoff, the noise over the neighborhoods will dramatically increase. The
second implication concerns the operating hours of the airport. Overnight
delivery companies desperately want to use the airport. This will
increase traffic, especially during the night, and the now familiar noise
will occur at all hours.
Combining these two factors spells disaster for the local area. When
the airport expands, the price of real estate will dramatically decrease.
The current airport is acceptable because the housing prices accurately
reflect the current level of noise. However, the prospect of expansion is
quite new, and few areas realize what it will do to the cost of their
home. Unless the airport and city attempts to prop up real estate prices
or reconsiders the expanded airport, homeowners and businesses will see
their property values fall thanks to rise of takeoff noise.
* RYAN WILLIAMS is a 1997 graduate of Corona del Mar High School and a
junior at the United States Military Academy. The views expressed here do
not represent the views of the US Military Academy nor the Departments of
Defense or the Army.
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