Wanted: Help in keeping airport restrictions
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Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- It’s a race the City Council has run alone for most
of the past three decades: trying to keep the skies over the city
friendly to residents.
Now the city will pass the baton to an untested teammate -- the county
Board of Supervisors -- and hope it has the political strength and
endurance to cross the finish line and win an extension on the curfew and
flight restrictions at John Wayne Airport.
“I think we can do this,” said Clem Shutte, the San Francisco attorney
who is counsel to the city on airport issues. “We need to start the
process and work it through.”
The council voted Tuesday night to get the supervisors involved on its
fight to keep the airport’s current restrictions, which expire in 2005,
in effect for another 20 years.
Mayor John Noyes said he’s had discussions with Supervisor Tom Wilson,
who agreed to take the matter to the board.
The political muscle provided by the supervisors is a key step in
keeping the restrictions in place. The process may eventually have to
wind through the Federal Aviation Administration and the courts before
the precedent-setting matter is finally decided.
The original airport agreement was secured in 1985. It provides for a
strict curfew and limits the number of flights and passengers at John
Wayne.
Members of the local Airport Working Group say they will support the
effort but insist that the city should continue to pursue an airport at
the former Marine Corps air station at El Toro.
Noyes, however, insists this is not an El Toro issue.
“Even if there was a full-blown El Toro airport, we would still be
asking for these limits,” he said.
This could prove problematic for South County airport representatives,
who said they will support Newport’s effort only if the city backs off El
Toro.
“They can’t be separated,” said Leonard Kranser, editor of the El Toro
Airport Web site. “The position of folks in South County, as I perceive
it, is the city of Newport is simultaneously trying to overturn Measure
F, which protects people throughout the county, and institute 20 more
years of protection solely for people that live around John Wayne.”
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