Letter of the week
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Here are some suggestions for John Wayne Airport:
Noise reduction:
Encourage airline companies to use the quietest airplanes available to
serve Orange County by providing a landing fee subsidy in proportion to
the degree of quietness and/or a landing fee penalty for the noisiest
planes.
Accelerate county funding to buy and/or soundproof homes in the
currently affected zones.
More actively encourage Congress, airframe and engine manufacturers to
research and fund aircraft noise reduction programs.
Provide seed money to the universities in Southern California to
research the problem of noise reduction at John Wayne. Make California
the center of studies and improvements in this area.
Connect Southern California airports with advanced high speed ground
transportation to reduce local connecting flights between airports and
provide better access for local residents and visitors to airport
transportation hubs.
Build takeoff exhaust noise deflectors at both ends of the runways to
take care of both north and south takeoffs. Currently the south taxiing
takeoff noise can be heard up to eight miles away in Tustin and Irvine at
45 degrees off the runway axis. Deflectors that would send the noise
upward would reduce the takeoff noise for all communities surrounding the
airport.
Build out the runways the additional several hundred feet that are
available so that takeoffs would be farther from the end of the runway,
and thus quieter as well as providing additional measures of safety.
Investigate the limits of onshore wind velocity on takeoffs at John
Wayne as a function of any of the above possible changes.
Airport operating hour expansion:
Combine with South County cities, which are strongly opposed to night
flight operations, to form a coalition that uses political and market
forces to pressure airlines and government to honor a no night flight
policy for John Wayne.
Those of us who oppose 24-hour airports near our homes have no desire
to impose such 24-hour airport operating conditions on the neighbors of
John Wayne--as long as you neighbors do not wish to impose a 24-hour
operational airport on us.
Save the bay:
Limit airport operations dumping pollutants on the San Diego Creek
basin. Eliminating an airport at El Toro designed for two and one-half to
five times the capacity of John Wayne is a great start to helping save
the bay. Improving fuels and engines is another solution. Reducing the
takeoff fuel consumption per passenger is another.
Requiring and actively evaluating in-depth studies, called
environmental impact reports, on up-basin projects should reduce
development effects on the fragile Newport Bay.
Be more proactive and cooperative in basin water development, storm
runoff, regular drain cleanups and plantings.
Miscellaneous:
Realize that your neighbors also bear considerable transportation
noise and contamination impacts from the freeways, trains, intercounty
buses and trucks and low-flying aircraft. Aircraft now regularly and
systematically use the formerly off-limits El Toro airspace at all hours.
Also, now northern takeoffs from John Wayne which proceed north, south or
east regularly overfly Tustin and Irvine. Most of us non-Newporters bear
these transportation impacts without the cooler temperatures, strong
breezes, and more convenient access if not a view of the water enjoyed
most of the Daily Pilot’s readers.
A good message for you to send to your neighbors is to stop the
funding of those spokesmen and politicians whose rhetoric makes
cooperation with your neighbors on solving your problems that much more
difficult.
Solving problems is often the superior solution compared with
transferring problems to others or moving away from them. Too often,
unsolved problems come back to bother you again.
DON STEWART
Irvine
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