The airport debate -- To cap or not to cap?
As residents of Eastside Costa Mesa, we strongly urge continuation of
passenger caps, noise restrictions and restricted flight hours at John
Wayne Airport.
VIRGINIA C. HANLEY
and JON M. HANLEY
Costa Mesa
What can be done to extend flight caps at John Wayne Airport?
I do not think caps can be extended. I do not think a municipality can
regulate interstate commerce.
Further, market demand for flights will continue to increase. There is
no incentive whatsoever for airlines to extend caps at John Wayne
Airport.
If it weren’t for the 1985 settlement agreement, the airport would be
at 15 million air passengers a year (The levels are now capped at 8.4
million.)
I believe John Wayne will be at 15 million in a couple years, after
the settlement agreement expires in 2005.
Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and other communities in the flight path
will continue to shoulder the burden of the air transportation situation.
But even when John Wayne goes to 15 million passengers, Orange County
still will not meet its share of air transportation demand, as will be
borne out in a soon-to-be-released Southern California Assn. of
Governments report.
The figure is more like a demand for Orange County of 34 million air
passengers. That is why El Toro must utilized for its intended purpose: a
second airport that will be deeded to the citizens of Orange County for
free.
Otherwise, taxpayers will spend billions of dollars condemning 700
acres of homes and businesses around John Wayne to reach the 34-million
passenger airport, an unnecessary waste of taxpayer money that would
unfairly and unnecessarily destroy people’s lives and livelihoods.
ANN WATT
Santa Ana Heights
I don’t want John Wayne Airport to grow any more. And I prefer to have
an airport at El Toro, where it is now said that flights will be safe.
In Newport Beach, the planes fly over about eight times as many
schools. I’m angry about John Wayne.
PATRICIA DALE
Newport Beach
To extend flight caps at John Wayne Airport, it will be necessary to
convince Congress, the Interstate Commerce Commission and airlines that
Orange County’s travel needs through 2025 can and should be provided by
the other regional airports.
JOSEPH STASCH
Newport Beach
Shirley Conger’s perceptive analysis about the futility of trying to
cap flights at John Wayne Airport applies equally well to El Toro and
Irvine, (“Smith’s views harmful to Newport,” Nov. 4).
Irvine has no more power over a future El Toro airport than Newport
Beach has over John Wayne. Indeed, Irvine has less power. It has no cause
of action. The flights do not pass over the city.
Irvine can try to put a cap on flights at El Toro, but there can be no
resistance to demand for skyrocketing air passenger traffic. Any cap
would be overruled because it would interfere with interstate commerce.
In fact, current commercial, state and federal projections for Orange
County require full use of El Toro, and there is no way El Toro’s five
runways could be squeezed into John Wayne.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
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