CLOSER LOOK -- Pushing for more restrictions
Paul Clinton
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -- Though the drive to extend flight restrictions
at John Wayne Airport has yet to gather much political steam, those who
would be most affected by the expiration of the caps in 2005 have already
begun readying themselves for the campaign.
From Newport Beach to Santa Ana to Irvine, the communities of Orange
County will have one eye on John Wayne -- with the other firmly fixed on
the former El Toro Marine base -- as they grapple with a growing demand
for flights.
Just as in the 1980s, when Newport Beach joined local activists in
lawsuits that won the restrictions, those involved say a broad range of
interests must have a say in the debate.
The restrictions limit the number of annual passengers to 8.4 million
and allow no more than 73 daily departures. Departures are allowed from 7
a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday.
Arrivals are allowed from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and
8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday.
The process to extend the caps formally began Dec. 5, after the
county’s Board of Supervisors directed interim CEO Michael Schumacher to
begin talks with Newport Beach.
Those discussions have not begun Even so, members of the Airport
Working Group, the driving force behind the 1985 settlement agreement,
have already challenged the city and county to include them, along with
the airlines, the Federal Aviation Administration and others, in the
talks.
“I think all the affected parties should be at the table,” Airport
Working Group attorney Barbara Lichman said. “We have five years to work
this through, and I think we can do it.”
The process
For now, officials and activists have started to lay down the road map
for extending the settlement agreement past 2005.
The crucial first step, most agree, is deciding if any modifications
should be made to the current flight caps and noise restrictions.
Newport Beach has already brought San Francisco-based law firm Shute,
Mihaly and Weinberger on board for legal advice on whether the
restrictions can be extended. The firm’s founder, Clem Shute, had a hand
in the city’s earlier fight to get the settlement put in to place.
City officials said the firm has indicated that the settlement
agreement could be extended.
However, the city hasn’t signed a formal contract with the firm, City
Atty. Bob Burnham said, in response to an e-mail inquiry. And some City
Council members have said they would like to hire another firm to assess
the probability of a successful extension.
“I want to know what the odds are for getting this thing extended in
the current environment,” newly-elected Councilman John Heffernan said.
“I want a fresh look, somebody on the outside looking in for the first
time.”
Once a decision on modifications is made, the city and county must
decide what kind of environmental reviews are required by the California
Environmental Quality Act.
The players
The groups that ultimately must approve the extension agreement
include the four who signed the 1985 deal -- the city of Newport Beach,
the county, the Airport Working Group and Stop Polluting Our Newport, a
local environmental group that was active in the 1980s and 1990s.
It’s not clear whether the FAA would have to approve the deal, since
federal law prohibits airports from imposing their own flight
restrictions. Congress granted a special exemption for John Wayne when it
passed the Aircraft Noise and Capacity Act in 1990.
Stop Polluting Our Newport, the group that founded the working group
in the early 1980s, won’t take much of a leadership role in the issue,
its members say.
“We just haven’t devoted our resources to the airport issue,” group
member and former Newport Beach councilwoman Jean Watt said. “We’ve just
followed AWG’s lead.”
The politics
Clearly, extending the caps at John Wayne isn’t likely to generate the
same kind of political furor that greeted county backers of the proposed
El Toro airport.
Even South County leaders are on record as backing continued flight
limits for John Wayne. The EL Toro Reuse Planning Authority passed
several resolutions last year supporting the effort, group spokeswoman
Meg Waters said.
But with Newport Beach keeping up the pro-El Toro airport fight, the
coalition of South County cities -- which on Friday filed an appeal of a
judge’s ruling overturning the anti-airport Measure F -- has rethought
its position.
“South County is getting angry that Newport Beach is forcing a much
worse airport down our throats,” Waters said. “We think it will be
impossible to get those caps extended without our support.”
Taken aback by Waters’ remark, Airport Working Group’s Lichman
vehemently disagreed.
“South County has not one thing to say about it,” Lichman said. “We
don’t need their support on the settlement extension. Talking with them
or trying to get their support doesn’t matter.”
At 14 gates, the John Wayne terminal handled 7.7 million passengers
last year. The proposed El Toro airport is being planned to handle 28.8
million annually by 2020.
While the supervisors are divided on El Toro, they unanimously support
extending the restrictions at John Wayne.
“The focus is accommodating the demand we generate in Orange County
with reasonable protections for the citizens around John Wayne and El
Toro,” said James Campbell, a spokesman for Supervisor Chuck Smith. “We
just can’t follow this ‘BANANA’ mantra that South County espouses that’s
‘Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anyone.”’
The FAA is working to complete a regional capacity study, expected to
be made public in April, assessing the future aviation demands in
Southern California.
That study should answer many of the questions about the need for a
second airport or expanded John Wayne, FAA spokesman Jerry Snyder said.
From there, success might depend on how well Newport Beach spreads its
message, said Airport Working Group co-founder Clarence Turner, who has
pushed for the involvement of Anaheim, Irvine and other Orange County
cities in the process.
“If I were involved, I would be thinking of a program that would
appeal countywide,” Turner said. “They’ve got to get outside support.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.