El Toro lawsuit settled
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT-MESA -- With legal bills mounting, Orange County and the El
Toro Reuse Planning Authority have settled a lawsuit that keeps the
county from hiring an outside law firm that has handled much of its El
Toro fight.
The two sides announced the deal in a joint statement Tuesday
afternoon.
The planning authority sued the county on Oct. 7, 1998, alleging it
didn’t secure a four-fifths approval from the Board of Supervisors to
hire Gatzke, Dillon and Ballance. The firm, headed by Michael Gatzke, has
advised the county on airport-related issues since 1978.
Gatzke has been one of the planning authority’s main enemies as the
county has worked to build an airport at the former El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station. Gatzke advised the county when the planning authority
challenged the validity of the airport’s environmental review.
In the settlement, the county agreed not to hire Gatzke for advice on
any new litigation. Gatzke, in turn, agreed to pay “taxable costs.”
Planning authority spokeswoman Meg Waters said those could add up to
about $10,000.
Also in the deal, the planing authority can file a claim against the
county for legal costs, which Waters said added up to about $250,000. The
authority dropped its suit.
“ETRPA wanted to put the county on notice,” Waters said about the
suit. “We wanted to insist that they follow the rules.”
County officials could not be reached for comment.
Newport Beach Councilman Gary Proctor, who said he hadn’t seen the
settlement, blasted the suit as a “purely political” move.
“I believe it’s nothing more than South County using trench warfare
and terrorist activity to challenge any kind of development at El Toro of
any kind,” Proctor said. “It’s just mean-spirited.”
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