Newport Beach officials to mull flight futures
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Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- In a special closed-session meeting today, the City
Council is expected to hammer out its position on a pending deal with
Orange County that could pave the way for a new commercial airline at
John Wayne Airport.
The city, county and two activist groups are in final talks to extend
an agreement known as the “cargo stipulation,” which has permitted two
cargo flights per day outside the regular number of flights permitted
under the 1985 settlement agreement.
Newport Beach, the county Board of Supervisors, the Airport Working
Group and Stop Polluting Our Newport -- the four original co-signers of
the 1985 deal -- must all sign on to extend the cargo flights.
“As a new council, we haven’t discussed it,” Mayor Gary Adams said.
“We need to sit down and make sure we have a consensus.”
An extension of the deal could free up two departures for an outside
carrier such as Aloha Airlines, which has requested daily flights to
Hawaii and Las Vegas.
Under the terms of the settlement agreement, the airport may allocate
39 daily Class A flights, the loudest of the airport’s three noise
categories. The bulk of the airport’s commercial flights, as well as the
two cargo flights, fall under the Class A category.
Since cargo flights were introduced in 1995, the airport has held back
two of those 39 flights as supplemental departures, giving one each to
Continental and Trans World Airlines. If the four groups cannot agree to
an extension, those flights would be stripped and given to the cargo
operators.
Airport officials have suggested extending the cargo exception -- for
one flight a day each by Federal Express and United Parcel Service --
until the end of 2005, when the settlement agreement expires.
Under that deal, which has been on the table since October, the county
would agree to shift the cargo flights.
Eventually, the proposed, though controversial, airport at El Toro
could be put into the mix as well.
“If El Toro [airport] becomes available for cargo, the county will act
to reposition cargo from John Wayne to El Toro,” said John Leyerle, the
airport’s access and noise manager.
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