The El Toro Debate -- No end in sight
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The Daily Pilot article of Jan. 12 [“Naughton appointed to airport
land use board”] labeled Tom Naughton, president of the Airport Working
Group, a “foot soldier” for the Orange County Board of Supervisors in
their quest to open a commercial airport at the former El Toro Marine Air
Base. Naughton has donated his time to the Airport Working Group for more
than six years and served as president for the last three years. He is
one of the many members of the group who donated their time to bring
about the settlement agreement for restricted flight operations and noise
abatement procedures at John Wayne Airport.
At the same time, he is aware that escalation of passenger demand for
more flights at John Wayne without an airport at El Toro will cause
catastrophic impacts on the citizens of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.
The Pilot also quotes Meg Waters, spokesperson for the El Toro Reuse
Planning Authority, an ad hoc coalition of South County cities opposing
an airport at El Toro. She states that Naughton’s appointment is a
political payoff, although the position is nonpaying. The Pilot fails to
identify Waters as part of a company, Waters & Faubel, which has been
paid more than $50,000 per month of public funds for more than two years
for salaries, public relations, TV ads and mail by the planning
authority. Faubel is an ex-council member of Mission Viejo.
One of Waters & Faubel’s TV ads shows an obviously doctored video of
El Toro main runways looking north into a zoomed-in, perfectly clear view
of Loma Ridge towering over the runway and nearby hills obscured with
haze. Loma Ridge is more than five miles from the end of the main
runways. Televising this video on local stations cannot be cheap. Several
more misleading anti-El Toro airport TV clips are currently on the air.
These are typical of the anti-airport mission.
The Daily Pilot, once a local Newport-Mesa newspaper, shows its true
colors when quoting a paid representative of anti-El Toro airport
zealots.
RALPH P. MORGAN, JR.
Costa Mesa
I would like to comment on the article concerning the extension of
flight restrictions at John Wayne Airport [“Pushing for more
restrictions,” Jan. 29] and in particular at statements attributed to
Barbara Lichman of the Airport Working Group. I take strong exception to
Lichman’s assertion that South County cities have no business or say in
any decision over John Wayne Airport.
As an elected representative of the 43,000 residents of my city who
would be subjected to overflight of more than 300 departures a day, 24
hours a day, seven days a week under the county’s El Toro Airport plan,
my city and every other South County city that will be subjected to El
Toro overflights has every right to be involved in any decision on John
Wayne.
The Airport Working Group has made it patently clear that the only
solution to retaining caps at John Wayne is for an airport to be built at
El Toro. They offer no other options, nor do they offer a willingness to
even discuss other options. No, their solution is to subject my city and
many other cities in South County to an airport with no restrictions, far
more flights and no curfews.
It is time for Newport Beach to wake up to this misguided group of
individuals that has done, and continues to do, significant damage to the
support that the South County cities have expressed for retaining
restrictions at John Wayne. As Meg Waters correctly pointed out in the
same article, you need our South County support to make that happen. But
the continued open hostility exhibited by the Airport Working Group and
its “leadership” of Lichman is eroding that support quickly. 2005 is just
around the corner, and one thing that can be assured is that there will
be no airport at El Toro.
GARY THOMPSON
CouncilmanRancho Santa Margarita
What will it take to end the debate of the airport at El Toro?
Answer: Open the airport at El Toro!!
ANN WATT
Santa Ana Heights
I have been hesitant to believe statements from anti-airport activists
that claim the El Toro airport is unsafe. Finally, we will have that
question answered by objective experts. The Federal Aviation
Administration took a major step in evaluating El Toro’s safety recently
as they tested departure routes and obstacle clearances at the former
base. I believe when their results are announced, we will know positively
that the El Toro airport would be perfectly safe for commercial aircraft
use.
ANGELA GALLAGHER
Costa Mesa
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