Newport Beach council paves way for Hawaii flights
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Paul Clinton
JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT -- It didn’t take long.
During a 15-minute, closed-session meeting, the Newport Beach City
Council approved a five-year extension of an agreement that will allow
cargo flights to continue at John Wayne Airport.
The council last week unanimously approved the agreement, which had
been on the table since October.
“The Newport Beach City Council is committed to doing its part to help
serve the most pressing air transportation needs of the county . . .
until a real, long-term solution is found,” Newport Beach Mayor Gary
Adams said in a statement.
The Airport Working Group and Stop Polluting Our Newport have joined
the city in approving the continued operation of the two daily
departures, which may only arrive or depart between 4 and 7:30 p.m. The
Board of Supervisors is set to consider the so-called “cargo stipulation”
at today’s 9:30 a.m. meeting.
In the staff report, Airport Director Alan Murphy has recommended
giving the two flights to a new commercial carrier to set up shop at John
Wayne.
The leading candidate for those flights is Aloha Airlines, which has
asked for daily flights to the islands of Maui and Oahu, as well as one
flight to Las Vegas. In June, the airline certified a modified Boeing 737
for use at John Wayne with the Federal Aviation Administration.
The cargo exception will expire one year after a proposed airport at
the former El Toro Marine base becomes operational. The county has said
it would try to shift the cargo flights to El Toro if possible.
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