Newport gives $270,000 to El Toro fight
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Preparing for what some called “a fight of our life,”
City Council members Tuesday voted to give grants to two groups that
promote an airport at El Toro.
Citizens for Jobs and the Economy will receive $150,000 and the
Airport Working Group will receive $120,000 for pro-El Toro public
relations campaigns. Under the agreement, both groups can also submit
additional bills for reimbursement by the city.
The council has set aside almost $3.7 million for the pro-airport
effort.
While five council members supported the action, Councilman John
Heffernan sided with some residents to reject the idea. Councilman Gary
Proctor is on vacation in Australia and was not at the meeting.
Explaining his decision, Heffernan said he wholeheartedly agreed with
the need to counter a multimillion dollar effort by Irvine and other
South County cities to kill the proposal for an airport at El Toro.
But “I don’t think this does it,” he said, adding that Citizens for
Jobs and the Economy and the Airport Working Group are “not the two
groups that I would be giving money to now.”
Referring to the failure in March 2000 to defeat Measure F, an
initiative that would require approval by two-thirds of county voters for
work on airport, jail and landfill projects, Heffernan said he didn’t
think the groups had proven themselves as efficient public relations
consultants.
“These two grant recipients had poor performance at the last go
around,” he said. “They couldn’t do it with $2.5 million -- now we’re
giving them more.”
While approved by the county’s voters, Measure F has since been thrown
out by a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge. Anti-El Toro groups
have appealed the decision.
Heffernan said that city officials should have looked into giving
money to other consultants before simply responding to a request for
funds by the two groups.
But other council members said the city had to stand by its longtime
allies in the airport fight.
“We came to the dance with the current players and we’re going to have
to live with the partners,” said Councilman Tod Ridgeway, adding that he
and his colleagues still had control over the way the remaining $3.3
million will be spent.
Addressing the city’s residents sceptical of the move, Councilman
Steve Bromberg said it was time to unify.
“You don’t have to like it, but this is what we’re doing,” he said.
“You’ve got to trust somebody sometimes. . . let’s everybody get on board
and make this happen.”
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