Airport Debate
Columnist hits a few good marks
Steve Smith continues to amaze, as usual, by coming out of left field
with a left hook to airport protagonists that Joe Frazier would be proud
of (“Want to see the El Toro airport fly? Here’s how,” March 10). Woody
Airport was great, but he misses the elitist tone of the Newport Beach
constabulary. How about “The Great Open Woodland Airport Park of Orange
County?” GOWAPOC might be a little long for any airport ID tag, but so
what.
Secondly, Smith is exactly right about the public relations program.
The same old tired faces carry no water. We need Joe Isuzu. We hear he is
available. For $5 million, he might be available for a few days work.
RON AND ANNA WINSHIP
Newport Beach
Overturning Measure F not likely
It has been reported that the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority has
filed an action to set aside Los Angeles Superior Court Judge James
Otero’s decision that deemed Measure F unconstitutional. Because of the
thoroughness of Otero’s ruling and the standards of review that apply,
this appeal appears to be nothing more than another stalling tactic.
Otero had several different legal grounds for his decision. If the
trial court is right on any one legal ground, the judgment will stand.
Therefore, to succeed on appeal, the planning authority will have to
convince the appellate court that Otero was wrong on all areas of his
legal analysis. Such an outcome is highly unlikely.
Otero politely suggested that if the county or its citizens want to
prohibit the El Toro project, it has the option of repealing Measure A.
ELMER L. COTE
Newport Beach
Newport residents have opinions that count, too
Your article (“Newport to give nearly $3.7 million to El Toro
campaign,” March 15) for public outreach to open the closed El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station as a commercial airport stopped short of calling
up officials of the city of Irvine to see what they thought.
However, you did interview Santa Ana Heights resident Ann Watt for her
opinion on the spending. Watt speaks in favor of redesigning the El Toro
airport before it is used. This is a delaying tactic, rather than
supporting the airport as the Marines built it.
El Toro is the best planned airport in the world due to the
14,000-acre buffer zone and fuel-saving crossed runways pointing to where
airplanes need to go. All we have to do is turn on the lights.
I believe you should interview taxpayers of the city of Newport Beach,
not Santa Ana Heights residents, for their opinion on how we should spend
our money.
DON NYRE
Newport Beach
South needs to work with North
Steve Smith’s article in the Daily Pilot (“Want to see the El Toro
airport fly? Here’s how,” March 10) misses on a few key points. The
“attitude problem” that he defines as Newport-Mesa trying to force the El
Toro airport “down the rest of the county’s collective throats” is the
mantra often repeated by the South County propaganda machine headed by
Meg Waters and company.
Just the opposite is the case.
El Toro has been here for 50 years, longer than most of the South
County residents have lived. It is the South County cities that have
shoved themselves down the throats of the rest of us in Orange County.
The county has spent $34 million to plan a commercial version of El Toro
as required by law, and the money came from John Wayne Airport, not the
taxpayers. The $5 million approved by the Board of Supervisors is, as he
says, for a public information campaign; it is to counteract the $40
million of taxpayer money already spent by South County in their campaign
of misinformation and lies about El Toro.
As to whether or not having another airport at El Toro makes sense,
consider that Orange County ranks second only to Los Angeles County in
population and is ranked third in the generation of goods and capital
equipment investment in California.
It is the economic engine that is driving the prosperity in the
county, and especially South County. The concept of a nostalgic feeling
of the ‘50s -- the bucolic way of life and the homey atmosphere that are
enviable attributes of the neighborhoods in South County -- will not be
destroyed by an El Toro airport, and in fact may not be sustainable over
the long haul if an adequate infrastructure, including an airport, is not
put into place.
This is a major population and industrial center that is expanding. It
is time for South County to join the rest of the world and become a
willing partner with the rest of the county in a program of controlled
growth that will benefit all of Orange County.
I do, however, agree wholeheartedly with Smith’s comment that the
amateur ad men and planners are tiring.
Sorry, Steve, your amateur status disqualifies you for the job of ad
campaign manager.
WILLIAM J. KEARNS
Costa Mesa
South County cares only for itself
The true hypocrisy of the anti-airport NIMBYs is really showing now.
Before the election, Measure F was about the health and safety of our
communities, which was the reason given for including toxic waste dumps
and jails in the initiative.
After the election, Measure F became a mandate against the airport,
even though many citizens wrote letters stating they voted for F to
eliminate any chance of a toxic dump in their community.
Measure F got overturned upon judicial review because of multiple
issues on a single initiative, and the Irvine City Council is quoted that
jails and toxic waste dumps were only included to give the Measure a
better chance of passing.
South County’s El Toro Reuse Planning Authority promoted, in myriad
mailers sent out, that El Toro is unneeded because other regional
airports would be easily accessible by a high-speed rail service. Yet,
the residents of Irvine recently voted down another rail line in their
city.
South County has stated that an airport on the 4,700 acres of the
former El Toro Marine base, which is surrounded by over 14,000 acres of
permanently open space, would destroy their “quality of life.” However,
the NIMBYs now officially want to increase the number of flights at John
Wayne Airport, which is only 470 acres with no open space around it and
where the residents are already subjected to hundreds of flights every
day.
Calling the anti-airport zealots hypocrites is a euphemism. They will
say and do anything and everything to sway public opinion their way.
DAVE BENT
Newport Beach
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