Pro-airport groups ready to rumble
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Armed with a multimillion dollar war chest at their
disposal, representatives of groups supporting an airport at El Toro said
Tuesday they are ready to enter the ring.
After sitting quietly while the county’s anti-El Toro forces were
bombarding residents with mailers, television and newspaper ads, El Toro
supporters will retaliate with equal means in the next two weeks.
“We’ve been dark for far too long,” said Dave Ellis, a spokesman for
the Airport Working Group. “This is an exciting time for us. We have not
been able to return fire in a long time . . . In the next 10 days, Orange
County will be getting educated on airports and uses at El Toro.”
Ellis added that the group was currently fine tuning television ads
for cable TV as well as mailers.
“Everybody will get an idea of how El Toro will benefit the county,”
he said.
While Ellis’ group already reappeared on the battleground when it
launched a new Web site promoting El Toro, a recent $120,000 grant from
Newport Beach will allow the Airport Working Group to expand its efforts
into the real world as well.
City leaders also approved $150,000 for Citizens and Jobs in the
Economy, another pro-El Toro group. Both organizations can submit
additional expenses for reimbursement under the agreement. In total, the
city has set aside $3.69 million to fight the pro-airport battle.
The groups might approach the airport issue from different angles --
Ellis’ group is primarily concerned about a possible expansion of John
Wayne Airport should El Toro fail to happen and Citizens for Jobs and the
Economy focuses on the economic benefits of an additional county airport.
Both Ellis and Bruce Nestande, the latter groups’ president and chief
executive, said they’d coordinate their strategies with each other as
well as the Orange County Regional Airport Authority, which is set to
spend an additional $5 million on a public outreach campaign.
“We have a different rationale for what we’re trying to accomplish,”
Nestande said. “But we all come together on one issue and that is the
need for El Toro.”
On the other side of the trenches, leaders in the fight against an El
Toro airport said they were closely watching their opponents’ movements.
“Of course we’re interested,” said Paul Eckles, the executive director
of the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority, adding that pro-El Toro groups
had managed to secure a significant amount of money.
But “no matter what they spend, they can’t change the reality that
this airport’s a bad idea,” Eckles said. “If you put perfume on a pig,
it’s still a pig.”
Anyway, all fire might have to cease on both sides once El Toro
opponents file a notice of intent to circulate a petition for a ballot
initiative that would kill the airport proposal, Eckles said.
Far from it, responded Nestande.
“A ballot initiative does not preclude a straightforward, factual
public information program,” he said, adding that pro-El Toro mailers
would not take a side and simply discuss the reuse of the former Marine
Corps Air Station.
City Atty. Bob Burnham said that even without an initiative aimed at
defeating the airport, anything that’s sent out by Ellis’ or Nestande’s
group and paid with city funds will have to be cleared by lawyers to make
sure it’s a legal use of public funds.
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