Editorial
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They have to be joking.
That was our initial response when we learned the South County-based
El Toro Reuse Planning Authority officials had directed their lawyers to
begin a lawsuit against Newport Beach for undertaking a campaign against
the Great Park.
The Great Park, or what is now being called the Orange County Central
Park, is being pitched by South County cities as an alternative to
building a new county airport at the now-closed El Toro Marine base.
Newport Beach leaders, of course, have argued strongly for an El Toro
airport to be built to take the pressure off of federal and county
officials to expand John Wayne.
The debate has turned into an all-out war, and no one expects that the
battle tactics will be pretty.
But this latest move by the planning authority is downright dripping
in hypocrisy.
What the South County anti-airport leaders are saying is that public
money cannot be spent on campaigns for or against initiatives.
But isn’t that exactly what South County cities have been doing so
far?
Over the last three years, the city of Irvine, to use one example, has
spent $5 million in the promotion of alternative uses of the closed El
Toro Marine base. And one of those uses is the creation of a central
park.
And what about all of the public funds that the anti-airport leaders
used to pitch Measure F, the now unconstitutional initiative that would
have required a two-thirds vote for airports, jails and landfills?
How was that not the same thing?
Nary a day can go by without seeing some sort of television commercial
on local cable stations pitching the serenity and family atmosphere that
a large central park would provide, with, conveniently, no mention of the
exorbitant price tag.
That’s exactly what Newport Beach’s television commercial campaign
will do -- provide the other side of the story. It will tell residents
just how costly and unrealistic a central park would be.
We don’t dispute that the leaders of the South County cities have
every right to make their pitch to the public on how El Toro should be
redeveloped.
Where we disagree is when they try to stand in the way when our local
leaders try to do the same thing.
The anti-airport forces should end this legal charade immediately
because their attempts to call the kettle black is laughable.
We just don’t find it very funny.
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