Residents offer mixed reviews to new airport plans
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- While not thrilled about a proposal to increase the
number of flights and passengers at John Wayne Airport in return for a
20-year extension of flight curfews, many of the city’s residents seem to
be willing to support the deal.
Under the agreement, which the Orange County Board of Supervisors
tentatively approved last week, the annual passenger cap would be raised
from 8.4 million to 9.8 million. Instead of 73 daily departures, 85
planes could take off from the airport and four new gates would be added
to the 14 that now exist. A 1985 settlement agreement establishing flight
and passenger caps, as well as nighttime curfews, is set to expire in
2005.
James Sachtschale, who lives in The Bluffs, about 1 1/2 miles from the
end of the runway, approves of the latest John Wayne plans.
“I don’t find that objectionable,” Sachtschale said. “I would rather
put up with this than thinking about what would happen if El Toro was not
converted to an airport.”
Backed by the City Council and the Airport Working Group, the proposal
to increase flights from John Wayne Airport has no direct effect on what
will happen to El Toro. But because opponents of a second Orange County
airport hope to kill the idea with a March ballot initiative, city
officials said they hope to complete a settlement agreement extension
before the spring.
Some in town said they didn’t agree with any increase in flights.
“It doesn’t enhance the area one iota,” said Richard Hilliard, who has
lived in Corona del Mar for more than 50 years. “All it does is drag it
down.”
Asked if he’d accept an increase in flights to prevent a complete
lifting of caps and curfews, Hilliard said he didn’t buy that argument.
A height limit on buildings in the city hadn’t prevented high rises
around Fashion Island either, he said.
But others countered that some flight caps were better than none.
“If that’s what it takes to get an agreement, I’m game,” said Tom
Hyans, a community activist who lives on Balboa Peninsula. “If they can
pull it off by doing that, I’m happy as a clam.”
And Phil Arst, a spokesman for last year’s slow-growth Greenlight
initiative and Airport Working Group board member, said he saw the
proposed increase as a “reasonable compromise.”
“I’m just hoping that South County people [who oppose El Toro] will be
similarly agreeable to compromises rather than sticking it all on Newport
Beach,” he said, adding that he would vigorously oppose increases in
flights beyond what’s now proposed.
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