Newport Beach man working on own El Toro initiative
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- With an anti-El Toro ballot measure looming for the
March election, Charles Griffin is taking his own plan for the proposed
airport to the people.
Griffin doesn’t mind blowing against the political winds. He’s used to
it.
For three years, Griffin has shopped his plan for realigning the
runways at the closed El Toro Marine base into a V shape. The plan was
reviewed by Orange County officials, but quickly fell off the radar
screen.
Now, the retired aviation engineer, who lives in Newport Beach, has
drafted an initiative he hopes to put in front of Orange County voters at
the same time.
Frustrated by a lack of support, Griffin said he hopes to submit the
measure to the county clerk early next month. Griffin and Santa Ana
Heights activist Russell Niewiarowski founded the New Millennium Group to
lobby for the plan.
“That’s why I’ve written an initiative,” Griffin said about the lack
of support for the V-Plan. “The supervisors aren’t listening.”
Griffin’s plan would revise Measure A, the successful 1994 initiative
that established aviation zoning at the base. It also would extend the
airport’s boundary to allow planners to eliminate the airfield’s
east-west runway and extend the north-south runway into Irvine.
Irvine would have the right to veto the plan under the state’s Public
Utilities Code.
Griffin also wants to set aside 1,500 of the base’s 4,700 acres for a
wildlife habitat.
The Board of Supervisors agreed to analyze Griffin’s plan in an
environmental review released in December 1999. Since that time, it has
come under fire from a number of parties. Critics have included Newport
Beach, the Airport Working Group, a pilot’s association and, of course,
South County leaders fighting an airport of any kind.
At a Tuesday meeting, several members of the Newport Beach City
Council spoke against it again.
Councilman Gary Proctor said airport planning should be left to the
specialists.
“To let citizens plan an airport is probably the worst place to make
those decisions,” Proctor said. “I was opposed to the Greenlight
initiative because it was letting citizens legislate planning decisions
at the ballot box.”
In a July 25 letter to the county’s El Toro planning office, the Air
Line Pilots Assn. objected to the plan’s “serious and specific
limitations.”
The Federal Aviation Administration also has refused to consider the
plan seriously, because it has not been endorsed by Orange County’s Local
Redevelopment Authority, the office planning an airport for the base.
FAA Associate Administrator for Airports Woodie Woodward sent a letter
April 13 to Niewiarowski informing the group of its position.
“It is not appropriate for the Federal Aviation Administration to
discuss the V-Plan alternative with your organization,” Woodward wrote.
South County leaders circulating their Orange County Central Park and
Nature Preserve Initiative, which would install a sprawling park at the
base, laughed off Griffin’s measure.
Meg Waters, spokeswoman for the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority, said
she wasn’t worried about Griffin’s ballot measure.
“I don’t think it has any constituency,” Waters said. “It’s got
something for everybody to hate.”
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