SOUNDING BOARD -- Russell Niewiarowski
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The Newport Beach City Council can’t have it both ways (“El Toro
V-plan blasted by Bludau,” Thursday).
On one hand, they paint the picture that they are not airport planners
and cannot get involved with formulating educated solutions on how to
bring El Toro out of its nose dive.
Then on the other hand, they want to maintain total control over both
John Wayne Airport and El Toro and paint the picture that they are doing
everything they can to prevent any JWA expansion and to promote/secure El
Toro.
Again, speaking from both sides of their mouths, the majority of the
council members have now agreed to press forward with an
environmental-impact report to allow John Wayne Airport to expand. Why?
Because the council had admitted long ago that neither they, the Airport
Working Group, Citizens for Jobs and the Economy, nor the county could
ever conceivably build El Toro amid all the opposition to the plan.
Rather than switch to better dance partners and hand off the bat to
someone more likely to hit a fresh new home run, the council instead
chooses to make the V-plan and its advocates the scapegoat to their
failed El Toro.
The question has to be asked: Why is Newport Beach turning up their
nose to such an obviously better El Toro alternative airport plan instead
of embracing it like some officials in North County are? And why is Costa
Mesa, the second most affected city closest to John Wayne, still just
yawning?
The answer is quite simple. It appears as though the majority of the
pro-development Newport Beach City Council march in lock step with the
Irvine Co. and are looking to their development interests rather than our
quality of life interests and the best interests of Orange County’s
future in securing an El Toro airport. If the [desire] to annex Newport
Coast is more important than securing El Toro, then we are being
misrepresented.
We need El Toro, and we need to promote a reasonable, downsized, less
threatening, less adverse, safer and quieter V-plan alternative for El
Toro that creates the greatest benefits for Orange County while
protecting the residents’ quality of life. It is completely unrealistic
to think that we can certify the county’s flawed environmental-impact
report for the airport and transfer the former Marine Corps Air Station
property into the hands of the county, and then magically insert a new
airport alternative.
Come March, the people will have only one drum beat to vote on: Irvine
and South County’s Great Park if Newport Beach residents don’t wake up
and assist us in placing the Orange County Public Benefits initiative --
the V-plan -- on the March ballot to defeat the Great Park.
Keep your noses down and your heads up. We can secure El Toro if we
work together to promote the right El Toro plan now.
* RUSSELL NIEWIAROWSKI is a Santa Ana Heights resident and is
president of the pro-airport New Millennium Group, which devised the
V-plan.
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