SOUNDING BOARD -- William J. Kearns
In the June 19 Daily Pilot, the cities of Orange, Villa Park, Tustin,
Irvine and Costa Mesa are said to have reported increased flights over
their cities, many of which are predominately residential.
Surprise, surprise. South County has experienced a phenomenal growth
rate and now boasts of a population of 600,000 made up of above-average,
educated and professional citizens who need to travel to distant points
for business and many who can afford to travel for personal and family
reasons.
The increase in passenger load at JWA has increased because potential
South County passengers now outnumber the combined passenger load of
Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Santa Ana so that the number of flights has
more than doubled since 1990. The good news is that Orange County as a
whole is a growing center of commerce and tourism.
The bad news is that South County and other areas now seeing
increasing flight activity over their homes don’t want to see their
“quality of life” impaired one iota and feel that the people in parts of
Tustin, Newport Beach, Santa Ana Heights and Costa Mesa should continue
to absorb the noise from the South County flights because “they are used
to it.” It doesn’t seem to occur to them that if the noise bothers South
County homes that it might also bother the homes adjacent to JWA. So how
are we to deal with the increasing flight loads?
Some of the armchair airport planners feel that a light rail system to
faraway Ontario is a simple solution. Others want to bore through
mountains in Cleveland National Forest to reach inland airports. Put in
new freeways (or toll roads -- ugh) to the outback. Each plan has its
merits, but they all have two major drawbacks: Money and completion time.
Many billions of tax dollars are involved and at least 20 years of work
if the projects are started today.
It all adds up to a high tax bill and great inconvenience due to
traffic snarls, increased pollution, more trucks on the highway and on
and on. A much simpler interim plan would be to open El Toro and share
the load with JWA. El Toro would be essentially free to taxpayers as a
$10-billion gift from the Navy.
Work on one or more solutions to gain access to distant airports could
go on in parallel so that at the end of 20 years both local airports and
access to more distant facilities, which we will certainly need by then,
will materialize with minimum cost and inconvenience to taxpayers.
WILLIAM J. KEARNS
Costa Mesa
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