Navy letter further puts park in peril
- Share via
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT-MESA -- A local congressman who supports an airport for the
closed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station said a letter from the Navy is
“undermining [the] legality and feasibility” of a Great Park at the base.
Assistant Secretary of the Navy H.T. Johnson answered the written
request from Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, who represents Costa Mesa.
“After reviewing correspondence from H.T. Johnson,” Rohrabacher said,
“it appears advocates of a Great Park reuse of El Toro would face
tremendous legal, economic and environmental hurdles.”
In his Sept. 14 letter, Johnson answers several questions Rohrabacher
asked in a July 11 letter the congressman sent to U.S. Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld.
South County opponents of Orange County’s airport plan for the base
have a different spin on the two letters, which focused on whether park
supporters could get the 4,700 acres at no cost. The letters also
addressed environmental cleanup of the base and what bureaucratic hurdles
park supporters would need to clear.
“The door hasn’t closed on the Great Park,” South County spokeswoman
Meg Waters said. “I think Mr. Rohrabacher has read the letter too fast
and doesn’t understand the nuances of the base conversion process.”
South County leaders hope to put their Great Park to a vote during the
county’s March 5 election. The park initiative is now stuck in legal
flypaper while supporters anxiously wait for an appellate judge to decide
its fate.
On July 31, Superior Court Judge James Gray invalidated the petition,
saying the ballot title and summary were misleading.
Airport boosters have criticized the Great Park as an unrealistic
drain on the public purse.
“Do the people of the county want to buy a big park for the city of
Irvine?” Newport Beach Councilwoman Norma Glover asked rhetorically.
“That’s the question.”
Glover and others, not surprisingly, agreed with Rohrabacher’s
assessment that the Johnson letter was helpful to their cause.
The Navy has set a timetable for handing the base over to the county
to develop the airport. That process could begin April 15.
“My sense is that the Navy is telling us loudly and clearly that if
that property is conveyed, it’s going to be used for an airport,” Newport
Beach Councilman Gary Proctor said.
* Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.