‘V-plan’ author hits the airwaves
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Making his first appearance on local public
television, the author of an alternative runway alignment for the
proposed El Toro Airport lauded his plan as the best one available.
Charles Griffin, a Newport Beach resident and retired aviation
engineer, said his “V-plan” is more logical that Orange County’s plan for
an airport at the closed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
The county, in a plan approved by the Board of Supervisors Oct. 23,
would send planes north and east on the existing crossbar runways.
“That’s not an an appropriate way to fly, because you would be flying
into a tail wind,” Griffin said.
Under his plan, a new runway would be built to allow planes to depart
in a southwestern direction. The current east-west runway at the base
would be removed and replaces with one creating a “V” pattern.
Griffin made his comments on “Real Orange,” a weekly public affairs
show. Anchor Ed Arnold conducted a brief interview with Griffin, who
appeared somewhat nervous, shortly after the show began at 7 p.m.
Some public officials have lauded the V-plan as a legitimate
alternative, but the plan has enjoyed little support among those making
the decisions about how the base will be used.
County airport planners have dismissed it and the Federal Aviation
Administration refuses to consider it a viable option.
Griffin and his New Millennium Group are circulating a petition, known
as the Reasonable Alternative Airport Initiative, that would give voters
a chance to adopt his plan.
As a result, the retired engineer has been a thorn in the side of
airport boosters like the leaders of the Airport Working Group.
“I am surprised he has continued on with his pursuit,” group president
Tom Naughton said. “For the efforts of the rest of us working on an El
Toro airport, he’s a faction that’s fighting the plans we’re working on.
He’s not helping at all.”
During the brief interview, Griffin urged county supervisors to place
his initiative on the March ballot along with a measure that would allow
a Great Park to be developed instead of an airport.
“It’s possible and practical and appropriate that the Orange County
Board of Supervisors would place it on the ballot,” Griffin said. “And
give people a real choice.”
That possibility seems remote, at best. Supervisor Tom Wilson, for
one, has said he wouldn’t oblige Griffin’s request.
Otherwise, Griffin and his group would need to collect 71,206 valid
signatures by March 1 to reach the November ballot. The group has
collected about 6,500 names so far, member Russell Niewiarowski said.
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