District rejects JWA expansion plans
Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT-MESA -- An impassioned resident persuaded the school board
Tuesday to veer away from its attempt to present a united front with
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa in endorsing an expansion option for John
Wayne Airport.
Greg Carroll, a Santa Ana Heights resident, persuaded all seven
trustees that they should not even support a fairly restrictive expansion
option. The board unanimously passed a resolution to only extend a 1985
settlement agreement that allows 8.4 million annual passengers and 73
daily flights in the noisiest class, as well as restricts the times
planes can fly. The agreement is set to expire in 2005.
“I’m thrilled. This is the first step in a long process,” Carroll
said.
The county Board of Supervisors approved a draft environmental report
in November that includes a variety of scenarios to expand the airport.
The school board was set to endorse a scenario that calls for four
more flight gates, 1.4 million additional passengers per year and 12 more
of the noisiest flights.
Carroll maintains the report is a hastily prepared and inaccurate
document that omits negative effects of the various scenarios.
After hearing Carroll’s testimony and some soul searching, the school
board decided to forge its own path and focus on its desire for no
expansion at the airport.
“We are concerned about any changes being made in the future of John
Wayne Airport,” trustee Dana Black said. “It’s not just pollution, but
safety, noise and quality of life.”
The resolution also declares the board’s opposition to the anti-El
Toro Measure W because of its concern over adverse effects of lost
revenue for the schools.
If the measure fails and an airport is ultimately built at the El Toro
base, it is expected to ease air traffic from John Wayne Airport.
“As I see it, there are no dollars within Measure W to build a Great
Park, so how is it going to be built without taxation?” trustee Judy
Franco asked. “If you look at how much it costs to maintain Balboa and
Golden Gate parks, it’s astronomical.”
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