EDITORIAL
Last week, Newport Beach city leaders and the Orange County Board of
Supervisors both signed an extension to the John Wayne settlement
agreement -- a first and important step toward keeping the skies above
Newport Beach clear of ever-more airplanes.
It will open the airport up to a few more flights -- 85 of the
noisiest each day, up from 73 -- and increase the yearly passenger
numbers from 8.4 million to 9.8 million. The compromise, which will go
into effect at the beginning of 2003, was a good one for the cities
surrounding the airport. The alternative -- no restrictions and many more
flights -- was untenable.
Unfortunately, it’s still not unthinkable. While the four groups that
had to sign off on extending the agreement are united, support for the
restrictions is far from universal.
The Air Transport Assn., an airline trade group, and the Federal
Aviation Administration both have raised questions about whether the
agreement legally can be continued. Either could send the airport’s
future back to where it was in 1985: the courts. And while that judicial
trip ended happily for Newport-Mesa, there is no telling whether a return
-- and a different settlement agreement, perhaps? -- would be as
fruitful.
So to Newport Beach city leaders’ credit, the day after they approved
the agreement, they were already talking about how to sell the deal to
the groups that could scuttle it. But from the sounds of the response, it
will take more than easy talk.
Don’t be fooled. The extension of the settlement agreement is still up
in the air. More money will have to be spent, as lobbyists fees are going
to mount while the airlines and the government are made to see that this
area cannot handle a bigger airport.
More time in Newport Beach City Hall will be wrapped up in John Wayne,
when there are other issues deserving of attention: water quality,
affordable housing, mansionization, the revitalization of the peninsula.
But until the extension is sealed, as well as signed, it is time that
has to be spent.
Think of it this way: For Newport-Mesa residents, it’s as if the long,
uncomfortable and annoying wait in the airport is over. Now, they just
have to get through the flight and land at their destination. But that
could be a bumpy ride.
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