Airport Working Group did its job;...
Airport Working Group
did its job; voters didn’t
I appreciate Joseph N. Bell’s questions regarding what went wrong
regarding our goal to secure an airport at El Toro (“A Few Things to
Ask Before Burying El Toro,” July 25).
I agree with Bell that South County anti-airport activists
“out-created, out-imagined, out-lied, outspent, out-managed and
outperformed us.” Whose fault is that? Certainly not the Airport
Working Group whose members are all unpaid volunteers. That
organization was one of the very few doing anything at all. They had
the major challenge of trying to make the $3.7 million provided by
Newport Beach influence more voters than the $19 million provided by
the city of Irvine.
Actually, the group did a good job in putting forth their no on
Measure W campaign message, because the majority of cities in Orange
County voted against Measure W. However, the election was decided by
the voter turnout in anti-airport, South County cities that exceeded
that in the north by a huge margin.
So who is ultimately to blame?
Every single person who did not take part in the election process.
Did you campaign against Measure W? Did you contribute either your
time or money to the campaign? Did you influence anybody to vote? In
fact, did you and your family even bother to vote?
I do not believe an El Toro airport is dead. Measure W was flawed
and should be declared unconstitutional and void. If so, the land
will revert to airport zoning and Irvine Mayor Larry Agran’s flawed
park plan will be branded “R.I.P”
ANGELA GALLAGHER
Costa Mesa
Reader’s attack on Bell provides false arguments
Frank Limbaugh’s spiteful attack (Airport Debate, July 27) on
Joseph N. Bell, combined with his weird reasoning as to why the
entire county will be better off without an airport at El Toro, is
just too much.
He blames Bell for not wanting to have the noise from John Wayne
get worse. Doesn’t he know that the airport that became John Wayne
was never intended to be a commercial airport but just a strip for
small private planes? Doesn’t he know that, when the county
supervisors first approved commercial flights from there, they
promised that noisy commercial jet planes would never be allowed,
since there was no buffer zone around the small airport, as there was
at El Toro?
He says that the people weren’t voting for a Great Park but for no
El Toro. Then how come there were two countywide votes in favor of an
airport at El Toro before the vote on the Great Park? Unfortunately,
I know one of the reasons some people were against El Toro: some
politicians and Irvine officials told everyone in the county that the
noise and pollution from an airport at El Toro would make their lives
miserable and their homes unlivable. Pure scare tactics. The ironic
part about it is that most of the people that live close enough to El
Toro to be affected by a commercial airport bought their homes when
it was an active military airport with very noisy planes landing all
day long.
The attitude of the anti-El Toro crowd seems to be that they
simply don’t want any airport anywhere near them. Well, fine, then
let’s convert John Wayne back to a small private plane airport with
no commercial flights, like it was supposed to be.
What’s good for one is good for all.
Or, if Orange County really needs a commercial airport, which
would be best for the entire county?
Would it be a small and eventually inadequate airport with no
buffer zone around it that cannot be enlarged without wiping out some
of the otherwise best and most expensive residential property in the
county, or an airport over 10 times the size with a large buffer zone
around it that is more centrally located for the use of the entire
county and located where an active airport has been for over half a
century?
JERRY PARKS
Newport Beach
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