South County airport money should be audited
William Kearns
As a resident of Costa Mesa, I take great interest in the
activities of Newport Beach. The article on Councilman John
Heffernan’s curiosity about the expenditure of $3.6 million allocated
for El Toro airport education raises a lot more questions than it
answers (“Airport spending questioned,” Aug. 14).
For example, although $3.63 million was authorized for citizen
education, only one third of it was spent. Why? How about an
accounting of the funds spent to lobby for extension of the John
Wayne settlement agreement?
Regardless of what the pro-airport groups said in defense of their
expenditures, “some” say Newport Beach taxpayers deserve a line-item
accounting of these expenses and “others” say the grant never should
have been issued. When I see “some say” and “others say” in an
accusatory article, I see the anonymous “they.” Who are “they” and
what is their motivation for saying anything?
Heffernan said, “This thing hasn’t smelled right from the
beginning.”
The article further goes on to quote Meg Walters (spokesperson for
the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority) as being glad that Newport
Beach is having the audit. Talk about bad smells -- South County
spent more than $45 million for their brainwashing “educational”
effort to try to convince all of Orange County about the dangers and
negatives that would result if El Toro is reopened. The firm Faubel
and Waters received $600,000 a year for a number of years, plus $3
million per year for advertising, thus profiting from that
$45-million expenditure.
The city of Irvine also spent $600,000 per year on a similar
effort and an additional $5 million per year for at least two years.
Where is the line-item accounting of the expenditures of South County
and the planning authority? After all, South County did its
electioneering with public money and maybe help from the developers
who want to build on the 14,000-acre buffer zone.
It’s possibly an unfair inference, but from the tone of the
article one could conclude that Heffernan is more sympathetic to the
planning authority and South County than to Newport.
* WILLIAM KEARNS is a Costa Mesa resident.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.