Rick Taylor: Making the residents a No. 1 priority
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June Casagrande
To Rick Taylor, an expansion of John Wayne Airport poses the
biggest and most immediate threat to Newport Beach’s quality of life.
But the struggle to contain airport noise and expansion is also an
example of how the city government needs to work harder to improve
quality of life in every aspect of the city, he said.
“We need to get back to the people in every aspect of city life
and get away from the effects of development dollars on our City
Council,” Taylor said. “It’s not about the Kolls, it’s not about the
Conexants, it’s not about the Marinapark hotels. It’s about the
people.”
Traffic congestion, water quality, integrity in government and
adding park space and playing fields are just some of the things the
City Council must take on as part of a fundamental shift in focus, he
said. But no battlefront in Newport Beach is more important to the
lives of everyday families than the airport, he said.
“My strong concern is that the John Wayne Settlement Agreement is
not all that the City Council has led the people to believe it is,”
Taylor said. “But make no mistake about it: There will be a challenge
to it. Orange County’s air traffic needs will be at 35-million
passengers a year by the year 2020, and the settlement agreement only
looks as far ahead as 9.8-million passengers. It’s not a question of
whether someone is going to challenge it. It’s a question of when.”
Taylor also said that the extension, in some ways, leaves the city
more vulnerable to airport expansion than before. For example, its
language allows some of the agreement’s stipulations to be altered,
which could mean an increase in flights prior to 2005 -- the date the
original agreement was scheduled to expire.
“We need to look at a regional solution. We need to consider El
Toro and even look to places like Ontario and Long Beach,” said
Taylor, a member of the Airport Working Group. “Newport Beach can’t
become the fall guy for all the air traffic in Orange County.”
As a Greenlight candidate, traffic is also high on his priority
list.
“The current City Council has actually weakened our traffic
phasing ordinance,” Taylor said. “They made it possible to declare
certain intersections as ‘infeasible intersections,’” meaning that
the traffic problems there are basically irreparable and that, as a
result, no changes should be made there.
Naturally, water quality and air quality are prime examples, he
said. But again, these issues can best be addressed by a council that
puts the people first, he said.
“I want to get up there and listen to people and make them feel
comfortable coming up to the podium to address their council. In my
mind, being on the City Council is one of the most humbling things
you can do. You’re a servant of the people.”
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RICK TAYLOR
AGE: 46
OCCUPATION: Attorney
FAMILY: Married to Irene; son, 11, and two daughters, 4 and 1
EDUCATION: Doctorate from Western State University; bachelor’s
from Cal State Fullerton; U.S. Army Institute of Administration in
Indiana
COMMUNITY SERVICE: Member of the Newport Beach Citizens Aviation
Committee; mentor of Youth Volunteers in Parole; vice president of
the Airport Working Group; past director of Child Guidance Center of
Orange County; alternate for the Airport Land Use Committee of Orange
County
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