Airlines agree to JWA cap extension
June Casagrande
In exchange for two more gates and a million more passengers a
year, the city has won verbal assurances from airline representatives
that they will support an extension of the John Wayne Settlement
Agreement.
“Without taking out the party hats and horns just yet, the answer
is: Yes. This is good news,” Mayor Tod Ridgeway said Wednesday.
In a series of meetings in past weeks, representatives of the
city, Orange County, the Airport Working Group and Stop Polluting Our
Newport agreed to further concessions to win the airlines’ blessing.
And at a meeting with county representatives, the Air Transport Assn.
agreed to urge the Federal Aviation Administration to support the
extended settlement agreement.
The administration’s approval is considered by many to be the
final piece of the puzzle in ensuring that restrictions on noise,
flights and expansion at the airport remain intact.
Though the aviation administration is not a party to the original
lawsuit that put those restrictions in place through 2005, it could
sue to overturn the restrictions. The city, county and environmental
groups want a letter from the aviation administration that, in
effect, would amount to assurances that they would not sue.
“We still need that ink on the FAA letter,” City Atty. Bob Burnham
said.
Burnham added that the increased number of gates and passengers
likely won’t have much effect on Newport Beach residents, noting that
factors such as the number of seats filled on any given flight and
current trends in air travel will buffer the effect of expanded caps.
“We’re convinced it will not have any significant impact,” Burnham
said.
Under the terms of the tentative new agreement, the airport can
increase the number of annual passengers to 10.8 million over a
10-year period; it will also bring the number of gates permissible at
the airport to 20.
The originally proposed settlement agreement extension allowed up
to 18 gates from the current 14 gates and up to 9.8-million
passengers a year. The current caps, which are slated to expire in
2005, allow 8.3-million passengers a year.
Ridgeway said that the airlines had also asked to add six more of
the noisiest flights per day, but the city and other parties said no.
Currently, 73 such flights per day are permitted. The original
settlement agreement allows that number to go up to 85.
Last week, U.S. Rep. Chris Cox met with the new Federal Aviation
Administration head to push for the settlement agreement extension,
creating a two-pronged approach to winning the administration’s
endorsement.
Allan Beek, a representative of Stop Polluting Our Newport, said
that county negotiators deserve much of the credit for earning the
airlines’ approval.
“We’re very happy,” Beek said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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