Interpret JWA extension as you will; the council did
There are two ways we can look at the Newport Beach City Council’s
approval Tuesday of the latest edition of the John Wayne Airport cap.
We might feel gratitude and some measure of relief that JWA won’t
morph into LAX in the 10 years covered by the agreement. This is the
reaction expected of us -- not just to accept, but also to applaud.
Or else, we might stare up at an airliner flying over our house
and wonder how in the world we have been negotiated into a dozen more
noisy flights daily when we had the promise two years ago of
permanent help from a new airport in El Toro.
Of course, whichever position we take must be tempered by the
recognition that -- as that eminent philosopher Yogi Berra once said
-- “It ain’t over until it’s over.” And the cap derby ain’t over
until the Federal Aviation Administration checks in.
All of this makes me long for the good old days when Dennis O’Neil
and Norma Glover were telling a Pilot reporter that they didn’t
expect a challenge to the cap agreement signed last June with the
county and, if one were to come, their lawyers had assured them the
city would prevail.
That was Agreement No. 1, in which we took our first hit.
Since 1985, passenger volume at JWA has been capped at 8.4 million
a year, noisiest flights at 73 a day and gates at 14. Under the new
agreement negotiated with the county, which we were assured wouldn’t
be challenged, those figures went up to 9.8 million passengers, 85
flights and 18 gates.
Now comes Agreement No. 2 -- responding to pressure from the
airlines -- with 10.8 million passengers, 85 flights and 20 gates.
The last shoe to drop, at least for this round, will be the
approval of the FAA.
Newport Beach officials, who have been working this territory
since about six months before the Measure W election, say we’re very
fortunate to be given this degree of protection, which resulted from
years of hard work on the part of City Council and staff members.
Some of the less grateful say that if the council had put this
degree of effort into defeating Measure W, we wouldn’t be sweating
out flight caps at JWA now.
Some of the downright ungrateful say we would prefer to take our
chances in court rather than allow the substantial increases
permitted under the new agreements.
So we need a reality check. Placing blame for the El Toro failure
-- a sport in which I admit complicity -- is no longer very useful.
Neither is self-congratulations.
Given the situation in which we now find ourselves, what, if any,
are our options? There are really only two:
1. Drawing a concession line in the sand and calling off
negotiations if it is crossed, leaving the current numbers in place,
and waiting for an inevitable lawsuit from the airlines and action by
the FAA when the present cap expires in 2005; or
2. Making the best deal we can under the circumstances.
That, it appears, is what has been done.
That said, I wish the self-congratulations that pervaded the City
Council meeting Tuesday evening might have been a little less
strident.
Perhaps they wouldn’t have been so irritating if the council
members hadn’t spent so much time telling us that it isn’t going to
hurt.
Glover, for example, said the council wouldn’t be recommending
modifications to the settlement agreement “unless we were convinced
that those changes would not adversely impact residents.” Earlier in
the day, she told the county Board of Supervisors that she was
“confident the increases in passengers and flights will not have
significant noise and traffic impacts.”
If she is saying, as she seems to be, that an increase of 12 noisy
flights a day out of JWA won’t make communication impossible on my
patio about 20% more often than current flights do, she’s welcome to
come over and check it out.
So is Councilman Gary Proctor, who called these considerable
changes “tweaking.”
Then-Mayor Tod Ridgeway made the quite remarkable case that the
new agreement could actually cut down the number of flights with math
so creative that one wished it might have been employed in the fight
for El Toro.
All of this would have been much more palatable for the
nonbelievers if one council member had just played it straight and
said:
“Look, we made a decision a couple of years ago to go for a new
cap agreement at John Wayne rather than an airport at El Toro because
we were afraid if we waited until El Toro was lost, we might never
get the cap. You might not agree with that decision, but that’s what
we did. We think it was the right choice, but it left us in a box
that we’re getting out of as best we can. For us to do that, you’re
going to have to put up with more noise and more disruptions, but we
think the alternative is much worse.”
The comment that seemed most inappropriate to me came when Glover
thanked Rep. Chris Cox in the same sentence with the Airport Working
Group. The working group, for all its internal problems, worked very
hard for many years to get an airport at El Toro. Cox worked equally
hard for equally long -- and mostly secretly -- to prevent it from
happening.
He has since turned what should have been a liability into an
asset, most recently by telling us in a bylined Thanksgiving column
in the Pilot that we should count among our blessings his work on
behalf of the JWA cap.
Only four speakers came to the podium to comment on the agreement,
but I thought that one of them -- a woman from Corona del Mar whose
name I missed -- made the most sense all evening. She told the fable
of the frog who, if dropped in hot water, leaps out, but if immersed
in cold water that is slowly heated stays in the pot until he is
boiled.
“That,” she said, “seems to me what is happening here. We keep
adjusting to these incremental increases to the gradual destruction
of Newport Beach.”
The people on the dais weren’t listening. They dismissed her
politely and went back to the business of the evening. Voting for the
agreement. Unanimously.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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