Orange County not right place for big airport
In a Dec. 14 letter, El Toro V-Plan proponent Russell Niewiarowski
of Santa Ana Heights expressed his widely held confusion (“Dazed and
confused by JWA situation”). He wrote: “I am confused as to how, on
one hand, the elected officials of Newport Beach and the majority of
the county of Orange Board of Supervisors could preach and sing the
need for a 30-million-annual-passenger El Toro International airport,
then so quickly discarded all such notions ... [and] present a new
notion that a mere slight expansion of John Wayne will now more than
meet Orange County’s future needs for the next 15 years.”
The confusion is justified because neither claim is true.
On the one hand, there never was a sufficient need for a second
county airport. El Toro’s size was pumped up in order to make the
economics look good. The county’s plan for filling El Toro required
that John Wayne shrink, that North County users of Los Angeles
International Airport and Ontario reverse direction and drive south
to El Toro, and that millions of San Diego County and Inland Empire
travelers each year join the traffic on our roads in order to fly
from Orange County. It was a fatally bad idea.
On the other hand, Orange County’s future aviation needs are
greater than what can be served under the new John Wayne plan.
However, no one has made the case that these needs must be satisfied
within the boundaries of this geographically small county. Orange
County is a land-scarce urbanized center. Airports belong in outlying
areas with less costly land, fewer impacted homes, less crowded
airspace, and less congested road access. Riverside and San
Bernardino counties offer these conditions.
It is time to ask what we would do if the Marines had not decided
to leave El Toro. It is time to get back to work on ground access
systems to the other airports scattered around the region.
LEONARD KRANSER
Dana Point
* Leonard Kranser is editor of an anti-airport El Toro
information Web site.
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