Be bold in El Toro support
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Hold on to your seats. And your caps. The grounded roller coaster has
been patched up enough that we can take another ride on the El Toro
Express. Meanwhile, the Agran Ark launched on the lake in the Great
Park has sprung a leak. And the victory champagne Rep. Chris Cox was
sharing with his Navy and development pals has gone flat. The new
ride may be bumpy, but at least there’s movement. So climb aboard.
All this, of course, because Los Angeles Mayor James Hahn has
asked the federal government to allow him to run a commercial airport
at the closed El Toro Marine Air Base, where Cox and his beloved
“private sector” are setting up shop. The projected need for airport
space in Southern California is expected to double in the next 20
years, and Hahn wants us to know that we won’t have Los Angeles to
kick around any more in trying to fill that need. “LAX,” he says,
“has clearly taken the brunt of the region’s aviation demand,” and it
is time for Orange County to be apportioned its fair share.
The outrage south of Newport-Mesa because Hahn pointed to El Toro
as the logical place to assume that “fair share” has been wonderfully
cacophonous. We should listen. And learn. Here’s how the anti-airport
folks responded, according to news stories in the Pilot and Los
Angeles Times.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors, by a 3-2 vote, sent off a
letter to U.S. Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta telling him
to bug out because the county doesn’t want an airport at El Toro.
Board Chairman Tom Wilson had already sent a letter of his own to
Mineta telling him that the Board of Supervisors “will not tolerate
any attempt by the city of Los Angeles to overturn a local land use
decision made by the voters.”
An Orange County delegation in Washington pressured Rep. Jane
Harman (D-Palos Verdes) into withdrawing an amendment to an aviation
funding bill that would have required “sharing the burdens and
benefits of air transportation.” Supervisor Bill Campbell described
the Hahn move as a “Hail Mary pass” and called the White House to
promise a fight against it. And Pastor John Steward, who heads the
Clergy for Wholesome Communities, called it “morally wrong” and
asked, “When is enough?” -- a question I don’t recall him posing
after voters had twice approved the El Toro airport.
That’s a cross-section of what their guys are saying. So how about
our guys? The ones who believe firmly that the El Toro airport is an
incredible opportunity, virtually handed to us at a critical stage in
meeting the air transportation demands of this region? How are they
responding to this unexpected rising of El Toro from the dead?
Only two are quoted in the news stories I’ve seen.
Tom Naughton, president of the Airport Working Group, said that he
is “quite pleased with the leadership Mayor Hahn has shown on this
regional issue” and “the AWG supports it 100%.” And Newport Beach
City Councilman Tod Ridgeway also pledged his support, but added: “I
don’t think there’s anything for us to do. In Newport Beach, we have
always said that we’re not in the airport development business. This
is a regional and national growth issue, and it’s not best addressed
by cities or initiatives or referendums.”
Now, however you feel about El Toro, you’ll have to admit that
these comments don’t come very close to the fervor of the
anti-airport folks. So I called our guys in the hope of getting a
little more fire and clarity.
Naughton didn’t return my calls, but Ridgeway obliged cheerfully.
Our conversation was interrupted several times by planes taking off
from John Wayne, which lent a little drama to the discussion, at
least on my end.
I asked, since the El Toro opponents are writing all these letters
and making phone calls and sending delegations to Washington,
wouldn’t it be a good idea for the Newport Beach City Council to let
the targets of all this attention know that there are some people
back here who support the airport and welcome Hahn’s action?
Ridgeway said: “I see no political advantage in writing such
letters. As elected officials, it’s important for us to maintain the
coalition that joined us in the cap fight at John Wayne. Why would I
want to challenge that sleeping dog? This is a larger issue.”
Does he feel that the residents of Newport Beach are being
properly represented by this passive approach to the reopening of the
possibility of an airport at El Toro?
Ridgeway said: “There are split opinions here on the airport at El
Toro. There is a lot of opposition to it, for example, in Newport
Coast.”
Will the Newport Beach City Council at least address this issue by
seeking some means of representing the pro-airport position in
Washington?
Ridgeway said: “I don’t see any of this coming before the City
Council. Our No 1. job is protection of the JWA cap. Stirring the pot
would threaten the support for that position.”
Given all these cavils, how would he sum up what he sees as the
proper stance of the Newport Beach City Council in response to the
Hahn proposal?
Ridgeway said: “This is our last hope, but it’s the hard way. It’s
back to repeating the Measure W debate all over again. We’re staying
the course, but we have to be careful not to be too aggressive. It
can’t be our fight alone, because we have too much to lose.”
If any of our City Council members disagree with this assessment,
it would be good to hear from them. They might also like to consider
that maxim of the old Green Bay Packers that “the best defense is a
good offense.” So far, caution has paid off in a Great Park where an
airport was twice the choice of voters.
Meanwhile, we will carry Ridgeway’s fighting words on our standard
as we do battle for our last hope. A lot of my neighbors are writing
their support to Mayor Hahn with a copy to U.S. Transportation
Secretary Norman Y. Mineta. If that’s the way you feel, you might
want to do that, too.
You might also want to beef up caution with a pinch of passion and
a dash of aggression on behalf of the strong wishes of the majority
of the electorate in assessing City Council candidates at the next
municipal election.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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