Laguna voices noise complaints about JWA
- Share via
June Casagrande
A spate of complaints from Laguna Beach residents about John Wayne
Airport noise appears to be a problem specific to South County cities
and likely does not reflect increased noise over most of Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa.
Laguna Beach Mayor Toni Iseman last week asked other South County
cities to lobby the Federal Aviation Administration to do a study on
whether planes departing John Wayne are flying too low. Iseman said
that she wants to work with the administration and leaders of
neighboring cities to reduce the noise she says has increased over
her city.
“If your altitude’s a little higher, then our shelves won’t
rattle,” said Iseman, adding that air pollution is also a concern.
But the problem may not be caused by changes in altitude. Instead,
a change in airspace rules that came into effect after last spring’s
Measure W vote could be what’s rattling Laguna Beach.
After Orange County voters approved a plan to turn the closed El
Toro Marine Air Base into a park and developed land, the FAA closed
the airspace over El Toro. To make up the difference, the
administration widened the airspace over John Wayne, stretching it in
the direction of Laguna Beach and creating an opportunity for pilots
to make turns over Laguna.
Planes taking off from John Wayne depart to the south. Flights
with eastern and northern destinations then turn in those directions.
Since the new airspace rules came into effect in July 2002, many may
be turning over or near Laguna Beach, Airport Working Group President
Tom Naughton explained.
A spokesman for John Wayne Airport said that there have been no
noticeable increases in noise complaints from Newport Beach or Costa
Mesa. Newport Beach Mayor Steve Bromberg said he was unaware of any
similar effect in Newport Beach.
Pilots do have some discretion as to the altitudes they fly at
shortly after takeoff, FAA spokesman Don Walker said.
“To operate the aircraft safely, they’re given very broad
latitude,” Walker said.
Typically, planes are at somewhere between 4,000 and 5,000 feet by
the time they get over the water and they are usually between 6,000
and 9,000 feet by the time they pass back over the land.
There have been no changes to flight patterns in the area in
recent months, Walker said, and no reason pilots would be flying
lower than normal.
Instead, he said, it’s possible that a trend toward bigger planes
is causing the effect of planes flying closer.
Since the new airspace rules took effect last summer, some
residents of Costa Mesa and Newport Coast have reported flight noise
increases. That noise, too, might be a result of the changed airspace
rules.
Iseman said that, whatever the cause of the increased noise, she
hopes that officials will find a way to buffer the effect.
“What does it cost them if it takes 30 seconds longer to fly that
much further out before they turn around?” Iseman asked. “Why
wouldn’t they want to do that?”
But aviation authorities may not see it the same way.
“It’s our policy to make the turn as quickly as possible once the
pilot is over the water, because the farther south you go, you’re
getting closer to Camp Pendleton, and that’s restricted air space,”
Walker said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.