Costa Mesa has place in JWA handover
Should Costa Mesa have a place at the table when Newport Beach
officials and the Orange County Board of Supervisors sit down to
discuss the management -- and fate -- of John Wayne Airport? It’s an
interesting question, the answer to that seems, at first blush, to be
a resounding “yes.”
After all, the residents of the Eastside of Costa Mesa -- this
writer included -- will be significantly impacted by any changes made
to the airport. Anything that produces more air traffic -- or changes
the direction of existing traffic -- will affect us, as well as our
good friends and neighbors a couple blocks away in Newport Beach.
Should the city fathers of Newport Beach be eager to embrace us as
decision-making partners in this process? Logic, common sense and
plain old neighborliness would certainly seem to indicate so.
However, based on Costa Mesa’s consistently weak support for an
airport at El Toro -- such an obvious solution to the region’s
airport capacity woes that it is clear that only self-preservation
and pure politics governed the decisions of some of our officials --
one should not be surprised if Newport Beach is less than
enthusiastic about Costa Mesa trying to jump aboard the John Wayne
bandwagon now.
Where were our leaders when Newport Beach needed support in the El
Toro matter? Nowhere to be found.
Since the Great Boondoggle, er, Great Park is rolling along and --
despite recent mutterings about resurrecting the airport plan --
seems to be gaining steam, the only viable solution to resolving
Orange County’s airport capacity problem is expansion of John Wayne.
Recent articles about the addition of two “temporary” terminal
buildings to support increasing demand illustrate this problem loud
and clear. More demand equals more flights. More flights equate to
more noise. More noise equates to more complaints, etc.
Costa Mesa residents have every right to be apprehensive about the
direction -- literally -- that John Wayne will take. It’s not
unreasonable to believe that Newport Beach officials will view
flights directed over Costa Mesa a better alternative than continuing
to fly down the Back Bay, over Balboa Island and environs. If future
expansion of the airport requires longer runways and more
administrative areas then, by golly, the annexation of Santa Ana
Heights -- horse manure and all -- looks like a pretty good move to
me.
So, despite Costa Mesa’s previous weak support on airport-related
issues in the past, I wholeheartedly support Councilman Allan
Mansoor’s proposal that our city be given a voice and vote when it
comes to any changes in the status of John Wayne Airport.
Newport Beach officials may view John Wayne as a municipal issue,
but it’s not.
It is a regional issue and needs to be considered by a broader
constituency than those living within the borders of their city.
If, in fact, the Board of Supervisors is willing to hand off
control of the airport to a single city then, perhaps, all interested
cities should bid on the opportunity. Certainly, Irvine would jump at
the chance. That way, Irvine Mayor Larry Agran could have his cake
and eat it, too. He’d have his “Great Park” and his own little
airport, despoiling not a single resident of his kingdom.
Back to the point at hand. The answer to the question posed in the
first sentence of this letter is, indeed, “yes.” The leaders of our
city should demand a place at the table when the future of John Wayne
Airport is discussed.
GEOFF WEST
Costa Mesa
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