Mesa needs to step up its role in JWA takeover
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The table has been set and the seating arranged, as Newport Beach
politicians prepare to engage county officials about the possibility
of controlling John Wayne Airport.
And Costa Mesa leaders are wondering what happened to their
invitations.
As far as the hosts are concerned, there is limited seating. Space
is reserved for the three Newport Beach councilman who make up the
Sphere of Issues Committee -- created specifically to explore how the
city can play a bigger role in airport management -- and any or all
of the seven Orange County Supervisors, who currently oversee John
Wayne.
The airport is a county transportation hub and touches the borders
of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and Irvine. Its jets, with
loud roaring engines, share equal time on flight paths over parts of
both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. These factors, and others, have
prompted people to question why Newport Beach is the only city to
possibly have a hand in controlling John Wayne’s future?
The answer, while most may not like it, is simply because they are
the only city to take the initiative. Indeed, it is Newport not Costa
Mesa that has been entrenched in years of costly settlement
agreements with the county the FAA and other agencies over John Wayne
air traffic.
Newport Beach instigated the idea of taking over some of the
county’s duties, most notably control of JWA, and advanced that
possibility by creating a specific committee to study how that would
best be done. So far, it has been Newport Beach’s party and its
officials have the prerogative to limit the guest list.
Do Costa Mesa leaders have a right to have their voices heard?
Absolutely. And this is the perfect opportunity for the city to
reverse its historically flaccid stance on airport issues and
establish its weight in John Wayne discussions.
Costa Mesa Councilman Allan Mansoor is correct: Costa Mesa must
have a voice in the future of the airport -- its residents deserve to
have their best interests represented. Mansoor should continue to
pursue his fresh, aggressive approach to John Wayne issues and push
his council to take the necessary steps to hold their own discussions
with county leaders.
But if Costa Mesa wants a seat at the table regarding discussions
of the future of John Wayne, it must understand that it cannot simply
crash Newport Beach’s get-together, it must host its own.
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