Putting airport debate to sleep
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In his recent letter to the editor titled, “Good night, El Toro
airport fight, sleep tight,” writer Martin A. Brower would have us
join him on his trip to Fantasyland as he postulates that “ the issue
of an airport at El Toro should never have come up.”
The fact that the South County whiners were successful in
frightening their fellow residents into believing the myth that a
commercial airport would somehow endanger them doesn’t change the
reality that the location was, and still is, the best location for a
major commercial airport in this region. The loss of this opportunity
has been an economic blunder of almost biblical proportions -- maybe
we should have Mel Gibson make a movie about it.
When addressing John Wayne Airport and the probability of its
expansion, Brower writes, “Some of my best friends live directly
under the flight path, and I sympathize with them.” I found myself
wondering how many of them will remain his “best friends” after
reading his drivel.
In an attempt to throw up a smoke screen, Brower equates a
commercial airport at El Toro with oil wells off the coast and an
atomic plant at Mile Square Park and speculates that “Orange County’s
economy will prosper quite well without an airport, oil wells or an
atomic plant.” I’m sure he hoped readers would conjure up images of
oil-covered beaches, nuclear meltdown and catastrophic plane crashes
by this tactic. Nice try, Mr. Brower.
Through all the rhetoric over the last several years regarding the
proposed airport at El Toro, even the most staunch opponents did not
deny that a commercial airport at that location would be an economic
engine that would anchor prosperity in Orange County for decades to
come. Brower would have us believe that everything’s going to be OK
-- we didn’t need that old airport, anyhow. I’m sure he’s focusing
his energy on the success of that boondoggle that surfaced last fall
-- the Tri-Tunnel Express -- which proposes that three tunnels be
drilled underneath Saddleback Peak to the Inland Empire to meet
Orange County’s airport needs.
The airport at El Toro may be dead now but that doesn’t mean it
wasn’t the right use of that land. It does mean that, with enough
money behind you, it’s still possible in this country to frighten
enough people into making the wrong decision. I’m sure we all will
keep Brower, Irvine Mayor Larry Agran and the rest of the mob that
quashed the airport at El Toro in mind as we enjoy our leisurely
drive to LAX or Ontario, through bumper-to-bumper traffic in our
attempt to wing off to some exotic place.
I’m sure his “best friends” living under the flight path of John
Wayne Airport will think kind thoughts about him as the pressure to
expand the airport results in more, lower and louder aircraft flying
over their homes. I wouldn’t be surprised if he is a frequent guest
at patio cocktail parties, so he can share in the result of his
efforts.
Only time will tell us who was right in this battle. For the sake
of all Orange Countians, I hope Brower and his cronies were correct.
Logic and my gut tell me they were not.
In an ironic twist, recently the newspapers carried the story of
presidential candidate John Kerry’s plan to use El Toro as a site for
affordable housing for service men and women in Orange County. If
successful, this would put a real monkey-wrench into the plans for
development of Emperor Agran’s Great Park and surrounding home
developments. One cannot help but smile at the poetic justice in this
situation.
GEOFF WEST
Costa Mesa
It is obvious that Martin A. Brower never looked at an aerial map
of Orange County. If he had, he would have seen that land had been
dedicated to overflights, such that flights heading south, out of El
Toro, would not pass over homes or schools before coming to the
ocean.
The former Marine base at El Toro would have made a great airport
had it not been turned into a political football.
Now the pressure is on John Wayne Airport. The last agreed-upon
limit of passengers and flights is the end of the line. Any further
increase in activity nurtures disaster in terms of excessive
pollution, decreased safety, untenable noise and overall unbearable
traffic -- both air and surface.
Planes arrive and depart every 90 seconds, seven days a week --
who needs more? Don’t let the airlines have another inch.
BOB WOLFF
Newport Beach
Martin Brower’s letter “Good night, El Toro airport fight, sleep
tight,” makes a travesty of logic. It should be labeled as
propaganda.
Brower weeps crocodile tears about the fate of Newport Beach
residents under the flight path of John Wayne Airport, which he
describes as a “rather large commercial airport.” The effect of air
traffic over heavily populated Newport Beach he dismisses as a
problem to be dealt with later. He assures the reader that Orange
County will prosper economically with only one airport.
Brower goes on to write that no one would ever use the 4,000 acres
at El Toro for an airport when Orange County already has John Wayne
Airport. Never mind that John Wayne has fewer than 500 acres with one
short runway (5,700 feet) while El Toro is 10 times as large (4,700
acres, not 4,000) with four long, intact runways. No one is in the
noise zone at El Toro, while several thousand residents in Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa are impacted by the 1,000 flights per day in and
out of John Wayne Airport.
This is a bargain-basement sale of land that taxpayers have
already paid billions for. Orange County residents and taxpayers are
the losers.
SHIRLEY A. CONGER
Corona del Mar
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