Long lessons learned: Airport fight not over...
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Long lessons learned: Airport fight not over
Richard Taylor mentions that I had been involved in controlling
John Wayne Airport for “more than 25 years” (Readers Respond,
Sunday). Actually, I’ve been at it for 40 years, beginning in the
early 1960s when I (and others) sought and obtained a resolution from
the county supervisors stating that the initial runway extension and
construction of a passenger terminal would not lead to commercial jet
operations. Within a year or two after those “improvements” were
completed, commercial jet operations commenced. Needless to say, we
were more than chagrined. But we also learned a hard lesson: It’s
never over till it’s over.
In 1969, I was appointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan as one of two
resident members to the commission that developed the noise standards
for California airports. The resulting state regulations, including
the setting of maximum allowable 24-hour and single-event noise
exposure levels over homes (enforced by 24-hour aircraft noise
monitoring), are still in effect.
In the 1970s the Airport Noise Abatement Committee (which I
headed) waged a multifaceted, hard-nosed fight against further
airport expansion, including the filing of hundreds of inverse
condemnation lawsuits against the county over airport noise. A small
initial batch of those suits went to trial, and there were enough
wins to force the county to seek a settlement in which the committee
agreed to drop the remaining lawsuits if the county signed a
settlement agreement with the city of Newport Beach, which included
limits on annual passenger capacity, noisy flights, and the hours of
commercial jet operations. That 20-year agreement was signed in 1985.
Happily, it’s been renewed for another 20 years. But, as they did
in the 1960s, the county supervisors will renege on that agreement
when (rather than if) it becomes necessary.
Having described what was accomplished before the Airport Working
Group existed, let’s look at what’s happened on that group’s watch.
One event stands out -- the loss of El Toro. We lost for four
reasons:
1. We were hopelessly outgunned, “out-PRd” and outspent by the
anti-El Toro crowd;
2. We allowed incumbent Supervisor Cynthia Coad (an El Toro
proponent) to lose to Chris Norby (who declared against El Toro and
was rewarded with heavy campaign contributions from South County);
3. We failed to politically organize the affected residents in
Eastside Costa Mesa so they could exert pressure on their City
Council (Measure F won even in Costa Mesa); and
4. There was no countywide effort to get out the anti-Measure F
vote.
It’s as simple as this: We can’t make those kinds of mistakes
again. The next battle will assuredly be another Armageddon unless
we’re prepared to take off the gloves and develop a hard-nosed,
effective, multifaceted strategy now. No more tax-exempt status that
bars political action and fundraising for political purposes.
It’s never over till it’s over.
DAN EMORY
Newport Beach
Mobile home vote
will be remembered
I have just come from City Council meeting where once again our
mayor, Gary Monahan, has shown his disregard and contempt for the
residents, mostly seniors, of Costa Mesa in favor of outsiders and
the big money.
Along with his sidekick, Councilman Allan Mansoor, who mimics
everything the mayor says or does, he has wasted taxpayer money,
hours upon hours of the planning department’s time and hard work in
developing a city ordinance that would give some protection to mobile
home owners in the event that their park owners would close their
parks, as happened to the home owners of El Nido and Snug Harbor
parks. Although Joe Brown, owner of those two parks, is now helping
to relocate us, we went through a trying year of anguish, frustration
and fear before we came to this point. If the city of Costa Mesa had
this ordinance a year ago, it would have saved a lot of grief,
taxpayers’ money and torment to the park home owners.
I guess the majority of the City Council did not take history
lessons in school or they would realize that it repeats itself if not
heeded. I think it’s clear that the mayor and Mansoor are bias toward
the park owners association, but Councilman Mike Scheafer should know
that there are 1,200 mobile homes in Costa Mesa. That amounts to a
lot of votes in November. Thank you Councilman Scheafer.
DICK MATHERLY
Newport Beach
* DICK MATHERLY is a former resident of El Nido Mobile Home Park.
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