Airport debate reaching new altitudes
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In reading Lolita Harper’s column, “Thinking Allowed” April 9 (“El
Toro airport advocates staying strong”) one can immediately see why
South County (and other cities in Orange County) have shot down the
idea of an international airport at El Toro.
Harper roots for Rick Taylor’s continued push to get El Toro up
and running but forgets what the final goal of Taylor and other
members of the Airport Working Group has always been -- and that is
to move the noise, pollution and traffic of John Wayne Airport down
the road seven miles.
As a matter of fact, they were pushing for an international
airport the size of San Francisco International, when the county’s
original airport plan called for a more than 30 million annual
passenger facility that would run 24-hours per day. But, what finally
came down is an airport with an estimated 28.8 million annual
passengers, with 824 commercial passenger and cargo flights taking
off and landing around the clock.
Taylor forgot to look at the number of cargo flights that would
have arrived and departed from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. in the morning.
Taylor and the zealots of the Airport Working Group can squawk about
a few more flights at John Wayne Airport, where operations still stop
at 10 p.m. and don’t take off until 7 a.m. In the county airport plan
for El Toro would immediately bring the use of John Wayne to just 5
million annual passengers, as commercial operations were moved from
John Wayne to El Toro.
El Toro was planned with a general aviation segment two times the
size of John Wayne Airport’s facilities. What makes you think that
there would continue to be any operations at John Wayne once El Toro
got off the ground?
Now lets talk size, and how the working group was asking South
County to “take some of the burden.” Who is kidding whom? At the
time, John Wayne Airport was capped at 8.4 million air passengers --
running just fine. But the insistence of having El Toro gear up for
28.8 million passengers, with round the clock operations, sure didn’t
seem to “share the burden,” especially when the environmental report
cut John Wayne Airport almost in half.
Who in their right mind would think that is “sharing the burden?”
El Toro passenger capacity would overshadow all of Orange County
and, in the long run, have the same effect as Los Angeles
International Airport, San Francisco and San Diego had on the area
surrounding their facilities.
One thing I do agree with is using the analogy of a “cancer” when
talking about airports, as I have not seen any airport shrink in size
over the years (unless it was John Wayne Airport under the county
plan).
As for Taylor educating Irvine about growth and development, whom
are you kidding? Irvine has world wide acclaims for their planning
and development skills, it has received numerous awards for it’s
quality of life, education, safety and planned neighborhoods, as well
as it’s wonderful ability to plan business parks where people live
and work close to home.
It is unfortunate Newport Beach didn’t have half of Irvine’s
capabilities in planning. If it did, perhaps the city would be far
better off.
Taylor and the Airport Working Group can continue to fight to move
John Wayne Airport to El Toro but the residents of Orange County
quickly saw the disaster that was approaching and I don’t think all
the money in the world will their minds -- or change the outcome of
the Great Park.
One thing is for sure: Once the gates of the Great Park open to
the public and Irvine and Newport Beach get cozy, we will no doubt
see a lot of folks from Newport visiting and taking part in the
activities with their family and kids.
DAVE KIRKEY
Coto de Caza
In response to Martin Brower’s Letter to the Editor Thursday,
April 8, “Tearing apart the Airport Debate”: Having been an active
resident and home owner in Newport Beach for more than 50 years, and
having designed the present intersection leading to the Balboa Island
bridge, I am a proud proponent of the Greenlight no-traffic-growth
initiative, as well as a limit on high-density traffic growth,
inducing business and industrial development in a beach-oriented,
destination-resort, residential community.
On the other hand, I feel that the high-density, high-rise
residential development along Jamboree Road that compliments the
high-density, high-rise business-industrial development along Main
Street -- north of John Wayne Airport and surrounding South Coast
Plaza -- as well as the closed El Toro Marine base is appropriate to
serve and support an ever growing population.
Having been an active professional engineer in the detail-design,
development, flight-testing and Federal Aviation Administration
certification of automatic flight-control and navigation systems for
commercial aircraft for more than 45 years, I feel qualified to give
my opinion on the airport situation.
Literally all Los Angeles World Airports has to do to operate long
range international operations at El Toro is to buy the property at
auction for 20 cents on the dollar -- with an FAA grant and a
Caltrans airport license -- and build a chain-link security fence
around the existing north-south oriented runways; install FAA
furnished security scanning equipment and ticket counters in the
existing small terminal; and provide secure busses to transport the
passengers from the ticket terminal to secure, prefabricated
aircraft-gate, waiting-rooms located along the existing east-west
oriented runways, which then serve as taxiways and concourse.
Flight operations would be into the prevailing on-shore wind from
the ocean, with approaches from the north over Loma Ridge and
departures to the south-west to El Moro Cove. All of which would be
done over 50,000 acres of preserved undeveloped land.
Then, just turn the lights on and ...
Brower’s comments concerning western departures turning over
communities are also without merit.
CHARLES GRIFFIN
Newport Beach
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