Flight-focused set vows to pursue airport
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Alicia Robinson
Residents are still divided on the best solution to the city’s
airport woes, but they haven’t stopped talking about clamping down on
traffic at John Wayne Airport.
The airport could reach its negotiated cap of 10.3 million
passengers per year by 2006 if passenger levels keep growing at their
current rate, Airport Working Group President Tom Naughton told about
25 local residents at the Wednesday night meeting of Speak Up
Newport, a public education group, at the Newport Beach Yacht Club.
John Wayne Airport is restricted by a legal agreement to 10.3
million passengers a year through 2011, when the cap goes up to 10.8
million until 2015. The Airport Working Group was part of the
negotiations with the city of Newport Beach, Orange County and
citizens group Stop Polluting Our Newport, which led to the cap.
Naughton said his group will continue to pursue a commercial
airport at the closed El Toro Marine air base, which Orange County
voters rejected by voting to rezone the land to a park in 2002.
“They have all these runways to tear up out there,” he said.
“Until those runways are gone, I’m going to do everything I can.”
Planning for the Southern California region doesn’t realistically
address growth and other transportation problems predicted in the
next 20 years or so, Naughton said.
For instance, a 2004 report from the Southern California Assn. of
Governments assumed the 192 million air travelers expected annually
by 2030 could be allocated to existing airports. Some communities,
however, are against expanding their airports, and the plan depends
on a multibillion-dollar train system that would take years to build,
he said.
Some residents say any further expansion at John Wayne Airport
will ruin their quality of life and property values.
Naughton urged those who want to revive an airport at El Toro to
write their congressman, and when it was pointed out that Newport
Beach Rep. Chris Cox has come out against an El Toro airport,
Naughton suggested writing Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta.
While some residents remain firmly in support of an El Toro
airport, others think an airport solution will come from building a
coalition with surrounding communities that Orange County alienated
by rejecting the El Toro plan.
“[An El Toro airport] is radioactive politically,” resident Dan
Emory said. “Wasting time on it is basically spending time on
something that is not going to get you anywhere.”
Emory is not alone in abandoning El Toro as a solution to the
area’s transportation problems. AirFair, another Newport-Mesa
citizens’ group, was formed in 2002 as an alternative to the Airport
Working Group because some people saw El Toro as a dead issue,
AirFair Chairwoman Melinda Seely said.
AirFair had scheduled a public presentation on airport issues
Wednesday in Costa Mesa.
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