Once El Toro is gone, it’s gone...
Once El Toro is
gone, it’s gone
Two letters in your Mailbag sections on May 25 and 26, by Ann
Merrit and Rex Ricks, need correction lest readers be misinformed.
Both Merrit and Ricks declare the county plan for the El Toro airport
to be unsafe. This is patently false. Both the Federal Aviation
Administration and Department of the Navy approved the county plan
for the El Toro airport as safe in February 2002.
As to the warnings about the El Toro airport being unsafe, these
are pure propaganda, the big lie, stated over and over again by
airport opponents. Did anyone watch CBS’s 60 Minutes show several
years ago, when they named John Wayne Airport as one of the most
unsafe airports in America? Reasons: 1) no buffer; 2) short runway;
and 3) deceleration upon takeoff.
El Toro is an ideal airport, located in a low-wind zone, with four
crossed runways and a large buffer area so that no one is in the
noise zone. It is sorely needed now because of rising demand for air
passenger service in the area. Ricks’ piece, promoting the V-plan as
a better airport plan, is a kind of fantasy. The V-plan, devised by a
local group, was carefully considered by experts when studying plans
for El Toro. It was studied and then rejected.
The space shuttle could land, if necessary, at El Toro. El Toro is
not dead. The need for this excellent airport grows steadily.
Airplane travel and its consequences are not confined to a small area
in south Orange County but affect millions of people in Southern
California. Thirteen south Orange County cities that devised and
voted for Measure W should not be the sole decision makers. I’ve
lived in Orange County -- I’m a native -- all my life and one thing I
know for sure is that once the land is gone, it’s gone forever.
RACHEL PEREZ-HAMILTON
Costa Mesa
V-Plan would have made El Toro take off
Don Nyre and Florence Stasch should ask Tom Naughton, president of
the Airport Working Group, or Dave Ellis, former political consultant
to the group, or Barbara Lichman, attorney representing it, to give
them a copy of the Parson’s Aviation report of the V-Plan. After all,
their donations and grants from the city of Newport Beach make this
both a public and private document. That should lay to rest the
debate as to whether the pilots’ V-Plan is a viable airport
operational plan.
As for me, I agree with Walter White of the Federal Aviation
Administration who said: “With respect to the other El Toro airport
layouts, the [V-Plan] initially appears to offer the most efficient
level of integration with current traffic flows and thus potentially
the highest level of safety and efficiency.” Since aviation
professionals were not allowed to offer input in the early stages of
El Toro airport planning, they were not allowed to work with anything
other than the “plan to fail” airport layout plan put forth by Orange
County politicians, a.k.a. the “land reuse authority.”
The “neutral” Irvine Co. opposed the V-Plan. Once the entire
perimeter of El Toro is built up with Irvine Co. projects, it might
dawn on people why any efficient and safe airport plan would have
been opposed by the Irvine Co.
ANN WATT
Newport Beach
Caspa column misses immigration issue
In his Tuesday column, Humberto Caspa writes: “Instead of making
scathing remarks against immigration in Garden Grove or Costa Mesa or
any city in Orange County, [Minuteman founder James] Gilchrist and
his group should be in Washington, pushing President Bush as well as
congressional leaders on Capitol Hill to change our country’s
economic policies toward Latin America.”
Where has Caspa been in the past 10 years? He needs to get his
facts straight.
* We are not against immigration. We are against illegal
immigration.
* The Minuteman Project is not a vigilante group. Look up
“vigilante” in the dictionary.
* We don’t need immigration reform. We need our immigration and
labor laws enforced.
* President Bush and most of Congress don’t want to enforce our
immigration and labor laws.
* American taxpayers are not responsible for the well-being of
Latin American countries. Let them all clean up their acts.
* The Minuteman Project has succeeded in calling national
attention to the illegal immigration problem, has proven that our
borders can be controlled, and it has succeeded in embarrassing
President Bush for not doing the job he was elected to do.
By the way, I am Hispanic; I came to the U.S. as a legal
immigrant; I’m a U.S. naturalized citizen; and it’s getting very
embarrassing to say I’m Hispanic.
HAYDEE PAVIA
Laguna Woods
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