Costa Mesa gets El Toro ‘wake-up call’
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Susan McCormack
COSTA MESA -- In Mayor Gary Monahan’s own words, the city of Costa Mesa
has received its “wake-up call” on the El Toro debate.
At a press conference held Friday morning at City Hall, Monahan said he
was outraged by Assemblywoman Pat Bates’ (R-Laguna Niguel) recent
comments that John Wayne Airport could be expanded to accommodate growing
air transportation demands in the county.
“This will necessitate the need to condemn and bulldoze a large area
around the airport, including substantial properties in Costa Mesa,” he
said. “It is not an option. It is not a possible compromise. It will not
come to fruition.”
The mayor even went so far to reinforce his feelings toward the matter by
awarding Bates a “Bulldozer Award” -- a yellow, Tonka tractor -- “for
proposing that we bulldoze the areas around John Wayne needed to expand
it so that South County won’t have to put up with El Toro.”
Monahan also announced that the first community meeting on El Toro will
be held Nov. 2 at the Costa Mesa Neighborhood Center.
Councilwoman Heather Somers also spoke at the meeting, presenting a map
of the areas that would probably be affected if John Wayne were to be
expanded. Somers said development of the airport would “eradicate
everything from the west side of John Wayne to the 55 Freeway,” which is
primarily business offices, and from the 73 Freeway to University Drive,
which contains homes.
Monahan compared the results of expansion of John Wayne to the
construction of an international airport at El Toro, and declared there
is no comparison at all.
“Are they going to lose their businesses?” he asked. “Are they going to
lose their homes?”
Costa Mesa officials were not alone in their condemnation of South County
arguments.
Peggy Ducey, executive director of the Orange County Regional Airport
Authority, agreed with Monahan’s assessment, saying that 10 properties
the size of John Wayne can fit in the buffer zone surrounding El Toro.
Villa Park Mayor Bob Bell and Councilman Robert McGowan, who attended the
event, expressed their concern that a proposal by South County to use
other counties’ airports would significantly affect street and freeway
traffic in Villa Park, Orange, Tustin, Santa Ana and other cities not
usually discussed in the El Toro debate.
“South County residents will spend two to three hours driving to
airports, and they will drive through my city,” Bell said, pointing to
the proximity of the Riverside and Costa Mesa freeways to Villa Park.
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