Cox not part of airport debate
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Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- City leaders don’t need Rep. Chris Cox’s help to
extend the noise restrictions at John Wayne Airport. At least, not now.
As staff members from the city continue talks with Orange County to
flesh out the details of the proposed extension of flight caps and the
airport’s other restrictions, Cox (R-Newport Beach) has been nearly
absent from the debate.
But that’s been the plan, Councilman Gary Proctor said.
“We’re not at a point where it would be appropriate for him to wade
in,” Proctor said. “We don’t have enough details on the table.”
The talks began shortly after the Board of Supervisors directed the
county executive office in December to begin hammering out a proposal to
extend the airport’s 1985 settlement agreement past its 2005 expiration
date.
For his part, Cox has stayed mum about his role in the process.
Several calls to the congressman’s office were not returned.
Cox may not have a direct role in the process, but he has been kept
abreast of the status of the talks by Councilwoman Norma Glover.
“One of the things I have tried to do is brief him,” Glover said.
“It’s very important that he know what’s happening.”
Both Proctor and Glover, while not directly at the negotiating table,
sit on the city’s ad hoc committee that monitors the situation.
If Cox ever enters the debate, it is still unclear what, if anything,
he could do to speed up the process.
“At this point in time, the issue is too broad,” Proctor said. “There
are so many facets that it’s hard [to find] a political solution. It’s
not something a piece of legislation can solve.”
Cox, as the fifth-highest ranking member of the House of
Representatives, could wield his considerable clout by lobbying the
Federal Aviation Administration, among other agencies. But officials said
the parties at the table haven’t reached that stage.
In the coming months, the city and county -- once they hammer out a
deal -- will begin environmental review of any proposed restrictions at
the airport. Glover and others said they’d like to see that review begin
in June or July.
Costa Mesa officials also have been on the sidelines of the talks but
have thrown their support behind Newport Beach.
“We’re behind Newport Beach’s efforts 100%,” Costa Mesa Councilman
Gary Monahan said. “They’re really the ones on the front lines.”
Before the deal can go into effect, it must be approved by the two
citizen groups that signed on to the 1985 settlement agreement -- the
Airport Working Group and Stop Polluting Our Newport. Both groups have
said they support the direction the city is heading.
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