Supervisors launch review of JWA flight cap extension
Paul Clinton
SANTA ANA -- Ignoring protests from its two minority members, the
Orange County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday began a process that could
extend flight restrictions at John Wayne Airport.
The three-member majority, including Supervisor Jim Silva, whose
district includes Costa Mesa, approved initiating an environmental review
of the proposed extension.
The deal, crafted during five months of staff-level meetings with
Newport Beach, was announced Friday. Under preliminary terms, the
airport’s cap on annual passengers would be raised 16%, from 8.4 million
to 9.8 million.
That cap, which limits daily departures to 73, and other restrictions
are set to expire in 2005. The cap began in 1985 via a settlement
agreement.
While Supervisor Chuck Smith has said environmental review should get
underway, Supervisor Tom Wilson opposed the move. Wilson, whose district
includes vast stretches of South County, said the start of the formal
process is premature.
The board will receive a status report May 26.
“I think it was rushed through the system,” Wilson said after the
meeting. “I don’t think it was thought out well enough.”
In exchange for the increase in air traffic capacity at John Wayne,
Newport Beach officials want long-term extensions of other flight limits.
The city also proposes adding four flight gates to the current 14,
combining two noise classes and extending the curfew until Jan. 1, 2026.
Once the gates are built, the county can add 12 additional departures
per day, increase limits on seat capacity and cap cargo flights at two
per day.
The county, city and two airport activist groups -- the Airport
Working Group and Stop Polluting Our Newport -- must all agree to the
extension.
Newport Beach’s proposal is bound to change in future talks, but
Wilson lamented that other affected parties weren’t brought to the table.
“I expected to see Newport Beach, county staff, and the [Federal
Aviation Authority] standing in front of us singing out of the same
songbook,” Wilson said. “If this was a train on the fast track, it looked
like the train was leaving the station and I was getting off.”
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