Pilots back another El Toro option
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Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- A pilots group that once criticized an alternative
runway plan for the closed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station has shifted
its stance.
The Air Line Pilots Assn. announced the change in an e-mail letter to
Charles Griffin, the Newport Beach resident and author of the alternative
plan, which would realign the east-west runway so it would form an
inverted V pattern with the north-south runway.
Griffin and other members of The New Millennium Group, a political
action committee, have said they will begin circulating a petition in the
next few weeks that, if it qualifies, would put the plan, known as the
Wildlands Ranch Alternative, to a public vote in March.
That would coincide with the South County measure that, if approved,
would change zoning at the base to pave the way for a central park.
In the e-mail Wednesday, Capt. Jon Russell, the western regional
safety chairman of the association, said his group “urges the FAA to
review the proposal set forth in The New Millennium Group proposal . . .
for operations on Runway 16.”
The comment reversed the group’s earlier contention that the V-plan
has “serious and specific limitations,” a comment in Russell’s July 25
letter to Orange County.
The county analyzed the V-plan in its environmental review of the
airport system master plan, which contemplates a 28.8-million annual
passenger airport at the base.
The Federal Aviation Administration has refused to review the V-plan
because it has not been endorsed by county airport planners.
The runways at the air base are now aligned in a crossed-bar pattern.
Critics have picked out safety concerns of the county’s airport plan,
which would leave the runways in their present layout. Griffin said he
introduced the plan so a safer airport could be built.
New Millennium members giddily embraced Russell’s letter. Russell
Niewiarowski has worked with Griffin to refine the plan since it was
first included in the county’s December 1999 environmental report.
“This is the first time that they have ever endorsed looking at
something else other than their own plan,” said Niewiarowski, a Santa Ana
Heights resident. “It’s the beginning of a new direction.”
To secure Niewiarowski’s support, Griffin modified several aspects of
the V-shaped runway alignment.
Griffin lowered the slope of the north-south runway, which arriving
planes would theoretically use in a southerly descent. Griffin also
proposed extending the runway.
Meg Waters, a spokeswoman for the South County cities fighting an
airport at El Toro, said she supported consideration of Griffin’s plan.
“I think they should look at it,” Waters said. “I don’t have any
problem.”
City officials pushing for an El Toro airport have said the county
should continue ignoring Griffin’s plan because it would delay the
airport plan long enough to rot on the vine.
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