Editorial
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With the historic settlement agreement that limited flights at John
Wayne Airport set to expire in 2005, and a commercial airport at El Toro
far from being realized, Newport Beach and Costa Mesa officials are
rightly worrying these days over what future air traffic growth will mean
to their communities.
And they are taking action. Newport Beach, in concert with the Airport
Working Group, a citizen coalition originally formed to fight airport
expansion at John Wayne, has embarked on an effort to extend that
settlement agreement into the year 2026 with minor growth in flights.
And just last month, the city of Costa Mesa joined the fray and handed
the Airport Working Group $15,000 to spend toward extending those flight
restrictions at John Wayne.
What transpired after that stunned Costa Mesa officials. The Airport
Working Group this month gave Costa Mesa back its money, saying thanks
but no thanks. The reason for the snub? Costa Mesa officials wanted the
money solely spent on John Wayne issues, not for the promotion of an
airport at El Toro.
We find the refusal of the money surprising also, especially
considering the Newport Beach-based Airport Working Group has a long
history of fighting the expansion of John Wayne Airport.
Reaching its peak in the early 1980s, the group, stocked with bright
minds like Barbara Lichman and former mayors Clarence Turner and Tom
Edwards, was a force to be reckoned with on the county scene. Indeed the
historic airport settlement agreement in 1985 was struck between the
county, the FAA, the airlines, the city of Newport Beach, the Airport
Working Group and the environmental group, Stop Polluting Our Newport.
The residents of Newport-Mesa owe a great debt to those early
pioneers. Today, the Airport Working Group’s focus has shifted and its
leaders believe an El Toro airport is the answer to John Wayne woes. In
fact, the group’s consultant, Dave Ellis, recently said the two issues
can’t be separated.
“It’s like hot dogs and a baseball game,” Ellis said. “You can’t talk
about one without the other.”
But that is simply not true. In fact, Newport Beach officials are
doing exactly that today, talking about one without the other.
With the blessings of the very same Airport Working Group, the city of
Newport Beach is holding discussions with county officials over the new
John Wayne settlement agreement, and the issue of El Toro is not even on
the table.
Having said that, though, we also wonder what is the harm in allowing
the Airport Working Group to discuss with Costa Mesa residents why El
Toro is a viable option to the air travel dilemma.
Surely, the people of Costa Mesa are capable of hearing all the facts
and making up their own minds on whether or not an El Toro airport is an
idea that should be supported.
So we urge the Airport Working Group and the city of Costa Mesa to put
political differences aside and instead work together on the airport
fight.
Like those early pioneers in the airport battle, they too can achieve
the common goal of keeping John Wayne expansion at a manageable level and
maybe even come up with solutions for the county’s future air travel
needs.
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