Cypress mayor backs alternative plan for El Toro
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Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Cypress Mayor Mike McGill has put his name on a
growing list of supporters of an alternative runway alignment for an
airport at the closed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
Since mid-June, a pilots group and a North County airport coalition
said they supported federal review of what has become known as the
“V-plan.” It was crafted by retired engineer and Newport Beach resident
Charles Griffin.
McGill, however, took it a step further.
“It makes sense,” McGill said Tuesday about the plan. “It seems like a
non-intrusive plan. It won’t create an airport that, for lack of a better
word, is overbuilt.”
Griffin and a group of supporters formed The New Millennium Group, a
political action committee, to launch the V-plan as a ballot initiative
in March.
The plan, which was analyzed in Orange County’s environmental review
of a 28.8-million annual passenger airport at El Toro, is formally known
as the Wildland Ranch Alternative.
Millennium Group leaders imposed a Thursday deadline to raise $10,000
so they can hire an attorney to make the initiative “bulletproof,” said
group member and Villa Park Councilman Bob McGowan. So far, they’ve
raised $7,000.
“We just want the right airport,” McGowan said of the alternative.
The V-plan would realign El Toro’s east-west runway so it would form
an inverted V-pattern with the north-south runway.
In mid-June, Air Line Pilots Assn. Capt. Jon Russell sent an e-mail to
Griffin saying he would lobby the Federal Aviation Administration to
review his idea.
The FAA has refused to formally review the alternative because it
isn’t the preferred plan of the county’s Local Redevelopment Authority,
the agency planning the facility.
The Orange County Regional Airport Authority has also urged the FAA to
review the V-plan.
Newport Beach officials pushing for an airport at the base said the
county shouldn’t consider Griffin’s plan because it would delay the
airport long enough for South County leaders to change the zoning with
their Great Park initiative.
That initiative, also set for a March vote, would dump the base’s
aviation zoning, approved by voters in 1994, in favor of open space.
Despite McGill’s endorsement, Newport Beach Councilman Gary Proctor
said he was unconvinced Griffin’s plan would ever succeed.
“I don’t think the plan is building momentum,” Proctor said. “I think
people want more information.”
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