City has to accept El Toro...
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City has to accept El Toro airport has flown
From reading the Daily Pilot Forum section, we are struck by the
short term memory loss of those Newport Beach residents who are
clinging tenaciously to the belief that an international airport at
El Toro is still a great idea.
Sadly, they forget that Newport Beach had a great opportunity that
they let get away. When we ran for City Council against Tom Edwards,
in 1994, there was a Speak Up Newport function that featured both
Bill Krogerman and Tom Edwards debating the El Toro airport proposal.
Although we were not allowed to participate directly, we managed to
ask Krogerman publicly whether or not he would support air cargo and
general aviation at El Toro. His response was: ‘’We would certainly
take a strong look at that given that a commercial passenger airport
not be included.’’
So in 1995, we were appointed to the Environmental Committee of
the Orange County Airport Commission and found that the plan being
developed by the county and supported by Newport Beach did not
include that proposal, but offered instead an international airport
with a 98 Million Annual Passenger contingency by 2025. LAX still
doesn’t have a 98 MAP without the adoption of the current expansion
proposal. So people of Newport Beach -- wonder why the South County
people were outraged? It wasn’t until the passage of Measure F
(overturned by one lone judge) that the county plan visited a maximum
28 MAP option, more than three times as big as our own Orange County
airport is today.
Using the big hammer was never going to work, but then, why
compromise and work together when you can just as well push your
weight around and then cry like babies when that strategy doesn’t
work.
Maybe there is still time to pay off the right politicians or
judges and come up with another Plan E, F, G, H or Z -- but we don’t
think so. In the words of Spike Lee: ‘’Just do the right thing’’ and
if you can’t do that -- ‘’live with the consequences.’’
RON AND ANNA WINSHIP
Newport Beach
Those against El Toro have fooled populace
The Daily Pilot article ‘’V-Plan supporters, opponents exchange
accusations’’ (May 16) quotes anti-airport supporters responding to
accusations they have lied about the V-Plan as saying they have the
right to free speech and are not breaking any laws. Sadly, that may
be true.
Anti-El Toro airport activists have fooled the public for years by
making ridiculous, unsubstantiated statements for the purpose of
sabotaging airport planning. In plain language -- they lied and
manipulated facts and they continue doing so today. Yet those lies
are protected by our Constitution. It is frustrating for those who
know the truth to watch the public accept blatant lies as facts.
If every statement about El Toro airport was analyzed by an
unbiased source and a report was published weekly on the front page
of our newspapers exposing lies, the public would have demanded
building the new airport and we would be building the terminal by
now. Follow the anti-El Toro airport money trail and discover it
leads to greedy developers and ambitious politicians who have had a
plan from the beginning to grab that land for themselves, no matter
the cost.
JANICE WRIGHT
Newport Beach
Airport funding audit sounds wonderful
I’m very much in favor of having the airing out of how the money
was spent for the El Toro grant money, very much. And I applaud City
Council members John Heffernan and Norma Glover for what they’re
doing.
SOLLY SHATZEN
Newport Beach
Airlines need El Toro international airport
Regarding “Supervisors, council extend airport limits” (June 26),
the much-heralded settlement extension won’t be worth the paper it’s
written on until the planned El Toro international airport comes on
line. At the start of the last settlement agreement, 1984, we had
3-million annual passengers at John Wayne Airport. Now we have three
times that much, 9.8 million annual passengers. During the next 20
years, demand will grow to 45 million annual passengers, of which 40
is to be handled at El Toro. Without El Toro, there will be massive
condemnations at John Wayne Airport, added runways and bridging over
freeways.
Airlines must sue to open El Toro, not to expand John Wayne
Airport. There are people in the noise zone at John Wayne Airport,
but no one is in the noise zone of the planned El Toro international
airport, even when operating at 30 million annual passengers.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
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