Agran proved no angel in El Toro’s end
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Last Sunday, the sound of Dave Henderson’s bat as he knocked the
Angels out of a World Series 16 years ago was finally obliterated
from my head forever.
From now on, no matter what happens, it’s downhill for the Angels,
and it seems that everything has already been written and felt to
express that satisfaction. So while we wait for the World Series,
I’ll move on to another winner, whose path to victory was as devious
as the Angels’ path these past few weeks was straightforward.
OK, Larry Agran, I give up. You win. You and that crew you’ve
assembled in Irvine make Machiavelli look like a carnival grifter. Or
the Enron crooks like common purse snatchers.
This latest move of yours to let the taxpayers in Bakersfield and
Fresno foot the bill for that imaginary Great Park of yours is sheer
genius. Our hired guns can’t even come close. Never could. I’ve
always admired professionals who are good at their work, and I’ve got
to say that as a superb confidence man, you’re in a class by
yourself.
In case anyone reading this doesn’t know what I’m talking about, I
call your attention to Proposition 51 in the upcoming state election.
Proposition 51 is called the “Transportation, Distribution of
Existing Motor Vehicle Sales and Use Tax Initiative Statues.” It
would take about 4.5% of state sales tax revenue and divert it to a
trust fund for “transportation, environmental and safety programs.”
And guess what is tucked into the free lunch line under this
umbrella? You got it. The Great Park.
Those of you who remember the mailing pieces that came out of
Irvine the past couple of years extolling the Great Park might also
recall that one of its selling points was a free ride for the
taxpayers.
When Agran was reminded of this the other day by a Los Angeles
Times reporter, he responded: “We never said that to create the Great
Park will cost no money. It’s only some of the more sinister people
in Newport Beach who are asserting we said that.”
Unhappily, our sin was not being sinister enough. We were
out-sinistered as well as out-smarted by a considerable margin.
I grazed through some of the fliers I saved and found Agran
telling The Times that a study commissioned by the city of Irvine
provided a “thorough analysis that shows the park plan would pay for
itself.” He also said that the Great Park “will generate more than
$25 million annually in net revenue ... with ample resources to
design and build the park in phases and operate it.”
He was quoted in the Orange County Register as saying that a plan
to create an endowment for the park out of revenue from leasing parts
of the existing base “creates an opportunity to build the great park
at no taxpayer expense.” And the sinister beat goes on.
The backers of Proposition 51 picked up a page from Agran’s book
by offering it up as found money because these goodies come from
“existing funds” that don’t require new taxes.
The “existing funds” have been siphoned off the state’s general
fund at the expense of education, health and social services that
would have to be diminished or eliminated to build Agran’s park --
the one that was offered up at no taxpayer expense. Opposing
Proposition 51 is the only time I can recall seeing the League of
Women Voters in bed with the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn.
Throughout this charade, Agran’s genius has been in packaging.
When a “Yes” vote favored an El Toro airport, he packaged it with
jails and toxic waste dumps. When a “No” vote favored El Toro, he
packaged it with a Great Park. So who would vote for waste dumps or
against a park? Not enough people, that’s who -- especially when they
were also being told how this airport would destroy everything they
held dear in their current lives.
Meanwhile, what were our guys doing with the Newport Beach money?
They were running scared from lawsuits with “educational” fliers, a
restriction that didn’t seem to cramp the fiction style in Irvine.
I’ve been giving some thought to packaging we might have offered
in response to the jails and dumps and great parks, looking for
offerings almost certain to be embraced by voters. Tax reduction, for
example. Who wouldn’t vote for that? So we might have created a
commission to study this matter, making sure beforehand -- of course
-- that it would come to the conclusions we wanted.
Armed with this research, we could then offer a measure that would
pair an El Toro Airport with a reduction in county taxes based on
income generated by the airport. All baloney, of course. An offering
on which we couldn’t possibly deliver.
But we’d worry about that after the election. Oh yes. And we’d
also convince the residents of Garden Grove and Huntington Beach that
their lives would be destroyed by the certain expansion of John Wayne
Airport if they didn’t turn out to vote for El Toro -- which would be
a lot closer to the truth than the discomfort in Mission Viejo if the
airport did win.
Maybe I’m giving too much credit to Agran. Maybe the ideas for
dumps and parks came from some of his half-million-dollar
consultants. But Agran was always the front man, the guy manipulating
the shells while we tried to guess which one the airport was under.
And if some of us were suspicious, it apparently never occurred to
the folks who didn’t bother to vote on Measure W that the airport
wasn’t under any of them.
So when they pass out the Enron statues for the Best Performance
in Creative Deception, I’ve got to be pulling for Agran. If he wants
to bring someone else up to the platform with him, so be it. But just
keep that picture in mind when you vote on Proposition 51. “No” means
“No” -- on both the Proposition and Agran’s end run.
Meanwhile, go Angels!
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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