One good Turner deserves another
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Bill Turner’s commentary, “Wasting an asset at El Toro” on Tuesday,
expresses well the anger and bitterness many of us feel about the El
Toro airport “give-away.” How Orange County and the federal
government can sanction such a destructive course of action is
amazing.
Additional information about the motives of some of the
anti-airport forces explain the situation better. Irvine’s plan is to
develop about 3,000 acres of former Marine base land. Because of its
location, this property -- when fully developed -- is estimated to be
valued at about $20 million per acre, or $60 billion total.
Unmentioned in most reports is the freeing of the 14,000-acre
buffer zone. Using the same estimated value after development, this
comes to $280 billion.
These sums will accrue to a few wealthy developers and provide
more income to the city of Irvine. However, the taxpayers will have
to foot the bill for excess traffic generated by these developments,
congestion and environmental costs.
Nevertheless, the need for the El Toro airport continues to rise.
Without it, there will be shortfall of nearly 20% in airport
capacity.
SHIRLEY A. CONGER
Corona del Mar
In “Wasting an asset at El Toro” in Tuesday’s Forum section,
author Bill Turner once again rehashes the same tired, stale
assortment of distortions, misstatements and lies spewed by the
county and Newport Beach for the last decade.
However, the underlying message in his essay is crystal clear to
anyone who has followed the El Toro battle with even casual interest.
When the results of an election favor Newport-Mesa, as did Measure A,
it is a voter “mandate;” no matter how narrow the margin of victory.
But when the same voters reject the Newport-Mesa agenda -- with
passage of measures F and W, the defeat of Supervisor Cynthia Coad,
tackling of illegal campaign spending by Newport Beach and the Orange
County Local Agency Formation Commission approval of El Toro’s
annexation to Irvine -- the decisions were always made by
ill-informed, incompetent voters hoodwinked by South County.
Turner needs to return to his high school civics books to remind
himself that our democratic system was designed to be the voice of
all citizens, and is not a failure when Newport-Mesa doesn’t get its
way.
RICHARD SODEN
Lake Forest
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