Airport debate remains in the clouds
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Members of the Airport Working Group of Orange County, Inc. Board of
Directors read with interest the Community Commentary of March 28 by
Dan Emory and Michael Glueck concerning the grave pressures for
expansion that face John Wayne Airport as the only airport available
to accommodate growing Orange County air travel demand. We admire the
authors’ grasp of information concerning the inadequacies of the
various panaceas, such as the 19th Century solution of new rail, and
the financially impractical solution of new freeways to reach
outlying areas, offered by, among others, the cities of South Orange
County who don’t want a needed airport in their own backyards, and
agree with their conclusions based on that information. We are,
moreover, grateful to their long time interest in the airport issue.
Indeed, Emory was one of the first involved in the effort to control
expansion of John Wayne Airport more than 25 years ago.
We must, however, dispute their conclusion. Far from being
“silent” on the issue of the impacts of increasing demand for air
travel in Orange County, the working group has been in the forefront
of finding a solution. First, as the authors acknowledge, the working
group has been, and remains, a principal supporter of the use of El
Toro as a commercial airport. Everyone in the Southern California
region has now recognized what the working group knew from the start,
i.e., that without El Toro (or a similarly situated addition to
capacity that does not exist), there is no outlet for increased air
travel demand.
In furtherance of the search for additional airport capacity, an
objective explicitly mandated by bylaws adopted when the working
group was established almost 22 years ago, we embarked on 10 years of
educational activities aimed at informing the Orange County public of
the economic urgency of additional airport capacity. We also
commenced litigation aimed at enforcing important public laws such as
the California Environmental Quality Act and the Federal Clean Air
Act against opponents of El Toro’s development as an airport, who
were bent on using any means necessary to subvert the effort, legal
or not.
While we prevailed in court, we could not, by our mandate as a
federally tax-deductible organization, participate in the political
process by which El Toro’s opponents ultimately prevailed.
Nevertheless, the working group properly used legal muscle to
successfully challenge the outcome of that political process. The
judicial decision on our most recent challenge to the correctness of
Irvine’s planning for and implementation of Measure W is still
pending. In short, the runways at El Toro remain in place, and a
dispute over the proper location at which to accommodate Orange
County’s need for increased airport capacity still rages.
While it has been actively engaged on behalf of an airport at El
Toro, the working group’s attention has not been deflected from the
other principal goal for which it was established: to control the
expansion of John Wayne Airport. In close cooperation with the city
of Newport Beach, the working group obtained, in December, 2002, the
county’s agreement to an extension of the John Wayne Airport
Settlement Agreement, already the most restrictive airport regulation
in the nation. Notably, for example, the extension contains a
provision that the curfew for takeoffs over Newport Beach, from 10
p.m. to 7 a.m., has been extended to the year 2020. In addition, in
cooperation with the city and county, we obtained from the FAA
approval of the settlement extension -- a feat not matched anywhere
else in the nation.
Finally, the working group takes seriously its responsibility to
its members to remain their eyes and ears in dealing with airport
related issues. While we may not always appear in the newspapers, and
decline to create unrealistic expectations for the future of Orange
County air transportation, our strategies and decisions are always
based on informed legal judgment and on promises we believe we can
keep. In that tradition, we promise the authors of the commentary,
our members, and the people of Newport Beach and surrounding
communities in general that we will never be “lambs,” but always
“lions” in the effort to find new ways of meeting Orange County’s
transportation demand, and protecting our community from the
potential impacts of John Wayne Airport expansion.
RICHARD TAYLOR
Newport Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Richard Taylor is a member of the Airport Working
Group’s Board of Directors.
I would like to congratulate the authors Dan Emory and Michael
Glueck for their succinct, yet comprehensive, analysis of the El Toro
situation, in their Community Commentary, “Orange County, we have a
problem,” and the Pilot for printing it.
The authors characterized the airport “drama” as a three-act play,
where act No. 1 is the successful setting of restrictions on John
Wayne Airport flights; act No. 2 is the failed attempt to open El
Toro; and act No. 3 is to prevent the expansion of John Wayne and
reopen El Toro -- the critical act that is now in progress.
The picture the authors paint of the effects of trying to expand
John Wayne to become the only airport facility in all of Orange
County is dismal indeed and, based on the estimates Emory and Glueck
quote, are reasonable. The redesign and reconstruction of John Wayne
alone would require at least 15 years until completion. Rearranging
the interconnecting infrastructure may take much longer. The
rebuilding of John Wayne would have an equally large negative impact
on South County, and it is difficult to understand why South County
would put itself through such an ordeal. The only beneficiaries for
such massive changes in Orange County are the developers and builders
(and their out of state investors) who hae been longingly eyeing the
14,000-acre buffer zone since the closure of El Toro.
The bright point is that if El Toro is to be activated, the
redesign is already completed. Since there are four serviceable
runways and a safe pipeline fuel delivery system in place, building
the terminal and necessary service facilities should take only about
two years for the airport to be operational.
FLORENCE STASCH
Newport Beach
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