Joseph N. Bell -- THE BELL CURVE
The El Toro airport beat goes on. And on. And on.
Laurel and Hardy. Abbott and Costello. Cheech and Chong. Laurel runs a
sound test; Hardy calls it a joke on the one hand and says it proves
unacceptable noise on the other. Abbott comes up with a skin game called
the Safe and Healthy Communities Initiative; Costello responds by trying
to out-con the skin game with a counter initiative. Cheech ponies up 150
grand to push for the airport; Chong kicks in $350,000 to kill it. Or $6
million. Or $11 million, depending on whose figures you accept. And so it
goes.
Next performance tomorrow. Watch the newspapers for time and place.
The only people making out in this miasma of confusion and rhetoric are
the political flacks who will go either way for the bucks. And since the
biggest bucks appear to be in South County at the moment, the flack
consultants who previously pushed the pro-airport position are now
demonstrating a remarkably open mind by selling out to the other side.
All this reminds me of a conversation I once had with Bill Roberts who --
along with Stuart Spencer -- directed an actor named Ronald Reagan in his
campaign to win the role of governor of California. Spencer-Roberts had
also managed California campaigns for the liberal Nelson Rockefeller and
the John Birch Society Congressman John Rousselot. When I asked Roberts
how he could, in good conscience, work for candidates with such disparate
philosophies as Rockefeller and Rousselot, he said: “We don’t hyphenate
Republicans. We ask only two things of a candidate we decide to handle:
Is he a Republican and does he have a chance to win? We don’t judge him
any further than that.”
I don’t know if the turncoat consultants hired by the city of Irvine are
motivated by the prospect of living under a potential El Toro flight
path. What I do know is that I live under the John Wayne flight path, and
that leads me -- by way of some rather obvious reasoning -- to several
conclusions that I offer free of charge to both sides in this tiresome
debate.
First of all, no one directly affected by aircraft noise is going to
compromise this issue. If 100 additional flights at John Wayne were
proposed, I would fight like hell against them. And I would have no more
interest in compromising at 50 or even 25 than the people who would be
subjected to El Toro noise are going to compromise.
It makes no difference to them that I live a few hundred yards off the
John Wayne runway while they would be five miles or more distant from El
Toro, and are thus far less subject to noise. They are programmed to
believe that the noise would be intolerable, and they aren’t going to
moderate that conviction. If you doubt that, consider for a moment that
probably no other issue in human history could have brought Larry Agran
and Christina Shea together.
Second, a counter initiative to that wonderfully christened Safe and
Healthy Communities Initiative is a terrible idea. Floating this
suggestion has already achieved about all that can be expected of it:
stimulating the whining coming out of Irvine, where the counterproposal,
according to the Los Angeles Times, has been “deeply resented” and called
“manipulative trickery” -- apparently in contrast to that Safe and
Healthy paragon of public policy virtue. It’s time that we just accept
the fact that they got the jump on us in the shell game -- and not try to
beat them at their own game.
Larry Agran told a Times reporter that it was his “gut feeling” that a
counter initiative “would backfire.” It’s the first time I’ve agreed with
Agran since the Marines decided to retreat from El Toro.
Third, and finally, scattering funds, energy and focus sometimes wins an
occasional battle but assuredly doesn’t win wars. Proponents of a
commercial airport at El Toro need to select the most vulnerable spot in
the enemy lines and concentrate resources there. And I believe that
vulnerable place to be what they regard as their greatest strength: our
old friend, Safe and Healthy.
Defeating this initiative would effectively break the back of organized
opposition to the El Toro airport. There would probably be years of rear
guard legal actions, but the heart would be cut from the opposition. They
have managed to talk their way out of two elections, but a third would be
fatal -- and they’ve set themselves up.
Finding the votes to bring this off should be concentrated where efforts
are most likely to be effective: in areas where noise from the planes is
not a factor. Trying to placate South Countians is counterproductive. But
residents of central and north Orange County would be receptive to the
strong arguments -- mostly economic -- that urge an El Toro airport.
So why don’t we knock off the blather. Let Wilson and Spitzer have their
photo ops with the petitioners and Agran and Shea bleed for the helpless
victims of corporate greed. If the consultants Newport Beach has hired
haven’t made the above arguments forcefully, they should be fired. And if
I’m not asked to be general manager of the Angels, I’ll be available --
for 150 grand, of course.
JOSEPH N. BELL is a Santa Ana Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.