READERS RESPOND
I have watched Chuck Smith, Jim Silva and Cynthia Coad ignore the
significant numbers of Orange County residents opposed to the airport,
watched them indifferently dispose of objections to the airport raised by
airline pilots associations, watched them kowtow to George Argyros’
money, and I wonder: who are they serving? Again, passenger counts are
down at John Wayne Airport, and we still need a 24-hour-a-day, seven days
a week, monster international airport? These supervisors are drunk with
power and ego, but still have a chance to do what is right. So who is it
they will answer to? Money, lawyers and lobbyists, or the people from
whom their existence emanates? It’s their call. Are they worthy of the
title “Honorable?”
PATRICK MALLON
Mission Viejo
Let us face facts about commercial airports in Orange County. If El
Toro is not converted to a commercial airport, there will be only one in
Orange County.
The Marine Corps, which owns Camp Pendleton, has no intention of
giving up land in Pendleton for an airport.
Therefore, Orange County will have to depend on John Wayne Airport for
all commercial aviation. John Wayne is 470 acres with no buffer zones to
the north, south, east or west. Even if expanded, John Wayne cannot
handle the aviation demand of Orange County. At maximum capacity, John
Wayne would handle only 250 flights per day. (LAX is 3,000 flights per
day).
In order to handle this capacity, flights taking off would have to fan
to the right over Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley. Other
flights would fan to the left over Newport Beach, Newport Shores, Turtle
Rock, Laguna Beach and Irvine.
Incoming flights, because of the airport size and high volume, would
be stacked over Brea, Fullerton, Placentia, Anaheim, Orange, Villa Park,
Tustin, Irvine and all of South Orange County. This airport does not have
enough runways and ground to handle 250 flights per day.
On the other hand, El Toro has 4,700 acres. It also has 13,750 acres
of buffer land around the boundaries of El Toro with no housing. One
major accident could shut down John Wayne for hours, maybe days. El Toro
has four existing runways. Let us use our heads -- we need two airports
in Orange County to handle the volume of air traffic for the county.
If we don’t do it now, there are no future possibilities.
A. BARLOW
Newport Beach
Fred Martin’s column “Cox Needs to Show Real Leadership on El Toro
Issue” was good timing. Knowing how stubborn antiairport cities remain on
the airport issue, including not even listening to any suggestion or
ideas of compromise, and pro-airport people who believe El Toro is the
most perfect answer to our air traffic dilemma, Chris Cox would have to
be a political genius to make both sides happy. If he is able to
accomplish the task he will have accomplished something even bigger than
tearing down the Berlin Wall.
DAN PETERSEN
Newport Beach
The Orange County Board of Supervisors should not place a competing
initiative on the ballot. The 190,000 signatures collected for the Safe
and Healthy Communities initiative is testimony to a grass-roots effort
that deserves to be heard without political confusion tactics of a
competing initiative.
CRAIG H. BROWN
Laguna Beach
This letter is being written to support the development of El Toro
airport. It is the only prudent and logical place for another airport
here in South County.
The residents of Newport Beach are only asking South County residents
to help and do their share with the air transport problems, which Newport
has been doing all by themselves for many years now. Please, we are only
asking you to help with this air traffic problem. We are not asking El
Toro to do it alone, John Wayne will still be a very active airport. We
are afraid of too much traffic over the homes in the Back Bay for the
safety of the residents of Newport Beach. El Toro has much more acreage
to plan a proper airport strategy for the safety and well being of
residents of both communities. Let’s stick together and do it right, and
make El Toro a great airport for all people to enjoy and the city to
prosper due to increased revenue for El Toro and safety, safety, safety
for everyone.
CAROLE WAGNER
Newport Beach
Oh, how I wish Jeff Metzger (Laguna Hills) was right when he stated in
his letter to the Pilot “Our measure will keep our communities safe and
healthy.” He was referring to the Safe and Healthy Communities
Initiative, which he is actively promoting around the county. Well,
actually he is half right. It will protect his community in South County.
But it will not protect ours around John Wayne Airport.
The initiative was designed to stop El Toro airport by saying any
airport, jail or toxic dump cannot be built on county land without a
two-thirds vote of the citizens. Now if that initiative passes, you can
be assured activists against the proposed airport will once again put
another initiative on the ballot about El Toro. Anybody doubt they will
get their way?
Once our county loses its last opportunity for an additional airport
in our area, and the air traffic demands increase just as experts have
predicted, who will vote against expanding John Wayne? LAX and Ontario
will be so overcrowded they will have become nightmares. By then, two
thirds of the county will gladly vote for the expansion of John Wayne. So
you see, Mr. Metzger’s initiative might work for them, but not for us.
D. WISEMAN
Newport Beach
A Sept. 4 letter from Aliso Viejo suggests that airport proponents
need to prove Orange County has an airport transportation need and that
there has never been a marketing study to determine if an airport at El
Toro would be economically viable.
For that writer, I’m certain the chairman of the Orange County Board
of Supervisors can supply him with tons of data representing Orange
County’s valid need for expanding air transportation facilities and that
operations at El Toro can be provided at no cost to Orange County
taxpayers.
The South County writer also says, “Ontario airport has expanded and
is in need of customers.” Now if the writer wishes to help Ontario fill
its need, I suggest all South County antiairporters simply head for
Ontario to help them out and vow never, ever, again to use John Wayne or
El Toro airports, now or in the future.
VICTOR H. JASHINSKI
Corona del Mar
I was not surprised that South County provided a record number of
signatures to qualify the Safe and Healthy Community Initiative for the
March ballot. People in this part of the county have become fanatical
about their antiairport stance. What is significant for all of Orange
County to realize is that those who signed the initiative are almost
exclusively from cities such as Irvine, Lake Forest, Mission Viejo and
Laguna Niguel.
Having recently moved to Lake Forest, I have listened to the airport
opposition’s fears, but I also understand the necessity for El Toro
airport. One problem is the impossibility to express any pro airport
logic or facts in this community without being verbally assaulted. A
logical solution is for the north to explain its position to the south
and vice versa, but instead they both seem to prefer regurgitating the
same old arguments and refuse to entertain the others’ views. If there is
any way for a compromise on this vital issue, it certainly is not evident
down here!
DIANA MILLER
Lake Forest
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