State committee discusses El Toro
Susan McCormack
SANTA ANA -- Elected officials from two counties, aviation experts,
activists, academics and more convened Tuesday to do something virtually
unheard of in recent months: discuss the past and future of the El Toro
issue in a peaceful, organized fashion.
However, state Assemblywoman Patricia Bates (R-Laguna Niguel) managed
to incense Newport Beach airport supporters by suggesting that after John
Wayne Airport’s noise and size restrictions expire in 2005, it be
expanded to between 18 million and 24 million passengers a year to meet
the county’s air transportation needs.
“That pretty well sums up our worst fears,” said Newport Beach Mayor
Dennis O’Neil, who was not at the event. “Whether it is said or not, it’s
inevitable that John Wayne will grow if there is not an El Toro.”
The five-hour nonpartisan event at Rancho Santiago Community College
was hosted by Assemblyman Lou Correa (D-Santa Ana), a member of the
state’s Select Committee on Long-term Planning for Commercial and General
Aviation Airport Capacity. Assembly members Scott Wildman (D-Glendale)
and Bates also attended the event, during which forces on both side of
the El Toro debate made short presentations and answered questions from
the committee.
Bates’ suggestion came after El Segundo Mayor Mike Gordon said that
Southern California should have a “regional plan” for creating or
expanding airports because transportation problems in one county may
affect others. Gordon said that about 20% -- or 12 million -- of passengers that currently use Los Angeles International Airport are from
Orange County, and this number is expected to double by 2020.
Bates said John Wayne should be able to accommodate the projected
demand, including those passengers who currently use LAX.
When pressed by Correa, El Toro Reuse Planning Authority Chair Susan
Withrow agreed, saying, “I think [the needs] could be handled with
existing facilities.”
David Ellis, spokesman for the Airport Working Group, laughed at the
logic, saying that there’s no way John Wayne could serve as many
passengers as other large airports such as John F. Kennedy Airport in New
York, which serves 25 million passengers each year.
However, he said that Bates’ comments are a threat to pro-airport
forces because expanding John Wayne is not beyond the realm of
possibility if the proposed El Toro airport is derailed.
“If it isn’t El Toro, the pressure to expand John Wayne when the
settlement is up will increase,” Ellis said.
A key issue pro-airport forces discussed was the increasing demands
for all forms of transportation in the county. Officials from both the
Southern California Assn. of Governments and P&D; Aviation, the county’s
airport consultant, warned participants that the county’s population is
expected to increase by 22% by 2020 -- or from about 2.7 million to 3.2
million -- with South County experiencing the highest increase in growth
at 39%.
This growth is expected to create increased traffic in the air and on
land, said Chuck Smith, chairman of the Board of Supervisors, and Anaheim
Mayor Tom Daly.
“If this El Toro opportunity is not seized ... there will be a
potential loss of control over our economic future,” Daly said, adding
that passengers and cargo companies will have to use other airports, thus
decreasing business and tourism growth in the county.
Supervisor Tom Wilson accused the Board of Supervisors of keeping
information from him and Supervisor Todd Spitzer, who both oppose an
airport built at El Toro.
Wilson said he’s had to be a “detective to ferret out information” as
to the board’s plan’s and warned that the county is moving “with our
blinders on.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.