Expansion talk infuriates pro-El Toro forces
Susan McCormack
Outrageous. Shocking. Inflammatory. Infuriating.
These are just some of the words pro-airport forces are using to
describe Assemblywoman Patricia Bates’ (R--Laguna Niguel) suggestion
Wednesday that John Wayne Airport could triple its size to accommodate a
projected 24-million passengers in 2020.
They’re also calling it one more thing: truthful.
“What we really see is what [South County’s] strategy has been all
along -- to expand John Wayne,” said Tom Edwards, a longtime airport
activist and member of the county’s El Toro Citizens Advisory Commission.
David Ellis, spokesman for the Newport Beach-based Airport Working
Group, agreed.
“As El Toro Reuse Planning Authority and South County cities try and
shift debate to garner support for the Safe and Healthy Communities
Initiative they’ve been saying we ought to use outlying airports,” he
said.
But Ellis said Bates’ words revealed a “repeated theme” that Irvine
council members Larry Agran and David Christensen and Mayor Christina
Shea also have brought up, then retracted from, in recent years.
The initiative, if approved in the March election, will require
two-thirds voter approval to expand or create new jails, airports and
hazardous waste landfills in the county. A Los Angeles County Superior
Court judge is hearing a suit today against the initiative, which
pro-airport forces are calling “unconstitutional.”
Chuck Smith, chair of the Board of Supervisors, said that Bates’ idea
has already been dismissed by the board.
“That’s been looked into and deemed unreasonably expensive,” Smith
said. “And it’s totally unfair to the people who live under the flight
path to bare the brunt of the projected passengers and cargo.”
Costa Mesa Councilman Joe Erickson agreed.
“It would have tremendous impacts on Costa Mesa and Newport Beach and
can not be tolerated,” he said.
Bates was unavailable for comment Wednesday, but her spokesman Trent
Smith said that Bates told him her comments were misconstrued.
“There was no way she was ‘touting’ that as an alternative,” Smith
said, referring to media coverage of the statements. “That’s like saying
she showed up with an agenda.”
Bates made her unpopular suggestion to expand John Wayne during a
five-hour Assembly committee meeting in Santa Ana on Tuesday, which was
attended by Smith. The meeting was hosted by Assemblyman Lou Correa
(D-Anaheim).
The committee, which also included Assemblyman Scott Wildman
(D-Glendale), will submit a report and recommendation to Gov. Gray Davis
in six to eight weeks, said Chris Leo, Correa’s chief of staff. The
report will concentrate on the increasing transportation challenges the
county is facing, Leo said, with special attention being paid to air
transportation.
Leo said that Correa disagrees with Bates’ comments, but will include
mention of them in the report.
“We were all shocked that she said ‘unconstrained John Wayne,”’ he
said. “I just don’t get it. The people in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
have borne a lot of the costs associated with an airport and done it on
behalf of the county.”
He continued, “Don’t think we’re not going to put our two cents in
about the project. ... These [South County] people just don’t want
anything.”
Leo said he thinks that the governor will not get involved in the
heated El Toro debate. However, he said next year Davis’ office is
expected to concentrate on the state’s transportation needs, which will
include airports.
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