Reactions mixed on competing measures
Susan McCormack
NEWPORT-MESA -- While antiairport forces lambasted a recent proposal that
the county Board of Supervisors place three alternatives to an
antiairport initiative on the March ballot, local El Toro supporters had
mixed reactions.
Los Alamitos Councilman Ronald Bates, who heads a new pro-airport group
called the Citizens Right-to-Vote Committee, is expected to urge the
board at its Tuesday meeting to place the three pro-airport initiatives
on the ballot.
Bates was unavailable for comment Thursday.
The Safe and Healthy Communities Initiative, which hopes to derail the
proposed El Toro airport, earned its spot on the ballot after South
County proponents gathered almost 200,000 signatures. The initiative, if
passed, would require two-thirds of voter approval to allow additions to
or the creation of new airports, jails and hazardous waste sites.
The three proposed initiatives differ from the Safe and Healthy
Communities Initiative because they would:
* Allow the supervisors to decide with a majority vote if jails and
hazardous waste landfills -- but not airports -- should be submitted to
voters.
* Require only majority approval by voters for jails or landfills only,
not airports.
* Ask voters if the board should transfer airport planning to a
joint-authority power made up of cities and the county, such as the
Orange County Regional Airport Authority.
“There have always been rumors there would be a counter proposal,” said
Newport Beach Mayor Dennis O’Neil, who said he would not comment on the
proposals until he knew the exact details.
But he questioned the motives behind the proposed initiatives. “Is this
intended to confuse the voters ... or a good faith effort on the part of
citizens?”
Costa Mesa Mayor Gary Monahan and Dave Ellis, spokesman for the Newport
Beach-based Airport Working Group, said they, too, are waiting to see the
actual language of the proposed initiatives until making a judgment.
“We’re in a wait-and-see mode,” Ellis said. “We haven’t really analyzed
[the proposed initiatives] yet. We have an open mind, but really have
come to no decision on it.”
Tom Edwards, a member of the city’s El Toro Citizens Advisory Commission,
said he believes all of the initiatives are hindering the airport
planning process.
“I don’t even think we need the Safe and Healthy Communities Initiative.
We’ve voted twice on this,” Edwards said. “Let the process go forward.”
Tom Wall said he was speaking for himself -- not the Orange County
Airport Alliance, of which he is executive director -- in supporting
additional initiatives on the upcoming ballot.
“By adding more initiatives to the ballot, we will give people more
choices,” Wall said. “The [Safe and Healthy Communities] initiative is
very restrictive and, in this case, why not give people these choices?”
Peggy Ducey, executive director of the Orange County Regional Airport
Authority, which could be given joint-authority powers over airport plans
if one of the proposed initiatives is passed, was unavailable for
comment.
While the board has the legal right to place initiatives on the ballot
without voters’ consent, Len Kranser, one of the Safe and Healthy
Communities Initiative’s leading proponents, blasted the attempt and said
it would be self-defeating for Newport Beach and Costa Mesa voters to
approve them instead of his initiative.
“[My] initiative gives protection for people who live near John Wayne
Airport by allowing one-third of voters in the county to stop any
expansion of John Wayne,” Kranser said. “If [Ron] Bates’ proposal passes,
there will be no protection whatsoever for people who live around John
Wayne because the requirement that airport expansion go to the public has
been excluded.”
Supervisor Tom Wilson, who opposes El Toro, released a statement Thursday
while he was in Washington, D.C., calling the proposed initiatives
“manufactured ... to confuse voters.”
“These initiatives detract from the validity of the Safe and Healthy
Communities Initiative, which was placed on the ballot by the citizens of
Orange County, not the Board of Supervisors,” Wilson said.
However, Wall said Bates was simply exercising his rights.
“Any citizen dissatisfied can propose an initiative,” he said.
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