Rebuttal
I am saddened by Tom Edwards’ (“Time for Plan B?” March 23) loss of
vision for the future of our county and our transportation needs. Tom,
although well meaning in his attempt to offer solutions for limiting
expansion at John Wayne Airport, has forgotten or set aside what the
future needs of air transportation will be for Orange County.
Let’s look at the true economics of this situation. If no airport is
built at El Toro, we, in this county are left with two options. The first
option is to ship all our future air transportation needs out of the
county. This would most likely mean using either Ontario or LAX for
passenger service (March Air Force Base still remains the best option for
all cargo transport even with El Toro).
If this is our first choice, we in Orange County stand to lose tens of
millions of dollars in federal grant funding for infrastructure. In plain
terms, the county that does address (air) transportation needs gets the
money form the Feds to build better roads, sewers, freeways, offramps,
intersections, etc. because they are the ones in need, due to the higher
volume of people using their facilities. What’s the likelihood our county
officials are going to kiss goodbye all that future additional money we
need from the federal government to maintain our county’s infrastructure?
And while I absolutely agree that we must all come together to keep the
restrictions in place at John Wayne Airport, it is completely unrealistic
to think that other communities are going to embrace our air traffic
needs. Ontario for instance is limited in expansion due to the Air
Quality Management District regulations. LAX is already designing its
facility to address additional air transport needs just for LA county
residents. If they were to consider embracing our needs, you can plan on
doubling your travel time just to get to the airport, of waiting for
flights at higher costs and who knows if you’ll be able to park once you
do get to the airport? Camp Pendleton keeps surfacing as a possibility.
But, there is zero interest in the Department of the Navy. It’s not even
an offer on the table.
This brings up to option number two, expand John Wayne. The cost of
expanding John Wayne Airport in today’s dollars is more than $4.3
billion. That’s almost two times the cost of building an airport at El
Toro. Most of that cost is in land acquisition and most of that land is
in the cities of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. That’s some of the most
expensive and desirable land and businesses in all of Orange County if
not the entire state. That amount also only encompasses airport costs.
That does not take into account freeways, city streets, sewers, bridges,
offramps or service costs surrounding the airport for construction at
John Wayne.
Other key economic factors that have been quietly overlooked are the
costs of the land at El Toro if it does not become an airport.
The Department of the Navy has agreed to clean the land (soil) to a
specific level of industrial acceptability if it is to be an airport. If
the Millennium Plan -- which is to be parkland, commercial and
residential properties -- is to be implemented, the cost for cleaning the
land to residential standards falls on the taxpayers of Orange County.
This cost alone could run in the billions of dollars due to the size and
depth of the dirt to be considered. This only covers the cost of the
soil, by the way, it does not begin to approach the cost of cleaning
water contamination. Another cost that has not been outlined is the cost
of building the future “Great Park” that the Millennium Plan espouses.
Some projections have estimated $250 million for the park itself. And
beyond building the park, no cost factors have been outlined for the
maintenance costs of such a large park. Some estimates are more than $2.5
million per year to maintain it, based on other parks of similar size and
scope. This probably means another bond issue, which in plain terms means
higher taxes to everyone in the county. Personally, I would rather each
city use their bond measures to promote parks in their own communities,
not some Great Park site that few of the other cities residents will ever
experience.
So, that brings us back to El Toro. It’s already an airport. It’s the
least cost to everyone in continuing to be an airport. El Toro addresses
our county’s future air transport needs. The Navy support the
continuation as an airport both in clean up and future need. El Toro
still promotes commercial growth and encourages new business interests to
locate in Orange County
And here’s one last little gem I’d like to impart to the resident of
the entire county. Why not make El Toro a profit-sharing airport that
would directly contribute dollars to all our ailing school districts and
cities in need of better police, fire and other city services? Those
cities most directly affected by the new airport would receive greater
percentages than those less affected. John Wayne Airport goes on as it
has with the current restrictions and revenues to the county.
It is clear we need a new visionary direction. More information needs
to be shared. Measure F is not the end. It is the beginning of better
planning. Everyone can win with a little vision and a lot more
understanding of the potential costs and benefits.
HEATHER SOMERS
Costa Mesa
Heather Somers is a Costa Mesa Councilwoman.
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