Getting ready to rrrrrumble!
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Armed with a reloaded war chest of funds from Orange
County and Newport Beach, Barbara Lichman and the Airport Working Group
are ready to rumble.
Lichman, the group’s executive director and outspoken attorney, is
pushing full throttle to defeat Irvine’s Great Park plan for the closed
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
“We not only have the money, we have the drive,” Lichman said. “Our
single goal is to win.”
Lichman certainly has the experience. One of a handful of founders of
the working group, Lichman has put herself at the epicenter of airport
politics in Orange County for a quarter of a century.
Accused by some in South County of inflaming the debate about the
ultimate use of the base with fiery rhetoric, Lichman has been unafraid
to offer critiques of South County and its leaders.
Lichman has denounced the Great Park, which was re-christened the
Orange County Central Park as the centerpiece of a ballot initiative
launched April 30. Lichman called the park “a chimera, an empty shell,”
as well as “a veiled land grab” by Irvine.
Instead of an airport, South County officials have proposed a central
park for the 4,700-acre base, which would be rezoned from aviation to
parkland if the initiative passes in March. The plan, developed by Irvine
Mayor Larry Agran, also requires Irvine to annex the base property.
Lichman, who has been known to describe South County leaders as
“bozos,” has ruffled a few feathers in the neighborhoods surrounding the
marine base.
“Calling people names is a little over the top and not beneficial,”
Lake Forest Councilman Peter Herzog said. “She’s very committed to the
cause.”
From the 10th floor of her Irvine law office, Lichman can look out at
a county she hopes will someday be able to count two commercial airports.
It’s a dream Lichman has had for almost two decades.
The lobbying campaign for an airport at El Toro is heating up, not
only with the South County ballot measure, but with a new infusion of
funding to the working group.
The Newport Beach City Council has set aside $3.7 million for the
group to fight the El Toro battle.
The working group has begun circulating a series of fliers warning
voters that tax increases will be needed to pay for the Great Park.
Lichman isn’t worried about South County’s initiative. In fact, she
believes it will unify the cities surrounding Newport Beach.
“The Great Park was the greatest thing to happen to North County,”
Lichman said. “They [would be] spending millions of dollars so that
people in Irvine and Lake Forest can enjoy life.”
Lichman’s involvement in airport politics stretches back to her role
in the founding of the working group in the living room of her Dover
Shores home in August 1981.
The group was founded by Lichman and former Newport Beach Mayors
Clarence Turner and Tom Edwards to stem expansion at John Wayne Airport.
The group successfully accomplished the mission of securing a deal with
the county in 1985 that imposed a litany of flight restrictions.
The deal, the result of settling a lawsuit filed by the working group,
inspired Lichman to attend USC’s law school, where she earned a degree in
1988.
Since that time, Lichman has made a career in aviation-related law.
The 55-year-old Lichman is now a partner at Chevalier, Allen & Lichman
and contracting her services to clients on issues ranging from airport
access and zoning to air-crash liability.
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