Local El Toro alternative gaining altitude
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Charles Griffin is getting some respect.
During recent weeks, Griffin’s alternative runway plan for the closed
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, dismissed by county planners, has been
gaining momentum.
In a June 18 letter to Griffin and his supporters, the Orange County
Regional Airport Authority, a coalition of 14 North County cities,
announced its support for formal federal review of the proposal.
“I encourage you to consult with experts . . . to ensure that your
proposal is submitted with the proper information and in the proper form
to enable a timely analysis, review and validation,” wrote Art Bloomer,
the authority’s executive director.
The letter echoed comments by a pilots group, which said in May it
would lobby the Federal Aviation Administration on behalf of Griffin’s
plan.
Under Griffin’s scenario, the cross-shaped runways at the base would
be reconfigured into a V shape. The plan is known colloquially as the
“V-plan.”
Griffin, a retired aviation engineer and Newport Beach resident, has
joined with activist Russell Niewiarowski and Villa Park Mayor Robert
McGowan to form The New Millennium Group to promote the plan.
The group, which is in the process of becoming a political action
committee, has announced plans to circulate a petition that would put the
plan, officially known as the Wildlands Ranch Alternative, to a public
vote in March.
“They want to know more,” Niewiarowski said about the letter. “They
want to move forward. I take it as a positive.”
The county analyzed the V-plan in its environmental review of the
airport, which is proposed to handle 28.8 million passengers. The FAA
has refused to review the V-plan because it has not been endorsed by the
county.
In his letter, Bloomer said Gary Simon, the director of the Local
Redevelopment Authority, also supports federal review of the plan.
Niewiarowski said Simon suggested the group take the V-plan to voters.
Simon, who was on vacation, could not be reached for comment.
The plan was rejected by the county because it forces more flights
over homes in the community of Newport Coast, as well as land in
southwest Irvine set to be developed into housing by the Irvine Co.
Also, fewer planes would be able to land under present operating
conditions, a county El Toro planner Bryan Speegle said.
“We feel it should be reviewed,” Speegle said. “We feel that it is
feasible. . . . [But] it has a lower capacity and higher impacts.”
Newport Beach officials have been reluctant to buy off on Griffin’s
plan, saying it would delay the hand-over of the base from the Navy to
the county, jeopardizing the project.
Newport Beach Councilman Dennis O’Neil said he shares those concerns
with colleague Gary Proctor.
“It would just shift the impact [of an airport] to a whole new
constituency,” O’Neil said.
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