STEVE SMITH -- What’s up
If California’s 70th District Assemblyman John Campbell isn’t speaking
to me for a while, I’ll understand. You see, I was the one who, 20
minutes into Campbell’s first-ever “Coffee with John Campbell,” asked him
about the El Toro airport.
Specifically, I asked Campbell about using Camp Pendleton for the
airport instead of El Toro.
Campbell’s position, in case you’ve missed it, is that John Wayne
Airport should not be expanded and that a new airport at El Toro should
not be built. “I will do everything in my power to see that John Wayne
does not get expanded,” he declared last Saturday.
In his reply, Campbell included Pendleton in a mix of alternatives,
including March Air Force base and an expanded airport in Ontario, which
has had the welcome mat out for at least a couple of years. Campbell’s
airport leanings are consistent with the “Southern California public
officials” who recently met in Washington with Transportation Secretary
Norman Y. Mineta and Federal Aviation Administrator Jane Garvey.
I was standing next to Campbell as he told the growing crowd at
Diedrich’s on Baker Street in Costa Mesa about the El Toro alternatives,
but I didn’t see her approaching until “she” was at my left elbow.
“She” was a senior citizen, and although I had about 12 inches and at least 100 pounds on her, she managed to muscle her way past me with a
poke in the side to give Campbell an earful. She explained that she was
in a coma two years ago and “sometimes I scramble my words.”
She then delicately discussed El Toro’s opponents in one sentence. “I
think they’re jerks!” she yelled. Through it all, Campbell was patient
and polite.
“What have I done?” I thought as I backed away. In the rear of the
pack, I sought refuge with acquaintance Del Heintz, who wondered aloud
which scoundrel cast Campbell into the bottomless pit that has become the
El Toro debate. “Oh, you’re the one!” joked Heintz.
But Campbell held his own against the marauder and others who are
concerned about our ability to meet our aviation needs. Let’s face it,
other than the V-plan, there really isn’t much El Toro stuff to talk
about anymore. We seem to just rehash the old arguments into new spin,
hoping to pick up a few allies along the way. These days, it seems, it is
merely a question of who talks the loudest.
The airport issue passed rather quickly, replaced by energy issues,
which dominated the two-hour session. Soon, Costa Mesa resident and
former City Council candidate Dan Worthington was questioning Campbell
about what could be done to protect Californians from identification
theft. There was also talk about affordable housing, another hot topic.
Costa Mesa resident John Feeney showed Campbell photos of graffiti in
his Mesa North neighborhood and proceeded to give me a tongue lashing for
what he perceived to be my opposition to Costa Mesa’s proposed ordinance
that would force landlords to evict tenants who have been arrested on
drug or gang-related charges. “So this is what it’s like,” I thought.
Another constituent asked where the lottery money has gone, then
someone asked when our Proposition 13 money would be returned, and that
was followed by discussions on amnesty for undocumented aliens (“It sends
the wrong message,” said Campbell) and stricter safety rules for trucks
coming in from Mexico.
The coffee gathering was a partnership between Campbell’s office and
Diedrich’s, the coffeehouse chain with Orange County roots. Desiree
Farden, Diedrich’s director of marketing, was on hand to assess the
results.
“The coffees are in the spirit of what Martin Diedrich thinks of as a
true coffeehouse, where people get together and exchange ideas. People
don’t get this kind of opportunity to speak directly to their elected
representatives,” Farden said.
That is too true.
Campbell is planning more coffees, one coming up in Irvine and one in
Newport Beach. If you stay home, you’ll miss a great opportunity to see
someone who isn’t afraid to disagree with you but avoids name-calling,
one who takes his job seriously and has made quick work of many of the
laws and rules he must know to succeed in California politics.
You’ll miss meeting a man whose work ethic got him named Freshman
Republican Legislator of the Year, one of only three named in the entire
country. He has also been named vice chairman of the Assembly Budget
Committee for 2002 and vows to hold the line on new taxes.
But most of all, you’ll miss the chance to speak to a man who told his
staff, “Tell the truth and you’ll never have to be nervous about your
response.”
As he did Saturday, Campbell’s buying the coffee next time too. I
think I’ll let you be the one who brings up the airport, and if “she”
shows up again protect your rib cage.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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