Readers Respond -- Why is support growing for an El Toro airport?
An increase in support for an airport at El Toro can be directly
related to our citizens’ solution-oriented spirit that has gained power
recently from the presence of other immediate crises.
Since last March, electricity for our homes has become a valued
commodity. The general voice cries out, “Why don’t we have more plants?
Or better plants? Or more efficient plants?”
Moreover, some of our local beaches have had to close because of the
operating properties of a sewage plant. One recent voice even comically
suggested that residents of Riverside County who work in Orange County
kindly make their “biological waste” part of their commute. In other
words, don’t overload Orange County toilets.
In face of these issues, a zeitgeist has emerged that is centered on
the correct development of our civic infrastructure. We are Orange
Countians. We are pragmatic. We see the other crises and their link to
the limitations of existing property and plants. We will not sell
ourselves short now in other areas where we can foresee crises: where we
can foresee infrastructure limitations on the horizon such as with
airport travel.
JANE D’ALESSANDRO
Costa Mesa
As the economy slows, taxpayers of Orange County are beginning to
realize that the concept of “The Great Central Park” carries with it an
overwhelming tax implication. Just the nonrecurring cost of the
environmental effect of cleaning up a military base that has been in
continuous use for more than 50 years is mind-boggling. This does not
even address the recurring tax burden of maintaining such a massive park.
An additional realization may be the detrimental effect on major
commercial and industrial enterprises locating in a county overburdened
with taxes and high cost of living, with no compensating improvement in
lines of communication.
The question does not even address the huge cost of trying to make
John Wayne Airport into a major commercial airport. Just the thought of
the cost in the condemnation of 700 acres of major business and
industrial complexes that surround JWA is hard to contemplate. This is
just an incidental cost of acquiring sufficient acreage to just extend
the runway marginally.
I believe Orange County is just now awakening to the reality of what
is being placed on the ballot.
Thank you to the Pilot for your interest in bringing these critical
issues before the public.
ROGER M. SANDERS
Newport Beach
EDITOR’S NOTE: Sanders chairs The Bluffs Homeowners’ Assn.’sairport
committee.
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