Rebuttal -- Bruce Nestande
The Newport Beach City Council has been very aggressive in protecting
its Newport Beach and neighboring city residents from the expansion of
John Wayne Airport and simultaneously promoting sufficient air
transportation capacity to satisfy the long-term demand for Orange County
residents.
In the mid-1980s, when JWA was modernized and capacity enhanced, the
Board of Supervisors agreed that a second airport site should be
identified to assist in satisfying that demand in Orange County.
During the past few years, the City Council has awarded grants to
various groups to provide public information to educate the citizens of
Orange County that airport capacity at John Wayne is too high now and
will only get higher without the addition of new capacity in the county,
and that El Toro is the logical and best place for a new airport to ease
the capacity problem at John Wayne.
While city funds cannot be spent for political purposes, such as
advocacy of candidates for public office or passage or defeat of any
ballot measure, public education can be directed at projects that
interfere with preserving an airport option (Editorial -- “City deserves
its own money back,” Feb. 3). It should be noted that South County
cities, using taxpayer funds, have spent in excess of $40 million in an
attempt to eliminate the El Toro airport option.
During the month of March, several milestones will occur that will
have enormous impact on the future of commercial aviation in Orange
County. Because of the location of JWA, Newport Beach will be affected by
these upcoming events.
The three most significant scheduled occurrences in March are the
outcome of Measure W, finalization of the federal Environmental Impact
Statement, and Department of the Navy issuing a Record of Decision
regarding disposition of El Toro to the county.
The aftermath of these decisions is absolutely unknown at this time as
is the scope and content of the appropriate public education program or
other desired actions.
City officials do not direct the specific activities associated with
the grant so long as the terms and conditions are honored. Clearly, the
Newport Beach City Council can at any time retrieve any unallocated funds
that obviously would then be immediately returned.
* Bruce Nestande is a former county supervisor and a member of the
group Citizens for Jobs and the Economy.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.