School board plans review of JWA expansion
Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT-MESA -- Now that the Orange County Board of Supervisors has
tentatively approved modest expansion of John Wayne Airport, the school
board is calling in its own experts to pressure officials to limit growth
as much as possible.
On Tuesday, the supervisors approved an environmental analysis of the
proposed expansion and endorsed Scenario 1, a plan supported by Newport
Beach that allows for a limited expansion of the airport when the present
flight restrictions expire in 2005.
Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees had passed a resolution
against any future airport expansion, saying they are concerned about an
increase in noise and toxic air quality that could result.
At Tuesday night’s school board meeting, Supt. Robert Barbot responded
to news of the supervisors’ decision by saying the district will take a
rigid stand against the consequences of the airport’s expansion.
“There has to be mitigation or else [the county] has to prove that
we’re wrong,” Barbot said. “They’re not done with [the environmental
analysis] until we say it’s done.”
Depending on what issues the district decides are a priority to
tackle, it will either use its own environmental experts or hire outside
consultants to respond to the county’s analysis.
Supervisor Jim Silva, who represents all of the school district except
for Newport Coast, said although he is sympathetic to the district’s
concerns it will be up to the Federal Aviation Administration to
ultimately decide the future of expansion at John Wayne Airport.
“I’m also a parent, and I know how important education is to the
children, so we would support everything we can to mitigate their
concerns,” Silva said. “I really can’t speak for the FAA.”
Silva said the supervisors have asked their staffs to meet with FAA
officials and the airlines to try to work out an agreement with Scenario
1 as the starting point. During these negotiations, some of the ways to
reduce the adverse effects will be hammered out, he added.
“Until we sit down at the conference table, everything is basically on
the table,” Silva said, adding that would happen sometime within the next
three months.
The supervisor also said he would be willing to meeting with school
district officials to discuss their concerns.
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