Dazed and confused by JWA situation...
Dazed and confused
by JWA situation
I felt both greatly confused, amused and roused after reading and
rereading news of the recent John Wayne Airport Settlement Agreement
extension dealings (“OK likely on new JWA deal,” Dec. 10, and “City,
county sign off on new JWA agreement,” Dec. 11).
After fighting tirelessly for over six years, I am confused as to
how, on one hand, the elected officials of Newport Beach and the
majority of the County of Orange Board of Supervisors could preach
and sing the need for a 30-million-annual-passenger El Toro
International airport, then so quickly discarded all such notions, in
addition to an untold $60 million plus, then while speaking from a
different face, present a new notion that a mere slight expansion of
John Wayne will now more than meet Orange County’s future needs for
the next 15 years.
One can’t help but feel amused after reading Newport Beach Mayor
Tod Ridgeway’s and Newport Beach City Atty. Bob Burnham’s comments
that claim that “there may actually be a diminished number of flights
out of JWA,” due to efficiently loading more passengers on existing
flights. And since Newport Beach claims that the new settlement
agreement deal “pleases everyone,” why then didn’t Newport Beach save
years of fighting and over $12 million plus to simply craft this deal
in the first place?
To suddenly say that a temporal, superficial expansion of John
Wayne now is all that is needed to meet our needs makes the elected
officials of Newport Beach complete and total fools.
And for former Newport Beach Councilwoman Norma Glover to say that
[the new settlement agreement] “would not adversely impact residents”
is downright laughable. Just which residents are she referring to?
Obviously, South County residents, and not those in Newport Beach and
rest of the residents in the John Wayne flight path corridor.
The soon-to-be-annexed-to- Newport-Beach Santa Ana Heights
residents will surely be adversely impacted by an additional 2
million annual passenger expansion, roughly the size of the entire
capacity served by Long Beach Airport, being dumped onto their
already burdened back yards. And the notion that less flights may
occur, resulting in projected less adverse impacts, is in fact false.
Planes bearing more passengers may yield greater efficiency to the
airlines, resulting in fewer flights, but will also mean that those
same planes will now be more heavily laden, which will translate to
louder take-offs, hence higher levels of noise pollution to Santa Ana
Heights and Eastbluff communities, the two closest communities under
John Wayne’s departure corridor.
And lastly, the intelligent, educated residents who have done
their own math work will see that the entire airport war and recent
John Wayne expansion plans as spearheaded by Norma Glover just don’t
add up. Glover personally used all her force to prevent any
reasonable airport alternative from replacing the county’s flawed
airport plan, stonewalling every local official or volunteer group
that did not side with her strategy and convinced the Board of
Supervisors majority to follow in lock step.
I feel that it is only fitting to once again rename Orange County
Airport. This time, rather than rename the airport after a staunch
anti-airport individual of celebrity status, it should be renamed
after someone who supports expansion of the facility. In John Wayne
Airport’s case, it should be rededicated the Norma Glover
International Airport upon completion of the 20-gate expansion plans.
RUSSELL NIEWIAROWSKI
Santa Ana Heights
City Council races
are out of control
Of all elections, the one for City Council should be the most
personal, the one least impacted by hired guns. The cost of running
is out of line, and it seems ludicrous to me that anyone running for
City Council should feel the necessity of hiring a political
consultant. I’m sure that the cost and the dirty tricks discourage
many capable people who might otherwise be interested in serving
their community.
NANCY GARDNER
Corona del Mar
Bridge at 19th Street deserves a look
I believe the Westside is the most critical issue in town right
now and has been for a long time, and we need to address it
immediately. I further believe that we can’t address the whole
Westside issue until we determine whether 19th Street is going to be
extended to Brookhurst Street. It will change the complexion of the
whole development of the Westside, whether it’s going to be privately
developed or the government’s going to have to do it through
redevelopment. I don’t think we understand the ramifications of
extending 19th Street, and that needs to be studied. I believe we
need a fair, honest study and an all-comprehensive study.
ROBERT GRAHAM
Costa Mesa
* Robert Graham is a longtime advocate of a bridge at 19th
Street.
Water quality is improving in Newport
Re: editorial, “Good, clean news from the Dunes,” Thursday.
Thank you, Daily Pilot, for pointing out the good things happening
with Newport Beach water quality. The residents have indeed put water
quality way up on the priority list, and the city has responded with
actions such as you described. More innovative ideas are being
considered each day by city government and staff to deal with the end
result of urban runoff, but the real long-term solution rests with
the residents of Newport Beach, as well as all of the residents of
the watershed extending all of the way to the San Bernardino
Mountains.
Urban runoff (officially, non-point source water pollution) is a
complex problem to deal with since, by definition, it comes from many
sources. One component can be addressed simply and immediately --
that is the part we as individuals contribute. The city has an
excellent Web site in place, www.cleanwaternewport.com, which points
out the many things to be aware of and what each of us can easily do
and manage. I encourage the Pilot to publish an article pointing out
what each citizen can do to reduce water pollution.
With 45 miles of shoreline and our ocean/bay-based economy, it is
in our best interest that contaminates and trash in runoff be
minimized. We must set, by example, the standard of behavior that we
expect from our neighbors upstream. It all runs downhill, and Newport
Beach and our precious waters are at the “end of the pipe.”
DENNIS BAKER
Board President, Earth
Resource Foundation, Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach
Coast/Bay Water Quality
Citizens Advisory Committee
member
Corona del Mar
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