AWG, back off before city claims JWA...
AWG, back off before city claims JWA
Call off the dogs.
The Newport Beach-based Airport Working Group recently settled
their El Toro-related lawsuit against the Department of Defense,
which cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars. The AWG is
suing the city of Irvine and is threatening to sue the Orange County
Local Agency Formation Commission, also known as LAFCO, over Irvine’s
annexation of the former El Toro Marine base.
The working group has yet to give up its lawsuit against the
county over Measure W. The group’s money comes principally from the
city of Newport Beach. In recent years, the City Council has handed
the group nearly $4 million of taxpayer money. The Airport Working
Group is Newport Beach’s hired surrogate in the airport battle. Its
leaders and consultants are the attack dogs that do the city’s
political and legal dirty work.
On Tuesday, the Newport Beach City Council voted to ask Tom
Wilson, the chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, to
dialogue with them about the city taking control of John Wayne
Airport.
We have a suggestion before supervisors begin considering whether
Newport Beach’s claims to John Wayne are any greater than those of
Costa Mesa or Irvine, which also border the airport, or the several
other cities in the flight paths, or the county that built the
airport.
We urge Wilson and the other supervisors to file away the proposal
until the Airport Working Group ends every one of its El Toro related
lawsuits. If Newport Beach wants to talk, a precondition should be to
call off the dogs.
LEONARD KRANSER
Dana Point
Great park plan is a great waste of assets
My gratitude to D.L. Warwick for an articulate letter (“Great Park
plan scamming taxpayers out of real estate” Mailbag), stating the
facts about the Great Park plan scamming taxpayers out of the real
estate that ran Nov. 20.
I truly believe south Orange County has outspent, outsmarted and
manipulated our side of the issue with the help of developers who
want to develop this property. Recently, I attended the Orange County
Local Agency Formation Commission meeting where 28 individuals voiced
their concerns about Irvine’s annexation of the former El Toro Marine
base. Five members of the commission, who represent only 30% of the
county population, voted for the Irvine annexation, while the other
two felt their were many unanswered questions and said they needed
more time to gather information. Those two members represent the
remaining 70% of the county, yet have a minority on the commission.
They voted “no.”
At this meeting, we were advised it would cost Orange County
taxpayers 2% on their taxes for this new plan for South County.
RACHEL PEREZ-HAMILTON
Costa Mesa
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