El Toro bidding almost done
Alicia Robinson
As of Wednesday afternoon, taxpayers were out $469.5 million.
Two lucky bidders now all but own parcels at the closed El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station, while bids still can be placed on two other
parcels until 3 p.m. today -- and possibly longer. But the total
amount of the top bids that came in by Wednesday afternoon was $530.5
million, somewhat short of the $1 billion or so that was spent to
relocate base operations in 1999.
The base property has long been the subject of a tug-of-war
between those who want a commercial airport and proponents of a
public “Great Park,” but Orange County voters’ passage of an
initiative in 2002 to create the Great Park effectively squelched the
airport option.
The Navy put 3,700 acres of the base up for sale in an online
auction that opened Jan. 5 and was set to close Wednesday, but the
auction rules say if a bid comes in on the closing day, it keeps the
auction open 24 more hours.
By Monday two of the base’s four parcels had gone for the minimum
bids -- a 902-acre piece for $125 million and a 202-acre piece for
$60 million. Those auctions are now closed.
But the two other parcels of 863 acres and 1,752 acres received
three and six bids, respectively, and can be bid on through today, or
Friday if more bids come in. The bidders have not been disclosed, but
once bids are officially awarded, likely in the next few weeks, the
winning buyers will be named, said David Haase, realty officer for
the federal General Services Administration, which is handling the
auction for the Navy.
Officials have said they expected a deluge of last-minute bids on
the parcels -- no one wants to tip his hand too early -- but in spite
of interest from about 700 investors and developers, bids have been
scarce.
“You would think that would materialize into more bids,” Haase
said. “No one has told me why they chose not to bid.”
The dearth of bids was not a surprise to Richard Taylor, vice
president of the Newport Beach-based Airport Working Group, a
proponent of an El Toro airport.
“Obviously the people that are putting up these bids don’t have a
lot to put up; they’re just putting up the bare minimum,” the Newport
Beach resident and former City Council candidate said.
He wondered who’s placing the bids and added that the city of Los
Angeles has offered significantly more than the current highest bids
all together.
Los Angeles City Councilman Tony Cardenas traveled to Washington,
D.C., earlier this week to press federal officials to help the city
get a lease for the base. Cardenas valued the city’s proposal --
which would include a 99-year lease, airport operations and clean-up
of environmental contamination -- at as much as $2 billion.
Even though Rep. Chris Cox has said the property should go to the
highest bidder, Taylor said, he hasn’t supported Los Angeles’
proposal.
Cox said it’s in taxpayers’ interest to make back more than $1
billion that was spent to relocate base operations, but that goal was
hampered by plans for the Great Park.
“The decision to have not just a significant portion of the
property but most of the property turned into parkland was tantamount
to a decision not to realize the highest amount of return from the
sale of the base,” he said.
He dismissed the machinations of Los Angeles officials as
politically motivated.
“They never did make an offer [to buy the property], and if they
had been serious, they could have bid in the auction,” Cox said.
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