Supervisors discuss El Toro alternatives
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Noaki Schwartz
Newport Beach officials were relieved Wednesday when the Orange County
Board of Supervisors still seemed to consider an airport at El Toro a
viable option for the future of the closed Marine Corps base.
Several pro-airport leaders sat in as the supervisors for five hours
studied the technical details of seven alternatives for the 4,700-acre El
Toro site -- from moving forward with the airport to scrapping the
project and starting anew.
In the wake of Measure F, which allows voters to have the final say on
certain county projects, the planning process for the proposed
$2.9-billion airport has been stalled and the supervisors must determine
which of seven different directions to take.
Measure F is being contested in court, but in the meantime, the county is
weighing its options. No decision will be made until after a May 19
public hearing.
But for El Toro advocates, no news was still good news. Mayor John Noyes
said although the supervisors did not take a vote, it seemed they were
all united in an effort to find a solution.
“It was music to my ears,” Noyes said. “I think the board realizes they
have to work together. “
Councilwoman Norma Glover said she was relieved to see that the
supervisors didn’t appear to be leaning in any particular direction, but
carefully considered each option’s cost and timeline.
“There was some pretty good interfacing among the supervisors on where
they wanted to go,” she said. “It was one of the more positive things I
think I’ve seen happen as far as the airport goes.”
Not everyone was pleased with the study session. Airport opponent Leonard
Kranser said they spent too much time on technicalities and not enough
time on the basics.
“They never really dealt with things like demand and the future of John
Wayne Airport,” he said. “[Supervisor] Tom Wilson did say he was worried
about the dollars on some of the alternatives, but that’s nothing in
comparison to what’s already been spent.”
Another reason for optimism among Newport Beach representatives was
Supervisor Todd Spitzer’s announcement that he supported the extension of
the John Wayne settlement agreement.
Noyes announced recently that the city has reaffirmed its commitment to
try to extend the flight and noise restrictions at John Wayne. He plans
to sit down with Wilson next week to discuss the idea.
“I don’t think the [board] is going to say no,” Noyes said confidently.
Without a plan in place, some community leaders who led the airport fight
years ago think the effort could be wasted energy.
Even Wilson said that Newport city officials can’t simply ask for an
extension, adding that there are a number of legal hoops to jump through.
Former mayor Clarence Turner pointed out that extending the 1985
agreement doesn’t solve the congestion problem at John Wayne, but simply
postpones it.
Many pro-airport activists have been lobbying for an airport at El Toro
as a safeguard against growth at John Wayne.
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