El Toro: world’s best planned airport?...
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El Toro: world’s best planned airport?
Ex-Irvine resident Hanna Hill writes from her sanctuary in
Minneapolis that the jets would have been flying at El Toro now if
the Airport Working Group had used tact and political savvy and had
been more cooperative (Dear Joe, “Lessons still have not been
learned,” Thursday).
Unfortunately, her letter contained many problems of fact, but
when she said the FAA wanted northerly takeoffs to turn left and fly
over Santa Ana, she misquoted the FAA, the pilots and the laws of
physics.
The FAA has approved the planned El Toro international airport’s
Airport Layout Plan, and in “Proposed Civil Aviation Reuse of Marine
Corps Air Station El Toro,” (Aug. 29, 2001), the FAA said: “The FAA
has determined that the reuse of the former MCAS El Toro as proposed
by the LRA (county of Orange) can be conducted in a safe manner.”
I hope Hanna Hill returns to Orange County to witness the flights
from the El Toro international airport because it just might be the
best planned airport in the world.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
Fish, not Newport’s fishermen, need saving
The Aug. 1 story regarding the local championing of the dory
fishermen is troubling to me (“Newport Beach comes to dory’s
defense”).
Naturally, no one wants
to see hard-working people put out of work, but it happens all of
the time as times change.
If California’s rock fish populations are in serious enough
decline to warrant such extreme measures (and they undeniably are),
then so be it. Every locale has some good reason to resist the ban on
catching these species of fish. However, none of them is as pressing
as the very existence of the fish in question.
Fishermen deny their greedy takes and any decline in fish numbers,
just as loggers defend their tragic clear-cuts and swear that there
are more trees than ever. All the tired old arguments are bankrupt.
In the case of deep-water fishes, one cannot possibly know what is
netted or hooked until it is visible, by which time it is too late.
As it is, it is probably too late to save a couple of the most
depleted species. As a taxpayer and citizen and a respecter of
fellow-voyagers on Earth, I demand that the rock fish be given a
good, long breather from my fellow citizens who see them as nothing
but cash or “sport.”
By the way, unless your article was in reference to a particular
dory, it should have read “comes to dorries’ defense.”
WALLACE WOOD
Costa Mesa
17th Street could use some cleaning up
As I have raced in and out of stores on 17th Street, I have
wondered who oversees the condition of the sidewalks and parking lot?
It seems to get a little worse each year. I have wondered about some
of the people who weren’t racing, just sitting or standing, looking
each shopper up and down sometimes asking for money.
One just figures loitering is acceptable in this area. I have
observed restaurant-type trash being kicked out of the car door into
the parking lot.
During one of these observations, I wished I would have had a
camera to catch the action (I didn’t) and get the car license. Where
would I have taken it? Does anybody care?
One wonders if the dirty sidewalks and dirty parking lot might
attract people who would pull a woman out of her car, as they did on
Aug. 4 in this parking lot (“Costa Mesa police arrest 3 carjacking
suspects,” Aug. 6), throw her to the ground (better than being
kidnapped) and steal her car? I wonder, I wonder, can’t help it if I
wonder.
KATHLEEN BRENNAN
Newport Beach
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