All should be in agreement about JWA agreement
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Much has been made of the newly inked extension of flight
restrictions at John Wayne Airport until 2015, which became a done
deal on New Year’s Eve when city leaders announced they had received
the blessings of the Federal Aviation Administration.
Some bemoan the expansion that was allowed, namely a jump from
8.4-million passengers a year to 10.5 million, an increase in the
number of noisy flights from 73 to 85 and the increase in open gates
at the airport from 14 to 20.
It sounds like a lot of concessions, and in many ways, it is.
But in truth, Newport Beach residents really have a lot of
thanking to do, namely to the city staff and City Atty. Bob Burnham.
And here’s why.
Burnham, city council members -- especially Norma Glover, Gary
Proctor and Dennis O’Neil -- and many others, have worked night and
day to craft a settlement that would be to the liking of all parties,
the city, the county, Stop Polluting Our Newport, the Airport Working
Group and the FAA, all the original signatories on the landmark
agreement of 1985.
About two years ago, when the push to extend the curfews and
flight caps beyond the 2005 deadline began, there were several things
sitting in Newport’s way.
First and foremost was the ugly and contentious battle to build an
airport at the closed El Toro Marine base and South County’s threats
to thwart any JWA settlement extension, however hollow those threats
were.
There was also great skepticism that the FAA or the airlines would
not challenge the JWA restrictions, the toughest in the United
States, especially in light of the 1990 Airport Noise and Capacity
Act that was passed five years after the initial landmark JWA
agreement.
That 1990 law put up tough guidelines for communities trying to
curb airport noise and expansion and gave greater powers to the FAA
and airlines.
Finally, there were the resources and diplomacy needed to bring
together such a consensus. Newport leaders had for years devoted most
of that energy to El Toro. A tactical decision had to be made to
shift that course and devote the energy to John Wayne.
It was, and thank goodness for that.
Sure, that move has brought consternation from many in the pro-El
Toro camp, and maybe they are right that more could have been done to
put up a united front against South County and push for the opening
of El Toro as an airport.
But first and foremost, Newport leaders needed to worry about
their own back yard. They should really be credited for seeing how
the political winds were blowing and acting quick to make the
extensions happen.
Proof of their foresight came last March, when Measure W passed
and rezoned the airport as a park, pro-airport supervisor Cynthia
Coad was ousted by anti-airport challenger Chris Norby, and the Navy
announced it would parcel off the land and sell it to the highest
bidder.
El Toro was a dream no longer. And thanks to the aforementioned
city leaders, it didn’t matter so much for John Wayne, as the wheels
were already spinning fast on extension of the flight caps and
curfews.
With this FAA agreement now securely in place, residents and city
leaders can rest assured that they have the best deal possible.
Still, there is no time like the present to look for other options to
meet the sure-to-be-expanding aviation needs of Orange County for
2015 and beyond.
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