COMMUNITY COMMENTARY -- Bonnie O’Neil
There are three main reasons for a discrepancy between countywide
opinion and Newport Beach regarding an airport at El Toro.
First, Newport Beach residents have been aware of air transportation
needs and problems for more than 20 years due to John Wayne Airport’s
close proximity to the city. They have been forced into understanding
this issue far more than the average county citizen.
We know that all legitimate studies on future county air
transportation requirements indicate significant increases, and we cannot
rely on other airports, such as the already maxed-out Los Angeles
International Airport, but must wisely provide for that demand within
Orange County.
Newport Beach clearly understands there are two choices: create a
commercial airport at the available El Toro site or expand JWA.
Physical evidence demonstrates JWA is far too small to adequately
handle future needs. It is on a bare 490 acres, while the El Toro
property is about 10 times larger at 4,700 acres. JWA already is
considered one of the more dangerous airports due to the combination of
its having only one small runway used for takeoffs, an enormous amount of
small aircraft that mingles with large jets in approach patterns, a most
unusual takeoff procedure necessary for sound mitigation, and most
problematic of all, homes, schools and businesses extremely close to the
airport and directly under the takeoff pattern.
The above circumstances have caused pilots to state that JWA is a
major accident waiting to happen. Yet without El Toro airport, JWA will
expand out of a growing need and we know the dangers will only increase.
The safety and quality of life for Newport Beach residents and other
surrounding neighborhoods would obviously be greatly compromised.
Second, activists against building an El Toro airport have been very
effective in putting forth blatant misinformation and in using scare
tactics to terrify people in South County cities and gain unwarranted
sympathy from North County citizens as well.
The horrors about El Toro portrayed in slick brochures and TV
advertisements are not realistic and can all be refuted with facts. Few
of those opposed to El Toro know about the 18,000 acres of a built-in
buffer zone that was purposely created by zoning laws to protect South
County residents from the noise and safety concerns.
A third reason for a lack of countywide support for El Toro is our own
fault. We have not performed as well as we should in getting out positive
information about the new airport to all county residents. Much of our
opposition’s misinformation has gone unchallenged. The media has not been
our friend, and we have not come even close to matching the anti-El Toro
activists with money, effort, or passion. When people do not have the
whole truth, but instead only a steady stream of misinformation, the
results are obvious and evident.
Unless pro-El Toro airport leaders can develop a viable strategy, with
proper financial support, to reach all Orange County citizens with
information that challenges the lies they have come to believe,
countywide opinion will not change. We will experience a never-ending
need and pressure to expand JWA, which will begin happening within the
next couple of years, and our once beautiful city will become something
we do not want to even imagine.
We will also be stuck with a gigantic park at the El Toro site that
will not only be a financial burden to taxpayers but a sore remembrance
of what could have and should have been.
It is time for each of us to take action that will help prevent such a
scenario. One way to get more information and volunteer to help is to
access o7 https://www.eltoronow.comf7 .
* BONNIE O’NEIL is a member of the Airport Working Group and is a
Newport Beach resident.
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