Airport Debate
- Share via
County doesn’t need an airport anymore
Only a politician, feeling immune from the consequences of reality,
would continue to support another airport in the face of the air travel
industry’s current woes (“County supervisor changes his El Toro vote,”
Wednesday).
Flights are cut in half, layoffs by the airlines are as high as 20% of
their work force, reduced purchases from Boeing and subsequent layoffs
there, cancellations of numerous conventions, refusal of many pilots and
flight attendants to even come to work and that’s just what has happened
in the first week [since the terrorist attacks].
Future prospects for a healthy air travel industry are pretty dim.
Time is money, businessmen won’t wait three hours at the gate for a
two-hour flight. Short haul flights will decline dramatically. Vacation
air travel will be heavily curtailed. (Hawaii will be a basket case by
Christmas). International air travel will continue but at a severely
reduced rate.
The entire country has been traumatized. It will be years before air
travel returns to “normal.” We need another airport like we need another
politician.
DON HULL
Costa Mesa
It’s a good time to settle on an airport
It seems to me that now may be the time to settle the fight over the
future of the former Marine Corp Air Station at El Toro.
Newport Beach is satisfied with its agreement with the county that
permits John Wayne Airport to have 8.4 million air passengers per year
and about 120 airline departures per day.
If the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority offered the same deal for El
Toro to the county, I bet the Board of Supervisors would jump at the
opportunity, just to get El Toro off its back. South County cities, which
use John Wayne the most, wouldn’t “suffer” more than Newport Beach
already does, and we would all be spared the ordeal of a fourth El Toro
election.
Besides, if the proposed Central Park and Nature Preserve Initiative
fails to make it to the March 2002 ballot, or if it does make it, and is
defeated, the county could be in a position to shove a much larger El
Toro airport down South County’s throat. South County politicos should
think about that prospect and settle while they can.
NORM EWERS
Irvine
Seize an opportunity and build an airport
It is time to rethink El Toro. This is the perfect time and
opportunity to build a 21st Century airport with the newest security
technology. Let’s take advantage of all that acreage and the wide buffer
zone to do things right.
MIKI and STEVE SHOLKOFF
Newport Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.