REBUTTAL
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I’m writing in response to what anti-El Toro activist Leonard Kranser
said in a recent article, “Anti-El Toro camp fires back at Newport Beach
meeting” (Aug. 17). He states that an airport informational workshop at
the Newport Beach Central Library was a scare tactic used to help support
a commercial airport at El Toro.
Well, Newport Beach should be scared. John Wayne Airport has already
undergone one expansion. Why shouldn’t we fear another? We opposed the
first expansion and had to fight hard to get the limitation on flights
and curfew we now have.
However in the year 2005, we will no longer have this protection. Why was
there an expiration date on these flight limits and curfew? Because
planners knew Orange County would grow to the point where we would have
to increase the number of flights and lift the curfew to meet the growing
transportation needs of our county.
Mr. Kranser writes: “I was very disturbed to see how people were being
scared with these horror tales of how John Wayne will double and triple
if there isn’t an airport in El Toro.” If these are horror tales, why
isn’t it being studied in the environmental impact report as an
alternative to El Toro airport. These horror tales are Plan F and Plan G.
He writes: “I don’t know of any responsible group that would support that
kind of an expansion.” If El Toro airport doesn’t happen, it would be the
same group that supported the first expansion at John Wayne Airport --
businesses and people needing to travel. Now there are more of them.
Maybe now is the time for Newport residents to ask the question: What if
El Toro Airport doesn’t happen?
LINDA WOOTERS
Newport Beach
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