Photo shows the danger of John...
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Photo shows the danger of John Wayne expansion
On Dec. 7, the Daily Pilot presented a photo of a tanker truck
carrying 8,000 gallons of jet fuel headed to John Wayne Airport that
was broadsided by an SUV driven by a suspected drunk driver. The
collision caused the tanker to jack-knife and spill 4,000 gallons of
fuel. Fortunately, there were no serious injuries.
A week later, the Pilot published an article about the fading
dream of El Toro. Meg Waters, Allan Songstad and an attorney for the
El Toro Reuse Planning Authority were quoted with very sanguine views
on the status of the airport situation in Orange County, i.e., El
Toro is dead and John Wayne will carry the entire load.
However, I recall that Waters spent a lot of time and money early
on in the airport imbroglio by designing and distributing at least 11
large posters purporting to show the problems with an airport at El
Toro. One of them showed a picture, in color, exactly like the scene
in the photo of the previous article in the Pilot, an accident that
actually happened at John Wayne.
Waters intimated that the scene in the poster occurred at El Toro
so as to frighten the residents of South County by illustrating what
would happen if an airport were operating at El Toro. The picture was
a lie, because no tanker trucks would ever be required at El Toro
since it receives all of its fuel by pipeline from the refinery.
Waters showed great concern for the safety of South County
residents, even though there is no danger there from tanker trucks,
but she shows no concern for the residents of Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach, where there is a real danger. That danger will only increase
as the passenger load increases to accommodate the burgeoning
population of South County.
Waters also said the South County and Newport Beach should work
together. A commendable statement, but one that ignores the majority
of Orange County. The total population of Orange County is almost 3
million; all of us paid state and federal taxes to establish the
airport at El Toro and are now denied the use of it. The solution
proposed by South County to move the airport to the Inland Empire
sounds reasonable at first glance, but ignores the experience of Los
Angeles International Airport when it tried to solve the same problem
by putting the huge Palmdale airport in Lancaster. The result is best
described with a slight modification of an earlier political
expression -- “What if they gave an airport and nobody came?”
WILLIAM KEARNS
Costa Mesa
Schools deserve upgrades before beach deserves sand
For the state to pay for upgrades on a beach seems ludicrous to me
when our schools that were built in the 1940s and ‘50s have little to
no upgrades at all still. It’s just ludicrous. I can’t believe we’re
talking about moving around sand when those buildings that our
children go to school in are in such desperate need of upgrading
repair and, in many cases, totally rebuilding.
NIKI GOOD
Newport Beach
There’s a big difference between the bridges
Your story on the Gisler/Garfield bridge in the paper was somewhat
misleading (“Bridge notion widens gap between cities,” Monday). You
indicated that the action of the Fountain Valley City Council is very
similar to what the Community of Redevelopment Committee was asking.
Specifically, that both cities wanted to do feasibility studies for
the bridges. That’s not true. The staff report clearly stated that
the funding that Fountain Valley is requesting is for design and
engineering for a bridge. That’s way beyond a feasibility study;
further that was the City Council, it wasn’t a self-appointed
committee that was voting to do this. So there’s a profound
difference, and I don’t believe it’s appropriate to make it seem to
be the same thing.
SANDRA GENIS
Costa Mesa
* Sandra Genis is a former Costa Mesa mayor.
An airport at El Toro
is needed to ease travel time
Leonard Kranser is right. Orange County’s airport cannot serve
future needs. So he suggests an airport in Riverside or San
Bernardino, which means just as much time on the freeway to get
there. For years, we would go up to Los Angeles the night before so
as to ensure not missing our plane by an accident on the freeway. And
going by limo might have the same problem, but this meant an extra
day, plus hotel and parking costs. Now we fly out of Orange County.
We refuse to call it John Wayne, but this means changing planes
somewhere before getting to our destination.
This past Monday, coming from Cabo, the plane into Phoenix was
late, so we had, at best, less than 15 minutes to get the plane to
Orange County. Coming this way, one has to deplane at one end of the
Phoenix Airport and get to the other end, about half a mile. I had a
wheelchair waiting for me, but as we passed a small airport tram, I
explained the problem, got on the tram, and the driver called and had
the plane wait for us. They closed the door behind us as we boarded.
We need El Toro, which will fly us directly and is close by. I
guess Kranser doesn’t go beyond the local supermarket.
Another comment: I guess there was a stampede at Van Cleef &
Arpels for the Lotus Collection, with the earrings, which Greer
Wylder said, were “only” $18,500. Goodness gracious, I just don’t
like to buy cheap jewelry, so I didn’t go.
LYNN MERLES
Costa Mesa
Column was right on about protecting free speech
I just wanted to say how much I appreciated Tony Dodero’s article
because I think it is so important that people respect free speech
and that we do get coverage on both sides of the issue (“From the
Newsroom,” Dec. 16).
On another note, I’ve personally had issues with the anti-war
movement. People have torn bumper stickers off my car and I’ve
received minor vandalism because I have anti-war stickers on my car.
And then also, I have a human rights club that I started at Estancia
High School -- I’m a teacher in Newport-Mesa -- and my human rights
club is also making anti-war messages and we’ve hung those messages
up around our campus on Human Rights Day. Those were torn down as
well. So there is a spirit of nationalism, I believe, that is just
this pro-war nationalism and it’s sort of like the spirit of
censorship. So it was a good article, an important article, about
disagreeing, but don’t leave the debate.
When I read it, I found that two people called in to say they were
canceling their subscription. Well, I don’t subscribe to the Los
Angeles Times, Daily Pilot, but I would like to because of Dodero’s
article and I was happy to hear that somebody was brave enough to
cover the issue, because it can be unpopular to stand for issues of
human rights, anti-war, things like that.
I also think you guys did great coverage on the fierce winter
swells coming in at Blackie’s in Newport Beach. Good coverage on the
surf as well, on a lighter note.
JOEL FLORES
Santa Ana
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