Airport expansion bad for everyone Regarding the...
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Airport expansion
bad for everyone
Regarding the letter to the editor from Rex Ricks of Huntington
Beach (“Readying for revenge from South County residents”) March 30:
Ricks has his fears misplaced if he fears taking on the “South
County NIMBYs” more than he fears taking on the Federal Aviation
Authority and Southern California Association of Governments.
Like a lot of pro-airporters, Ricks fails to understand that the
reason South County was so successful in opposing the airport at El
Toro was not due to enormous political or financial power, but
rather, because the airport idea was a dead loser from a dozen
important perspectives to begin with. South County simply told the
public the truth: the plan would’ve been a disaster for most of
Orange County.
Had the pro-airport arguments been as persuasive and defensible,
there’d be an airport at El Toro today.
The expansion of John Wayne Airport is also a bad idea. It was
built to accommodate 14 million annual passengers during current
operating hours, and up to 18 or 20 million annual passengers with
nighttime operations. We should never allow John Wayne to expand
beyond it’s current footprint, or agree to expanded operating hours,
given the location and size constraints at John Wayne, the
unnecessary impact of nighttime operations on far too many people,
and -- most importantly -- the complete absence of any kind of
believable projection of demand in Orange County from Southern
California Association of Governments.
When will the Airport Working Group finally demand sane air travel
projections that take full account of the development of fast train
technology -- to replace up to a third of all current and future
regional landings and takeoffs?
MICHAEL SMITH
Mission Viejo
Multitude of faiths strengthens invocations
I am saddened by the controversy regarding prayers in city council
meetings. I can swear with impunity, profane without fear, but I
cannot invoke the name of my God for fear it might offend or exclude.
Religious leaders in the community are asked to pray to bless the
proceedings and deliberations of the council. These leaders are asked
because of their beliefs and every expectation should be that they
would pray from within the context of those beliefs. To request that
they abridge their language to reflect someone else’s idea of deity
is to deny the strength of diversity that is so vital to our
country’s very existence. And indeed is limiting their freedom of
speech.
I am honored and strengthened when I hear the prayer of a faithful
Jew, Buddhist, Hindu, Christian or others uttered in my behalf using
the vocabulary that is meaningful to them. I thank them for their
faith and I am grateful that they express it. And I am grateful that
that they are able to express it freely. Let us be vigilant in that
regard.
LISA THOMAS CLAYTON
Newport Beach
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