Protesters want military housing at El Toro
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Alicia Robinson
Protesters chanted “Vote Cox out” in front of Rep. Chris Cox’s office
on Dove Street on Friday, to show their support for reopening
military housing at the former El Toro Marine Air Base, and a disdain
for what they said is Cox’s disregard for the welfare of military
families.
About 20 people gathered on the sidewalk at midday held signs that
read “Cox is turning his back on our troops.” That prompted a few
hearty horn honks from passing cars, and protest organizers had done
a good job mobilizing the media for the event, but otherwise they
drew little attention from the surrounding business district.
The object of their protest, Cox, was traveling Friday and could
not be reached for comment. A Cox spokesman also declined to comment
on the issue.
The Marine air base was closed in 1999. Protesters maintain that
the base’s 933 housing units are now going to waste and should be
opened to area military families, some of whom struggle to pay the
sky-high cost of living in Orange County.
In November, the nearly 4,700-acre base was annexed to the city of
Irvine, and the U.S. Navy plans to auction it off later this year.
Voters in 2002 approved rezoning the land for use as a park, but some
residents have pushed for an airport with an eye to limiting
expansion at John Wayne Airport.
On Friday, however, protesters weren’t thinking about the airport
issue.
“We’re really not involved with that,” said Ken Lee, a spokesman
for ocmil.com, a group of advocates for Orange County military
families that organized the protest. “What we’re trying to do is keep
our military families here in Orange County from teetering on the
brink of bankruptcy.”
Protester Ann Watt of Newport Beach said Camp Pendleton has a
waiting list for housing while El Toro’s housing sits empty.
“I’m hoping that the base housing will be returned because the
federal taxpayers paid for it and the troops need it,” she said.
The congressman has tried to pacify El Toro housing supporters by
telling them he supports the military, Ron Gross of Westminster said
he hasn’t backed it up with action. Gross served in the Navy for 32
1/2 years and is now a California reservist.
“Cox does nothing,” Gross said. “Every once in a while to keep his
name in the news he signs a letter that says, ‘Yeah, I support you.’”
Gross wants the military to reopen the commissary on the base so
military families will have access to discounted goods without having
to go to Camp Pendleton or the Air Force base in Los Angeles.
Another retired Navy man, Kendall Neisess of Fullerton, came to
observe the protest as a supporter of the oft-proposed El Toro
commercial airport.
“What we really should do is get El Toro back into service as a
mixed-usage plan so the military could use it, and we could use it
too,” he said.
The sprawling base would allow for a buffer zone larger than most
airports have, so the military housing could coexist with an airport
that wouldn’t offend surrounding residents, he said.
But Neisess made a grim assessment of the likely outcome of the
efforts of military housing and an airport.
“Nothing will change, I’m afraid, unless the Navy department’s
official mind is changed, and I don’t know whether Congressman Cox
can do that,” he said.
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