From the Los Angeles Times, July 17, 2001
Not for reprinting without permission of the Times

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-000058529jul17.story

EDITORIAL

The Numbers, Please ...
 

July 17 2001

A regional development agency's blunder, overstating by millions the number of Orange County air
passengers, is echoing through the political battle over a commercial airport at the former El Toro Marine
base. It has given unfortunate credence to the old adage about lies, damned lies and statistics.

When it comes to airport planning, accurate numbers matter. For instance, how many people using this
region's airports came from Orange County? The answer helps decide where new airport facilities should
go and how big they should be. Not just planners but aviation officials, politicians, wary suburbanites and
eager developers seek numerical justification for their views. Numbers pulled from planning reports turn
up in brochures and initiative campaigns.

El Toro airport opponents, long mistrustful of the Southern California Assn. of Governments' figures,
recently got the agency to acknowledge that in May it overestimated by 4 million the number of Orange
County airline passengers using all Southern California airports. The miscalculation resulted from
including passengers from outside the area who made connections at the region's airports in Orange
County's total. SCAG now says that the 16 million total for Orange County passengers that it had given
for all airports was in fact only 12million. According to the amended estimates, about 7million Orange
County passengers traveled through Orange County's John Wayne Airport last year. Another 5million
were said to have used Los Angeles International and Ontario International.

The need for accurate numbers is evident, as officials planning El Toro are already at odds with a
substantial portion of the population that has grown up in cities around the base.

As it turns out, the county's combined planning for expansion at John Wayne and El Toro would
accommodate roughly three times the county's passenger demand under the corrected SCAG figures.
The accuracy of much earlier SCAG passenger projections for the region has also come under attack.
The county needs all the clarity it can get to resolve its long local argument, which will be reprised tonight
for the entire region to hear in a radio debate on KCRW-FM (89.9) at 6:30 p.m.

SCAG's error is more fuel for opponents of an international airport at El Toro. It will certainly add to the
skepticism that already exists about county supervisors' current plans for El Toro and about the county's
obligation to regional airport needs. 



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