By Matthew Stone
Considering the San Fernando Valley Sun/el Sol’s extensive reporting on Whiteman Airport recently, greater context is timely and necessary.
Only hours after the April 20th mishap, avowed Whiteman detractors, including LA City Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez, as well as nonprofit leaders Veronica Padilla-Campos of Pacoima Beautiful and Roberto Barragan of ICON CDC, began spewing anti-airport politics. Understandably outraged, Angelenos recoiled in disgust at these attempts to politicize the issue.
On social media, these calls to close Whiteman were overwhelmingly panned by Angelenos. Public comments supported Whiteman and ridiculed Rodriguez for opportunistic “grandstanding” with many mocking her stance, likening it to closing roads over car crashes. Rodriguez’ years-long fixation on Whiteman angers many residents when problems such as crime, hazardous vehicles and broken street lighting continue festering in her district.
Everyday Angelenos quickly recognized this accident as an accident and expressed well wishes for the recovering pilot – the only person involved – and thanked his rescuers.
After witnessing regional fire catastrophes in Pacific Palisades and Altadena, Angelenos understand how local airports like Whiteman serve as critical infrastructure keeping their families and neighborhoods safe.
For its part, Whiteman has been credited as ‘vital’ to saving Sylmar from last year’s Hurst Fire – something Monica Rodriguez refuses to acknowledge. Likewise, on April 20, a blaze beside Interstate 210 was quickly met by units operating on a routine deployment from Whiteman – the sort of prompt response an airport closure would eliminate.
Whiteman Critics Opposed Safety Improvements
Anti-Whiteman policies not only threaten Los Angeles’ emergency response capabilities and infrastructure – they already have undermined attempts to make Whiteman Airport safer for all.
History shows many Whiteman detractors who complain about its safety today are also responsible for blocking common sense protections for Angelenos – and are continuing to do so.
In 2011, Pacoima Beautiful helped defeat a detailed proposal for runway safety zones. After a fatal crash in these zones’ proposed location, Padilla-Campos boasted the 2011 opposition was the “easiest campaign [Pacoima Beautiful] had ever done.”
In 2023, Padilla-Campos and other Rodriguez appointees to the Whiteman community advisory committee pressed LA County to close the airport and to refuse Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) funding. LA County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath complied by disallowing FAA funds – inhibiting repairs, upgrades and mitigation efforts for neighbors and residents.
Although the New York Times quoted her as eager to replace local overhead power lines with underground equipment in response to the devastating 2025 fires, Rodriguez now dismisses the idea.
The long history of Monica Rodriguez and Pacoima Beautiful repeatedly obstructing attempts to make Whiteman safer establish a pattern of bad faith: ‘improving safety’ is merely a talking point for them, not a genuine aspiration.
A Future for Whom?
Previous coverage of Whiteman politics has discussed Angelenos’ “concerns that deals are being struck behind closed doors.”
In 2025, ICONCDC drafted a study proposing various developments on airport land, which drew heavily upon industry insiders’ input and encouraged its audience to “imagine” its highly speculative projected results. This study relies on faulty premises about Whiteman and altogether ignores the airport’s importance to local infrastructure and emergency response.
The study’s framing – focusing on developers’ visions for the future, rather than those of the community at large – gives Angelenos even more reason to fear they are being ignored.
Likewise, public LinkedIn data lists Sylvia DeLuna-Barragan, wife of Roberto Barragan, as bookkeeper for ICONCDC as well as for Pacoima Beautiful and two other nonprofits (associated with Monica Rodriguez and Luz Rivas); this record is likely to ignite locals’ interest.
Whiteman detractors have given Angelenos more than enough reason to be dubious about their motives and intentions.
Matthew Stone is a Los Angeles native and licensed noncommercial pilot with no professional or institutional affiliation with Whiteman Airport.



