TIGHTENING UP: It’s not that Anaheim’s government...
TIGHTENING UP: It’s not that Anaheim’s government leaders don’t want to be accessible--they just want to have a little more say in who they’re accessible to. The seventh floor at City Hall--where the mayor, city manager and council members have offices--is undergoing renovation that will include new security doors. . . . No single event prompted it, says spokesman Bret Colson: “We want to be proactive, rather than have a tragedy strike and then react.â€
GET WELL PRESENT: Huntington Beach’s sister city of Anjo, Japan, had donated money to help rebuild the pier. Now Huntington Beach is giving Anjo something it very much wants--an oil well. . . . The well, donated by Pacific Coast Homes, will soon be dismantled at its location at Golden West and Garfield--to make way for street widening--and shipped to Japan, at Anjo’s cost. . . . Says Councilman Victor Leipzig, who initiated the exchange: “The oil well is a symbol of our city.â€
BEHIND THE NUMBERS: Most local cities showed no increase in slayings in 1995; many were actually down some. But Anaheim Police Lt. Stephen Sain offers an interesting explanation: the paramedics. . . . “It’s not that there are fewer violent crimes, it’s that the paramedics are getting really good,†says Sain. “They stabilize the victims, get them to the doctors and lives are saved.†. . . Santa Ana has more than double the slayings of Anaheim, the second highest in the county. More than half of Santa Ana’s 72 slayings were gang-related.
TYING THE KNOTT’S: When Stephanie Richardson met Mike Strong she thought he was a monster. But then, she was too. The Irvine couple met while working as monsters at Knott’s Berry Farm at Halloween time. Which is why they’ve decided to be married there. . . . Turns out they’ll be the 1,000th couple to exchange vows at the amusement park in Buena Park. Bonus wedding gifts from Knott’s: a pair of annual passes and a honeymoon trip to Mexico.
More to Read
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.