Residents make plea for DARE
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A group of concerned residents will ask the City Council to
continue funding the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program.
As budget cuts loom once again, the drug education program may be
placed on the chopping block once more.
Using a four-letter acronym like the program it hopes to save, the
Substance Abuse and Violence Education task force, or SAVE, is
working with school leaders, businesses, parents, local religious
groups and the police department to secure outside funding for the
program. So far, the group has secured two grants totaling more than
$250,000.
The group hopes to work with a grant writer to help them find
funding sources from outside the city.
The City Council will discuss whether to continue funding the
program at its meeting on Monday, Dec. 16. The council saved the
program, but cut part of its funding earlier this year.
Shirley Carey, a task force member and Huntington Beach City
School District trustee, said she feels the program helps prevent
many children from using drugs.
“I do think that the lives of many children’s are changed as a
result of this program,” she said. “They make decisions to not use
drugs, or at least delay the time before they use.”
Personnel Commission reevaluates its duties
The City Council and Personnel Commission held a joint meeting
last week to discuss the roles and responsibilities that the
commission faces.
The meeting, which lasted a little more than an hour, is just one
of several workshops that the city will hold to discuss the
commission’s duties, said Michael Miller, legal counsel to the city.
Personnel Commission procedures for disciplinary action and
grievances were some of the things discussed at the meeting.
Newly elected council members Gil Coerper, Cathy Green and Jill
Hardy attended the meeting last week.
Citywide siren testing will resume Friday
On Friday, the city will resume its monthly warning siren testing.
The tests, which sound from seven of the city’s fire stations to
warn of impending emergencies such as a hazardous chemical spill,
tornado or tsunami, will take place on the last Friday of each month
at noon.
Huntington Beach is one of the few California cities that has
maintained the siren system, city officials said. Testing was
temporarily interrupted to make repairs to the sirens, which have
been in place for the past 20 years.
If the sirens go off at any time other than the last Friday of
each month, citizens should prepare themselves for some type of
emergency situation. On such occasions, residents should turn their
radio dials to KWVE 107.9 FM or to 95.9 KFSH for information.
Stations will receive information within five minutes of any
catastrophic event and provide listeners with instructions.
Anyone with questions about siren testing can call the Huntington
Beach Fire Department Emergency Services office at (714) 536-5980.
-- compiled by Jose Paul Corona
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