WHAT HAPPENED: The City Council reduced...
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WHAT HAPPENED:
The City Council reduced the number of Planning Commission
meetings each month from two to one.
WHAT IT MEANS:
To cut costs, the council directed the seven-member commission to
shave one meeting off its monthly calendar.
In one year, the Community Development Department will save
between $33,300 and $48,300 a year.
After a spirited discussion about whether the reduced schedule
would lead to a glut of projects on the commission’s plate, council
members narrowly approved the move.
Mayor Connie Boardman joined council members Debbie Cook, a former
planning commissioner, Pam Houchen and Dave Sullivan in the approval.
New council members Jill Hardy, who sat on the Planning Commission
before her November election, Gil Coerper and Cathy Green opposed the
decision.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“Major projects tend to stack up. It would take a lot more effort
on behalf of the staff to space out large projects.” -- Jill Hardy
WHAT HAPPENED:
The City Council named Jim Engle to the permanent position of
community services director. Jim Engle, naming him to the post.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Engle steps into the top post in a department where he has spent
the last three decades of his professional life.
The council approved a recommendation by City Administrator Ray
Silver to install Engle, who replaces departing director Ron Hagan.
Engle has been interim director since October, when Hagan announced
his retirement.
Engle, 53, has been a deputy director in the department since
1993.
WHAT HAPPENED:
The City Council approved six new transportation projects, which
will be eligible for $2.9 million in grant funds from the Orange
County Transportation Authority.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The council launched the new projects, including widening Heil
Avenue between Silver Lane and Beach Boulevard and installing a
transit center on Pacific Coast Highway.
The city will also coordinate traffic signals along Adams Avenue
and at the intersection of Brookhurst and Victoria streets. The city
would chip in $9,000 to the project, which is being overseen by Costa
Mesa.
Other projects include bus benches in the city’s coastal areas,
the installation of closed-circuit cameras at four points along
Pacific Coast Highway and a realignment of sections of five
“arterial” streets -- Warner, Edinger and Garfield avenues and
Brookhurst and Goldenwest streets.
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