NEWPORT BEACH Proposed resort will submit environmental...
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NEWPORT BEACH
Proposed resort will submit
environmental impact report
A study of the Regent Newport Beach Resort planned to be built on
the Peninsula will focus on traffic, aesthetics, water-quality and
other concerns about the proposed 110-room luxury resort. The City
Council on Tuesday approved a contract for a consultant to do
environmental studies on the project. The $195,000 cost of the study
will be paid by the developer, Sutherland Talla Hospitality.
* City Manager Homer Bludau gave the council a thorough accounting
on a set of priorities he set at the beginning of the fiscal year.
Among the successes was the extension of the John Wayne Settlement
Agreement. Among the projects that are not yet completed is the plan
to renew the city’s contracts with its cable television providers.
* Rumor has it that someone has been policing the city’s harbor
permit holders, telling them they can’t hose off their docks and
boats and let the water run into the bay. The odd thing is that it’s
not the city who’s out talking to people. City officials will send
out letters telling people how to help protect local water quality.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
COSTA MESA
Air quality on Westside equal to its surroundings
On Monday the South Coast Air Quality Management District
presented a report during a City Council study session that shows the
Westside’s air quality is right on average for the area.
The district found that in the Westside industrial area, there
were 74 complaints in 2002, with the highest number based on odor. It
sent out 29 notices of compliance and nine notices of violation
within the same time period.
* Officials at the Prince of Peace Church on Mesa Verde Drive East
started installing a root barrier on Baker Street to prevent the
roots of ficus trees they planted without city approval from causing
damage to the sidewalk.
Many residents in the area had complained that the roots were a
hazard. They prefer city officials require the trees be removed, as
they did in 2002. But subsequent negotiations led city officials to
allow the trees to stay as long as the church took measures to
control the roots.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
POLITICS
Ueberroth decides to quit gubernatorial recall race
For rent: One slightly used campaign office.
The luck of the Costa Mesa office may be a turn-off, however, for
perspective tenants. It first housed the failed California recall
campaign of Rep. Darrell Issa. Then, Laguna Beach resident Peter
Ueberroth moved in.
Last week, citing the inability to get out a substantive message,
not to mention his low showing in polls, the former baseball
commissioner and organizer of the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles
withdrew from the hunt to replace Gov. Gray Davis.
Ueberroth had been Newport-Mesa’s favorite, at least financially,
far out-raising his competition.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He can be reached at (949)
574-4233 or by e-mail at [email protected].
PUBLIC SAFETY AND COURTS
Mount Carmel priest put on leave by diocese
A Newport Beach Roman Catholic priest was placed on administrative
leave this month after a Riverside County man filed a lawsuit
alleging that the priest molested him about 25 years ago.
The suit, filed in Orange County Superior Court, names both Msgr.
Daniel Murray pastor of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church and the
Diocese of Orange in the lawsuit that accuses the priest of sexually
abusing the then 8-year-old victim in Garden Grove over a six-year
period.
He has denied the allegations.
Murray, who has been pastor of the Balboa Peninsula church for
four years, was placed on administrative leave on Sept. 2 when he
returned from his vacation, said Father Joe Fenton, spokesman for the
Diocese of Orange.
The lawsuit states that Murray inappropriately touched the boy
when he came to the priest for support when his parents were going
through a divorce. Murray continued to sexually abuse the victim
although the boy resisted, it states.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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