NEWPORT BEACH Senior housing project wins Coastal...
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NEWPORT BEACH
Senior housing project wins Coastal Commission support
The Lower Bayview Landing senior affordable housing project has
been approved and is expected to be built by mid-2005. The California
Coastal Commission approved the project Wednesday after the city and
environmentalists reached a compromise on several environmental
issues.
* A residential drug and alcohol treatment center on Balboa
Peninsula has come under fire as neighbors report a number of noise
problems at the site. The City Council will look at its options for
assuring that the business complies with noise and zoning codes.
* The Airport Working Group scored a win in the form of a
settlement with the Navy over environmental issues at the closed El
Toro Marine Air Base. The Navy has agreed to conduct expanded
environmental studies of the site before it is parceled out and sold
to developers and for parkland.
* Safety at John Wayne Airport is at a high after federal
authorities reported that air traffic controllers there had guided a
million flights without a single controller error. A controller error
occurs whenever an air traffic controller guides a plane to someplace
it shouldn’t be, usually near other planes.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
COSTA MESA
Police working toward community involvement
City leaders last week heartily embraced Police Chief John
Hensley’s desire to implement a comprehensive community policing
style. The City Council voted unanimously to adopt a resolution
supporting community policing -- a partnership between the police
department and other city departments to tackle any number of
problems. The plan should be in place early next year.
* During a Planning Commission study session, Deputy City Atty.
Marianne Milligan suggested the city enter into a binding legal
agreement with Joe Brown, owner of Snug Harbor and El Nido, instead
of pursuing an interim ordinance the commission was already
considering. The agreement would serve the same purpose as the
interim ordinance -- to set a procedure for closing a mobile home
park -- and define exactly what kind of parks Snug Harbor and El Nido
are, Milligan said. The commission will consider the agreement option
Monday.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
EDUCATION
Special ed students protest
classroom conditions at CdM
Fourteen of 16 special education students at Corona del Mar High
School stayed home this week as part of a walkout parents staged to
bring attention to what one parent called the “controlled chaos” of
too few teacher aides and a classroom infested with rats and
cockroaches.
A district spokesperson said that the carpets would be cleaned
Friday and they would tell janitors about the rodent issue.
* Corona del Mar senior Matthew Ramirez, 17, died Oct. 31 while
riding an all-terrain vehicle in the Glamis desert after an Arizona
man in a dune buggy struck his vehicle from behind. Ramirez was
thrown from the vehicle and died of a broken neck. Harry Lane Foster,
53, fled the scene after the accident, but turned himself in the next
morning and faces felony hit-and-run charges. A memorial service will
be held in Ramirez’s honor 7 p.m. Monday at the school.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
POLITICS
Candidates for local races set, ready for March
No more wondering if a last-minute entry alter the state political
races, which are set for March primaries. Last week was the deadline.
The fields are set.
In the 68th Assembly district, which includes Costa Mesa, the
candidates are self-described businessmen Larry D. Allison, a
Libertarian; Al Snook, a Democrat; and Van Tran, a Garden Grove city
councilman and a Republican. Also running is Republican Mark Leyes,
who is also on the Garden Grove City Council.
In the 70th Assembly district, six Republicans, one Democrat and
one Libertarian are trying to get on the November ballot. The
Republican candidates are Cristi Cristich; businessman and Army Major
Chuck DeVore; Chonchol D. Gupta; engineer and businessman Long K.
Pham, South Orange Community College District Trustee Donald P.
Wagner; and Marianne Zippi. Libertarian and voice systems specialist
Mark Baldwin and Democrat Carl L. Mariz are also seeking the seat.
The 35th Senate district will be the battle between two who have
proven they can win: John Campbell and Ken Maddox, Republicans who
now hold the 70th and 68th Assembly district seats, respectively.
Others seeking the senate seat are businessman Timothy Johnson, a
Libertarian; legal secretary Rita Siebert, a Democrat; and retired
U.S. Marine Col. Joe Snyder, a Republican.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She can be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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