Talking on cellphones could cost you
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Anyone caught talking on their cellphones or allowing them to ring in
any of Surf City’s libraries could be subject to a $100 fine.
The City Council on Monday passed the law, which is a compromise
with library director Ron Hayden, who recommended the council make it
a misdemeanor to use cellphones in libraries and punish violators
with a $500 fine and up to six months in jail.
Hayden said the stiff penalties would only be used to deal with
the most egregious offenders who refuse to comply with cell phone
rules at the request of library staff members.
The ordinance would be effective, he argued, because it would be
posted on signs and postcards given to violators as a way of
reminding them about cell phone rules. It will also allow police to
cite violators.
“Without this ordinance, the police can’t do anything,” Hayden
said, adding that similar punishments are on the books for crimes
like littering and that he thought “cellphones are more irritating.”
The council balked at the proposal, instead adopting an ordinance
that allowed punishment with an administrative citation for talking
on cellphones in nondesignated areas or having them emit amplified
sound. The fine for violating the ordinance would be $100.
Hayden now has the power to delegate authority to various library
staff members to issue citations.
The ordinance received mixed reviews from library patrons Tuesday.
Teri N-Gwarek said she thought that cell phone users should be
punished “if they persist, or act unconcerned about other people’s
comfort zones.”
Tom Didie disagreed, arguing that the manners should not be
legislated.
“If they don’t behave right, they simply shouldn’t be welcome back
at the library,” he said.
But that isn’t always possible, Councilwoman Connie Boardman said.
“It’s nice to have a little hammer when the carrot doesn’t work,”
she said.
City streets becoming trailer parks
The Police Department is asking the City Council to help deal with
an over abundance of RV parking on city streets.
Chief Ken Small said some RV owners are using city streets to park
their trailers and boats for long-term storage, lowering Huntington
Beach’s own parking stock and blighting neighborhoods.
“I don’t think anybody can deny that we have a problem in
Huntington Beach with RV parking,” he said. “There isn’t a
residential neighborhood that isn’t affected.”
The Police Department gets five to 10 complaints per day about RV
parking, he said.
Current law allows residents with RVs under 25 feet to park on
city streets for up to 72 hours, while those over 25 feet are allowed
to park for just 24 hours.
Small is recommending that the city require RV owners to purchase
a permit from the Police Department that will be good for 48 hours if
they want to park on the street. Residents would be allowed to
purchase up to four permits a month.
The new ordinance would also fix a loophole in the current
ordinance that allows RV owners to move their vehicles, sometimes
just a few feet, to avoid staying in one spot over their allotted
time period.
“Many move from neighborhood to neighborhood, street to street to
avoid our ordinance,” he said.
The new recommended ordinance would hold permitted parkers within
a 2/10-of-a-mile radius.
A community meeting will be held on Sept. 21 to collect public
comment on the ordinance. A final draft will be completed by the
Police Department and the City Attorney’s office and submitted for
approval sometime in the fall.
City chips in to aid social several services
The City Council hopes to use $22,500 from the General Fund to
offset a federal-grant shortfall.
The council on Monday approved an action plan for how to use $1.6
million in federal funds and subsidize several disparities in funding
with city money.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has awarded
Huntington Beach an annual block grant for a series of projects
including the Fair Housing Council, loan payments for the city gym
and pool, and ramp construction that meets requirements of the
Americans with Disabilities Act. Funding will also be used for
improvements to the Oak View Community Center and Library.
A portion of the money is allocated to social services, but city
staff members and a citizen allocation committee couldn’t come to an
agreement on how the money should be spent , with slight
disagreements on several line items that could affect the overall
budget of various social services.
“This seems to happen every year,” Councilwoman Debbie Cook said.
Economic Development Director David Biggs said the grant should be
used to continually fund city programs, but several citizen groups
argued that there were other programs that merited funding.
To deal with the shortfall, the council instructed City
Administrator Penny Culbreth-Graft to find $22,500 in the General
Fund to finance Project Self-Sufficiency, a college program for
single mothers. Federal funding for that program could then be
diverted into other programs.
“It’s not a huge amount of money, but it does have to be taken
from somewhere else,” Biggs said.
The rest of the funding, about $12,500, will be provided from a
grant by Wells Fargo.
Replacement Planning Commissioner appointed
Councilwoman Pam Julien Houchen has appointed marketing specialist
Kristin Stilton to the Planning Commission. Stilton will be replacing
commissioner Jan Shomaker, who stepped down from office after it was
discovered that her firm, Pier Realty, was involved in the sale of
apartments that had been converted into condominiums without the
proper permits. Houchen’s involvement in the conversions is also
being investigated.
Stilton said she had no opinion about the investigation. She is a
15-year resident of Huntington Beach and serves as a member of the
city’s Design Review Board. Stilton’s tenure on the commission will
be short since Houchen’s term is set to end this year.
Describing herself as politically neutral, Stilton said she has no
set agenda for the Commission and plans to look at issues on a
case-by-case basis.
“I’m not out to save the squirrels, and I’m not trying to turn
this place into Disneyland,” she said.
The new commissioner is a graduate of UC Davis with a bachelor’s
degree in landscape architecture.
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