Week in review
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The Balboa Village is set to get a make-over after the California
Coastal Commission approved an extensive Newport Beach plan to revamp the
area, including the Balboa Pier.
The commission did put a few caveats on its approval. Among them, the
city must submit a plan to manage traffic during construction and
restrict work to the nine months between Labor Day and Memorial Day so it
does not interfere with summer beach crowds.
City planners will take the next step Tuesday: bringing the plan
before the City Council.
The $8.8-million project is set to begin in November, if all goes
according to plan.
-- Daily Pilot staff. To reach the newsroom, call (949) 642-5680 or by
e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
A crystal-clear plea
Costa Mesa Councilman Chris Steel on Wednesday pleaded not guilty for
the second time to two counts of felony perjury charges.
Steel said he is determined to fight the charges leveled against him
by the Orange County district attorney that accuse the councilman of
allowing a resident to sign 2000 election nomination papers for his wife.
Steel is also accused of signing for a legally blind woman during the
1998 elections. The councilman said this week that he was not about to
give up now and is determined to clear his name.
Both Steel and his attorney, Ron Cordova, said they were encouraged
when a Superior Court judge last month threw out a civil case brought
against Steel by resident Michael Szkaradek, who made similar
allegations.
In other news, a brush fire blackened about 10 acres of Crystal Cove
State Park on Tuesday afternoon. The fire that lasted about two hours
broke out off the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor between
Newport Coast Drive and Laguna Canyon Road.
There was no damage to homes. One firefighter was injured while
working on the fire but escaped with a cut to his foot.
-- Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached
at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
A defensible report?
The Newport Dunes resort won a dubious honor last week, when its
swimming area was singled out by environmentalists as one of the county’s
trouble spots for bacteria contamination.
During 2000, some part of the resort’s lagoon had a posted warning for
144 days, or almost 40% of the year.
Dunes management wasn’t talking, but RV users weren’t shy -- several
said they weren’t told about the posting until they tried to go for a
swim.
The report was released by the National Resources Defense Council on
Wednesday .The report also said postings and closures in Orange County
jumped 75%, to 881, when compared with 1999.
A posting at the Dunes has been in effect since July 25.
-- Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
Nothing new for Costa Mesa
Although many audience members at Monday’s City Council meeting seemed
pleased by the mention of district representation, their intrigue was
quelled when the council killed the possibility by a 3-2 vote.
Councilman Gary Monahan and Chris Steel spearheaded a motion to allow
Costa Mesa residents to decide the future structure of the city’s
government. The changes they proposed were directly electing a mayor,
adding two more council members and electing officials by district.
Monahan said he was in favor of directly electing a mayor, but said
his main motivation for bringing up the changes was to allow the voters
to decide.
Monahan said he had no opinion about the other two options. Steel, on
the other hand, wanted to see council members elected by district and
didn’t support the remaining options.
Although more speakers voiced support for Steel’s idea than Monahan’s,
neither councilman got his wish.
Mayor Libby Cowan and Councilwomen Linda Dixon and Karen Robinson did
not support any of the three proposals. Their majority vote halted any
momentum the arguments may have built.-- Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or by e-mail at o7
Scoring well on another round of tests
The release of Stanford 9 test scores last week showed mostly good
signs for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
In their fourth year of testing, students in second through fifth
grades showed improvement in all four areas tested -- reading, math,
language and spelling -- the best news of all.
More troubling for school officials, while all of the schools in
Newport Beach are above the 50th percentile mark, there are a number of
schools in Costa Mesa struggling below it.
Still, even that worry had the proverbial silver lining: Several of
those same schools showed the greatest test gains in the district.
“We put some after-school programs, some training of our teachers,
which seems to be paying off,” Supt. Robert Barbot said. “What else we
can do is see what has not been productive.”
-- Danette Goulet covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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