WEEK IN REVIEW
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The leader of the opposition to annexing Newport Coast thinks he may
have found a better way to ensure the neighborhood’s quality of life:
join forces with the city. Coast resident Phillip Greer, who headed up
two attempts to stop annexation, has said he wants to be appointed to the
city’s soon-to-be-formed Newport Coast Advisory Committee.
Carmelo’s Ristorante will go on, the City Council decided, declining
two residents’ appeals to take actions to curb noise at the restaurant.
This week marked the start of the 93rd annual Newport Harbor Christmas
Boat Parade, lighting up the waterways of the city.
By late next year, construction of 150 low- and moderate-income senior
apartments will be underway. The units, which will be built near Coast
Highway at Jamboree Road, will begin renting at about $650 and $780 a
year to qualified seniors.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
Signing off
Opponents to the Home Ranch project trucked in the fruits of their
signature-gathering labor to City Hall last week, hoping to have gathered
enough to force the issue to a citywide vote.
Preliminary totals are not being released, but about 125 packets of
signatures were dropped off at the City Clerk’s office, each containing
about 33 signatures. Using simple math, about 4,125 signatures were
included.
However, postings on a community Web site -- by those who were part of
the referendum team -- estimated a much lower total of roughly 3,000.
Final counts will come from the Orange County Registrar’s office, once
the city ships them over.
More than 40 residents, many of them members of Costa Mesa Citizens
for Responsible Growth, spent a total of about 180 hours, walking the
streets of Costa Mesa in search of registered voters who would like to
see the Home Ranch project overturned.
While opponents may have gotten blisters, they arguably have stronger
arms -- since each packet was 50 pages long, but only included three
pages of signatures. The large girth was because the city’s resolution
approving the project was 100 pages long and has to be included in the
referendum packets. Opponents managed to cut it in half by shrinking the
font and printing on the front and back but still got stuck with quite a
heavy task.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
Arresting development
Newport Beach Police on Tuesday arrested a 72-year-old man on
suspicion of molesting a teenager 26 years ago.
Bruce Knight Cleworth of Newport Beach has also been charged with
possessing destructive device after police, who searched his home in the
3000 block of Broad Street, also found a pipe bomb there, officials said.
The victim is now 40 years old and lives in Oregon, police said.
Officials said he came forward with the information recently, providing
officers with sufficient leads to make the arrest.
Cleworth’s arraignment on the charge of possessing the pipe bomb was
continued to Jan. 3. He is yet to be charged in the alleged molestation
case.
Police also declined to release any information about the
circumstances of the incident that allegedly happened years ago.
Cleworth is being held in Orange County jail with bail set at $50,000.
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
Woman kisses dog
Newport Coast Principal Monique VanZeeBroeck is using a lot of
mouthwash this weekend to rid the taste of dog slobber from kissing a
fake reindeer on Thursday. The good-natured VanZeeBroeck kissed Maggie, a
mastiff dressed up in antlers, to reward her students for exceeding their
reading goal over the past two-and-a-half months.
The Orange Coast College culinary department played host to a group of
children from the Boys and Girls Club in Fullerton on Thursday. The kids
made gingerbread houses to take home with them.
* Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
Beach planning
Gearing up to tangle with the state’s coastal commission, Newport
Beach began forming a committee to put in place a new Local Coastal
Program.
The program, which must be in place by June 30, 2003, governs
development in coastal area.
The city began developing a program in the late 1980s, but the process
stalled after the approval of a land-use plan.
This week, Mayor Tod Ridgeway began taking volunteers for a six-member
steering committee to plan and craft the program. The move comes on the
heels of an Oct. 5 letter from the California Coastal Commission
critiquing the city’s development standards for coastal bluff sites.
Also, in news presumably greeted with enthusiasm by boaters, the
Orange County Board of Supervisors lowered boat mooring fees in Newport
Harbor. The board dropped its fees from $38 to $20 per linear foot per
year. The new fees now match what the city charges, which,
coincidentally, are expected to rise in 2002.
* Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
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