COSTA MESA Costa Mesa renews anti-airplane...
COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa renews anti-airplane vow
City officials renewed a commitment to delve into the issue of
increased airplane flights over the city last week, saying they will
continue to seek information, hire experts and collaborate with other
leaders in an effort to provide some relief to residents.
City Manager Alan Roeder said the city must first sit down with
all the relevant players to get a true assessment of what is causing
the increased flights over western portions of Costa Mesa. Airport
representatives from both Long Beach and John Wayne airports still
give conflicting information, but the more local folks have been able
to back up their innocence with charts and graphs, Roeder said.
Without playing the blame game, Costa Mesa leaders would like to
talk about where the changes came from and get a realistic assessment
of what can be done.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Vocal coach arrested
Robert Alan Giese, a 27-year-old voice coach accused of repeatedly
molesting a Buena Park teenager he met at the All-American Boys
Chorus headquartered in the Orange County Fairgrounds, will be
arraigned on Oct. 18, officials said last week.
Giese, who was arrested on Sept. 20, faces six felony counts of
child molestation. He is accused of molesting a 17-year-old boy
between May 1, 1998 and May 31, 2002 at his Irvine home. The victim
was 13 years old when the incidents began, officials said.
Police arrested Giese after the teenager reported the alleged
crimes. Giese was with the chorus as a full-time staff member through
May 2000. He was their production manager, voice coach and director
of communications until that time. After May 2000 Giese taught only
one voice class a week.
Giese is currently out on $200,000 bail and is scheduled to be
arraigned on Oct. 18.
In other news, Newport Beach police investigators testified at a
preliminary hearing that was held Thursday afternoon at the Harbor
Justice Center for Trenton Michael Veches, a former city recreation
coordinator accused of inappropriately touching several young boys.
Veches was arrested in April on suspicion of behaving
inappropriately with several boys 10 years of age or younger. He
faces felony charges for allegedly sucking the boys’ toes. Police
confiscated several digital images from Veches’ home computer showing
him performing the act, investigators said.
Police identified more than 50 victims in those pictures, all boys
who had participated in the city’s after-school and summer programs
Veches supervised over the last three years. He was arrested after a
co-worker tipped off officials that Veches was behaving
inappropriately with the children.
Veches’ next court date is scheduled for Oct. 8 at the Central
Justice Center in Santa Ana.
POLITICS
Getting down to wartime business in Congress
Newport-Mesa’s two congressman had their eyes on wartime
legislation this week, as Rep. Chris Cox proposed a bill and Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher renewed an older one.
On Wednesday, a House Judiciary subcommittee held hearings on
Rohrabacher’s H.R. 1198, which would allow American prisoners of war
in Japan during World War II to collect reparations from Japanese
companies that used them as slave labor.
One vet, Dr. Lester Tenney, shoveled coal for Mitsui Mining for
three years without pay. Tenney, in testimony, said he was brutalized
by company officials.
On Thursday, Cox proposed a bill, along with Rep. Martin Frost
(D-Texas), that would expedite special elections to fill vacant House
seats if a majority of members are killed in a terrorist attack.
The bill, known as H.R. 559, would allow states to tweak their
election laws so they could call the elections more quickly.
EDUCATION
Skate park idea inches forward in Costa Mesa
The School Board unanimously decided to explore building a skate
park at Davis Elementary School in Costa Mesa. The park would be a
collaboration with the city of Costa Mesa, which passed its half of
the joint resolution earlier in September. The next step is inviting
community input from nearby residents.
Orange Coast College has ratcheted up its reputation as a
high-transfer school. This week, it was named No. 2 out of
California’s 108 community colleges in the overall number of students
it transferred last year to the nine University of California
campuses and the 23-campus California State University campuses.
And because of the population crush at Newport Harbor High School,
parents are no longer admitted to school rallies. The school will be
videotaping the rallies, though, so parents can watch them from the
comfort of their own homes.
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