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COSTA MESA SKATE PARK OPENS TO CROWDS
After 10 years of spinning their wheels, skate park proponents
will finally get a place to put down their wheels.
In September, the City Council approved a skate park for TeWinkle
Park.
Staff members are dusting off the plans for the failed Charle
Street-Hamilton Street plans. They have done a complete review of
these plans and are expecting to present the idea of modifying them
for TeWinkle Park to the City Council in January.
But some Mesa del Mar residents still oppose a skate park at
TeWinkle because they say it would destroy the last area of open
space in the park.
DEBATES STRETCH ON ABOUT NEWPORT CONTROL OF JWA
It started small, but its implications could be huge. In the fall,
Newport Beach leaders announced they wanted to create what they
called a “Sphere Issues Committee” -- a casual group of three council
members that would try to engage county leaders in a dialogue on a
number of county-run operations that directly touch Newport’s
borders: the Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol, the Santa Ana Heights
Redevelopment Agency, the Coyote Canyon Landfill, local tidelands and
John Wayne Airport. And though their request started off as little
more than an invitation to chat, its implications could be huge.
This year will reveal whether the city’s casual inquiry could
result in taking over the harbor patrol, the multimillion-dollar
redevelopment agency, landfill operations and even possibly John
Wayne Airport.
City officials say their goal is to look for opportunities
beneficial to the county and the city -- areas where Newport might be
able to take some administrative or financial burdens off the
county’s hands to provide more efficient service. But, before the end
of this year, it could be clear whether this will mean taking control
of tens of millions of dollars and several of the most influential
county facilities, and possibly gaining long-term control over
airport expansion.
FEW SURPRISES AS NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD HEADS TO ELECTIONS
Three Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees will be up for
reelection in November.
Newly appointed President Dana Black, a member since 1996, said
she has not yet decided whether to run in the next election. Nor has
Martha Fluor, who just finished her third term as president.
Trustee Dave Brooks, who represents the northwestern end of Costa
Mesa, said that he does intend to run. Black’s trustee area covers
parts of Newport Beach, and Fluor’s, the east side of Costa Mesa.
No one has heard about anyone else thinking of entering the race
yet.
In the 2002 election, incumbent Judith Franco kept her seat, and
Tom Egan beat out Wendy Leece, the most conservative board member.
Linda Sneen stepped in when Jim Ferryman chose not to run for
reelection.
CITY, ATTORNEY MEET IN COURT
Expect Costa Mesa’s legal travails to continue since former City
Atty. Jerry Scheer refiled his complaint against the city and five
defendants.
In October, city leaders announced they had reached a settlement
that would pay Scheer $750,000 and prompt his retirement. But two
months later, Scheer grew impatient that not all the defendants had
signed off on the settlement and refiled his complaint.
And this time, he probably won’t be as amenable to settling as he
was before, his attorney, Dan Stormer, said.
PRIMARY FIGHT REACHES NEW LOW
Among various bitter Republican contests in the March 2 primary,
political undead right-winger Bob Dornan’s fight to wrest the 46th
District Congressional seat from Dana Rohrabacher will be the most
closely watched. While he hasn’t run for office since his second
defeat by Loretta Sanchez in 1998, Dornan’s track record of
fundraising clout and a willingness to say anything about anyone may
put him over the top, or at least a nose ahead of Rohrabacher, who
hasn’t faced a serious opponent in years.
Dornan has already made an issue of Rohrabacher’s admitted 1960s
drug use and his past support for medical marijuana, among other
things. Rohrabacher hasn’t started pulling skeletons out of Dornan’s
closet, but he might have to if he wants to wow voters, who are
expecting a bloody match.
HOTEL VOTE TOO CLOSE TO CALL
Steven Sutherland has made it a personal mission to show peninsula
residents why he believes they should support his project, a 110-room
luxury resort at the site of what is now the Marinapark mobile home
park.
He has knocked on doors, commissioned studies and held community
meetings. And every time he emerges from a face-to-face meeting with
neighbors, he emerges with a renewed faith that education will win
him his project. That will likely be his approach as the November
balloting nears. In that election, voters will decide whether to let
him build his Regent Newport Resort.
But opponents believe they have an even stronger case, and one
they think could win out in voters’ minds. They say the peninsula is
the wrong place for the project, and they disagree with studies that
say that traffic caused by the project won’t be significant.
City officials have seemed to support the project in part for the
tax revenue it will bring and in part as a revitalization of the
peninsula. But only time will tell whether voters see it the same
way.
SCHOOLS NARROWLY AVOID
FEDERAL SANCTIONS
At least three Newport-Mesa Unified schools will be paying extra
attention to standardized test scores and assessments when they come
out later in the year.
Pomona, Whittier and Wilson elementary schools are all listed in
the Program Improvement Category under the federal No Child Left
Behind Act after missing performance targets the last two years. That
means that the district must provide technical assistance to the
school, notify parents of its status, and use 10% of funds for staff
development.
Schools are required to have 13.6% of their students test at the
proficient or advanced level for English-language arts and 16% for
math. The three schools, which have a predominantly Latino student
population who are taking tests in a language they have not yet
mastered, are hoping to make those targets in 2004 and 2005 or face
corrective action.
In the 2004-05 school year, the minimum proficiency levels jump to
24.4% for English and 26.5% for math. The No Child Left Behind Act’s
goal is to have 100% proficiency by 2014.
IMPROVERS MAKE PLAY FOR COUNCIL
Three council seats will be open next fall, but only two council
members can run again, as Councilwoman Libby Cowan is termed out. It
probably won’t be as eclectic a crowd of candidates as vied to
replace former Mayor Karen Robinson.
City Councilman Mike Scheafer, who was appointed to replace
Robinson, said he is considering his options for running in the fall,
and Councilman Chris Steel is expected to run for reelection.
New Parks and Recreation Commissioner Mirna Burciaga has already
declared she will run. Planning Commissioner Katrina Foley said she
will run again.
New Planning Commissioner Eric Bever, who withdrew a bid to
replace Robinson last spring, said he is considering a run for the
council in the fall.
And Planning Commission Chairman Bruce Garlich said he is
seriously considering running.
HOUSING MARKET HITS NEW HIGH
AND THEN RISES SOME MORE
Another booming year is likely on the way for retail and housing
in Newport-Mesa, with restaurants expecting sales to grow 10%,
numerous new stores coming to shopping giants Fashion Island and
South Coast Plaza, and the housing industry looking for continued
market strength.
But a boom in cardboard boxes as living quarters may also be in
store. With experts predicting a continued gap between the demand for
housing and the number of new units being built, median prices are
already only affordable to about 27% of Californians and will likely
continue to climb beyond the reach of many this year.
VOTERS SHOW NO MANDATE ON DIRECTION FOR CITY HALL
The 2002 Newport Beach City Council election helped polarize local
government into two factions in a way that seemed to strengthen both.
Greenlight leaders failed to make good on their plan to win majority
control of the council. But they nonetheless doubled their presence
in City Hall by placing Dick Nichols on the dais as the second
Greenlight councilman.
At the same time, a core group of mainstream council members were
able to solidify their control of local government, largely by
pointing to their successes in maintaining the city’s quality of
life. Their anti-Greenlight position was validated by the reelection
of Tod Ridgeway and Gary Adams, both of whom were challenged by
Greenlight candidates.
But a lot has changed in the last two years. Nichols cast an
unflattering light on himself with several gaffes, including implying
that a planning commissioner had taken a bribe and a later faux pas
that caused some to label him racist.
In the meantime, West Newport Councilman Gary Proctor has stepped
down, and Steven Rosansky has been appointed to take his seat. This
year, Rosansky will run for reelection, as will Steve Bromberg.
Greenlight Councilman John Heffernan, however, remains undecided
whether he’ll try for a second term. When the voters cast their
ballots in December, it could amount to a mandate for one of two
competing view of how best to preserve the city’s future.
CITY PLAN UPDATE PUTS MANY TO SLEEP
This year is also likely to be the most important for Newport
Beach’s general plan update, the far-reaching process for revising
the city’s blueprint for the future. Changes to the document have
been subject to debate for more than a year, as the process has
become a battleground for competing visions for tomorrow.
How much development should be allowed in the airport area? What
kind of growth should take place near the industrial area near Hoag
Hospital? How much traffic is the city able to handle? Where can more
affordable housing be installed?
These are just some of the questions that will be decided this
year as the general plan update process is completed.
TRIAL VERDICT SHOCKS COURTROOM
A jury trial is set to begin in spring for three Inland Valley
teens accused of raping an unconscious 16-year-old girl. Greg Haidl,
son of Orange County Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and
Keith Spann all face serious prison time for the multiple felony
charges. The incident reportedly occurred in July 2002 at Don Haidl’s
Corona del Mar home.
The case is still in the pre-trial stages. Greg Haidl’s attorneys
have filed several motions including those alleging outrageous
prosecutorial misconduct. Judge Francisco Briseno also decided last
month to throw out two enhancements against Greg Haidl and Nachreiner
ruling that the teens did not cause great bodily injury to the
victim. That decision ruled out the possibility of life in prison for
the two defendants. Instead, they will face 55 years and four months
in state prison if convicted.
Prosecutors had argued that the teens had severely injured the
victim when they tried to penetrate her with a pool cue.
The high-profile trial involves sensitive evidence, including a
20-minute videotape made by the defendants that attorneys say
captured the incident in lurid detail. The jury trial is expected to
begin March 1.
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