COSTA MESA Mobile home rules sail through...
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COSTA MESA
Mobile home rules sail through Planning Commission
The fifth time was the charm for a proposed mobile home ordinance,
as it cleared the Planning Commission on Monday. It had been
continued four times before. The ordinance would give the city more
authority over the closure and conversion of mobile home parks. The
City Council will consider it in April.
* The reality TV juggernaut made its way to Costa Mesa Wednesday
as “Extreme Makeover, Home Edition” burst into town. The crew sent
the lucky family off to a vacation and is now working round the clock
to remodel their home and add an addition by the time they get back
on Wednesday.
-- Deirdre Newman
PUBLIC SAFETY AND COURTS
Mysterious substance
slows the slowest of lines
Close to 60 people were evacuated from the Department of Motor
Vehicles Wednesday evening after a clerk opened mail containing a
suspicious grainy substance, fire officials said.
Orange County Hazardous Materials team members, after examining
the substance, determined that it was not a credible threat. It
appeared that some kind of packing material had gotten into the
envelope in question, officials said.
The DMV closed half an hour before usual closing time on
Wednesday. But it was back to business as usual Friday morning. The
office was closed on Thursday to observe Abraham Lincoln’s birthday,
which is a state holiday.
The incident is the second false alarm in two weeks for Costa
Mesa. Also, on Feb. 4, 80 employees were evacuated from Fairview
Developmental Center in Costa Mesa after someone found a gray powdery
substance in envelopes.
Officials later determined the substance was harmless. The powder
turned out to be “sacred ash” brought in by an employee who smeared
it on her forehead as part of a daily religious ritual.
-- Deepa Bharath
POLITICS
Candidate apologizes for misusing quotes in mailer
Republican 70th Assembly District candidate Cristi Cristich
apologized to Rep. Chris Cox for a campaign mailer she sent to
district voters, Cox announced Wednesday. Cox had on Feb. 6 condemned
the mailer as misleading, saying it implied an endorsement of
Cristich he didn’t give.
The mailer included selections from a letter Cox sent Cristich
congratulating her on her candidacy and citing a long-standing policy
of not endorsing candidates in GOP primaries. An identical letter was
sent to 70th District candidate Chuck DeVore. Both candidates sought
Cox’s endorsement.
Cristich’s campaign director Dave Gilliard said earlier he didn’t
think the letter was misleading. The campaign agreed last week to
send corrective letters to voters who had received the earlier
mailer.
* Local grocery workers on picket lines said they were skeptical
that new talks that began Wednesday would achieve any significant
results in the four-month old strike and lockout. Several earlier
rounds of talks have broken off with no change in the positions of
grocery chains Albertsons, Kroger and Safeway or the United Food and
Commercial Workers union. The strike was called in October when the
two sides failed to reach an agreement on health benefits and other
provisions in contract talks.
* Local real estate experts on Thursday reported double-digit
increases in average home sale prices in the fourth quarter of 2003,
following a statewide trend, but the number of home sales for that
period in Newport-Mesa was lower than elsewhere in the state because
of a lack of inventory.
* Average home prices rose more than 29% in Costa Mesa and 34% in
Newport Beach during the last three months of 2003, while in
California the increase in median home prices was 17.9% for the
period.
-- Alicia Robinson
NEWPORT BEACH
Marinapark the latest straw in debate over Greenlight
The latest battle in the ongoing war between Greenlight committee
members and City Hall erupted during a council meeting over how the
city is handling information about the proposed Marinapark hotel.
Greenlight spokesman Phil Arst charged that by sending the project
to a non-Greenlight vote, the council is conveniently avoiding having
to vote on the project as a council.
He was answered quickly by Councilman Steve Bromberg, who pointed
out that the Greenlight group’s goal is to put major developments
before voters, but they now are protesting putting the matter to a
vote.
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