City adds to emergency list
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Fire department officials have expanded the city’s emergency manual
to cover six new hazards.
Joining fires, earthquakes, floods and tsunamis are terrorism;
high winds; epidemics such as SARS; power outages; agriculture or
vector hazards, which include mad cow disease and the West Nile
virus; and work and school-based violence.
“We probably went 20 years, and we didn’t add an issue, but now we
have so many issues coming up so fast,” said Glorria Morrison, the
city’s emergency services coordinator.
The plan is separated into two sections-- the basic plan and the
operations plan.
The new plan, approved by the City Council on Tuesday, will soon
be distributed throughout the city. Copies of the 70-page manual will
go to the Police Department, the Fire Department, the Public Works
Department, the Huntington Beach Hospital and Medical Center, the
school districts, the Orange County Sanitation District and the
governor’s office of emergency services.
The plan maps out how to prepare for, respond to and recover from
an emergency. It includes everything from setting up an emergency
operations center and activating a chain of command to assisting
disabled people and answering legal questions.
It also includes a list of veterinarians who can care for animals
and mortuaries that can handle casualties.
“There’s a lot of detail,” Morrison said. “It has all of the
answers to questions that you might ask in an emergency.”
As part of the process of drafting the new plan, Huntington Beach
met and shared ideas with 23 other Orange County cities.
“Huntington Beach’s plan was used as the model for Orange County,”
Morrison said. “We met twice a month, and we shared plans and we
looked at different models -- state plans and Los Angeles plans.”
City officials also gathered input from all of the city’s
department heads.
Nature center hosts native plant sale
A collection of native plants and butterflies will be displayed at
the Shipley Nature Center on March 6.
California native plants, such as coffee berries, manzanitas and
flowering maples, will be sold from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Liz Cooper and
Sandra Huwe, experts on Orange County butterflies, will also display
live eggs and caterpillars and answer questions about butterflies and
the plants that attract them.
“We do offer the hummingbird and the butterfly plants,” Friends
board member Nancy Harris said. “A lot of people like to plant so
that they can attract certain wildlife to their yards.”
About 160 plants will be sold at the event. Volunteers will be on
hand to provide information on care of the plants. For best results,
Harris cautions that the plants be planted by the end of March.
The sale is set to coincide with the Shipley Nature Center’s
monthly restoration day, which takes place on the first Saturday of
every month from 9 a.m. to noon.
The Friends of the Shipley Nature Center, which is hosting the
event, is a nonprofit organization that took over the nature center
when the city cut funding in October 2002 and locked the gates.
A crew of young men and women from the Orange County Conservation
Corps works four days a week pulling invasive plants, planting native
vegetation and redesigning the interpretive building. On the third
Sunday of every month, the center is open to the public for nature
walks and tours.
The center provides a habitat for 23 endangered species, including
western pond turtles and Southwestern willow flycatchers.
The Shipley Nature Center is in Huntington Beach Central Park. For
more information, contact the friends at (714) 842-4772, e-mail
[email protected] or log on to https://www.fsnc.org.
Water agency educates children
Surf City’s main water agency will educate county children about
water at a festival this spring.
The Orange County Water District will hold the nation’s largest
water education festival for children on May 11 and 12 in Irvine.
More than 7,000 students, parents and teachers are expected to
attend the festival, which is designed to teach third- and
fourth-graders about the interdependence of water, soil, plants,
trees, animals and humans.
The event drew 7,000 participants last year.
The district is seeking help from volunteers to work booths and
guide children through activities.
To volunteer, contact Julie Chestnut at (714) 257-1219. To sponsor the event, donate supplies or present an activity, contact Rebecca
Long at (714) 378-3362.
The Taste of Huntington Beach
A sampling of Surf City’s finest chefs will be cooking up a storm
on March 28 for the fourth annual Taste of Huntington Beach.
The event, which will take place at the Hyatt Huntington Beach
Resort and Spa, will serve samples of dishes from 50 of the area’s
restaurants and 30 nationally recognized wineries and breweries. The
types of food will include Chinese, Mexican, Italian and Hawaiian,
plus there will be exotic desserts.
Proceeds will be donated to the Children’s Library of the
Huntington Beach Central Library. Last year’s event raised $32,000.
The event will also include a silent auction, a raffle and live
entertainment.
Tickets are $40 per person if bought in advance and $50 at the
door. Tickets can be purchased at the Huntington Beach Central
Library, at 7111 Talbert Ave.; at the Huntington Beach Conference and
Visitors Bureau, at 301 Main St.; at Duke’s at the pier; and at the
Longboard Restaurant and Pub, at 217 Main St.
For more information, call (714) 969-3492 or log on to
www.hbrestaurants.com.
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