GOVERNMENT Support getting bigger for scaled-back rail...
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GOVERNMENT
Support getting bigger for scaled-back rail line
CenterLine’s support is growing, as evidenced by a recently
released survey showing 69% of county residents said they would
probably or definitely vote in favor of the proposed light rail
system, which will run through Costa Mesa. Only 51% of respondents
said they would probably or definitely vote for a light rail system
last year. The survey was sponsored by the Orange County Business
Council, which is neutral on CenterLine, and Cal State Fullerton
Center for Public Policy.
* Newport Shores homeowners, who want a canal near their homes
dredged to get rid of the sediment they say is damaging the water
quality and health of the marshlands, are banding together and
forming a committee in the hopes of getting some results. But the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which owns the channel, says its first
priority is dredging the Santa Ana River. And funding is hard to come
by for other projects, project manager Ken Morris said.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Surprise shot hits Newport Harbor High student
A 17-year-old Newport Harbor High School senior was shot in the
face with a pellet as he rode his bicycle near Cliff Drive Park the
evening of Aug. 27.
The pellet pierced the boy’s skin and lodged itself about an inch
in front of his left ear, but he is recovering from the injury.
Police are looking for whoever shot him.
* Police arrested two Los Angeles County women for prostitution
last week at a local massage parlor.
Officers received an anonymous tip that New Oriental Mass. was
operating, unlicensed, in a medical building at the corner of Harbor
Boulevard and Fair Drive, said Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Marty Carver.
Alhambra resident Yanling Sun, 39, and Hacienda Heights resident
Chunyan Li, 31, were both arrested for prostitution and booked into
the Costa Mesa Police Department’s jail. They were released on a
written notice to appear in court, Carver said.
The parlor had placed ads in local newspapers, but did not have a
massage license, as required in the city, he said. Officers shut the
business down.
EDUCATION
OCC enrollment climbing despite price hike
Enrollment at Orange Coast College is up and so are the number of
classes being offered and student fees.
State budget cuts forced community colleges to raise their
per-unit fee from $18 to $26. OCC is offering about 5% more classes
than last fall, but enrollment is up nearly as much, meaning many
students are still not getting some classes they need to take.
Students, parents and police are gearing up for the start of
school next week.
* A controversial loop road at Newport Coast Elementary School
should ease some of the traffic troubles at that site, officials
said. Davis Education Center and Harbor View Elementary School have
new bus loading and unloading zones that will help keep bus traffic
and parent traffic separate.
NEWPORT BEACH
St. James Church stays its conservative course
Three churches, including one on Via Lido, refused to cease
operations at the demand of an Episcopal bishop from whose diocese
they seceded during the last two weeks.
St. James Church in Newport Beach, All Saints’ in Long Beach and
most recently St. David’s in North Hollywood, broke away from the
Diocese of Los Angeles, citing the Episcopal Church’s liberal views
on the supremacy of Jesus Christ, the Bible and homosexuality as
reasons.
The three churches have placed themselves under the Diocese of
Luweero in the Anglican Province of Uganda, Africa. Observers say the
issue is headed to the courts for a long-drawn legal battle.
Bishop J. Jon Bruno has maintained that all churches and
surrounding land belong to the diocese, but St. James administrators
say the building and property belongs to St. James, a nonprofit
organization and that the bishop has no authority over it. Bruno sent
letters to the churches Friday informing them their leaders had been
fired and new priests would continue the work of the Episcopal
diocese in the respective areas.
Bruno through his attorney had asked the three churches to stop
services and business operations by Monday morning, but the churches,
through their attorney, refused to do so.
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