WEEK IN REVIEW
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Newport Beach’s leaders went “tough on noise” this week and approved
changes to the city’s noise ordinance for good.
While council members were eager to emphasize that the revised law
applies to all residents and will be applied throughout the city, the
move received a lot of attention since ex-basketball star Dennis Rodman’s
loud parties prompted it.
After realizing the the Orange County district attorney’s office
hesitated to prosecute noise offenders in the city because of Newport
Beach’s softly-worded noise ordinance, city officials made some additions
they hope will make it easier to press criminal charges.
The new version states that anyone can face prosecution after a police
officer has issued a warning to stop the noise. It also makes it clear
that property owners may be accountable for noise that occurs at their
home.
But even without the revisions, Rodman, who protested against the
changes at the May 22 council meeting, is already in trouble. The
district attorney’s office has charged Rodman with three counts of
criminal misdemeanor, alleging he used amplifiers illegally during his
40th birthday party at his West Newport Beach home. His arraignment is
scheduled for arraignment at Harbor Justice Center on June 20.
Harbor patrol’s drawn-out standoff
Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol deputies stationed in Newport Beach handled
the longest standoff ever in the harbor in the wee hours of Friday after
a distraught Costa Mesa man led them on a high-speed chase.
Deputies had to wait until the crack of dawn to arrest 39-year-old
Philip Frazier, who was allegedly driving his boat around the harbor
without navigation lights. He was arrested for driving a boat under the
influence of alcohol or drugs and also referred to psychiatric
counseling.
The pursuit, which began inside the harbor, took the deputies into the
ocean south of the harbor. Crisis negotiators and additional deputies
from Dana Point also came in to help.
Police in Costa Mesa, meanwhile, continue to battle the nagging
problem of auto thefts in the city. Although recently released FBI
statistics showed a decline in crime in every category, it contained a
21% increase in auto thefts. The numbers compare 2000 with 1999.
According to numbers released by Costa Mesa Police, there was another
7% increase in 2001 compared with the previous year. Officials say the
best way to counter the problem is heavy police patrol in problem areas
and residents exercising more caution.
A harsh tour through Ellis Island
As the school year draws to a close, teachers are finding ways to tie
up the ends of lessons that are more fun and spectacular than ever.
Each day we seem to be hearing about another cute thing that students
are doing. But one of the greatest, because of the way it was carried
out, happened last week at Lincoln Elementary.
Prepared by teachers and executed mostly by parents, students lived
out what it was like for immigrants coming through Ellis Island.
Parents were in top form. They played their roles to a “T,” being
horrid and nasty to children -- just as immigration workers would have
been to immigrants.
Starting up the litigation
Bob Caustin proved on Monday the second half of his motto: “water
quality through education and litigation.”
The Defend the Bay founder is suing the Irvine Co., the Irvine City
Council and a handful of other agencies to stop a high-density industrial
center from being built off the northern edge of the El Toro Marine base.
The council, on May 8, approved its own preliminary environmental
report on 10.2 million square feet of industrial, research, medical and
scientific uses. The behemoth project would add 16,000 new jobs to the
county.
But Caustin is concerned the complex would lead to dangerous increases
in air pollution, traffic and waste. It could also drain power usage
during the state’s power crunch, Caustin said.
Irvine Councilman Greg Smith said Caustin is “barking up the wrong
tree.”
Bridging the greasy traps
Grease and bridges took center stage last week in Costa Mesa.
The Costa Mesa Sanitary District approved a letter stating its intent
to pass an ordinance requiring restaurants to install grease traps.
The possible future ordinance is controversial because of the high
cost of the traps -- between $10,000 to $40,000 -- and also because of a
dispute about whether the district or the City Council has the authority
to pass such an ordinance.
The Orange County Transportation Authority decided to release the
long-awaited Santa Ana River Crossings study for public comment Monday,
but is holding it until later this month.
A summary of the study released Thursday, however, found that building
bridges across the river at 19th Street and Gisler Avenue would increase
noise levels but would reduce the overall distances drivers would have to
travel.
The authority will be accepting public comment on the study starting
June 21.
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