COSTA MESA Gay march set for...
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COSTA MESA
Gay march set for Costa Mesa City Hall return
Leaders of the county lesbian organization marched out of City
Hall last week with overwhelming support from the city Human
Relations Committee for their annual demonstration.
Organizers from the Orange County Dyke March received the
endorsement of seven of nine committee members, as the committee
voted to officially recommend that the City Council on Monday not
only approve the suggested march route but waive the police
protection fees associated with the march.
Lori Hutson and Catie Profeta, who have organized the Orange
County version of the national Dyke March, said the special event
fees charged by the city, which exceeded $4,000, were excessive and
deterred freedom of assembly from groups who could not afford such a
large amount.
Committee members agreed and not only recommended the council
waive or cap fees for the Dyke March but suggested the city take a
closer look at the permit fees and consider lowering them.
--LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
EDUCATION
Community college bond readied for November
The Coast Community College district is putting its faith in
voters to approve a $370-million bond, after the board of trustees
voted unanimously to put it on the November ballot. The bond will
fund a host of facility improvements at the three campuses over a
20-year period.
Races are heating up for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
as a handful of contenders have thrown their names into the ring. Tom
Egan is challenging Wendy Leece, Ron Winship is taking on Serene
Stokes and Shelby Cove is challenging Judy Franco. So far, Linda
Sneen is running unopposed for Jim Ferryman’s seat.
--DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
ENVIRONMENT
Dirty beaches soil
Newport city leaders
City leaders hardly warmed at the arrival of a report in which
Newport Beach stood out as an area with some of Orange County’s
dirtiest beaches.
Beach postings and closures spiked 80.7% during 2001, when
compared to the prior year, according to a report released by the
Natural Resources Defense Council.
The group, reporting data collected from the Orange County Health
Care Agency, said the county’s beaches were marred by either of those
two stigmas for 1,592 days of the year. In 2000, the county counted
only 881 days.
Many of those postings or closures occurred in Newport Beach, a
revelation that didn’t excite city leaders.
“We’re embarrassed,” Mayor Tod Ridgeway said. “We’re not happy
about it.”
Several trouble spots emerged -- 43rd Street, 38th Street and the
swimming lagoon at the Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort.
Despite the dour news, city leaders said they were implementing
measures to deal with the postings, which are caused when bacteria
from polluted urban runoff or other waste causes bacteria levels to
soar in swimming areas.
City leaders have mounted three studies to examine the source of
the pollution.
--PAUL CLINTON covers the environment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at [email protected].
NEWPORT BEACH
New groups form in city
The Newport Beach Taxpayers Assn. came onto the local scene,
drawing controversy even in its infancy. Political consultant and
taxpayers’ rights advocate Dave Elllis lent his bulk-rate postal code
to the group, leaving Greenlight leaders to wonder whether the
officially neutral new association will in fact be a force to promote
development.
The Committee to Abolish Helicopter Noise was the second new group
to make headlines last week. Led by resident Rene Jacober, the group
wants the city to reconsider whether its police helicopter patrols
are worth the noise and the money.
A plane leaving JWA for Atlanta with 167 passengers on board was
declared to be in a state of emergency after one of its two engines
failed. The 757 was rerouted to Los Angeles International Airport and
no one was hurt.
The city’s dory fishermen found a powerful ally in city leaders,
who have taken up the fight against some new fishing regulations.
Mayor Tod Ridgeway has sent a letter to two federal agencies in hopes
that an emergency ban on catching rockfish can be modified enough to
allow the dory fleet to survive.
-- JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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