Council repeals banner law
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With no discussion, the City Council Monday night repealed its law
that bans planes towing banners from flying over the city.
The council decided to rethink the law not after a lawsuit was
filed, but when the Federal Aviation Administration asserted its
ultimate authority over airspace.
Councilwoman Connie Boardman introduced the law earlier this year,
citing years of complaints from residents about noise and safety of
the planes.
Shortly after the law was passed on Sept. 16, the Center for
Bio-Ethical Reform, an anti-abortion group, sued the city to overturn
the ban, which it said violated its 1st Amendment rights.
As hearings began in late October, the FAA stepped in and said
that it had clarified language in a regulation to make it clear that
the agency, and not the cities, controls airspace.
That change meant the new law would not stand up in court, council
members said.
Now that the city has repealed the law, officials at the Center
for Bio-Ethical Reform say they will try to get a similar law in
Honolulu, Hawaii repealed.
Surf City’s law was based on the one passed in Honolulu.
Boeing successfully launches Delta IV rocket
After numerous delays and false starts, Boeing successfully
launched the Delta IV rocket Wednesday afternoon.
The Delta IV is the first conventional rocket to use a U.S.-built
engine since the space shuttle.
The rocket, developed as part of a $1.5-billion program, carried a
broadcast satellite for Eutelsat, Europe’s largest satellite-services
operator.
The rocket’s debut, which is months overdue, is part of an Air
Force program to develop more reliable and economic rockets.
A Saturday launch was delayed until Tuesday.
Hundreds crowded a grassy field at Boeing’s Huntington Beach
campus that day to watch the launch of the rocket designed at that
facility. But the launch was delayed for the second time in a week.
The countdown stopped and started several times before being
delayed due to a software glitch, Boeing officials said.
Pay Surf City parking tickets, or get the boot
Huntington Beach residents had better start paying their parking
tickets.
A bright yellow immobilizing boot will appear on the car tires of
those drivers who have five or more unpaid parking tickets now that
the City Council unanimously approved use of the device.
Using the boot, the city avoids the hassle of towing and
impounding habitual violators’ vehicles. The boot can be put on a car
in less than a minute. To have the boot removed, car owners will have
to pay all of their outstanding fines and a $100 fee to cover the
cost of installing the boot, Police Chief Kenneth Small said.
The boot reduces the potential damage that a vehicle can sustain
when it’s towed, Small said.
Huntington Beach will be the only city in the county that uses the
boot, according to a report prepared by Small.
The police department bought five boots at $400 each with funds
from the Statewide Abandoned Vehicle Abatement Program.
The department expects to start using the boots on Jan. 1,
Huntington Beach Police Lt. Bill Peterson said.
City takes a step in combating urban runoff
The City Council Monday night approved the Water Quality Element
Framework, a plan that will help the city develop a comprehensive
program for improving water quality in the city.
The framework had to be approved by the council before the city’s
Urban Runoff Management Plan could be completed.
Now that the report has been completed, the council has authorized
the Public Works Department to complete the urban runoff plan for the
city.
The final plan will outline different ways to deal with urban
runoff in more detail. Collectively, the reports will enhance current
efforts to deal with polluted urban runoff in coastal waters while
reducing flood conditions within the city.
Sanitation district to foot half bill for sewer repairs
The Orange County Sanitation District has awarded the city
$581,000 to help pay for the cost of repairing sewer mains.
The district’s Cooperative Projects programs give local agencies a
chance at money to reduce excess inflow into the district’s
collection system.
Improvements made to sewer mains can help reduce the amount of
excess water going into sewer treatment facilities and this, in turn,
brings down processing costs.
The grant will fund half the cost of repairs to more than 19,000
feet of sewer mains.
The area targeted for repairs is bounded by Warner Avenue, Newland
Street, Heil Avenue and the San Diego Freeway.
The first portion of the repair project will determine the cost
and benefits of the project. If the sanitation district finds the
results of the study acceptable, the city will move forward with the
repairs.
-- compiled by Jose Paul Corona
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