ENVIRONMENT Costa Mesa studying the effect of...
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ENVIRONMENT
Costa Mesa studying the effect of its urban runoff
* A firm hired by the city of Costa Mesa began a study last week
of the city’s 109 storm drain outlets to see how much urban runoff is
getting into storm sewers. The study also will provide information to
the Regional Water Quality Control Board, which suspects a few
specific Costa Mesa drains as possible sources of bacteria that has
been detected in the mouth of the Santa Ana River and could have
caused beach closures at Huntington Beach. Findings on the storm
drain testing are expected in November.
* A county project to dredge and remove vegetation in San Diego
Creek was halted Wednesday when work permits from the Army Corps of
Engineers expired.
* Preliminary results of a study of fish from the Newport Bay
showed they contain two contaminants that could cause cancer and
other health risks to humans. The information was released Thursday
by the Orange County Health Care Agency after it was alerted by the
Regional Water Quality Control Board, which commissioned the study.
-- Alicia Robinson
NEWPORT BEACH
Greenlight councilman
backs away from group
City Councilman John Heffernan, the city’s first Greenlight
councilman, announced he was distancing himself from the Greenlight
group. Heffernan said he disapproved of a lawsuit the group had filed
against the city and a flier it had distributed.
* With the bitterness of the El Toro battles slowly fading into
the past, Newport Beach leaders want to extend an olive branch to
former foes on the Irvine City Council. Council members will consider
whether to ask their Irvine counterparts to join a committee to
discuss traffic, development and public safety.
* A battle of the boat shows closed its first chapter as a judge
ordered an injunction against the Newport Dunes and the Southern
California Marina Assn. to stop them from using the name “Newport
Beach Boat Show.”
The name is too similar to the Newport Boat Show, which local
promoter Duncan McIntosh held at the Dunes for 10 years.
* A battle is taking place on Balboa between a local merchant and
a resident who likes to feed the pigeons behind the Fun Zone. Hunter
Stroman, manager of Marina WaterSports, worries the droppings create
a health risk. Martin Zofchak, the “Pigeon Master of Balboa,” said he
would keep feeding the birds.
-- June Casagrande
COSTA MESA
Skate park wins approval of city’s recreation commission
* The long-awaited skate park is one step closer to reality after
the Parks and Recreation Commission approved a design for the
facility that will be located at TeWinkle Park. The design chosen is
compatible with the park’s layout and preserves a good deal of open
space.
* A Costa Mesa man was honored Thursday for his heroic lifesaving
efforts last year. Orange County Sheriff’s Deputy Christopher Corn
and a colleague from the Harbor Patrol in Newport Beach received
Medals for Lifesaving for trying to save a woman in distress off the
Seal Beach pier.
Newport Harbor High School alumnus Steven Armand also received a
Medal for Lifesaving for trying to save a man who hung himself.
-- Deirdre Newman
PUBLIC SAFETY
Videotape in teens’ sex case to be ruled on this week
* Attorneys in the case of three teenagers accused of raping a
16-year-old girl finished a tedious round of hearings last week
about the authenticity of a videotape that captured the sexual
encounter.
Gregory Haidl, 18 -- the son of high-raking Orange County
Sheriff’s Department official Don Haidl -- Kyle Nachreiner and Keith
Spann, both 19, are accused of raping an unconscious 16-year-old girl in July 2002. All three have pleaded not guilty to 24 felony counts.
Judge Francisco Briseno did not make a ruling Monday and instead said
he would review the transcripts of the two-week hearing and issue a
written ruling this week.
* A star witness for the defense team of James Lee Crummel has
given his defense lawyers some grief this week by recanting
statements the lawyers are hoping to get admitted to Crummel’s trial,
which starts Monday. Crummel was arrested in Newport Beach in 1997,
accused of murdering 13-year-old Costa Mesa resident Jamie Lee
Trotter.
The witness, James Munro, allegedly told five people, over a
22-year period, that William Bonin, the infamous “Freeway Killer,”
killed Trotter.
The judge will decide Monday whether Munro’s statements can still
be admitted as evidence.
-- Deirdre Newman
* The Costa Mesa Police Department is coming into the age of
technology by implementing a new computer system.
After using the same computer system for 24 years, the department
employed the first phase of a technology overhaul that will increase
communication, officials said.
-- Lolita Harper
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