EDUCATION Newport-Mesa students have the knowledge to...
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EDUCATION
Newport-Mesa students have the knowledge to graduate
Newport-Mesa Unified School District high schools performed better
than the state and county average on this year’s exit exam. But
results on other standardized test reports released Monday ran the
gamut.
Districtwide, 85% of students passed the 2004 California High
School Exit Examination’s math and English language arts sections.
And though scores in some sections of the Standardized Testing and
Reporting program showed significant improvement, they also made some
large drops -- particularly for the district’s second-grade students
and Corona del Mar High School algebra students.
* Few local students opt to take the American College Testing
Program, known as the ACT, but those who did this year beat national
averages.
In testing data released this week, this year’s graduating seniors
in Newport-Mesa Unified School District earned an average composite
score of 23.2 out of 36 points. Only 228 Newport-Mesa students took
the test, placing far behind the Scholastic Aptitude Test in
popularity.
COSTA MESA
Community backs Market Place operators
Residents packed a public meeting Monday to talk about seeking
bidders to run the Orange County Market Place, the long-running swap
meet held at the Orange County Fairgrounds. Many of those who came
spoke in support Bob and Jeff Teller, who founded and still operate
the market.
This is the second attempt by the fair’s directors to seek bidders
interested in operating the market. Last year, controversy erupted
over the bidding process and it was terminated. Another public
hearing will be held Thursday on the tentative request for bids to
run the market.
* The City Council decided Tuesday to solve residential parking
problems and complaints by giving staff members 60 days to research
them and suggest solutions rather than automatically granting parking
restrictions that residents request. The issue came up when a group
of College Park homeowners asked the council to stop residents of
nearby apartments, condominiums and mobile homes from parking on
their streets.
Council members opted for the new strategy because they feared
parking restrictions would merely shift parking problems to a new
neighborhood.
NEWPORT BEACH
Church secedes from Episcopal Diocese
St. James Church on Via Lido and All Saints Church in Long Beach
announced their secession from the Episcopal Church on Tuesday,
saying that the diocese’s liberal philosophy doesn’t match their own
orthodox view of the Bible.
St. James members on Monday voted 280 to 12 in favor of the
secession with one member abstaining.
The Episcopal Church’s ambiguous views on whether Jesus Christ is
the only Lord and Savior who offers salvation to believers don’t
match those of St. James’ members, church officials said.
The 1,200-strong church will now come under the Diocese of Luwero
in the Anglican Province of Uganda, Africa. The Rt. Rev. Evans
Kisekka will be the church’s bishop. In addition, a bishop in Texas
will serve as the “on-site bishop” to offer pastoral guidance to the
church.
The Rt. Rev. J. Jon Bruno, bishop of the Diocese of Los Angeles,
said he has sent out “a letter of protest” to the bishop in Luwero.
Bruno said he does not intend to release the two parishes and that
they rightfully belong to the Episcopal Church.
He also sent out a letter to be read during service on Sunday at
all churches under the diocese saying that he opposes the churches’
move to break away.
But St. James officials released a statement in response to the
Bishop’s saying that the church owns the building and the surrounding
property on Via Lido and that the diocese has no claim against it.
* City officials promised Wednesday to work with the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers to prevent the spreading of sand dredged from the
Santa Ana River on the beach in West Newport. The corps is heading a
$4.5 million, largely federally-funded project to dredge 400,000
cubic yards of sediment from the river to prevent flooding and
deposit the sand along the shore in Newport Beach.
A crowd of residents turned out to protest the project at an
informational meeting and ask that the sand be pumped offshore, which
was an option given to contractors bidding on the project but was not
selected due to cost.
* The City Council is likely to formally accept the resignation of
Councilman Gary Adams on Tuesday, after Adams last week submitted a
letter resigning from the council as of Sept. 1. Now serving his
second term, Adams announced in July that he planned to resign to
take a job promotion in Washington, D.C.
If council members agree Tuesday on the appointment process to
replace Adams, they could take applications through Sept. 9 and hold
a public hearing to interview candidates on Sept. 14.
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