Complex contractor testifies at deposition
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The Salem, Ore., contractor hired to build the second phase of the
sports complex attended an Oregon deposition Tuesday, where he was
scheduled to testify about what happened to the $950,000 he was paid
by Huntington Beach. Details of that deposition were not available by
press time.
Surf City attorneys filed a lawsuit against contractor Joe
O’Connor in June for abandoning the project after receiving a
substantial portion of the money. O’Connor was hired to build soccer
pavilions, roller hockey arenas, batting cages and concession stands.
O’Connor also abandoned a similar soccer project in Kalamazoo,
Michigan after he was paid nearly $250,000 by soccer club owner Chris
Keenan. Keenan went after O’Connor with a civil lawsuit and won when
O’Connor failed to appear in court.
Keenan re-filed the judgment in Oregon and secured a felony arrest
warrant for O’Connor, who was eventually arrested in August.
On Tuesday, O’Connor attended a court-ordered deposition at the
offices of Keenan’s attorney, where he was expected to testify on how
he spent Keenan’s money.
“During that time, we also plan to ask him about how he spent
Huntington Beach’s money,” said Keenan, because it helps to paint an
understanding of O’Connor’s current financial status.
City to examine Fourth of July policies
The midnight parties that take place a few days before Fourth of
July each year could soon come to an end.
On Monday, the City Council will examine the city’s staking-out
policy at the request of police, who say the practice is becoming
unmanageable.
“It’s very difficult for us to be out there until midnight,”
Huntington Beach Police Chief Ken Small said. “Last year we had to
put four officers on patrol.”
For two years, dozens of residents living along the north end of
Main Street have waited until the first stroke of midnight on July 2
to stake out a place on the grass for viewing of the Fourth of July
parade. Using duct tape, chalk and even police ribbon, the residents
mark off their viewing spots for each year’s parade route. By early
morning, every inch of grass and cement along the parade route is
spoken for.
Before the midnight deadline was set, there was no law in place,
and residents would begin staking out spots as early as they could.
Small said the situation was getting out of control.
“They would stake out their place in May if they thought they
could get away with it,” he said.
Because staking out now does not begin until midnight, residents
often eagerly await their start times by throwing small parties in
their front yards, or waiting in lawn chairs along the sidewalk. With
so many people waiting outside, the nighttime takes on a noticeable
party-like atmosphere.
City events coordinator Naida Osline said the city is considering
changing the staking out policy.
“We’re going to look at moving it to the daytime instead of the
nighttime,” she said. “There’s been some concern by the police.”
Officially, police are not allowed to get involved in neighborhood
stakeout disputes and will not enforce codes if someone were to
occupy a spot that had been staked out by someone else.
The council will review the practice at Monday’s Fourth of July
study session at 5 p.m. Other items on the agenda include a
discussion about the quality of this year’s fireworks displays and
plans for next year’s fireworks. The council will also look at
restructuring the Fourth of July Executive Board, which is losing
several members this year.
Ballot order announced
Jim Moreno will be first, Keith Bohr will be last and Debbie Cook
is stuck somewhere in the middle.
The city clerk’s office has released the ballot order for Surf
City’s 16 candidates vying for one of three available spots on the
City Council. When voters go to the polls this November, the names
will appear in this order:
Jim Moreno, Robert Mellema, Rex Ricks, Tim Reilly, Joey Racano,
Steve Ray, Don Hansen, Blair Farley, Robert Kliewer, John Earl, Hyman
Crippen, Debbie Cook, Joe Carchio, Norm “Firecracker” Westwell, Peter
Albini and finally Keith Bohr.
Views differ on the ideal place to be located on the ballot.
Deputy City Clerk Kelly Mandic said conventional wisdom was that “the
first and last slots on the ballot were the best place to be.”
Bohr said he had no problem being at the bottom, but said “I think
the best spots might be theone, two and three [positions].”
The state ballot spots are decided in a lottery by California
Secretary of State Kevin Shelley. Each election, letters are drawn at
random and the order they are chosen make up the new ballot alphabet.
Names are then arranged in the new alphabetical order.
Coastal cleanup moves on shore
You don’t have to go to the beach to enjoy this year’s Coastal
Cleanup Day.
For 20 years, the California Coastal Commission has been
sponsoring the statewide volunteer cleanup effort to pick-up trash
along California’s beaches, but one group is now trying to do its
part to pick up trash before it makes its way to the ocean.
The Earth Resource Foundation will be sponsoring a cleanup of
Talbert Marsh and the Santa Ana River jetties on Sept. 18 from 8 a.m.
to noon. Executive Director Stephanie Barger said she hopes the
volunteers will be able to “pick up trash before it hits the ocean.”
Besides the cleanup, the event serves as an opportunity to educate
the public about their role as conservationists.
“We want to teach environmental responsibility where you live and
play,” she said. “We’re not going to solve all the problems by having
beach cleanups, we need to trace back to the community what
activities we as humans are doing and give people alternatives to
enhance their lifestyles.”
Even the structure of the cleanup itself has been changed to be
more environmentally conscious. Volunteers are encouraged to bring
their own reusable water bottles and gloves to reduce waste, and will
be asked to reuse their trash bags.
Barger said she hopes the event makes people think about their own
roles in what she said is becoming an increasingly “disposable
society.”
Volunteers are allowed to join in during any part of the morning
and can stay for as long or as little as they want. Volunteers are
asked to enter the Talbert Marsh cleanup site at the bike trail gate
on Brookhurst Street near Pacific Coast Highway. Signs will also be
posted.
For more information, visit https://www.earthresource.org.
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