Governor dips into Back Bay
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Alicia Robinson
In an eleventh-hour bid for federal funding, Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger is putting his muscle behind the Back Bay restoration
project. He offered his support for the $38.4-million project --
which includes extensive dredging -- in a recent letter to Newport
Beach Rep. Chris Cox, who has been urging Congress for several years
to appropriate the money for the work.
The 1,000-acre Upper Newport Bay is Southern California’s largest
tidal wetland and a number of endangered plants and birds live in it.
Cox, a Republican, is seeking $13 million for the restoration project
in the 2006 federal budget.
It’s not clear whether Schwarzenegger’s star power will help
secure the money, which will help avert the loss of some state
grants, but Cox is banking on it.
“The significance of this endorsement is that the Governor is
making this one of the state’s priorities in Washington,” Cox said.
“We have been working to convince the appropriators in Congress that
this environmental initiative has national significance. Gov.
Schwarzenegger’s endorsement makes it clear that it is of statewide
significance as well.”
If Congress promises the funding, it will probably be included in
a federal appropriations bill, which is expected in June.
Just weeks before the 10-year anniversary of the Oklahoma City
bombing, Huntington Beach Rep. Dana Rohrabacher is considering
opening a new investigation into the crime. According to the
political website CongressDaily and a Tulsa, Okla., TV station’s
website, Rohrabacher may want to investigate whether convicted
bombers Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols had help in the plot and
whether the federal government covered up FBI training McVeigh and
Nichols received at one time.
Rohrabacher was out of the country Wednesday and could not be
reached for comment. The online reports said officials, including
Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating and two Oklahoma congressmen, have been
urging Rohrabacher not to pursue an investigation.
Cox’s work as chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee
has earned him recognition from the Congressional Fire Services
Institute, a think tank that advises Congress on fire and emergency
services. The institute on April 7 will name Cox one of two
legislators of the year for 2005.
“Having made a personal commitment to engage the fire service on
homeland security initiatives, Chairman Cox has worked very closely
with the fire organizations on a number of measures in his
committee,” the institute wrote about Cox in a statement.
Cox will be honored at the institute’s annual dinner next week in
Washington, D.C.
“I’m very grateful for their recognition. It is born of our
working closely together over the last two and a half years on first
responder legislation,” Cox said. He expected hearings to be
scheduled soon on a bill that will help first responders get federal
funding faster.
A handful of area parents are steaming over upcoming appearances
at the Newport Beach Public Library by author Eric Schlosser, who
wrote greasy expose “Fast Food Nation” and “Reefer Madness,” a
discussion of the black market trade in sex and drugs.
After hearing about Schlosser’s April 15 and 16 visit from local
GOP pollster Adam Probolsky, several parents -- including Costa Mesa
Assemblyman Chuck DeVore -- said they don’t think Schlosser should be
included in a planned mentoring session with local high schoolers
because he advocates legalizing marijuana.
“It’s in a public place,” said John Carvelli, a Newport Beach
father. “To me, you should be extra sensitive to the information that
children are being exposed to.”
Tracy Keys, who directs the private foundation that paid for the
author’s visit, countered that the subject of Schlosser’s visit is
his book on the fast food industry, not drugs. She said the speakers
series that includes Schlosser brings writers from a diverse set of
professions to Newport Beach and offers students a chance to meet
them. For information on Eric Schlosser’s talks, visit
https://www.city.newport- beach.ca.us/nbpl/eventservices online or
call (866)301-2411.
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