Better luck next time, Chuck
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Ever subject to the whims of politics, Newport Beach Assemblyman
Chuck DeVore on Wednesday failed to get approval for an audit of
improvements at Crystal Cove State Park. DeVore announced in June
that he planned to request the audit because the project is behind
schedule and over budget.
Sending weeks of careful politicking down the drain, one member of
the state Joint Legislative Audit Committee left a meeting before the
vote on the audit, DeVore spokesman Brian O’Neel, said. The 12-member
committee is made up of six Assembly members and six state Senators,
but approval of the audit required at least four votes from each
house, and DeVore ended up with only three Senate votes.
Sen. Charles Poochigian, a Republican from Fresno, was the member
who left.
“We did everything short of sending out a hit squad to go kidnap
him and bring him back,” O’Neel joked ruefully.
Since being elected to the Assembly in November, DeVore has
hammered state parks projects at Crystal Cove as examples of the
parks department’s inefficiency and as places where money could be
saved. O’Neel said DeVore hasn’t yet decided whether to bring the
audit request to the committee again.
“It could be in the next few months that the problems that we’re
trying to deal with in this audit become even more pronounced,” he
said.
Two times the charm for Crystal Cove bill
A bill that will give a nonprofit group control of renovating and
operating historic cottages at Crystal Cove State Park was
unanimously passed Tuesday by a state Senate subcommittee. It was the
second try for Sen. John Campbell, the bill’s author, who retooled
the legislation earlier this month.
“We’re delighted that it’s made it past the first hurdle,” said
Laura Davick, founder of the Crystal Cove Alliance, who worked with
Campbell on the bill and has said her group would be interested in
taking over park operations.
The Senate and the Assembly have until Sept. 9, the end of the
legislative session, to act on the bill. If passed, it would trump a
move the state parks department made in late June to seek bids for
cottage operations. Bids from nonprofit and for-profit groups are
being accepted through Sept. 21.
Officials vie to allow Jewish votes in Cox election
Still frustrated by the choice of a major Jewish holiday for a
special primary to replace former Rep. Chris Cox, local Jewish groups
are working with state and county election officials to ensure Jewish
voters can cast ballots if they want.
The Oct. 4 election to fill the 48th Congressional District seat
falls on the same date as Rosh Hashanah, “which is one of the holiest
days in the Jewish calendar,” said Joyce Greenspan, regional director
of the Anti-Defamation League in Costa Mesa. “It is not a day where
you can be doing any kind of work, including writing.”
Greenspan said that of the 70,000 to 100,000 Jews in Orange
County, at least 60% of them live in the 48th District -- which
includes Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine and several other
cities. Several ideas are being discussed to make sure Jewish voters
aren’t disenfranchised, she said.
The controversy over the election date may actually spur more
people to cast ballots.
“I believe that the effect on this election is that there will be
many more people voting,” Greenspan said. “Certainly I can see the
Jewish community being very clear about wanting to vote.”
Brewer takes the pledge
Hoping either to one-up her political competitors, or to get her
name in another press release, 48th Congressional District Republican
candidate Marilyn Brewer recently announced she signed the taxpayer
protection pledge offered by Americans for Tax Reform.
Those who sign agree to “oppose any and all efforts to increase
the marginal income tax rates for individuals and/or businesses,”
according to a statement from Americans for Tax Reform.
There are 221 members of the House who have signed the pledge.
Campbell’s got Next
No word on whether he’ll have to serve Pepsi on the campaign
trail, but Campbell on Tuesday announced an endorsement by Generation
Next, a group of young Orange County Republican business and
community leaders.
Campbell, of course, is running for the 48th Congressional
District seat and has racked up an array of endorsements, with the
most impressive likely being Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s.
For those who remember the late 1990s, “Generation Next” was used
in a Pepsi ad campaign that included the Spice Girls.
All joking aside, , the political group is not affiliated with the
beverage but spends its time considering hip, youthful issues such as
business and Social Security.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at
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