Gains & Losses
GAINS
FIT AS A FIFTH- (OR SEVENTH-) GRADER
Annual tests show area fifth- and seventh-graders are in good physical
shape compared to others around the state. Results of the recently
released 1999 spring Fitnessgram have students in the Fountain Valley and
Ocean View school districts performing better than the state average.
Children in the Huntington Beach City School District did better in 1999
than in 1998. The Fitnessgram assesses cardiovascular endurance, body fat
percentage, abdominal strength and overall endurance.
FARMERS MARKET AT PIER PLAZA
The Huntington Beach City Council agreed last week to keep the farmers
market and craft fair at Pier Plaza, where it was relocated in January
from Downtown streets. The move has increased sales and attendance at the
weekly outdoor event. The farmers market is held Fridays from noon to
sunset.
A WISH COME TRUE
Derek Tao, 5, has spent much of his life in hospitals undergoing
treatment for a brain tumor that has reoccurred twice. But recently, the
Fountain Valley resident got to take a break from it all. The Make-A-Wish
Foundation granted three of his wishes -- sending him on a train trip to
San Juan Capistrano, getting the California Highway Patrol to chauffeur
him around town and sending him on a trip to Disney World. “This just
goes to show that sometimes life sucks, but there are still good people
and things to look forward to,” said Candice Tao, his mother.
LOSSES
INFRASTRUCTURE REPAIRS OUT OF FOCUS
Convincing Huntington Beach residents to spend $1.3 billion over the next
20 years to fix everything from sewers to sidewalks will be tough, the
city’s Infrastructure Advisory Committee discovered last week. The
results of a focus group study commissioned by the board shows that
residents don’t believe more money is needed to fund the city’s aging
streets and storm drains, which they think are in fine shape. “We have a
much deeper problem than we anticipated,” said Chauncey Alexander, a
member of the advisory committee.
SOUNDING OFF ON AIRPLANE NOISE
Residents living by the beach are angrily buzzing about the noise from
airplanes flying banners along the coast. There are no limits on how many
times a plane can fly over a specific area or how many can be out there,
according to the Federal Aviation Administration. And the city says it
has no proof the planes are breaking the law. But residents are still not
happy with the noise. “You’re so mad you want to pull out your gun and
blow them out of the sky,” said resident Charlotte Melson.
HE WAS THE FIRST
Donald Keller, the Independent’s founding editor, died last month after a
brief illness. The 70-year-old journalist started the newspaper in 1964
for Ridder Newspapers, which later became Knight Ridder. He left it in
1967 to start the Action Line column for the now-defunct Orange County
Evening News. Keller went on to work for a number of Northern California
papers, including the Contra Costa Times and the San Jose Mercury News,
from which he retired in 1989.
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