WEEK IN REVIEW
Students at Lincoln Elementary School in Corona del Marimmersed
themselves in the immigration experience this week, dressing up to
reflect the heritage of their ancestors and going through the various
steps of the immigration process. Many said they had newfound
appreciation for what their relatives went through.
And students from Harbor View Elementary School, also in Corona del
Mar, got an intimate lesson in Courage when they visited Orange County’s
Walk of Honor and heard about the experiences of the eight Congressional
Medal of Honor recipients from this area.
-- Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
MORE HOMES FOR HOME RANCH?
Costa Mesa city planners and Segerstrom officials are scrambling to
fill an eleventh-hour request by Councilwoman Linda Dixon to reconfigure
the housing on the Home Ranch site.
Last week, Dixon suggested to C.J. Segerstrom & Sons that houses be
built on the part of the 93-acre parcel currently proposed for industrial
use. The imbalance between jobs and housing in Costa Mesa bothered Dixon,
she said, and she wanted to figure out a way to address the need for more
homes.
Paul Freeman, a spokesman for C.J. Segerstrom & Sons, said the
developers would be willing to meet her request as long as the council’s
final decision would not be delayed. He expects a vote on the project
this month, he said.
Freeman said Dixon’s suggestion is plausible as long as thedevelopers
get the OK from the prospective industrial park tenant to move them to
the southeast portion of the former lima bean field.
-- Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
MONEY MATTERS
Two months after terrorist attacks crippled the nation’s airlines,
passenger traffic at John Wayne Airport has begun to stabilize a steady
15% below pre-Sept. 11 levels.
The airport has also begun to notice huge shortfalls in revenue
generated from landing fees, rental cars, restaurants and other
concessions. A clearer picture of those drops will emerge in December.
Also, California State Parks officials have begun analyzing where they
could find funding to pay for the restoration of the 46 cottages at
Crystal Cove State Park.
That process went hand-in-hand with Assemblyman John Campbell’s
critique of parks officials for failing to adequately discuss finances.
Campbell, the vice chair of the assembly’s budget committee,
challenged the state to “show me the money.”
-- Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
COVERING UP
A years-long effort to cover the city’s reservoir could be sped up as
a result of the Sept. 11 attacks. City officials are looking for ways to
fund the estimated $4 million cost of purchasing a flexible, plastic
cover for the Big Canyon Reservoir in Corona del Mar.
A majority of the few dozen residents who attended a Koll Center
informational meeting Monday said they were miffed that a consultant for
the expansion project ducked out before answering questions. The event
turned into a one-sided debate over the 250,000-square foot project
that’s the subject of a Nov. 20 special election.
Responding to residents’ complaints that the scores of ducks flocking
around one Grand Canal home have created a smelly nuisance, city
officials have drafted a law to restrict feeding and breeding waterfowl
in the city. The law would allow kids with a slice of bread to feed the
ducks but would prohibit incubation and the types of feeding that create
a nuisance or discourage the bird migration.
-- June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
WAITING IN JAIL
Thomas Michael Murphy, 54-year-old Balboa Island man, is in jail after
he was found guilty Thursday of touching three young girls
inappropriately and possessing a large volume of child pornography.
Murphy faces life in prison, but his fate will be determined by
Superior Court Judge Frank Fasel during the Jan. 11 sentencing.
Murphy was found guilty of four felony counts of lewd act with a child
below 14 years of age and one misdemeanor count of child pornography.
Each of the felony counts includes an enhancement that states Murphy
committed the crimes with the intent of gratifying his sexual desires.
Newport Beach Police arrested the former self-employed scuba
instructor on May 2, 2000 after they seized about 10,000 photographs and
200 movies from his computer at his Ruby Avenue home. Two girls aged 9
and one other 11-year-old came forward with the allegations.
In other news, Newport Beach Police and the Orange County Coroner are
still investigating the suspicious death of a a 41-year-old Huntington
Beach man found dead Monday at the base of a parking structure on Newport
Center Drive.
Jeffrey Paris Wall was an attorney with O’Melveny & Myers in Newport
Center. Police say further tests are being performed on Wall to determine
whether the incident was a homicide, suicide or an accident.
-- Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached
at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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