Week in review
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A contractor for the Balboa Bay Club paid $60,000 in fines for causing
sulfide levels in nearby waters to reach unacceptable limits. The
construction company, Snyder Langston, said it accepts full
responsibility for the violations.
City Councilman John Heffernan said he will wait to get a look at the
field of City Council candidates for the upcoming election before
deciding whether to vacate his post early. Heffernan had announced in
April that he would resign two years into his four-year term, then
changed his mind, saying he had some things to consider before he made a
final decision.
The city’s Environmental Quality Affairs Citizens Advisory Committee
announced it will ask council members to look for ways to stop
“mansionization.” Some say the issue should be addressed in the city’s
general plan update process, but others say the matter can’t wait.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
Guilty verdict in fast-food murder
The jury came out with a guilty verdict for 42-year-old Ramadan
Dokovic Wednesday. Dokovic was convicted of shooting and killing Miroslav
Maric, a 49-year-old Newport Beach resident.
The shooting, billed by Costa Mesa Police as the most public one ever
in this city, was witnessed by several people going about their everyday
lives. It happened the afternoon of May 18, 2001, in the crowded parking
lot of a Jack in the Box restaurant at the corner of 17th Street and
Tustin Avenue.
The prosecution maintained that Dokovic committed the crime during a
robbery because the purpose of his meeting was to secure a few stolen
Rolex watches. Investigators and attorneys alike said the case was
complex and convoluted because of Dokovic’s and Maric’s involvement with
a credit card fraud ring that operated in the Newport-Mesa area.
The fraud ring was reportedly operated by Mike Dokovic, also known as
Ilmija Frjlukcic, Ramadan Dokovic’s nephew.
The defense argued that Ramadan Dokovic shot Maric in self defense. It
took the 11-woman, one-man jury a little over three days to reach the
verdict. Dokovic could face anywhere between 25 years to life in prison.
He is scheduled to be sentenced June 28.
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
Relief for Costa Mesa businesses
A handful of business owners breathed a sigh of relief last week as
the Costa Mesa City Council voted not to impose any further regulations
on cyber cafes and also allow the in-home business on West 19th Street to
continue operating indefinitely.
In separate actions, council members secured the future of a dozen
city businesses by endorsing business as usual.
The council voted to allow 10 in-home businesses on West 19th Street
to operate even after the property title is sold, and even though the
small section of the street -- formally known as the transitional zone --
was returned to strictly residential.
Likewise, the council opted not to enforce more stringent regulations
on two city cyber cafes, saying the unique business offered a safe form
of entertainment that was not subject to stricter enforcement.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
Nothing quiet on the coastal front
The Orange Coast Assn. meeting last week didn’t turn out to be as
quiet as most folk expected.
An appearance by Newport Beach environmentalist Rodolphe
Streichenberger, a commission nemesis, sparked a confrontation over the
legality of the agency on Wednesday.
Standing up in the luncheon room of the Newport Dunes Waterfront
Resort, Streichenberger accused the commissioners of having too much
power.
“I announced to her I am a critic,” Streichenberger said later about
his stir with the commissioners. “I said, ‘You [commissioners] are
outmoded, you are backward.”’
Streichenberger’s five-year battle against the state commission came
to a head in April 2001, when a state Superior Court judge agreed with
the environmentalist’s claim that the agency is unconstitutional.
He sued the commission in April 1997, shortly after it refused him a
permit to operate a marine habitat about 300 yards off the Balboa Pier.
He founded the Marine Forests Society.
* Paul Clinton covers the environment, John Wayne Airport and
politics. He may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
Library plans inch forward
Supporters of a new Mariners Branch Library are celebrating the fact
that they met their fund-raising goal last week, raising $1 million in
three months, including a $500,000 chunk from Donna and John Crean. This
coup makes the project eligible for $2 million in state funds.
The proposed school-public library would replace the aging branch
library and be used as the sole school library for Mariners students.
Newport Beach and school district officials unveiled the design for
the library project on Wednesday.
To address safety concerns, the 2,000-square-foot school children’s
section will be separated from the public children’s portion of the
library by a roll-down door during school hours.
The HOPE program celebrated its official opening on Thursday at its
headquarters on the Whittier Elementary School campus in Costa Mesa.
The district created HOPE -- Health, Opportunity, Preparation and
Education -- to redouble its efforts to get pre-schoolers ready for
kindergarten on a variety of levels. The program merges existing and new
resources including hiring Lorie Hoggard, principal of Sonora School, as
the new director of early childhood education.* Deirdre Newman covers
education. She may be reached at (949) 574-4221 or by e-mail at o7
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