Council will discuss city attorney today...
Council will discuss city attorney today
The Costa Mesa City Council will hold a special meeting in closed
session at 8 a.m. today to make a decision regarding City Atty. Jerry
Scheer.
On Sept. 9, the council voted unanimously to place Scheer and
Assistant City Atty. Tom Woods on paid administrative leave after a
general employee performance evaluation.
During that same session, council members also voted to halt all
business with an outside legal firm, audit the city attorney’s office
and set up a subcommittee to further review the performance of the
city’s top two attorneys. A week later, a unanimous council vote
reinstated Wood.
On Oct. 4, the council voted 3 to 2 to reinstate Scheer, who
returned to work Oct. 7.
Last week, though, the City Council sent a letter with an
ultimatum to Scheer -- return to his post full time or resign. In the
Oct. 17 letter, the city’s outside legal counsel outlined a series of
requirements of Scheer as the city attorney and offered him a chance
to quit if he wishes.
The letter advised that if Scheer wants to continue working as the
city attorney, the “council will be proceeding with his evaluation at
an upcoming meeting in the near future.”
Scheer has been with the city attorney’s office for almost 16
years, providing legal services to the City Council, the Planning
Commission, the Costa Mesa Redevelopment Agency and city departments.
Student enrollment hits all-time high at UCI
UC Irvine’s fall student enrollments have hit an all-time high,
university officials said Tuesday.
The number of undergraduates went up 8.6%, graduates 11.7% and
graduate health science students 1.5%. The total number of students
went up 8.7%.
UCI study: ADHD can lead to bedwetting
Children with attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder may also
tend to struggle with bedwetting and other bowel and urinary tract
problems, a UC Irvine College of Medicine study has found.
The study, that university officials say is the first to
investigate this issue, will be presented at the annual meeting of
the American Academy of Pediatrics in Boston. The study was
spearheaded by Dr. Barry Duel, assistant professor of urology and a
specialist in childhood urological diseases at the UCI Medical
Center’s University Children’s Hospital.
The researchers found that children with attention
deficit-hyperactivity disorder scored three times higher than
children without the disorder on a questionnaire that surveyed issues
such as preadolescent bedwetting and improper bowel control.
Between 3% and 5% of all children in the United States have some
degree of attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder. Previous studies
have suggested that about 30% of such children suffer from
bedwetting.
Change smoke alarm batteries, officials urge
The Newport Beach Fire Department urges residents to change smoke
alarm batteries when clocks are set back an hour as a result of
daylight savings time each fall. Daylight savings time ends at 2 a.m.
Sunday, when clocks will be turned back one hour.
Fire officials also suggest the same be done in the spring when
the clock is set forward by an hour.
Also, once the batteries are changed, be sure to test the alarms.
This simple act, officials say, will help protect residents in case a
fire occurs.
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