-- Compiled by June Casagrande INSIDE CITY...
-- Compiled by June Casagrande
INSIDE CITY HALL
Here are some decisions coming out of the Newport Beach City
Council meeting on Tuesday:
HEFFERNAN SEAT
Councilman John Heffernan officially withdrew his statement
earlier this year that he would resign his council seat, saying that
there is much work that still needs to be done. Heffernan said he
plans to finish his council term, contrary to his previously
announcement that he plans to step down this fall. “I’m staying put
and will continue to represent District 7 for the remainder of my
term,” Heffernan said.
MORMON TEMPLE
In anticipation of a Nov. 12 hearing on a proposed Mormon temple,
council members and staff spent some time Tuesday discussing ways to
keep that meeting from running into the early-morning hours. Two
Planning Commission hearings on the temple each attracted more than
200 people to council chambers, and the hearings lasted past 11 p.m.
In hopes of getting home before sunrise at their first meeting next
month, council members agreed to meet at 6:30 instead of 7 p.m. and
asked staff to clear the agenda of all but the most urgent items.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“I think it will be a very long meeting,” Councilwoman Norma
Glover said.
CITY COMMUNICATIONS
In response to resident complaints that it can be difficult to get
information about city government, staff gave a presentation on the
state of resident communications in the city. Assistant City Manager
Dave Kiff gave an overview of the city government cable TV
broadcasts, the activities of the city’s Public Information Officer
Marilee Jackson and the city’s Web site. In response to one
resident’s request to make audiocassette tapes available for
purchase, City Clerk LaVonne Harkless said it might be possible for
the city to purchase the equipment to copy tapes into a more
user-friendly format.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“We have a fairly advanced Web site for a city, but there’s always
more that can be done,” Kiff said.
CANCELED CONTRACT
Council members decided to cancel the franchise agreement with one
of its trash haulers, Ocean Waste and Recycling LLC, after the
company for months failed to comply with some reporting requirements.
A representative of the company presented documents and a compelling
argument to show that the company had fixed its problems, but, in the
end, council members agreed that the business relationship should
nonetheless come to an end.
FINGERPRINT EQUIPMENT
The Police and Fire departments will get a new, state-of-the-art
fingerprinting system. City Council members approved a $57,000
expenditure for hardware and software comprising the Identix Live
Scan Fingerprinting System. The last time the city’s fingerprinting
technologies were updated was in the mid-1990s.
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