2 longtime Newport Beach staffers retire...
2 longtime Newport Beach staffers retire
Two longtime staffers of Newport Beach’s Harbor Resources
Department have announced they will retire.
Tony Melum, director of the department and a city staff member for
25 years, and Wes Armand, harbor inspector with the city for 18
years, have announced separately that they will retire.
Melum may continue to work with the city as a consultant,
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said.
As head of the department, Melum’s has overseen the city’s most
valuable resource: Newport Harbor. Like Melum, Armand’s work as
inspector required him to be out on the harbor most of the time.
“Tony and Wes are institutions around Newport Beach,” said Kiff,
who was supervisor to Melum and Armand. “They’ll join a growing
alumni team of past city workers who stay involved and stay
interested in this city for as long as good health allows them to do
so, so just because they leave our employment doesn’t mean we lose
their knowledge, talents and commitment to the Harbor. I wish them
the best and will miss them.”
Melum and Armand declined to be interviewed.
-- June Casagrande
Clean air program earns award
ZEV*NET, a shared-use car program at UC Irvine has won a Blue Sky
Merit Award, marking the second time this year that the program has
been lauded for its efforts to address two major challenges facing
Southern California: traffic congestion and air quality.
ZEV*NET was one of four organizations chosen this year for the
award, which recognizes outstanding marketplace contributions to
advanced, sustainable transportation. The award was presented Nov. 7
at the Skirball Cultural Center in West Los Angeles by
WestStart-CALSTART, an advanced transportation technologies
consortium based in Pasadena.
The program combines rail and zero- and low-emission vehicles in a
far-reaching initiative led by UCI’s National Fuel Cell Research
Center and Institute of Transportation Studies, both affiliated with
the Henry Samueli School of Engineering.
The goal of the pilot program is to use today’s emerging
technologies -- zero- and low-emission vehicles, stationary fuel
cells, advanced communication and global positioning technologies and
the Internet -- to solve complex problems such as traffic congestion,
air pollution and oil dependency.
In September, ZEV*NET won the 2002 Transportation Excellence Award
from the Orange County Transportation Authority. For more information
about ZEV*NET, visit www.zevnet.org.
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