THE TAO OF STEVE “The outside...
THE TAO OF STEVE
“The outside looks almost identical to the way it did before, but
once people come inside, they’re in for quite a shock.”
-- Steve Herbert, co-owner of the Cannery Seafood of the Pacific,
on the restaurant’s new design. Jellyfish lights, a waterfall and an
upstairs sushi lounge are now part of the eatery, which reopened
after 2 1/2 years
“This thing had the makings of a civil war, but in the end, it did
not go there. Everybody has taken the high road.”
-- Steve Bromberg, Newport Beach councilman, on the city’s 6-0
vote to approve a Mormon temple with a 90-foot steeple on Bonita
Canyon Drive
“They just did not feel the need to obey the law. But if everybody
believed that, we would have dogs running loose all over the city.”
-- Sgt. Steve Shulman, on why the Newport Beach Police Department
has repeatedly ticketed Lynne and Philip Butterfield for letting
their dog, Red Baron, swim in the ocean unleashed. The Butterfields’
contention that the city’s leash laws do not extend to the water was
quashed by an Orange County judge
“Something really bad one day is going to happen ... I think that,
constitutionally, we have the parameters to take drastic action.”
-- Bromberg, on cracking down on Fourth of July in West Newport
“With a 72-hour period, we kind of go from an empty container to
being a mini-city here.”
-- Steve Beazley, deputy general manager of the Orange County
Fair, on preparing for the fair’s opening day
“If they had agreed to abide by rules of a 50-foot height limit,
we certainly would not be here tonight.”
-- Steven Brombal, president of the Bonita Canyon Homeowners
Assn., on Mormon Church officials asking for a 124-foot-high steeple
for their proposed Mormon temple
“That pole will come down.”
-- Bromberg, on a lone pole on Little Balboa that is holding up
plans to put utility lines underground
NICHOLS ON STEVE
“Until that is changed, I’m going to stick it to [Steve] Bromberg
every once in a while.”
-- Dick Nichols, Newport Beach councilman-elect, on his soon-to-be
fellow councilman’s dealings with the Village Inn, a restaurant in
Bromberg’s district that has drawn noise complaints
OH, YOU’RE TALKING ABOUT A BOAT
“She can’t just get by on her looks anymore.”
-- John Matthews, a lifelong Newport Beach resident, on a 1941
Newport Beach fire boat he’s restoring
THE WORLD ACCORDING TO TOM
“I’m sure that some of my votes will displease some of you some of
the time. I take comfort, though, in the fact that it is logically
impossible for me to offend all of you all of the time.”
-- Tom Egan, one of two new Newport-Mesa Unified School District
trustees, while introducing himself at a meeting
“I don’t want to get too excited, but I’m reminded of Egan’s first
law: If the salad is good, then the rest of the dinner is good.”
-- Egan, on preliminary election results that showed him winning
“We are a prudent city, and we like to get the most bang for our
buck. Why spend money on real estate when the Internet offers more
and more information that is getting to be pretty good.”
-- Egan, as president of the Costa Mesa Library Foundation, on the
2,400-square-foot Costa Mesa Technology Branch Library. The new
branch, which is in a strip mall, offers 27 computer stations with
Internet access and little print material
TRUST IN POLITICIANS
“You are in way over your head.”
-- Wayne Morris, Costa Mesa resident, on whether new Mayor Karen
Robinson will have enough time to be the city’s mayor
“Our city councils -- past and present -- are well intended, but
very naive, very liberal, very permissive. They have an attitude of
denial, indifference and silence that frustrates the electorate.”
-- Chris Steel, Costa Mesa councilman, at a public forum at
Vanguard University
“There are certain things that have taken place over the last 48
hours that have caused me to question it. I’m not sure what I’m going
to do.”
-- John Heffernan, Newport Beach City Councilman, vacillating on
whether to leave his seat
“I think the Brown Act is ridiculous, but it is in effect and if
we have to go by it, then the foundations should also.”
-- Steel, Costa Mesa councilman, on whether foundations should be
ruled by the state’s open-government laws
“If the election outcome had been such that if a significant
amount of [Ron] Winship votes would have pushed Taylor over the edge,
I would call for a reelection. That’s how much I think this is not
right.”
-- Gary Adams, a Newport Beach councilman reelected Nov. 5, on
hearing about a phone message sent out by his campaign manager that
claimed that Winship was a Greenlighter when he wasn’t
DON’T WE ALL
“I want to win so that I can buy a house on Lake Como in Italy and
live next to Versace.”
-- Brian Como, one of many trying to win Saturday night’s
SuperLotto Plus drawing.
FIERY QUOTES
“This is our fifth house fire in three days. And it’s only
Wednesday.”
-- Bruce Hinkle, lead operations coordinator for the American Red
Cross of Orange County, on the “crazy week” he and his colleagues
were having while at a Costa Mesa house fire
“I was going to paint that house next week. Not anymore.”
-- Luis Pineda, while painting a home across the street from a
burning Costa Mesa house
“Historically, when we have rainy weather, we traditionally have
boat fires.”
-- Sgt. Ron Peoples of the Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol,
speaking about a 51-foot sailboat that sustained about $10,000 in
damages during a fire on Dec. 29, a rainy Saturday
“We were just inside a minute earlier.”
-- Julie May, Costa Mesa resident, watching her home in the 100
block of Lexington Avenue burn on March 2. No one was injured, but
several pets were lost in the townhouse fire
“You can’t tell a person to clean up their garage, just as you
can’t walk into somebody’s house and ask them to do the dirty dishes
or vacuum their carpet.”
-- Robert Myers, a resident of Monticello Town Homes Complex,
which had two fires back-to-back, on the possibility of having the
complex put regulations on garage contents. Fire officials say how
people store their possessions and what they store has an effect on a
fire
“People are still dealing with the trauma. Some of them are even
afraid to flip on the stove to make a cup of tea.”
-- Julia Cross, board member of the Monticello Homeowners Assn.,
on how residents of Monticello Town Homes are dealing with the two
unrelated fires that consumed several homes
RISE OF A CITY COUNCILMAN
“I don’t feel that expressing my viewpoints is grounds for
removal. Where is the tolerance and understanding for my point of
view?”
-- Allan Mansoor, member of the Costa Mesa Human Relations
Committee, on his right to post comments some find offensive without
being taken off the committee
“It appears that, unfortunately, the City Council has appointed
the kind of person who is more interested in fanning the flames than
extinguishing them.”
-- Rusty Kennedy, executive director of the Orange County Human
Relations Committee, on the Costa Mesa City Council’s April
appointment of Allan Mansoor to the Costa Mesa Human Relations
Committee. Kennedy said it appears that Mansoor regularly posts
comments on a Web site that are offensive to Latinos, homosexuals and
immigrants
“It was like David and Goliath. I was the outsider and a longshot,
yet I won over the incumbent mayor. I attribute it to all the
grass-roots support.”
-- Mansoor, who was elected to the Costa Mesa City Council in
November
THE LEECE SHE COULD DO
“But I chose, rather than taking the easy way out, to continue one
last time to represent a viewpoint that I’m sorry will no longer be
represented.”
-- Wendy Leece, outgoing Newport-Mesa school board trustee, on why
she ran for reelection
“We have been talking for years as a board that we finally have to
get back to spelling tests. Enough of this not grading their spelling
because it would hurt their self-esteem.”
-- Leece, Newport-Mesa Unified School Board trustee, on the
spelling improvements on the Stanford 9 test district students took
last year
HOW CAN YOU ARGUE WITH THAT?
“In New York City, people are still pretty apprehensive because of
[the terrorist attacks]. This seems like the last place that would
happen. There’s girls in bikinis and beer. How could Al Queda have a
problem with that?”
-- Dan Contento, on why he traveled from the East Coast to Newport
Beach to celebrate the Fourth of July
JUDGMENT CALL
“My goal was to have a successful campaign, not an interesting
one.”
-- Glenda Sanders, a Corona del Mar attorney, who was elected to
county Judge Office No. 27
“Has a miracle happened?”
-- Gay Sandoval of Costa Mesa on hearing that Judge Ronald C.
Kline asked the courts to remove his name from the November ballot,
on which he was running for re-election to the Orange County Superior
Court. Sandoval was running a write-in campaign for his seat
“I have always wanted to be a judge. The question has always been
a matter of when to run or to seek an appointment by applying for a
position with the governor.”
-- Karen Robinson, Costa Mesa councilwoman, on her decision to
launch a late-hour write-in campaign to unseat Kline. Robinson had
been on the City Council for little more than a year
THE TWO FACES OF AN AIRPORT OPPONENT
“My heart instinct is not to see that happen. I’m just being
realistic. Not like my friends in Irvine who say, ‘Oh, we can just
shove it elsewhere.’ I’m saying, ‘Where do we shove it?’”
-- Russell Niewiarowski, president of the New Millennium Group,
which was working to get a commercial airport at the El Toro Marine
base, on his idea to build an international airport at Seal Beach or
dramatically expand passenger capacity at John Wayne Airport
“I’m tired of this airport fight. That’s been a tough sell,
looking at what’s right. I can’t force people to look.”
-- Niewiarowski, on why he quit the pro-airport organization on
June 7
A GOOD QUESTION
“If dogs can have a park, why can’t we?”
-- Roger Cetina, a 14-year-old Costa Mesa skateboarder, on a skate
park
THE NEVER-ENDING STORY
“People who use John Wayne are a little less sensitive to the
economy. They’re richer.”
-- John Heimlich, director of economic and market research with
the Air Transport Assn., on why John Wayne Airport seems to have
bucked the national downward trend in holiday travel, with figures
showing that the 2001 numbers were close to those of 2000
“The troops are fanning out through the community to do what’s
necessary to defeat [the initiative]. That’s our goal.”
-- Dave Ellis, spokesman of the Airport Working Group, on efforts
to raise $2 million to defeat Measure W, an anti-El Toro measure on
the March 5 ballot
“We’ll definitely be supportive of a resolution. The one as worded
needs some tuning. Hopefully, we’ll have an alternative the majority
can be supportive of.”
-- Gary Monahan, Costa Mesa City Councilman, on a resolution
coming before the council to oppose Measure W
“I’m like the rest of you. I’ve got my finger crossed.”
-- Supervisor Jim Silva on election night, speaking about Measure
Wwhich supports a park at El Toro. It passed by about 58%
“They threw the baby out with the bathwater because the right way
to fly it, which is far, far superior, was never given to people as a
choice.”
-- Robert McGowan, a member of the New Millennium Group, which
lead an effort to get a new airport initiative on the November ballot
“We still need that ink on the FAA letter.”
-- Bob Burnham, Newport Beach’s city attorney, on getting the
Federal Aviation Administration to promise in writing that it will
not sue the city if a new John Wayne Settlement Agreement is put in
place
“They are now over areas where they haven’t been before.”
-- Jerry Snyder, public affairs officer for the FAA’s Western
Pacific Region, on the increase in flights over areas like Costa
Mesa’s Westside
“There are many, many other steps that have to be taken before El
Toro can be ruled out. We’re very hopeful that El Toro is still an
option.”
-- Becki Ames, chief of staff for George Nakano, a state
assemblyman from Torrance who has a proposed a bill that would hold
up federal money for areas that don’t bear their fair share of air
transportation burdens
“If the lid comes off of John Wayne Airport, we’re all in a heap
of trouble.”
-- Dennis O’Neil, Newport Beach city councilman, emphasizing why
the noise restrictions and flight caps at John Wayne Airport are so
important. An extension to 2015 was passed by the Orange County
supervisors and will now go to Washington, D.C.
WHAT’S THE FREQUENCY, PAUL?
“I thought I was on the wrong channel.”
-- Paul Bunney, Costa Mesa resident, to City Council members about
a city TV ad in Spanish on Channel 74
STEEL ... ON STEEL
“When I was first elected, I didn’t have the best image. I was not
looked at as a team player, but I have gone out of my way to give
[fellow council members] what they want -- to a point. I hope they
will give me the benefit of the doubt and second some of my motions
-- at least give me a chance.”
-- Chris Steel, on serving on the Costa Mesa City Council. Steel
was named the Daily Pilot’s newsmaker of the year for 2001
CAN YOU TOP THIS?
“We’ve been attacked by wild packs of dogs at least a dozen times.
-- Andy Mandell, a.k.a. Mr. Diabetes of Florida, on the downside
of his national walking trip that began in Pensacola in January to
teach the public about the disease
WHAT ABOUT THE CHEERLEADERS?
“I think it went too far. Some parents got too upset, and some
girls expected too much.”
-- Dana Odell, applauding Newport Harbor High School Principal
Michael Vossen’s decision to have 17 girls who did not make the
cheerleading squads try out again after there was controversy over
the original selection process. Odell’s daughter, Katie, made the
first cut
“I’ve already not made it once. And after all this, I don’t know
if I want to deal with this again.”
-- Jessica Cochens, Newport Harbor High School student, on whether
she’ll try out for cheerleading again. Cochens was one of the 17 who
did not make it onto the teams in late 2001
THINKING OF SEPT. 11
“The photograph of the twin towers burning reminds me daily that
my challenges pale compared to the victims of Sept. 11.”
-- Lyle Davis, a Newport Beach resident who was on business in
Newark, N.J., on Sept. 11, 2001, on watching both World Trade Center
towers crumble and how his world has changed forever
“I don’t think this will happen again, the flight attendants won’t
let it happen again.”
-- Lynette Palmquist, a flight attendant who works out of John
Wayne Airport, on not allowing terrorists to take over a passenger
plane again
SAY AGAIN?
“It’s like you have to keep pouring more coffee in the cup or you
have an empty cup in your hand.”
-- Brian Slater, a Newport Beach Fire Department paramedic, on
trying to play the bagpipes
“We’re meeting our disinfection goals.”
-- Bob Ooten, the Orange County Sanitation District’s director of
maintenance and operations, on using chlorination to clean up the
coast
“Visibly, it is very noticeable, or I should say not noticeable.”
-- Bill Morris, Costa Mesa’s director of public services, on
placing utility lines underground on the Westside
SO LONG, PARTNER
“The floor plan is not made for a family. The family room is in
the back, not near the kitchen where the family can hang around. I’m
a hands-on grandma and I like the children to be around the kitchen
when I’m cooking.”
-- Beverly Cohen, a Bay Shore Drive resident, on why John Wayne’s
former home needs to be demolished
WHAT’S IN A NAME?
“The name change will let people know worldwide that Costa Mesa is
near the ocean, which is a location that makes the city blessed.”
-- Janice Davidson, chairwoman of Citizens for the Improvement of
Costa Mesa, on the organization’s plan to lobby the City Council on
Monday to change the city’s name to Costa Mesa-by-the-sea
FAME’S TEACHINGS
“He stole me away from another car dealer.”
-- Mike Tyson, boxer, on why he houses his cars with Nader
Amirvand, the owner of Auto Market Lotus of Orange County in Costa
Mesa. Tyson stopped by the Harbor Boulevard car dealership to pick up
a Lamborghini from his private collection
“When you put 15 random people together like that, you learn that
everyone has a really fascinating story and everyone has something to
teach you.”
-- Sarah Jones of Newport Beach, on being part of the cast of
“Survivor 4: Marquesas.” Jones was voted off the reality TV show
early
“Golf courses are like women, er, people. They all have different
personalities.”
-- Fuzzy Zoeller, professional golfing legend, at the Toshiba
Community Breakfast at the Newport Marriott
-- Compiled by S.J. Cahn
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