EDUCATION Newport Beach boy turns soap hearts...
EDUCATION
Newport Beach boy turns soap hearts into profits
After attending at two-day school workshop on how to make soap at
school, 10-year-old David Penner of Newport Beach decided to turn his
new-found interest into a profitable business. He sold more than 100
soap hearts prior to Valentine’s Day and will give 20% of the profits
to the American Heart Assn. in honor of his grandmother, who survived
a heart attack in November.
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District decided to move toward
constructing a new building at Newport Harbor High School due to the
instability of Loats Theater and Robins Hall. Both structures were
determined to be seismically unsafe according to a study conducted by
structural engineers. The board voted, in a 6-1 vote with Trustee Tom
Egan dissenting, for a new building that will maintain the current
facade instead of retrofitting the old ones.
* CHRISTINE CARRILLO covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
NEWPORT BEACH
City will look at luxury resort plans at Marinapark
Councilmen Steve Bromberg, Tod Ridgeway and Don Webb will form a
committee to examine a developer’s plans for a 110-room luxury resort
on the peninsula at Marinapark.
Residents who attended Tuesday’s City Council meeting to support
preserving the Port Theatre were surprised to learn that an item on
the agenda wasn’t really about preservation. The city postponed
voting on whether to designate three city theaters as “landmarks,” a
designation that would give their owners more freedom but would not
bestow and historical or preservationist status.
A fire station in Santa Ana Heights would use at least $3 million
in funds set aside for redevelopment of the area. Though a handful of
residents have protested, saying that they should not pay the full
cost of a station that will serve other areas, county supervisors
gets the final say.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
BUSINESS
Ribs and burgers to replace Aysia 101 in Newport
It was a week in which Newport-Mesa learned it had attracted two
new restaurants and a health conscious-grocer.
A San Bernardino-based restaurateur plans to install two
family-style eateries on Mariner’s Mile to replace the failed Aysia
101. Rib house Tony Roma’s and Irish-themed Bennigan’s are expected
to open in June at the 2901 W. Coast Highway address.
Also, San Diego-based healthier-foods grocer Henry’s Marketplace
announced it would open a third Orange County location, in Costa
Mesa, within the month.
Henry’s would go in as an anchor tenant in Costa Mesa Square,
which is located at the intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Nutmeg
Place. Occupying a 25,000-square-foot space, Henry’s will offer fresh
fruit and produce, a deli, bulk foods and vitamins.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
COSTA MESA
Huge turnout cancels redevelopment meeting
A fired-up crowd of industrial property owners packed an
auditorium in the Police Department Monday night to protest the
city’s tentative plans to add its properties to the downtown
redevelopment zone. But the overflow crowd was more than the
auditorium could handle, forcing the Redevelopment Agency to cancel
the meeting and try again in a larger venue in March. The city is
contemplating adding 434 acres to its downtown redevelopment zone.
The city also released information that the Redevelopment Agency
owes more than $41 million in principal and interest on five
different debts. Some of the industrial property owners charge this
is overwhelming evidence that, if the new areas added to the zone,
the agency will use the property taxes it collects to pay off its
debt instead of reinvesting in the area.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
PUBLIC SAFETY
State says violent crime dips 25% in Costa Mesa in 2002
Crimes dropped in Costa Mesa in almost every category during the
first nine months of 2002, the state Attorney General’s office
reported Tuesday.
Violent crimes plummeted 25.2%, according to the preliminary
report. The only category that increased was thefts.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety. She may be reached at (949)
574-4226.
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