COSTA MESA One of city’s founders and...
COSTA MESA
One of city’s founders and greatest advocate dies
The venerable historian of Costa Mesa, Bob Wilson, passed away
Jan. 4 of congestive heart failure. Wilson worked arduously to get
the city incorporated in 1953 and served as mayor three times.
* City leaders announced Monday night that another proposed
settlement agreement has been reached with former City Atty. Jerry
Scheer. Peter Brown, the attorney who represents the city, is
confident that all parties will sign this agreement. The last
agreement fizzled because Senior Deputy City Atty. Marianne Milligan
didn’t sign it.
-- Deirdre Newman
EDUCATION
Community college district on financial watch list
The state chancellor’s office has placed Coast Community College
District on a financial watch list to monitor its operating budget
more closely. Coast and a dozen other community college districts
statewide were on the list, released Wednesday by the chancellor for
California Community Colleges, which identified financially troubled
districts. Coast is listed as a Priority 3 district because its
budget reserves slipped below the 5% recommended by the chancellor’s
office.
* UC and community college students will see fee increases up to
44% under the budget proposed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger Friday.
Community college fees will go up from $18 per unit to $26 per
unit to help prop up the state budget. UC fees will increase 10% for
undergraduate students and 40% for graduate students. Public schools
would receive $216 more per student next year, but some special
programs might get reduced funding under the proposed budget.
* The State Board of Education Thursday approved a request by
Newport-Mesa Unified School District to waive a $750,000 penalty for
not providing enough instructional time to students at one high
school. To offset the 30 hours lost, the district agreed to add 1,800
instructional minutes this academic year and next at Middle College
High School.
* Newport Harbor High School’s newly-refurbished swimming pool is
open for business. The new pool has fresh tiles, new decks with
better drainage and a state-of-the-art timing system, making it a
potential venue for national swimming meets.
-- Marisa O’Neil
PUBLIC SAFETY
Costa Mesa police bust extensive pot farm in office
Costa Mesa police arrested 42-year-old Paul Harrington on
suspicion of cultivating the marijuana for sale after they searched
the office of Starving College Students Moving Co. in the 2000 block
of Placentia Avenue on Tuesday.
Detectives found about 1,050 plants as well as another one pound
of marijuana and a handgun. Harrington had set up an extensive indoor
cultivation organization. The total value of the drugs seized were
estimated at $450,000. Harrington also stole electricity to grow the
plants indoors, officials said.
* Costa Mesa saw an increase in violent crimes but a decrease in
property crimes during the first nine months of 2003 compared to the
same time in 2002, a report released by the state attorney general’s
office on Wednesday showed.
Overall, crime in the city was up by 1.4%. Violent crimes, a
category that includes murders, rapes, robberies and assaults,
increased by 10.4% and property crimes -- burglaries and auto thefts
-- dropped by 1.6%.
-- Deepa Bharath
ENVIRONMENT
County denied ability to clear overgrown San Diego Creek
Orange County officials learned they can’t proceed with clearing
part of San Diego Creek, which they say has a reduced floodwater
capacity, because it’s overgrown and full of sediment. The California
Coastal Commission’s executive director on Wednesday rejected an
emergency permit request for the creek clearing and asked the county
to use the usual permit process.
-- Alicia Robinson
NEWPORT BEACH
Greenlight plans to sue city over Marinapark vote
The Greenlight committee announced plans to file a lawsuit against
the city within a few weeks over a vote on the Marinapark hotel
project. Though the matter is scheduled to go before voters,
Greenlight leaders say that it should be labeled a Greenlight vote.
City Council members disagreed that the hotel project triggers a
Greenlight vote because it’s not expected to generate too many
peak-hour car trips. Greenlight leaders want Measure S guidelines
changed to include total floor area in the list of factors used when
considering hotels. City officials are considering a similar move.
-- June Casagrande
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