Surf City turns away MTV
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City officials are balking at a request by pop cable channel MTV to
host summer programming from Surf City beaches.
Others feel that this is exactly what the city needs.
“I think it would be great for the city,” Surf City resident Julie
Plozai, 22, said. “People that watch MTV are going to be the people
taking vacations here.”
But city officials aren’t interested.
“Bringing a whole lot of kids in the summer is really not
something we need to do,” Mayor Cathy Green said. “We’re already so
filled up in the summer, it just doesn’t make a lot of sense.”
MTV producers had hoped to air nine weeks of their summer
programming from a beach house stationed in Surf City. Popular
programs such as “Video Clash,” “Spankin’ New Music” and “Total
Request Live” would have been aired from a spot near the Huntington
Beach Pier.
“I think it could be a good opportunity, provided that it was
something that the city wanted to do,” said Doug Traub, president of
the Huntington Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau. “It would give
us national exposure for a prolonged period of time.”
Traub, who has worked with the city to promote it as an overnight
tourist destination, said he succeeded in negotiating with MTV to
shrink the amount of filming time, but that city officials were still
hesitant, given reduced resources.
“Staffing is down this year, and Downtown residents have a hard
time already with all of the events we have,” Police Chief Kenneth
Small said. “For me, the issue is how many people, where are they
going to park and how are we going to find the resources to handle
it.”
Traub said that MTV may also look at the state beaches for a
locale.
A Huntington State Beach lifeguard supervisor, Lt. Mike Brousard,
said that no request has been made yet by MTV, but did say they would
consider the issue.
“It’s hard to say now, but if they put an application in, I’m sure
we’d entertain it seriously,” Brousard said.
Plozai, who works at the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, is sure
that it would draw needed attention to the city and plans to speak to
that effect at the next City Council meeting.
“If [MTV] comes, I will be down there on my break every day,” she
said.
City passes law on what demonstrators can carry
The City Council on Monday passed a law that will prohibit
demonstrators from carrying objects that can be used as weapons.
“Specifically, the ordinance is concerned with what types of items
people can utilize at any type of rally or public assembly,” City
Atty. Jennifer McGrath said. “The focus was public safety and making
sure people can’t utilize objects that can become weapons.”
Stakes holding up signs, for example, will be limited in size and
width. Metal bars will be banned, as will piping, large slabs of wood
and baseball bats.
Certain things seen as harmless were removed from the list, such
as plastic signs and inflatable devices.
“I took out some of the stuff I thought that the council and the
public found were questionable,” Police Chief Kenneth Small said. “It
had things in there like signs or banners constructed of anything
other than paper.”
The city of Los Angeles has a very similar ordinance, McGrath
said.
“This is a tool to enable [police officers] to diffuse a situation
before it becomes violent,” McGrath said.
The ordinance will require a second reading at the next City
Council meeting, scheduled for 7 p.m. Tuesday in the council
chambers.
Residents will have a say in search for manager
Residents are invited to take part in the search for a new city
administrator at a public forum later this month.
City Administrator Ray Silver will retire in July after 13 years.
Silver took over as city administrator in 1997 after serving for
seven years as assistant to former City Administrator Michael
Uberuaga. Before coming to Huntington, Silver served as city manager
in the cities of Coronado and Upland, and as director of planning and
land use for San Diego County.
The City Council interviewed five firms on Monday before settling
on the L.A.-based executive search firm Maximus.
City officials are hoping to solicit input from business owners
and residents to be used in the recruitment process.
It will be held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Jan. 26 at the Huntington
Beach Central Library’s Talbert Room. The central library is at 7111
Talbert Ave.
For more information, call (714) 536-5577.
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