NEWPORT BEACH It takes developers to replace...
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NEWPORT BEACH
It takes developers
to replace a village
Lido Marina Village could be replaced by a luxury hotel and
time-share condominiums if two local developers have their way. Some
property owners in the village, however, don’t want to sell, and
members of the slow-growth Greenlight committee also showed their
opposition last week.
* An eelgrass-planting program in Newport Harbor could provide
relief for private pier owners who want to dredge under their docks
but can’t afford the high cost of replacing eel grass. The Army Corps
of Engineers should begin work by early May to plant beds of eelgrass
in eight spots in the harbor.
* Morning Canyon is eroding, threatening to damage the 22 homes
that line its banks. The city wants to help fix the problem, but some
leaders say that residents should chip in part of the $2-million
cost.
* Hoag Hospital chief executive officer of 29 years Michael
Stephens has announced he will retire next year. The hospital will
launch an executive search for a replacement.
-- June Casagrande
EDUCATION
Test scores show increase over last year’s results
Nearly all Newport-Mesa Unified schools showed improvement on last
year’s statewide tests, according to scores released Monday. The base
scores of the 2003 Academic Performance Index, on a scale of 200 to
1,000, represent the latest data based on last year’s standardized
tests in California schools. In the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, 22 of 29 schools showed improvement over last year’s base
scores. The lowest-performing schools in the district -- Whittier,
Wilson and Pomona elementary schools and Estancia High School -- all
showed the biggest improvements.
* Members of the Newport-Balboa Rotary Club planted a seven-foot
Australian willow on Tuesday at Kaiser Elementary school in Costa
Mesa to celebrate Arbor Day.
An older pine tree, planted by Rotary members some 20 years ago,
sits just on the other side of a bank of classrooms. Each Arbor Day
during the last 35 years, the club has given seedling trees to all
third-graders in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
-- Marisa O’Neil
PUBLIC SAFETY
Delay in arraignment from early-morning accident
The arraignment of a man accused of driving under the influence
and hitting two men who were crossing the street after leaving a
popular Costa Mesa bar was postponed last week.
Pawel Stanislaw Wiater, who was allegedly driving the Mitsubishi
Eclipse that killed Andre Felipe de Oliveira Braga, 31, of Laguna
Beach, and injured John Garazulis, 25 of Westminster, will enter a
plea on charges of vehicular manslaughter and drunken driving on
March 19, court officials said.
The 22-year-old Costa Mesa man will be represented by a public
defender.
* California Supreme Court judges heard arguments on Wednesday
morning about a civil lawsuit filed by the parents of two toddlers
who died at a preschool after a man intentionally ran them over with
his car five years ago.
The case is before the Supreme Court to decide if the Wiener and
Soto families have a legitimate civil case against Southcoast Early
Childhood Learning Center, where the children were killed, that
should be heard. The case was thrown out of a lower court.
Attorneys expect the Supreme Court to make a decision within the
next 30 days. The Wieners, Sotos and their legal counsel could not be
reached for comment by press time but have always expressed
confidence in their argument.
-- Lolita Harper
POLITICS AND ENVIRONMENT
Making a quick flight home and back again
Local congressmen announced their support for a request from Aloha
Airlines to obtain four of 12 available slots at Washington Reagan
National Airport, which would be used to add two direct flights daily
between Washington, D.C., and John Wayne Airport.
Rep. Chris Cox and Rep. Dana Rohrabacher signed a letter urging
transportation Secretary Norman Mineta to approve Aloha’s request. If
the flights are approved, the airline will have to bump two other
flights to stay within quotas set up by the airport’s operating
agreement.
* A grant to Orange County CoastKeeper that funds a kelp
reforestation program will be renewed, keeping the program going for
three more years. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
told CoastKeeper it will continue the grant, which since 2002 has
provided about $50,000 a year for growing and planting kelp in
Crystal Cove.
CoastKeeper spends about $125,000 annually on kelp reforestation,
supplementing the federal grant with other funds. The group also
hopes to raise as much as $200,000 to build its own lab that would be
used to grow kelp and provide educational programs.
-- Alicia Robinson
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