NEWPORT BEACH Tree changes leave nothing to...
NEWPORT BEACH
Tree changes leave nothing to residents’ chance
City Council members approved changes to the policy that governs
maintenance of the city’s 40,000 trees, making it easier to get a
problem tree removed and saving money for residents, who often must
pay for tree removal and replacement. The revisions took an ad hoc
committee months to craft and spawned hours of public debate on how
to balance the desire for faster tree removal procedures with tree
protection.
* The city will consider climbing aboard the smoke-free beach
bandwagon after council members were petitioned a second time by
students who want a beach smoking ban.
Other coastal cities including Los Angeles, Santa Monica and San
Clemente have adopted similar bans, and two Newport Beach council
members asked city staff members to research the issue.
* Council members also voted to forward comments from the city’s
Environmental Quality Affairs Committee on an Irvine development to
officials in that city.
After a contentious relationship for many years, Newport Beach is
hoping to get better results using the soft touch in dealings with
its neighbor.
To that end, council sent comments on an environmental report on
Irvine’s Central Park project but held off on demanding a report that
takes Newport’s concerns into account.
-- Alicia Robinson
EDUCATION
Parent Help event highlights awareness of child abuse
Parent Help USA used National Child Abuse Awareness Month to
highlight the issue, and Orange County Superior Court Judge James
Gray, a Libertarian candidate for the U.S. Senate, spoke with parents
and staff members at the Costa Mesa office on Tuesday.
The organization seeks to prevent abuse through parent education,
a resource library and donations.
They are seeking volunteers and donations of food, baby items and
children and adult clothing.
* Corona del Mar High School senior Evan Hirsch was one of four
county students to receive a $10,000 scholarship from the Irvine Co.
last week.
“I was really surprised,” Hirsch said. “I didn’t see it coming at
all.”
Hirsch has been involved in various activities during high school,
including drama, peer assistance and the harbor patrol.
The 18-year-old just finished working on the school’s musical,
“Into the Woods,” and next is co-directing a sketch comedy show.
-- Marisa O’Neil
COSTA MESA
Revision makes planning decision an easy one
Revisions to a housing project at the former Calvary Church
Newport Mesa site enabled its approval by the Planning Commission on
Monday.
The Olson Co. modified the project it designed for the corner of
23rd Street and Orange Avenue, reducing the density of the
single-family housing project.
-- Deirdre Newman
POLITICS
Babies make five for Huntington congressman
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher’s congressional salary suddenly isn’t going
to go as far as it used to.
Tuesday night, the Huntington Beach congressman’s wife, Rhonda
Carmony, gave birth to triplets at Saddleback Memorial Hospital in
Orange.
Born a month premature, the two girls and one boy were reportedly
healthy and soon to head home. Daughter Annika Brigit Rohrabacher, 4
pounds 6 ounces, was born first around 5:15 p.m. Her brother,
Christian August Rohrabacher, 3 pounds 15 ounces, and her sister,
Tristen Francis Rohrabacher, 3 pounds 7 ounces, followed.
* Rep. Chris Cox sent two letters to the chief Defense Department
official in charge of the former El Toro Marine Air Base reuse in a
continuing effort to air the concerns of military families regarding
opening a commissary and reusing the housing. But some military
family advocates feel like Cox is more talk than action.
-- Alicia Robinson
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