NEWPORT BEACH City Council finally decides on...
NEWPORT BEACH
City Council finally decides on Local Coastal Plan
At long last the Local Coastal Plan this week cleared its hurdles
at the city level and is headed to the California Coastal Commission
for further review.
The City Council voted to approve the plan marked forward motion
on an issue weighing on the city since Newport Beach missed the June
30, 2003 application deadline -- a misstep that has cost the city
$1,000 per month since.
Residents whose property falls inside the coastal boundaries must
deal with the California Coastal Commission when developing their
property. What the city has done with the proposed Local Coastal Plan
is define for itself -- taking into consideration suggestions from
the Coastal Commission, which will ultimately give the plan the
thumbs-up -- which properties should be subject to what type of
development guidelines.
Once a final Local Coastal Plan is formally adopted, the city can
handle that process, officials said.
* City officials held off on banning smoking on public beaches,
saying they will wait to reexamine the issue after summer. The
decision came on the heels of the Malibu City Council’s decision to
ban smoking on its beaches.
Council members agreed during a study session to put the ban on
hold to watch how other cities that have adopted such laws handle
enforcement during the busy summer season.
-- Lolita Harper
CRIME AND COURTS
Friends of alleged victim testify as rape case continues
The prosecution rested its case last week in the high-profile rape
case against three teenagers, and the defense opened with strong
testimony from former friends of the alleged victim.
Two of the girl’s former friends, who testified for the defense,
made statements that were in stark contrast to what the girl herself
said over the last week when she took the stand.
Greg Haidl, son of Orange County Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl, Kyle
Nachreiner and Keith Spann are accused of raping and sexually
assaulting the victim with various objects at the Haidls’ Corona del
Mar home.
-- Daily Pilot staff
EDUCATION
A new labor agreement for Newport-Mesa teachers
Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees voted Tuesday night
to approve a labor agreement that will give teachers a pay raise of
more than 5% over two years and increase instructional time for
students.
The salary increases will start in the fall and take starting
salaries from $38,062 to $40,000 and add an additional $104 the
following year. Instructional minutes for first- through
third-graders will increase and schools will have the option of
providing full-day kindergarten.
* Orange Coast College granted the largest number of associate of
arts degrees in the school’s history at its 56th annual commencement
ceremony Thursday at the Pacific Amphitheater in Costa Mesa. The
school awarded 1,524 associate’s degrees and 491 certificates of
achievement in various areas of study. About 600 graduates came to
walk the stage and receive their degrees and certificates in the
blinding late afternoon sun before a crowd of thousands.
* Corona del Mar High School students reenacted an alcohol-related
crash, trial and memorial service as part of its Every 15 Minutes
program.
Named for a statistic that states someone is killed or seriously
injured by a drunken driver every 15 minutes, the program seeks to
educate and warn teenagers of the dangers involved. The presentation
came, coincidently, a week after two former students were killed and
one seriously injured in an alcohol-related crash near Estancia High
School.
* Harbor View Elementary School celebrated its 50th anniversary on
Thursday. Alumni, teachers and former Principal John Dean reminisced
and shared stories about the school. The school also unveiled a new
mosaic, called “Forever Young,” with tiles painted by 200 students.
* Students and administrators gathered on UC Irvine’s campus on
Thursday to denounce acts of hate and the destruction of a symbolic
wall built by Arab students.
The rally came a week after someone torched a cardboard wall built
by members of the school’s Society of Arab Students. The burning of
the wall, a replica of Israel’s controversial security barrier, is
being investigated as a hate crime.
-- Marisa O’Neil
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