PUBLIC SAFETY Watching for signs of West...
- Share via
PUBLIC SAFETY
Watching for signs of West Nile virus in Newport-Mesa
City and county officials this week said they will continue their
efforts to stop the spread of West Nile virus but don’t plan any
significant changes now that two birds have died from the disease.
Residents expressed concerns that the city isn’t doing enough to
prevent breeding areas for mosquitoes, the insects that carry the
disease. City officials said that Orange County Vector Control
District handles the majority of mosquito control, and residents can
do their part by making sure they eliminate standing water on their
properties.
* Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police departments will be looking
out this week for motorists who aren’t wearing their seat belts.
The campaign, which includes extra officers on duty specifically
looking for seat belt violations, is part of a statewide effort to
get more people to buckle up. People not wearing their seat belts can
get pulled over by police at any time during the year and even
buckled-up drivers may get tickets if their passenger is unbuckled.
-- Marisa O’Neil
COURTS
Judge requires Haidl to wear electronic locating device
A superior court judge on Thursday placed a list of 10
restrictions on Greg Haidl while he awaits retrial on charges that he
and two other teens gang-raped a girl.
Haidl, the 19-year-old son of Orange County Assistant Sheriff Don
Haidl, will have to wear an electronic device and have his location
monitored by a global-positioning system to make sure he sticks to
the new terms of his bail. Those include a curfew, not using drugs or
alcohol and not being alone with girls younger than 18.
* An appellate court ruled that disparaging speech against the
Village Inn on Balboa Island cannot be restrained before it is
uttered.
The case hinged on alleged statements a former neighbor of the bar
made to employees and to other people about the bar. The neighbor,
Anne Lemen, had an issue with the owners of the Village Inn over
allegations of noise and public disturbances for years. Lemen can
still be sued for libel and slander, but those charges can only be
filed after she made her comments.
-- Daily Pilot staff
GOVERNMENT
A long ballot of council hopefuls in November
Costa Mesa voters will have a crowded list of candidates to chose
from for the three open City Council seats in November. Wednesday was
the deadline for hopefuls to file their petitions. Incumbent Chris
Steel and resident Terry Shaw were two who qualified for the ballot
this week.
* The Newport Beach City Council tightened the threshold for
reviewing decisions by lower bodies, such as the Planning Commission,
by requiring a simple majority -- instead of just one council member
-- to review a recommendation.
The council felt it would be better if there was a more
substantive interest shown by council members before reviewing
decisions from other bodies.
-- Deirdre Newman
NEWPORT BEACH
Airport forces remain in a tight holding pattern
A citizens group against expansion at John Wayne Airport will
continue to pursue an airport at the closed El Toro Marine Air
Station, the group’s president said Wednesday.
Airport Working Group head Tom Naughton told residents at a
meeting of Speak Up Newport that gaining support in Washington, D.C.,
may be the only way to give an El Toro airport traction, and he urged
them to write to their representatives.* A pair of bottlenose
dolphins frolicking in the Back Bay have been drawing plenty of
attention.
The dolphins, which experts say appear to be a mother and her
calf, have been feeding in the same spot for about three weeks. But
people hoping for a close look need to know that disrupting the
animals’ behavior -- initiating contact or feeding them -- is a
violation of federal law. Spectators should watch from shore, experts
recommended.
* Tiles, sold by the Corona del Mar Centennial Foundation, are
expected to adorn the Centennial Plaza to be built at the corner of
Coast Highway and Marguerite Avenue.
Those who buy the tiles at $100 a piece can either draw or affix a
picture on it with the help of Color Me Mine in Triangle Square. The
ceramic art store is partnering with the Centennial Foundation on the
project. The foundation expects to sell about 1,000 tiles.
-- Daily Pilot staff
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.