Costa Mesa gets share of area security funds
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Alicia Robinson
Costa Mesa will get a share of $19.8 million in homeland-security
funding Orange County is slated to receive, Rep. Chris Cox announced
last week. The grant will pay for counterterrorism planning,
equipment and training in 14 cities that also include Irvine, Santa
Ana and Fullerton.
“Orange County is an enormous urban area, not only in terms of
population, but also our economy,” Cox said in a written statement.
“This funding will help protect our communities from terrorist
threats and protect our continued economic growth at the same time.”
With the new funding, California has netted more than $280 million
in counterterrorism dollars.
Reservist gives thanks
after receiving support
A harpist, hors d’oeuvres and members of the U.S. Marine Corps
were on hand last week when a local attorney thanked his law firm for
its financial support while he served in the military earlier this
year.
Joseph Preis, 32, a business lawyer at Newport Beach firm Stephan,
Oringher, Richman & Theodora, was on active duty in the Marines from
1990 to 1994. He joined the Marine Corps Reserve after the Sept. 11,
2001 terrorist attacks.
He was activated in January and served in the Judge Advocate
General office of the 1st Marine Division. When Preis phoned law firm
partner Todd Theodora to say he’d been called up, he was pleasantly
surprised at the response.
“I heard from him 20 minutes later -- ‘Joe, don’t worry about a
thing,’” Preis said. “That was such an amazing answer.... I was
activated with many people whose employers did not take care of them,
and the results were really dramatic.”
The firm supplemented Preis’s military pay so he was earning the
same amount as he did at the firm, and attorneys called him regularly
to see if he or his family needed anything.
“We love Joe, and we supported fully the cause,” Theodora said.
“We wanted him to have a peace of mind that only comes from being
taken care of financially in a difficult time.”
Several Orange County Marines and local officials, including
Orange County Supervisor Jim Silva, turned out for a reception
Thursday honoring the firm’s patriotism.
Group makes affordable bid
for closed Marine air station
An Orange County group that supports those serving in the military
and their families made a $255 million bid to the U.S. Navy this week
on housing, a commissary and other facilities at the closed El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station.
Ocmil.com, an Irvine-based military support group, worked with
Tustin-based Affordable Housing Resources to put together the bid,
which includes money to renovate the commissary and give military
personnel a discount on the MetroLink train. If the bid is accepted,
the group asserts it will make more affordable housing available to
military service people and their families.
Swearing-in announcement
not spelling bee material
Nine new state Assembly members were sworn in and welcomed to the
Assembly Republican Caucus this week, but they apparently plan to
improve conditions in some other locale. A press release on the new
members said they’ll “begin work on Califonria’s future.”
New GOP legislators include Chuck DeVore, who represents Newport
Beach, and Van Tran, who represents Costa Mesa. State Sen. John
Campbell, a former assemblyman, also was sworn into his new post and
was pleased with how smoothly it went.
“It went like many things in the Senate do instead of the Assembly
-- it started on time, and it finished early,” he said.
Intelligence reform bill includes Cox provisions
The U.S. Senate on Wednesday passed a massive intelligence reform
bill that included provisions pushed by the House Homeland Security
Committee, which Newport Beach Rep. Chris Cox chairs.
The House passed the legislation Tuesday night. The bill overhauls
the nation’s intelligence agency structure and creates a new director
of national intelligence. Among the provisions Cox wanted are more
training and technology for border, immigration and consular
officials; increasing the number of detention beds for illegal
immigrants waiting to be deported; and improving the communications
systems between different emergency response agencies.
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