ENVIRONMENT Sanitation District faces fine for Labor...
ENVIRONMENT
Sanitation District faces fine for Labor Day spill
A Labor Day weekend spill of nearly 1.6 million gallons of treated
wastewater could cost the Orange County Sanitation District $160,000,
the penalty suggested Monday by administrators at the Santa Ana
Regional Water Quality Control Board. An investigation found that a
power failure and subsequent problems with backup generators at a
sanitation district pump station in Huntington Beach caused the Sept.
4 spill into the Santa Ana River.
The sanitation district can pay the penalty or request a hearing
with the water board, which could choose to modify or waive the
penalty.
NEWPORT BEACH
Bells ring, boat lights glisten in ‘Winter Wonderland’
Thousands flocked to the 96th annual Newport Harbor Christmas Boat
Parade to see 150 lighted yachts, dinghies and other small boats
cruise around Balboa Island, Balboa Peninsula and Lido Isle. The
event, sponsored by the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce, continues
tonight and is themed “A Winter Waterland.”
* Greenlight, the city’s slow-growth advocacy group, fired an
opening shot Tuesday in the looming battle over the general plan
update. The general plan, a guide to future development in the city,
is undergoing a once-a-decade makeover.
Greenlight supporters say some alternatives for the general plan
would add 200,000 car trips a day to city streets and intersections
that are already at capacity, and residents don’t want that much
additional development and traffic. Newport Beach Mayor Steve
Bromberg responded that the committee creating the alternatives for
the general plan is made up of residents, and more public input will
be solicited as the plan takes shape.
* The City Council unanimously elected Steve Bromberg mayor for
2005, a post he also held in 2003. Bromberg was chosen as mayor and
Councilman Don Webb was named mayor pro tem at a meeting Tuesday,
when the council also voted to hire Robin Clauson as the new city
attorney. Clauson has been with the city since 1989 and replaces Bob
Burnham, who served as city attorney for more than two decades.
COSTA MESA
Council rules to let all their votes count
The City Council on Monday elected to use a vote of the full
council to choose members of the Parks and Recreation and Planning
commissions, rather than let each council member appoint
commissioners. The council switched in February 2003 from a vote to
direct appointments in an attempt to make the commissions reflect the
range of viewpoints on the council.
The city is accepting applications for vacancies on the planning
and parks and recreation commissions through Tuesday. If the new
appointment procedure passes a second reading in January, the council
could begin considering applicants for the commissions in February.
EDUCATION
Lending a helping hand to San Clemente students
Newport-Mesa Unified School District officials have collected
nearly $9,000 to purchase phone cards for San Clemente students whose
parents are stationed at Camp Pendleton. Nearly 60% of San Onofre
Elementary School’s students have family serving overseas. The phone
cards will allow them to speak with their parents for nearly three
hours over the holiday break, Principal Barbara Barnes said.
* Serene Stokes was named president of the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District board, during it’s annual reorganizational meeting
Tuesday night. Trustees nominated each other to serve on 23
committees and legislative posts for the remainder of the school
year.
Trustee David Brooks is the board’s new vice president, Trustee
Linda Sneen is clerk, and Supt. Robert Barbot will continue as board
secretary.
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