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For sale: One big fairgrounds lot
Residents could see a “for sale” sign on the Orange County
Fairgrounds, if state legislators decide it should be among unused
and underused properties the state will sell to solve budget
problems.
Costa Mesa residents kicked up a fuss when then-Assemblyman John
Campbell first suggested selling the fairgrounds in April, and they
continued to protest when the fairgrounds was listed as an example of
salable, underused properties in a report requested by Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
The report suggested ways the state can reorganize government
operations to save money and increase efficiency. In January
legislators will begin tackling the report’s more than 1,000
suggestions to decide which are most feasible.
Rape trial stirs up
teenage outrage
The retrial of three men accused of gang-raping an allegedly
unconscious 16-year-old girl when they were teenagers is scheduled to
start Jan. 31.
The first trial of Keith Spann and Kyle Nachreiner, both now 20,
and Greg Haidl, the 19-year-old son of former Orange County Assistant
Sheriff Don Haidl, ended in June with a hung jury. The videotaped
incident happened on a pool table in the garage of Don Haidl’s Corona
del Mar home in 2002.
Greg Haidl starts the year in jail and will remain there at least
until the conclusion of the trial. A judge revoked his bail after a
series of run-ins with the law, including allegedly having sex with
another 16-year-old girl he met at a party the night a mistrial was
announced.
With fewer counts against the accused and with Greg Haidl in jail,
the second trial will likely move more swiftly than the first, which
lasted about a month.
Even though it’s the second time around, and Don Haidl retired
from his position to draw attention away from his son, the case will
likely remain in the news.
Principal lawsuit targets district leaders, parents
A court date has not yet been set for an expected court battle
between the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and former Newport
Heights Elementary School Principal Judith Chambers.
Chambers sued Supt. Robert Barbot, Assistant Supt. of Human
Resources Lorrie McCune and Assistant Supt. of Elementary Education
Susan Astaritas in November for defamation, breach of contract,
violation of due process and intentional infliction of emotional
distress.
She felt she wasn’t given sufficient time to respond to her
firing, said her attorney, Margot Nelson.
Chambers is also suing three Newport Heights parents, citing their
alleged attempts to blame her publicly for the departure of popular
substitute teacher Shannon Jay.
First-period thrown out the classroom window
Newport-Mesa Unified School District officials announced in
November their plans to shake up the high school system within the
next five years by allowing students to choose when they want to go
to school.
The high school redesign phase will eventually allow students at
five local high schools more scheduling flexibility and the option to
take online classes from home, though there is no immediate
timetable.
Other California school districts have batted around the idea of
flexible schedules, but several Newport-Mesa officials believe
they’re the first ones to actually include it in their strategic
plan, a five-year blueprint and budgeting reference.
Three high school teachers are already teaching online classes in
American government, U.S. history and economics and opened them to
students from each high school. Board members said more online
classes are on the way, maybe as soon as next semester.
City sets planning limits, outrages some residents
Newport Beach city staff members will be hard at work over the
next few months analyzing the land-use options that general plan
advisory committee members have come up with for 13 geographic areas
in the city, such as Banning Ranch and Corona del Mar. The options
illustrate different scenarios for how much and what kind of
development should be allowed in these areas.
The committee has been meeting for about two years to see what
they think the blueprint for the city should look like for the next
20 years.
Their decisions already are meeting with strong opposition from
members of the city’s slow-growth Greenlight group.
The Planning Commission and City Council have given their feedback
on the options. As part of the general plan update process, the city
developed a computer model to analyze traffic and another to analyze
city finances.
Staff members will now begin asking these computer models, “What
if?”
Unusual trial gathers national attention
Corona del Mar resident Victoria Hawlish will go on trial in
January for allegedly touching a teenage girl inappropriately.
Hawlish is charged with four counts of committing lewd acts with a
minor, a girl who is a family friend.
Because Hawlish lives in an upscale area and because the alleged
offense is relatively unusual, the case will likely draw a fair
amount of attention.
Nothing happens at Marinapark site
After a potential hotel project for Marinapark was rejected by
voters in November, the burden is now on the grass-roots group that
led the opposition to come up with a viable plan for a park.
Protect Our Parks led the charge against the city developing a
hotel on its last piece of harbor-front property.
Newport Beach will hold a study session in January to start
dealing with issues surrounding the property. The question of
tidelands will also have to be resolved.
Although the state lands commission’s legal counsel has told the
city it believes a sizable portion of the land below the trailer park
is tidelands -- land the public must have access to that can only be
developed with uses that serve visitors -- the city hasn’t received
any official confirmation.
Residents of the mobile home park on the land are expected to work
tirelessly to keep heir way of life. So far, they’ve succeeded.
Lawsuits pile up against Costa Mesa City Hall
Costa Mesa is now using an outside law firm, Jones & Mayer, as its
legal counsel. The council decided in September to abandon its
reliance on the in-house city attorney’s office.
In the fall of 2003, the city experienced costly lawsuits. Rutter
Development sued the city in August 2003 over the 1901 Newport Blvd.
condominium project. Rutter ended up getting a subsidy of about $1.5
million to decrease the density of its project, finally approved by
the City Council in January.
Former City Atty. Jerry Scheer sued the city and other defendants
in September 2003 and got a $750,000 settlement over the way he was
treated. Scheer filed the lawsuit against the city, four present and
former council members and a deputy city attorney. The suit contained
16 complaints for damages including violation of free speech and due
process; unlawful harassment based on age and disability and
violation of the Brown Act open meeting law.
If more comes along, it will be up to the outside firm to protect
the city from litigation.
Family refuses to give up search for couple
Newport Beach Police will continue their search for retired couple
Tom and Jackie Hawks, who disappeared in mid-November after selling
their yacht.
Police suspect foul play and have charged 25-year-old Long Beach
resident Skylar DeLeon, the boat’s buyer, with money laundering. They
haven’t said if they think he’s connected with their disappearance,
but with a prosecutor who deals with high-profile homicides on the
case, there may be more to come.
DeLeon and his pregnant wife are believed to have taken a sea
trial on the boat before they purchased it for $400,000.
Police believe they may be among the last people to have seen them
alive.
The boat, a 55-foot cabin cruiser called the Well Deserved, still
floats at its mooring in Newport Harbor but is officially in police
custody.
No spiritual relief in court’s church ruling
The disagreement between St. James Church in Newport Beach and the
Episcopal Church USA lands even more dramatically in Orange County as
the future, and past, of the church gets decided in court.
Its future looks to be free of what members say is too liberal a
doctrine.
In August, the church announced it was going to break away from
the national church and remove the word “Episcopal” from its name.
Church members said they had major concerns about the Episcopal
Church’s liberal views about homosexuality, the divinity of Jesus
Christ and the supremacy of the Bible.
They voted to place themselves under the more conservative Diocese
of Luwero in the Anglican Province of Uganda, Africa.
All Saints Church in Long Beach and St David’s in North Hollywood
also broke away from the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, prompting
Bishop J. Jon Bruno to file a lawsuit against all three churches
stating that their buildings and properties still belong to the
diocese. That suit will be heard in Orange County.
The church’s past is up in the air because the national church
claims it owns the church and surrounding property. Church leaders
argue the opposite.
A court decision may decide the legal and land disagreements, but
what court can force people to change their beliefs?
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