EDUCATION OCC president announces he’ll retire at...
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EDUCATION
OCC president announces he’ll retire at month’s end
Orange Coast College President Gene Farrell announced last week
that he plans to retire at the end of the month.
The 68-year-old, who has worked for the Coast Community College
District for 34 years, helped the college put together a plan for
growth and renovation during his nearly three years as the top dog on
campus.
* Coast Community College District officials plan to interview the
cream of a crop of 44 applicants who want to fill the trustee
position left vacant when Paul Berger died in January.
The interviews will take place March 18 and will include the five
favorites of the remaining four board members. The candidates will
make a two- to three-minute presentation at the meeting and then take
questions from the board.
* Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger drew supporters and protesters on a
stop at a Santa Ana restaurant last week.
Schwarzenegger came to the Red Robin on Sunflower Avenue to
collect signatures for his ballot initiatives. Some, including
members of the UC Irvine Conservative Student Union, were happy to
oblige. Others, including parents and educators from Newport-Mesa
Unified School District, protested his education policies.
POLITICS
Funds from El Morro washed DeVore’s way
Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, who last month proposed two bills that
would allow the residents of El Morro Village to remain in their
beachside trailer homes, received thousands of dollars in campaign
contributions from the community’s residents.
DeVore’s campaign finance chief also is on the board of the
company that handles the leases and loaned DeVore money during last
year’s campaign. DeVore still owes him more than $28,000.
DeVore denied any unseemly connection, saying his plan to get more
money from the homes, rather than spend money to turn the area into a
campground, was consistent with his fiscally conservative beliefs.
“People support candidates who agree with their stances,” he said.
“It doesn’t matter if it’s 50 bucks, 100 bucks or 100,000 bucks; my
position was set before I got money from these people.”
* Costa Mesa residents can add second stories to their homes if
the top floors line up with the first, the City Council decided.
That’s a change from a previous rule that the second floor had to
have a larger setback from the side of the property.
The old rule had been meant to prevent buildings from appearing
too massive, but it unintentionally kept builders from being able to
use lower-floor foundation walls in their construction.
Councilwomen Linda Dixon and Katrina Foley opposed the measure
because they wanted more time to study the setback change.
* The Costa Mesa Planning Commission approved rezoning a 21-acre
property to build a massive retail complex featuring furniture and
housewares stores. The South Coast Home Furnishings Center will be
built on Hyland Avenue between South Coast Drive and Sunflower
Avenue.
The 312,540-square-foot facility will replace a former State Farm
Insurance office building that has been vacant since 2004. Furniture
manufacturers’ showrooms will anchor the development, which will also
include home decor stores, office supply vendors and other retail
uses.
The City Council still must approve the rezoning, to be done by
Birtcher Development of Laguna Niguel.
BUSINESS
Market shuts doors
after quarter century
After 25 years of serving residents of the Balboa Peninsula, the
2W Market closed up shop last week.
Wes and Flori Hseih did not want to shut down their business but
lost the lease on their Balboa Boulevard business. The couple opened
the store in 1979, just a few months after emigrating from Taiwan.
The worst part about shutting the doors was leaving their longtime
customers, Flori Hseih said.
* Officials with both South Coast Plaza and Fashion Island were
reserving judgment last week about possible effects from an announced
merger between Federated Department Stores Inc. and May Department
Stores Co.
Federated owns Macy’s at South Coast Plaza and Bloomingdale’s at
Fashion Island, and May owns Robinsons-May at both centers.
There is talk that Robinsons-May stores eventually will close,
which would leave both centers with a large store to fill.
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