Here are some items the council will...
Here are some items the council will consider tonight:
JOB CENTER REHEARING
The council will consider a request by Councilwoman Katrina Foley
to rehear the March 15 decision to close the Job Center. The
city-supported center was founded in 1988 to give day laborers a
place to go while waiting for jobs, so they would stop hanging out in
city parks and on streets.
Councilman Gary Monahan last month proposed closing the Job
Center, saying it won’t fit in with plans to revitalize the Westside.
But some residents are worried the problem of loitering laborers will
return when the center is closed at the end of June.
Foley asked for the rehearing because she said that those who use
the center weren’t adequately notified before the meeting and that
the council made the decision despite insufficient information about
alternatives for workers once the center closes.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Foley isn’t likely to get the majority vote she needs for the
issue to be reheard. The three councilmen who voted to close the
center cited fiscal concerns about the cost of running the center --
nearly $103,000 in the 2004-05 fiscal year -- and overall improvement
on the city’s Westside, and they’ll probably stick to those guns.
But they may be asked to explain themselves by workers who use the
Job Center, who are expected to turn out in droves for the meeting.
WALNUT
STREET PARKING RESTRICTIONS
The council will take up a request to restrict parking to
residents only on Walnut Street between Orange and Westminster
avenues. Some households signed a petition requesting the
restrictions because parking can be a problem during some events at
nearby St. Joachim Catholic Church.
At a Feb. 22 City Council meeting, the council postponed a
decision and asked church officials and residents to work together to
solve the parking shortage.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The church has agreed to do several things to assuage parking
complaints, so residents submitted a new petition opposing parking
restrictions. Council members are likely to vote down the proposed
resident-only parking, since their initial goal was to get the two
sides to cooperate.
NEWBORN DROP-OFF SITES
To prevent unwanted babies from ending up in trash bins, the
Orange County Fire Authority is asking cities to request that county
supervisors designate fire stations as places where newborns can be
dropped off safely. In 2001 a state law became effective that allows
parents to surrender newborns at hospital emergency rooms without
fear of prosecution.
Los Angeles County already has designated fire stations as safe
drop-off sites, and area fire officials want to follow suit. The
council will decide whether to ask Orange County supervisors to
include Costa Mesa’s fire stations as drop-off sites.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The fire authority is encouraging all Orange County cities to join
the Safe Surrender program, and Newport Beach already has pledged its
support. The item is likely to get the council’s approval.
-- Compiled by Alicia Robinson
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