EDUCATION A number of honors arrive for...
EDUCATION
A number of honors
arrive for district
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District racked up a number of
honors last week.
On Wednesday, Corona del Mar High School physical education
teacher Ted Williams was named one of Orange County’s five teachers
of the year by the Department of Education. Later that evening,
Newport Harbor High School senior Alyson O’Desky received the Irvine
Company’s student leadership award for $10,000.
* The district named Bob Metz, the principal of Corona del Mar
High, as next year’s interim assistant superintendent of secondary
education. Metz will replace Jaime Castellanos, who is leaving the
district at the end of June.
* A team of UC Irvine researchers at the Reeve-Irvine Research
Center, led by Hans Keirstead and Oswald Steward, published a lengthy
article this week in the Journal of Neuroscience. The paper outlines
a research project that the group has pursued over the past few
years, in which paralyzed rats regained motor skills through human
embryonic stem cell injections.
NEWPORT BEACH
A plan for a new city hall
It may not be time to watch out for the bulldozers yet, but stay
tuned ...
The City Council early Wednesday morning voted to proceed with a
reconstruction of City Hall that would retain only the council
chambers.
Opposition notwithstanding, a 5-2 council OK’d the plan to gather
more detailed blueprints for the renovation. It would replace 90% of
the existing City Hall and build a new fire station, a parking garage
and a community center. The initial cost would be $41.5 million, but 30 years of interest could raise that close to $90 million.
And that was the cheapest option on the table.
Opponents complained about the lack of choices and have vowed to
get the issue to a citywide vote.
* The council also approved an environmental report for a proposed
Lexus dealership on MacArthur Boulevard at Jamboree Road.
The approval came after Councilwoman Leslie Daigle proposed an
amendment requiring city staffers to take a second look at a driveway
that councilmen John Heffernan and Dick Nichols viewed as a potential
traffic risk.
POLITICS
El Toro battle takes
flight again
The Los Angeles City Council on Wednesday voted 11-0 to ask the
Los Angeles board of airport commissioners to investigate the
possibility of putting an airport at the El Toro Marine air base. The
resolution recommends the board use “any and all means, including
litigation.”
The move was met with cheers by Newport Beach-based Airport
Working Group. The group’s vice president, Richard Taylor, said he’s
glad to hear that Los Angeles is getting involved.
“When Los Angeles speaks -- they have a lot of clout in
Washington. Maybe they’ll sit up and listen,” Taylor said.
Opponents of an airport at El Toro dismissed the chances of Los
Angeles getting its way.
COSTA MESA
Greenlight for red-light fight
The California Supreme Court this week declined to review a
lower-court decision that has blocked Costa Mesa from issuing tickets
to drivers caught on camera running red lights at two intersections.
For now, police are issuing warnings to those snapped on Newport
Boulevard at 19th Street and 17th Street. A lower court ruled that
the city could not have the cameras at Caltrans-operated
intersections. The ruling may make it easier for those who got
tickets to fight them in court.
* Share Our Selves, which provides free food, clothing and
services to those in need, has been recognized for the quality of
healthcare it offers to residents.
CalOptima, the agency that administers Medi-Cal benefits in Orange
County, gave Share Our Selves the Mary K. Dewane Safety Net award on
May 3.
Share Our Selves, founded in 1970, serves about 225,000 Orange
County residents and is one of the county’s largest emergency-relief
organizations.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.