PUBLIC SAFETY Cameras leave cities in the...
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PUBLIC SAFETY
Cameras leave
cities in the red
Red-light cameras help reduce accidents, but the county needs to
give cities a better way to track how much money they bring in, a
grand jury report found last week.
The report looked at red light cameras in five Orange County
cities, including Costa Mesa, and found that, under current
accounting methods in the county, cities cannot tell how many tickets
the cameras are responsible for versus tickets written by officers in
the field.
Costa Mesa is under contract with a company that operates cameras
at 15 stops in four intersections in the city at a cost of $7,000
each per month. Currently, the city is issuing warnings, not the $336
tickets, at eight of those because of a court decision that found
they couldn’t have the cameras at Caltrans-operated intersections.
RELIGION
Armenian church
welcomes top leader
For the first time in its history, St. Mary Armenian Apostolic
Church welcomed its pontiff, the world leader of the Armenian
Apostolic Orthodox Church, to Costa Mesa.
His Holiness Karekin II, who was elected Supreme Patriarch and
Catholicos of All Armenians in 1999, had visited the Western Diocese
of the Armenian Church of North America in May 2001.
On this trip, he is visiting California parishes to bless
congregants and to visit the site of a future cathedral in Burbank.
Greeted by hundreds of St. Mary Church congregants who waved
American and Armenian flags and flanked by select Diocese
representatives, Karekin II walked down a red carpet and into the
sanctuary, where he took part in a special ceremony on Thursday
evening.
BUSINESS
El Matador gets
a new owner, again
A new owner stepped forward to buy Costa Mesa’s El Matador
restaurant for the second time in less than a month.
Greg McConaughy, who lives in Corona del Mar and owned a Costa
Mesa sports bar until last year, made a deal Wednesday to buy the
restaurant from the county Public Administrator/Public Guardian’s
office. He agreed to pay $535,000, the same amount Newport Beach
engineer Xavier Bengoechea bid in a May 19 auction. Bengoechea
decided to cancel the deal for unknown reasons.
McConaughy does not plan any major changes for the Newport
Boulevard restaurant. El Matador was founded in 1966 by Marcial
Gallardo Sr. Gallardo passed away in 2003, and his sons did not want
to lose the restaurant. Family issues led to the founder’s estate
being placed in the county’s hands in 2004.
POLITICS
Cox appears finally
to have sealed deal
Newport Beach Rep. Chris Cox on Thursday was tapped by President
Bush to head the federal Securities and Exchange Commission, which
regulates securities markets. Cox still must be confirmed by the
Senate, but candidates already have begun lining up as his potential
replacements in Congress.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
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