Brewer stands by mailers, message Newport Beach...
Brewer stands by mailers, message
Newport Beach Republican Congressional candidate Marilyn Brewer on
Thursday dismissed as meaningless a censure dealt to her by the
Orange County Republican Party early in the week.
After a complaint by opponent state Sen. John Campbell, the
party’s ethics committee decided Brewer’s campaign mailers made false
claims about Campbell.
Campbell and Brewer will face off with 15 other candidates Tuesday
in a special primary for the 48th Congressional District seat.
Brewer said the party isn’t an objective critic because it already
endorsed Campbell, and she stood by her mailers as accurate.
“They’re not going to support me, so they’re doing anything they
can to make it more difficult,” she said of the party’s Wednesday
decision.
Dredging will continue without grounded boat
A major dredging project in the Santa Ana River will continue
upstream of Coast Highway, but the dredging boat that ran aground
twice early in the year won’t be back, Army Corps of Engineers
project manager Ken Morris said Thursday.
Eland, a dredging boat that’s more than 160 feet long, ran aground
once in February and once in March while working on the $5-million
project, which began in November. The Corps is dredging 400,000 cubic
yards of silt from the river to improve flood control.
Enough dredging has been done at the river mouth, so the boat
won’t return.
Workers still are digging silt out between Coast Highway and Adams
Avenue, and they will grade the sand that was deposited on an island
habitat for least terns, Morris said. The flood control project
should be finished in mid-November.
Horse play is getting a bit nicer at fairgrounds
A dispute between management and tenants at the Orange County
Fairgrounds Equestrian Center has been smoothed over, and one fair
board member now wants to look at the center and all other
fairgrounds operations to see if they’re the best use of the
property.
At a fair board meeting in August, several riders and trainers who
board horses at the equestrian center complained that Rick Hanson and
his family, who manage the center, haven’t kept its facilities clean
and safe and that they have raised rents without notice.
Hanson said he did address complaints when they were brought to
him, and the problems weren’t as severe as the riders said.
Since then, the management and tenants have started talking out
their differences and “are headed in a really good direction,” said
Kathy Hobstetter, a trainer who runs her business from the center.
Conditions at the center haven’t changed much, she said, but there’s
hope for improvement.
Hanson said he won’t evict two tenants who were served notice
earlier.
“I think we decided that in order to avoid lawsuits and heaven
knows what, we better start talking, or we’re going to end up on a
dead-end road,” Hanson said.
After hearing more about the equestrian center at a meeting
Thursday, fair board member Dale Dykema asked for a report on the
various uses of fairgrounds property and how they interact. Fair
chief executive Becky Bailey-Findley said the report likely will be
presented to a buildings and grounds committee in October.
-- Compiled by Alicia Robinson
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