EDUCATION 80% of Newport-Mesa schools meet API...
EDUCATION
80% of Newport-Mesa schools meet API goals
Newport-Mesa Unified School District officials reported Thursday
that 80% of their schools met Academic Performance Index target
scores for 2002-03.
Some schools reported substantial increases, such as Whittier and
Pomona elementary schools, which showed gains four times what the
state had mandated. The API is based on a series of standardized
tests and sets annual improvement goals for schools.
* High numbers of students stayed home from school in the last
week before the winter break, some likely ill with the flu. School
district officials reported one confirmed case of influenza A based
on five throat cultures taken at Corona del Mar High School last
week. At least 11 district schools reported more than 10% of the
student body had stayed home or was sent home sick.
* The school board elected new officers this week. Dana Black is
the new president, Serene Stokes the vice president, and Dave Brooks
the clerk.
* An anonymous donor gave $20 million to UC Irvine, matching the
largest single donation in the school’s history. The money will go to
support 10 faculty positions and additional expenses for the School
of Information and Computer Science.
-- Marisa O’Neil
BUSINESS and ENVIRONMENT
Coldwell makes deal to buy Newport’s Strada Properties
National residential real estate giant Coldwell Banker announced
plans to acquire Strada Properties, a Newport Beach-based firm that’s
seen exponential growth since it burst onto the scene in 2000.
Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but the companies said their
combined sales in the last 12 months reached $5.5 billion.
Strada’s two Newport Beach offices and 225 employees will be added
to the 15 offices and 750 agents that Coldwell Banker has in Orange
County. Company executives said they’ll combine technology and
marketing to further the brand identity as a high-end residential
brokerage.
* Orange County supervisors voted Tuesday to declare an emergency
to allow trees and plants to be cleared in San Diego Creek, to
prevent a flood that could wash sewage into Upper Newport Bay.
Environmentalists were concerned about the destruction of animal
habitat and questioned performing the work as an emergency. Crews on
Wednesday began marking areas where vegetation will be cleared, and
that clearing could begin this week. The $3.3-million project should
last three months.
-- Alicia Robinson
COSTA MESA
Review overestimated legal costs, city attorney says
A review of an independent review done on the city attorney’s
office found that the city’s legal costs are closer to other cities
of its size than the independent review found.
The supplemental review was done by acting City Atty. Tom Wood,
who arrived at the same conclusion as the independent review -- that
Costa Mesa should keep its legal services in-house.
* Prince of Peace officials have decided to remove some of the
school’s ficus trees to keep the peace with neighbors. They will be
removing the ficus trees along Baker Street and raising $10,000 to
replace them with a variety of tree known as yellowwood or
podocarpus.
-- Deirdre Newman
PUBLIC SAFETY and COURTS
Arrests in alley shooting made during citywide search
After a citywide, multi-agency search early Wednesday, police
arrested six locals in connection with a shooting in a Costa Mesa
alley the night before Thanksgiving that left two people injured,
officials said.
Sixty officers from the Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Santa Ana
police departments, and officials from the county district attorney’s
office and the Probation Department, served search warrants on
several locations in the city.
In the end, they recovered one handgun and arrested Enrique
Olaguez and Gustavo Zamora, both 19; Guillermo Arturo Ascencio II,
22; 20-year-old Christian Hernandez; and two 17-year-old boys who are
not being identified because they are minors.
All suspects are being charged with attempted murder and
conspiracy to commit murder.
* A judge on Thursday dismissed significant charges against two
Inland Valley teenagers accused of raping an unconscious girl, ruling
out the possibility of life sentences for them. Judge Francisco
Briseno threw out charges of infliction of great bodily injury and
use of a deadly weapon against 18-year-old Greg Haidl, son of Orange
County Assistant Sheriff Don Haidl, and Kyle Nachreiner, 19. Greg
Haidl, Nachreiner and Keith Spann are accused of assaulting the
then-16-year-old girl in Don Haidl’s Corona del Mar home. The teens,
then high school students, allegedly penetrated the girl with a pool
cue.
-- Deepa Bharath
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