NEWPORT BEACH Lawsuit to reverse El Toro...
NEWPORT BEACH
Lawsuit to reverse El Toro
initiative reaches settlement
The Airport Working Group and other organizations came to a
settlement in a legal battle over the Measure W vote that prevents
the former El Toro Marine Air Base from becoming a commercial
airport. Two more lawsuits by the working group over environmental
studies of the site could be resolved as soon as next week.
* City officials might want to change some of the guidelines that
determine when a Greenlight vote comes into play for a new project.
Council members will consider changing the guidelines, especially in
terms of how the city measures hotels’ effects on traffic. But
changes to the guidelines don’t affect the wording of the
voter-approved initiative.
* The Narconon drug- and alcohol-recovery group home on the Balboa
Peninsula got a verbal lashing from council and community members.
The city council will consider changing local zoning rules to give
them more control over group homes.
* Proponents of a community center for Newport Coast got their
wish on Tuesday when council members approved the site and concept
for the center planned for Newport Coast Drive and San Joaquin Hills
Road. At the same time, however, council members said that the
current $10 million project will have to be scaled back to meet the
group’s $7 million budget.
-- June Casagrande
COSTA MESA
County fair board reopens swap meet bidding process
Gentlemen, start your bidding: The Orange County Fair Board
decided to re-open the bidding process for the lease of the high-end,
weekend swap meet at the fairgrounds. The previous competition
between Tel Phil Enterprises, which created the Orange County Market
Place and has been running it for the past 35 years, and Delaware
North, was nixed because of various charges and allegations.
* The Westside Redevelopment Oversight Committee is exploring the
range of economically feasible possibilities necessary to spark the
conversion from industrial to residential use without redevelopment
in the area south of 19th Street and west of Monrovia Ave.
-- Deirdre Newman
ENVIRONMENT
Crystal Cove cottages
closer to remodeling
Restoration of cottages and other improvements to Crystal Cove
State Park will begin in a few weeks, following the awarding of an
$8-million construction contract to Newport Beach firm Metro Builders
and Engineers Group Ltd. The state Department of Parks and Recreation
granted the contract, which is the first phase of a two-part
restoration project that will make 46 cottages and other park
amenities available for public use.
* Orange County has received the necessary permits to proceed with
dredging and clearing vegetation from San Diego Creek but workers
were not expected to resume the clearing until after storms expected
this week. The county in December undertook an emergency project to
clear the creek after flood control officials said it was overgrown
and full of sediment, putting a nearby sewage treatment plant at risk
of flooding in heavy rains. Environmentalists have protested the
creek clearing, which they said destroys valuable habitat for
endangered animals.
-- Alicia Robinson
EDUCATION
Groups kick off drive to build athletic facilities
Costa Mesa took a first step to getting its own athletic stadium
and new swimming pool with a kick off reception by fundraisers
Thursday night.
Costa Mesa United and Costa Mesa Community Athletic Foundation,
two organizations that are seeking donations for the facilities,
raised nearly $2,000 in their first official event. Organizers hope
it generated enough buzz in the city to make people want to help
raise money to build a new swimming pool at Costa Mesa High School
and an athletic stadium at Estancia High School.
* Christian broadcaster Daystar Television Network filed a lawsuit
Wednesday against the Coast Community College District claiming the
district did not comply with state law when they agreed to sell
KOCE-TV to its fundraising wing.
In a Wednesday press conference, Daystar’s attorney said that the
district should have named his client, not the KOCE Foundation, as
the highest responsible bidder. The suit asks a judge to rule that
the current sale should stop and that Daystar can go ahead with its
$25.1 million offer.
* A team from the Newport Harbor High School Culinary Academy have
been training and preparing every day for a statewide student
competition, sponsored by the California Restaurant Association.
They will have 60 minutes to make a salad, main course and dessert
-- without using an oven or any electricity. Using only two
butane-fired burners, a blowtorch and food and equipment they bring
to the competition, the team will make a warm ratatouille salad with
balsamic glaze, poached mussels and prawns with lime saffron rice and
crispy hazelnut towers with chocolate malt sauce and creme fraiche.
-- Marisa O’Neil
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