Week in review
One more City Council member voting against it and the
250,000-square-foot Koll Center expansion project wouldn’t have made it
beyond City Hall.
But Tuesday’s 4-3 vote in favor of the plan pushed the expansion onto
the Nov. 20 ballot. A special election -- paid for by Koll officials --
will be held on that day.
The citywide vote is required under Greenlight, the city’s new
slow-growth law, which puts certain general plan amendments before
residents.
Tuesday’s close vote -- council freshmen Steve Bromberg, John
Heffernan and Gary Proctor rejected the project -- seemed to reflect
growing opposition against the expansion from vocal community activists.
Greenlight supporters have said that they’ll campaign against the
project, but Koll officials countered that they will put out the facts
and let residents decide. The expansion, which includes a 10-story office
tower and two parking structures, would be located at Koll Center’s
southern tip, near the intersection of Jamboree Road and MacArthur
Boulevard.
The two sides are likely to use the city’s Nov. 3 “visioning festival”
as a venue to get their message across. City officials will host a
get-together for residents on that day to talk about the city’s pending
general plan update.
-- Mathis Winkler covers Newport Beach. He may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at [email protected].
Fighting fire, safely
Following a fire at a UC Irvine science lab last week, Newport-Mesa
Unified School District officials assured that their classrooms were
safe.
But like UCI’s labs, Newport-Mesa does not install sprinklers in
science labs. All of the classrooms do, however, have the required fire
extinguishers. Newport-Mesa officials also assure that all schools are up
to code.
Following the UCI incident, college administration announced that
while that lab was not supposed to have sprinklers, two thirds of the
buildings on campus, including dormitories, are also without sprinkler
systems.
-- Danette Goulet covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
Another worm doesn’t turn
Dennis Rodman’s arraignment on criminal misdemeanor charges at the
Harbor Justice Center was continued from July 24 to Aug. 8.
The former NBA star is accused of using loud amplifiers on a public
beach without a city permit during a party in May on the eve of his 40th
birthday.
Officials said Rodman has asked for more discovery on the case, hence
the postponement.
On Thursday, a 20-year-old man rammed his car into the glass window of
a furniture store on Fairview Road. Witnesses said the car was pulling
into a parking stall when the driver suddenly accelerated, causing the
car to jump the sidewalk and crash into the window.
Police said the driver then got off the car and fled. Officials said
they had no reason to believe the car was stolen or that the driver was
involved in any criminal activity.
Also on Thursday, a woman drove her Volvo into a sidewalk, into a wall
and over a speed limit sign on West Coast Highway about 600 feet west of
Dover Drive after another car collided into hers, officials said. The
woman was taken to Hoag Hospital and was treated for a sprained neck. She
was released the same day.
-- Deepa Bharath covers cops and courts. She may be reached at (949)
574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
Poll favors pro-airport forces
The pro-airport crowd got a shot in the arm this week when a new poll
showed a 7% increase since March in support for an airport at the closed
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
The poll, commissioned by the Orange County Business Council and Cal
State Fullerton, was released on Wednesday.
Fullerton pollsters asked a sample of 532 Orange County households
whether they support at airport at the base -- 46.8% said they would,
53.2% said they would oppose it.
Pollsters also asked whether they would support Irvine Mayor Larry
Agran’s Great Park at the base -- 62.4% said they would, 37.6% said they
would oppose it.
Of the households sampled, 80% were in North County and 20% were in
South County.
-- Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at [email protected].
THINK about the future
THINK Together, a Santa Ana-based nonprofit that oversees the Shalimar
Learning Center, learned a bit of news of its own last week.
It got a new executive director: Stephen Erkelens.
Erkelens will be responsible for the group’s operations, volunteer
development and fund-raising efforts.
Erkelens, who was born in Argentina and raised in Guatemala, said that
the Westside is in need of after-school programs to give children
academic support.
-- Daily Pilot staff
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