Newport-Mesa agencies receive safety grants
Deepa Bharath
NEWPORT-MESA -- Public safety programs in both cities will benefit
from traffic safety grants handed out by Gov. Gray Davis on Tuesday.
The 182 new grants, which will fund a variety of local and statewide
programs, total $30.3 million and will be distributed to cities, counties
and state departments.
Costa Mesa Police Department will receive $25,000, and the Newport
Beach Police and Public Works departments will get $76,160 and $50,000, respectively. UC Irvine’s Health and Policy Research program also
received $481,481.
The newly funded grants fall under several priority program areas that
include vehicle occupant protection, driving under the influence,
emergency medical response services, police traffic services, bicycle and
pedestrian education programs, traffic collision data collection, roadway
safety, and outreach to community-based organizations throughout
California.
Newport Beach police will use the money to pay the DUI team for
overtime shifts, especially on weekends and holidays, Sgt. Steve Shulman
said.
“It will also help us fund two DUI checkpoints,” he said.
The money will be available from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30, 2003.
Shulman said the department has benefited from traffic safety funds in
previous years.
“I believe we’ve used the money to buy laser guns for speed
enforcement and funded other DUI programs,” he said.
Of the $30.3 million in grants statewide, about $4.2 million has been
allocated to Los Angeles and Orange counties.
The Public Works department will use its $50,000 to update
computerized traffic accident records system, City Manager Homer Bludau
said.
“It will allow the Police Department, as well as our traffic
engineers, to better identify trends in accidents,” he said. “That way,
we can look at what we can do differently to make the situation better.”
In Costa Mesa, the intersection of Placentia Avenue and 20th Street
will get a crosswalk safety light modeled after one in Laguna Beach, Lt.
Karl Schuler said. The light alerts drivers when pedestrians are crossing
the street.
“In that area, it has been an issue with dayworkers and a bus stop,”
he said. “The crosswalk safety light has really helped in Laguna.”
The light will probably be installed in a year, Schuler said.
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