EDUCATION City Council OKs Newport Coast Elementary...
EDUCATION
City Council OKs Newport Coast Elementary loop road
An access road at Newport Coast Elementary School that came under
fire by neighboring residents got the go-ahead at Tuesday’s City
Council meeting and is scheduled for completion before school starts
in the fall.
Some parents expressed their relief that the road will be built
and, hopefully, ease traffic snarls around the school. Nearby
residents, however, worried how the road would affect them and
blasted city officials for not giving them notice of the project.
* New school buses in Newport-Mesa and throughout the state will
soon need to have three-point restraint systems in them.
New school buses that carry fewer than 20 passengers will have to
have the lap and shoulder belts starting Thursday and new full-size
school buses must have belts starting on July 1, 2005. The
Newport-Mesa Unified School District plans to replace all of its 65
buses in the years to come.
-- Marisa O’Neil
COSTA MESA
Council approves budget without increases
The Costa Mesa City Council narrowly passed a $110-million budget
for the 2004-05 fiscal year Monday. The budget was enacted on a 3 to
2 vote with Councilmen Allan Mansoor and Chris Steel dissenting. The
budget was balanced without any increases in taxes or fees.
* The second reading of a special-events law proved controversial
on Monday when two council members suggested changing the wording of
the law, which the council first approved on June 7. Council members
Libby Cowan and Steel, and the majority of residents who spoke,
thought it was unfair to exempt churches from the new law. But there
was not enough support on the council to change that exemption. The
law is “content-neutral,” meaning permits will no longer be issued
based on the type of speech involved with the event.
* Nine organizations that applied to sell fireworks will not be
able to do so this Fourth of July because they do not meet the new
requirements. The council tightened up the criteria for selling
fireworks in May. Twenty-eight organizations will be selling
fireworks next month.
* South Coast Plaza’s 12th annual Food and Wine Festival attracted
gourmet establishments from all over the county Thursday evening.
This year’s festival featured more than 30 wineries, focusing mainly
on those from the Central Coast. The festival benefits Costa Mesa’s
Someone Cares Soup Kitchen and Second Harvest Food Bank of Orange
County.
* About 1,000 SBC customers got back their phone service Tuesday,
about three days after a contractor reportedly accidentally drilled
through an underground telephone cable. Those affected live in the
“state streets” and Mesa Verde areas of Costa Mesa.
PUBLIC SAFETY AND COURTS
Jurors in gang-rape trial begin deliberations
Jurors began deliberations Wednesday afternoon in a high-profile
case involving three teenagers accused of gang-raping an unconscious
16-year-old girl.
Prosecutors say Greg Haidl, son of Orange County Assistant Sheriff
Don Haidl, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith Spann sexually assaulted the
girl, identified during the trial only as Jane Doe, with various
objects as she lay on a pool table in the assistant sheriff’s Corona
del Mar home.
The teenagers face 24 felony counts. If convicted, they could face
up to 55 years and four months in state prison.
About seven hours into deliberations, jurors asked Judge Francisco
Briseno if they should proceed to deliberate on other counts if they
can’t reach a verdict on the first count, court officials said.
Earlier in the day, they had asked to see portions of the
videotape, the court papers show. At about 1:25 p.m., they asked the
question: “If we are unable to reach a verdict on count No. 1, are we
to continue to other counts or do we stop?”
The first count is rape by intoxication. Briseno instructed the
jury to proceed with the other counts, officials said.
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