NEWPORT BEACH Newport Coast couple on Gilligan’s...
NEWPORT BEACH
Newport Coast couple on Gilligan’s Island
Newport Coast residents Glenn and Mindy Stearns will reprise the
role of the millionaire couple the Howells on “The Real Gilligan’s
Island.”
Mindy Stearns, a former KTLA reporter, and entrepreneur Glenn
Stearns signed up for the reality show, pitting them against another
couple playing the Howells. The show airs on TBS, starting on
Tuesday.
* The Newport Beach City Council is hoping to hire Acting City
Atty. Robin Clauson for the job full-time.
Council members appointed Clauson, an assistant city attorney in
the interim, after former City Atty. Bob Burnham -- who held his
position for two decades -- retired in August.
The council has made Clauson an offer, but terms of the proposed
contract were not revealed.
The council has interviewed many candidates since August and
narrowed the field down to two, including Clauson, City Councilman
Steve Bromberg said.
But the other candidate decided to stay where he was.
Clauson is a good fit for Newport Beach not only because she is a
familiar face, but because of her efficiency and knowledge on issues,
Bromberg said.
* Many of the city’s restaurants will have to pay an annual fee
for a grease-disposal permit to help keep oils and grease from
clogging the sewer system, the City Council unanimously decided this
week.
Less than half of the city’s restaurants have grease interceptors.
Those without must install the interceptors or pay a fee toward sewer
maintenance, according to the new law.
Although the newly-approved law allows the city to charge fees,
the amount of the fees won’t be set until July, when next year’s
budget is discussed. An earlier staff report proposed a permit fee of
up to $20 and an annual inspection fee of $100 to $150. A restaurant
could be charged up to $800 to have the city clean its pipes.
The new regulation will get a second reading at the council’s
December meeting and become effective 30 days after a second vote of
approval.
* Council members picked the name, Back Bay View Park, for a new
park still under construction at the corner of Coast Highway and
Jamboree Road.
Council members toyed with a few names before voting unanimously
on Back Bay View Park.
The Parks and Recreation Commission considered three other
suggestions -- Jamboree Bluff Park, Rim of the Bay Park and Upper Bay
View Park.
Commissioners handpicked those names from a list of 129 names.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Volunteers keep an eye out this season
Newport Beach residents heading out of town for the holidays can
rest assured a trained set of eyes will be keeping watch for anything
unusual.
Volunteers with the police department will perform vacation checks
on homes whose owners notify them that they will be out of town. The
year-round service helps keep an eye out for opportunistic burglars
or other troublemakers, police said.
* Newport Beach and Costa Mesa each reported a slight increase in
the number of hate crimes in 2003 despite a decrease statewide,
according to an FBI report released Monday.
Costa Mesa reported a total of three hate crimes, up from one in
2002 and Newport Beach reported seven, three more than the previous
year. Police in both cities said that such crimes only make up a
small portion of reported incidents.
* An attorney for a defendant in a high-profile gang-rape case
announced Tuesday that he also is representing the woman in an
alleged assault by a cab driver that happened this month.
The 36-year-old Placentia woman hired attorney Joseph Cavallo, who
also represents Greg Haidl, after prosecutors held off on filing
charges against 42-year-old cab driver Rodney Cornell Carter, pending
further investigation.
Cavallo, who last week asked the Orange County District Attorney’s
Office to recuse itself from the gang-rape case, said he will hold
them responsible for “selectively prosecuting” cases if they do not
file a case against Carter.
EDUCATION
Former principal files against school district
A former Newport Heights Elementary School principal has filed a
$3-million lawsuit against three district administrators and three
parents, disputing her public dismissal from the school nearly a year
ago.
The suit alleges breach of contract, violation of due process,
defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Former
Principal Judith Chambers claims the district declined her the
opportunity to respond to allegations that she didn’t push hard
enough to retain a popular substitute teacher at the school and that
it created public forums to rally support against her.
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