WEEK IN REVIEW
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At first it was just rumor and talk. But this week residents learned
the truth about the future of the Christmas Boat Parade.
And that future is two changes: five days instead of seven and a
trimmed route, cutting off the tip of the Balboa Peninsula and the end of
a channel between Lido Isle and Lido Peninsula.
Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce officials sent letters out
detailing the changes -- those letters were set to begin arriving in
mailboxes Saturday.
Which means already there’s a good chance there are homes in Newport
Beach filled with frustrated folk.
Parking woes
To add to the pain of returning to school in 80 degree weather, only
miles away from the beach, Orange Coast College students were faced with
parking problems, long lines for books and overcrowded classrooms.
Officials said enrollment at the college is up 11.2% from last year,
with a total of 22,507 so far. The number is expected to rise 3 to 4%
when fall registration deadlines are reached.
With added students comes more demand for parking, books and classes,
officials said.
One student said he had to sit on the floor in one of his classes
because there weren’t enough desks.
“And this wasn’t a class I was trying to add or anything. It was a
class I was registered for,” said 20-year-old Chad Brandel.
Many returning students noticed more people on campus and complained
about long lines for everything from the bookstore to the bathroom, but
the biggest complaint was about parking.
Parking between the hours of 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. was deemed impossible,
students said.
Wetland victory
Assemblyman John Campbell (R-Irvine) got his first taste of
legislative success Friday, when Gov. Gray Davis signed his first bill
into law.
The freshman legislator and car dealer was elected to his seat in
November.
Assembly Bill 810 will pave the way for patches of man-made wetlands
in the watershed feeding into Upper Newport Bay. The bill gives the
Irvine Ranch Water District the power to acquire land to install the
wetlands.
The wetlands would filter polluted urban runoff, cleaning up water
before it enters San Diego Creek and Back Bay.
Confined and jailed
A 41-year-old Newport Beach woman was sentenced Thursday to six years
in prison after she pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter for killing
her husband by running him over with their car last year.
A Superior Court judge declined probation or a reduced jail sentence
for Leslie Van Houten, who on Feb. 2, 2000 knocked her husband Kenneth
Jerome off his bicycle and drove their purple Geo Storm over him twice.
That same day they had an argument about who was to take the car.
She had pleaded not guilty to the murder charge last year. But in
June, she took a plea offer from the Orange County district attorney and
pleaded guilty to the voluntary manslaughter charge.
Van Houten’s attorney, William Kelley, said she had suffered for 17
years by living with Jerome, who he called “a chronic abuser.”
Van Houten will likely end up spending about four years in prison as
the judge gave her credit for 660 days she has already spent in jail.
In other court news, Dennis Rodman’s arraignment on two misdemeanor
charges relating to his allegedly loud birthday party in May was put off
from Wednesday to Sept. 17, but not before attorneys from both sides
settled some issues relating to discovery.
Also, a preliminary hearing was postponed this week in the case of
Ramadan Dokovic, the Downey man accused of publicly shooting and killing
Newport Beach’s Miroslav Maric in May. The hearing was delayed to Sept.
25.
Don’t park here
It’s getting harder and harder to find a park to play in.
Costa Mesans trying to put together a game of softball or soccer are
running into difficult as the city facing a crunch of free time at its 27
parks.
The growth of organized youth sports is partly to blame, officials
say. But adults are responsible, as well, since they’ve begun trying to
recapture their youth as not just weekend warriors, but weeknight ones.
-- Daily Pilot staff. To contact the newsroom, call (949) 642-5680 or
by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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