WEEK IN REVIEW
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Newport-Mesa’s representatives say they’re stepping up to the plate to
fight a proposed House bill that environmentalists say could hurt the
Back Bay.
Both Rep. Christopher Cox (R-Newport Beach) and Rep. Dana Rohrabacher
(R-Huntington Beach) have vowed to fight the proposal, made by a New
Jersey Republican.
The bill would amend the Clean Water Act by revising the standards for
bacteria levels and allow boats equipped with a kind of “marine
sanitation device” to dump waste into protected waters.
But any fears about that, if the two representatives throw their
weight around rightly, should be nothing.
Loaded for bear
They weren’t headed to the Million Man March, but airport supporters
got on the bus Tuesday and went to a county hearing.
Four buses left the Newport Dunes Resort on Tuesday morning to take
more than 150 eager locals to the Board of Supervisors public hearing on
the plan for an airport at the closed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
The group helped pack the hall during the daylong hearing on the
county’s environmental analysis of the airport plan.
At the hearing, Newport Beach Councilman Tod Ridgeway and Costa Mesa
Councilman Chris Steel both threw their support behind an airport at the
base.
Ah, youth and toilet paper
It may have been bathroom humor gone wrong.
But residents of Mesa Verde Drive woke up Tuesday morning to find what
police called one of the most extensive incidents of vandalism with
toilet paper in recent memory.
And it wasn’t a bunch of bargain-basement paper. It was top of the
line, soft as can be TP.
Officers pegged the incident as a back-to-school prank, possibly
because “Class of 2002” was written on the street in shaving cream.
Back to school
School started this week in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
and not a moment too soon for two teachers who were just hired at Kaiser
School.
Fifth-grade teacher Emily Cimo and fourth-grade teacher Jennifer
Benhardus both wanted to work at Kaiser so much that they did not take
positions at other schools and waited to see if their services would be
needed during the first week.
Luckily for them, Kaiser needed two extra teachers and both were still
available.
“Both had worked at Kaiser before and so they really valued the
culture that we have here and were willing to hold out, but they got
nervous at the end,” said Principal Daryle Palmer.
Crossing a line
A student may sit in the middle of a church hall, but he wouldn’t be
learning about the 12 apostles, he would be learning about geology.
And although the cross hanging around a tutor’s neck may dangle in the
face of a child, the only applicable lesson would be one of geometry,
explaining that the two lines are perpendicular to each other, forming
90-degree angles.
Proponents of a collaborative effort between the city, school board
and nonprofit organizations, contend faith-based groups may be a part of
the formula but would not impose religious teachings on the students they
were helping.
Debate about mixing church and state were sparked when Mayor Libby
Cowan proposed the city commit resources to a collaborative effort with
local nonprofits. Although details of possible programs and dollar
amounts were not specified, a handful of residents voiced their concern
about using city funds to support faith-based programs at last week’s
City Council meeting.
Another handful of the resolution’s backers, including Councilman Gary
Monahan, said a line would not be crossed and the city would merely be
taking advantage of the faith-based programs’ willingness to help.
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