Here are a few items the council...
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Here are a few items the council considered Tuesday:
TREE AWARD
The city was presented with the Sterling Award by the National
Arbor Day Foundation. The award recognizes the city’s excellence in
tree planting and maintenance, forestry education, funding and other
areas.
WHAT IT MEANS
Newport Beach becomes only the third city in California and the
15th nationwide to receive the exclusive award. The city also is a
“Tree City USA” for 2004, an honor it has received for 15 consecutive
years.
STREAMING
VIDEO CONTRACT
City Council members approved a $42,367 contract with Granicus
Inc. to provide streaming video of council meetings online. The city
also will purchase $7,000 worth of electronic hardware to set up the
streaming video, and it will spend $1,400 a month in ongoing
maintenance costs.
WHAT IT MEANS
Viewers will be able to watch council meetings live from their
computers or call them up later at the click of a mouse to see who
said what and how council members voted.
CITY TO OWN
5 ‘VIEW PARKS’
The city will become the owner of several pieces of county land
including five small “view parks” in Newport Coast and open space in
Buck Gully and Los Trancos and Muddy Creek canyons. The council
agreed to take over the property from the county, which wants to
streamline its administrative responsibilities.
WHAT IT MEANS
The Orange County supervisors still must approve the land
transfer, but once they do the city will be able to do more frequent
maintenance at the parks. While owning the land will cost Newport
Beach a little more, the upside is additional revenue from cellular
phone towers placed in some of the parks.
-- Compiled by Alicia Robinson
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