NEWPORT BEACH Hoag opens new women’s facility...
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NEWPORT BEACH
Hoag opens new women’s facility
Special guests and members of the media got a first look at the
new 320,000-square-foot Sue and Bill Gross Women’s Pavilion -- the
newest edition to Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian.
The seven-story wing dedicated primarily to women’s health is
scheduled to be open on Oct. 5. There are 130 private rooms, many of
which overlook the Pacific Ocean.
The $129 million new facility will host an open house on Sept. 24.
EDUCATION
Level teaching field in Newport-Mesa district
A statewide study by the Education Trust-West, an Oakland research
group, revealed this week that the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District provides more prestigious teachers to its needy students
than the average California district. The report, released Wednesday,
posted estimated average teacher salaries for every school site in
California.
According to the researchers’ data, teachers at Whittier
Elementary, College Park Elementary and other low-income Newport-Mesa
schools make more on average than many of their counterparts in the
wealthier parts of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Whittier, which has
99% of its students below the poverty level, has an average teacher
salary of $64,362 -- one of the highest averages in the district.
* John Nicoll, the longest-running superintendent of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District, died Sept. 10 at the age of 83.
Both admired for his dedication and scorned for his hard-edged
demeanor, Nicoll helmed the district from 1971 to 1993, overseeing new technological breakthroughs in the schools and lobbying for
millions in grant money.
His legacy in Newport-Mesa, however, was a checkered one, as he
resigned in 1993 amid an embezzlement scandal that sent district
finance officer Stephen Wagner to prison. While Nicoll was never
accused of any wrongdoing himself, the incident led many in the
community to question his leadership. In the weeks before he
resigned, more than 400 parents in Newport-Mesa petitioned for his
removal.
Nicoll did leave a lasting mark on the district, however, creating
the John W. Nicoll Scholarship Fund in 1993 to benefit graduating
Newport-Mesa seniors who plan careers in education.
* The campaign to recall Coast Community College District trustee
Armando Ruiz picked up steam last week, as Orange County treasurer
and tax collector John Moorlach officially endorsed the petition
drive. Fellow trustee Jerry Patterson and others are busy gathering
signatures from the community, hoping to place the recall item on the
November ballot.
The petitioners accuse Ruiz of exploiting state funds by retiring
from two jobs on the same day to boost his pension. Last October,
Ruiz ran for reelection to the Board of Trustees as an incumbent
despite having officially retired from the post four days earlier. A
state law at the time allowed him to earn double the pension from his
full-time counseling job in the South Orange County Community College
District.
Ruiz has denied any wrongdoing, noting that his action was legal
at the time.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Corona del Mar woman sentenced to 20 months
A Corona del Mar mother of two was sentenced Friday in Orange
County Superior Court to serve 20 months in state prison for
attempting lewd acts on a teenage girl who was living in her home.
Prosecutors believe Victoria Hawlish, 41, inappropriately touched
a 15-year-old girl on numerous occasions while the girl was living in
Hawlish’s Corona del Mar home.
A jury in March found Hawlish not guilty of five counts of lewd
acts with a minor. They did, however, find her guilty of three counts
of attempted lewd acts with a minor, a felony.
It is likely that Hawlish will serve only six months of her
20-month sentence, because of the number of days she’s already spent
in custody, officials said.
POLITICS
County supervisors look at how to fund Harbor Patrol
Orange County supervisors on Tuesday agreed to look into new ways
of funding the sheriff’s Harbor Patrol, which is headquartered in
Newport Beach and also serves Huntington Beach and Dana Point.
Suggestions include charging cities, which now pay nothing for harbor
patrol services, and adding a fee to boaters’ registration.
The Harbor Patrol provides fire protection, law enforcement and
rescue services along Orange County’s 42 miles of coastline.
Supervisors want to find other funding sources because the patrol’s
funding now comes out of the already strapped harbors, beaches and
parks department. They will likely hear about other funding sources
within the next two months.
BUSINESS
Business ventures have Newport-Mesa in plans
Newport Lexus and Birtcher Development and Investments both showed
some community spirit as they moved forward with plans to bring
separate business ventures to Newport-Mesa Wednesday.
Newport Lexus announced the donation of $100,000 for the Newport
Beach centennial celebration at a ground-breaking ceremony for a
planned Lexus dealership. The MacArthur Boulevard dealership is
expected to open in late 2006. Centennial events are expected to
begin Oct. 2 at city beach party where the Beach Boys are scheduled
to perform.
The same day, Irvine-based Birtcher Development and Investments
announced tenants who have signed on to the planned South Coast Home
Furnishings Centre. The furniture-centered shopping center is
expected to open in early 2007 on the site of the former State Farm
Insurance building near Sunflower and Hyland avenues.
COSTA MESA
One more year until new
arts center theater opens
One year is left until the opening of the Renee and Henry
Segerstrom Concert Hall and Samueli Theater. The Orange County
Performing Arts Center held a one-year-to-go event at the current
facility, and patrons received a tour of the buildings under
construction.
According to Darrell Waters, project manager from Fluor, the
project is 70% complete. The first glass panels have been set into
place, and the roofing is almost entirely finished.
NOTABLE QUOTABLES
o7”We’re seeing exactly what we’d expect to see. There’s very
much a level playing field with our teachers and what we do to
educate our students.”f7
-- Jane Garland, Newport-Mesa Unified School District spokeswoman,
on a report released last week, showing that poor or minority
students in the district have better chances of working under a
highly credentialed teacher than in most districts in the state.
o7”We’re seeing prices we haven’t seen there before.... As the
prices go up, you’re going to find less and less young people being
able to live and party there.” f7
-- Sally Martin, a Realtor, on rising home prices on the Balboa
Peninsula.
o7”The reason I support a measure like that is [that there are]
too many abuses in pension plans. Armando makes himself, in Orange
County, a poster child for why voters need to take a hard look at
what kind of fiscal animal the legislature in Sacramento has
created.”f7
-- John Moorlach, Orange County treasurer and Costa Mesa resident,
on his support for a recall of Coast Community College District
trustee Armando Ruiz.
o7 “We’re in discussions with them, but we are also pursuing our
rights in court through the eviction process. Our goal is to gain
control of the property and move forward with the public’s vision as
soon as possible.”f7
-- Richard Rozzelle, acting superintendent for state parks’ Orange
Coast district, on talks between the state and residents of El Morro
Village mobile-home park.
o7”We rarely, if ever, get federal appropriations for our city,
and I think we need to have people who know how to do that working
for us because it benefits our community. Every day we don’t have
someone working to find us money, it’s costing us money, and we have
to rely on taxpayer dollars.”f7
-- Katrina Foley, Costa Mesa City Councilwoman, who has suggested
the city hire a lobbyist to help gather more federal money.
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