Orange County https://www.ocregister.com Sat, 10 Feb 2024 18:27:59 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://www.ocregister.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/cropped-ocr_icon11.jpg?w=32 Orange County https://www.ocregister.com 32 32 126836891 Bulldog Bubba is a happy-go-lucky guy https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/10/bulldog-bubba-is-a-happy-go-lucky-guy/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 18:20:07 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9850686&preview=true&preview_id=9850686 Breed: English bulldog

Age: 10 years

Sex: Neutered male

Size: 50 pounds

Bubba’s story: Don’t let this guy’s age fool you; Bubba is so full of life. He enjoys playing chase and all kinds of interaction with other dogs. He’s incredibly sweet and loves everyone he meets. He’ll happily follow along with whatever you’re doing. He’s a happy boy who will bring all of his happiness into his new people’s home.

Adoption cost: $250

Adoption procedure: Fill out Friends of Orange County’s Homeless Pets’ online application or email fochp@yahoo.com. The website has other pets in need of homes, too.

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Maltipoo Twinkie’s got a lot of love to give https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/10/maltipoo-twinkies-got-a-lot-of-love-to-give/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 18:15:36 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9850679&preview=true&preview_id=9850679 Breed: Maltipoo (Maltese-poodle mix)

Age: 13 years

Sex: Spayed female

Size: 12 pounds

Twinkie’s story: Senior dogs are so easy to love. They fit right in, wherever they find themselves. Sweet Twinkie is no exception. She loves walks, and strolling with her is a delight. So is a trip to the dog park for social hour. Twinkie loves treats, as well as everyone she meets. In her foster home, she politely reminds when it’s time for a trip outside. Once that’s done, it’s time for some snuggling. If you’re looking for an easygoing gal with lots of love to give, Twinkie is just the dog for you. Bring some treats when you meet her, and you’ll literally have her eating out of your hand. And you’ll see firsthand how much love she has to give!

Adoption cost: $325

Adoption procedure:  Complete the required adoption application online or contact I.C.A.R.E. Dog Rescue at rescue@icaredogrescue.org.

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9850679 2024-02-10T10:15:36+00:00 2024-02-10T10:15:43+00:00
How does Orange County’s voting system work? https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/10/how-does-orange-countys-voting-system-work/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 17:19:32 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9850644&preview=true&preview_id=9850644 Orange County’s voting system was put to the test this week — and all seems to be working well as the county’s election workers gear up for the counting of more than 1.8 million ballots on Tuesday, March 5, now less than a month away.

With the primaries officially underway, election workers put the first batch of test ballots through Orange County’s voting system on Thursday, Feb. 8. Inside the spacious and drafty warehouse at the Orange County Registrar of Voters headquarters in Santa Ana, around 10 workers, each with multiple stacks of test ballots, fed them one by one through the ballot scanning devices.

Related: Orange County Register’s March 5, 2024 Primary Election Voter Guide

By the end of the day on Friday, the 40 machines that had been tested this week were deemed to be working properly, according to the Registrar’s Office.

“We’ve never had any discrepancies in the vote count,” said Registrar of Voters Bob Page.

  • Staff members of the Orange County Registrar of Voters scan...

    Staff members of the Orange County Registrar of Voters scan test ballots into a Verity Scan devices on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Santa Ana. The marked test ballots and scanning are part of a state-mandated logic and accuracy testing of the machines and processes of the OC Registrar of Voters, which is done for Californiaxe2x80x99s upcoming March 5th primary. The scanners are used in voting centers throughout Orange County on election day. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • A Verity Scan device lets an Orange County Registrar of...

    A Verity Scan device lets an Orange County Registrar of Voters staff member know that it is processing a test ballot on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Santa Ana. The scanners are used in voting centers throughout Orange County on election day. The marked test ballots and scanning are part of a state-mandated logic and accuracy testing of the machines and processes of the OC Registrar of Voters, which is done for Californiaxe2x80x99s upcoming March 5th primary. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • James Wight, right, reads names and numbers to Danyette Sayles,...

    James Wight, right, reads names and numbers to Danyette Sayles, both Orange County Registrar of Voters staff members, as they check the accuracy of scanned test ballots from Verity Scan devices that are used in voting centers throughout Orange County, on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Santa Ana. The marked test ballots and scanning are part of a state-mandated logic and accuracy testing of the machines and processes of the OC Registrar of Voters, which is done for Californiaxe2x80x99s upcoming March 5th primary. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Huy Nguyen, an Orange County Registrar of Voters staff member,...

    Huy Nguyen, an Orange County Registrar of Voters staff member, scans test ballots into a Verity Scan device on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Santa Ana. The marked test ballots and scanning are part of a state-mandated logic and accuracy testing of the machines and processes of the OC Registrar of Voters, which is done for Californiaxe2x80x99s upcoming March 5th primary. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • A Verity Scan device lets an Orange County Registrar of...

    A Verity Scan device lets an Orange County Registrar of Voters staff member know that it has scanned and recorded a test ballot on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024, in Santa Ana. The scanners are used in voting centers throughout Orange County on election day. The marked test ballots and scanning are part of a state-mandated logic and accuracy testing of the machines and processes of the OC Registrar of Voters, which is done for Californiaxe2x80x99s upcoming March 5th primary. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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Thursday officially kicked off the testing of all ballot scanning devices that will be used in the primary election. It is called, according to the Secretary of State, the “logic and accuracy test,” mandated by the state to “ensure that every device used to tabulate ballots accurately records each vote.”

Accuracy testing of Orange County’s voting system started with the preparation of test ballots and will continue until all devices have been included in the test, said Page. The Registrar’s Office wants to ensure every device accurately counts ballots before they are put into use, he said.

If a device, during testing, is found to be counting ballots inaccurately, it won’t be put to use, Page said.

As in years past, voters have several ways to vote, Page said. Ballots can be mailed through the U.S. Postal Service, dropped off at a ballot box or delivered in person at a vote center. Voters can also vote in person at any vote center.

The 406 test ballots used in the “logic and accuracy test” this week cover every scenario in which a voter could submit a ballot, whether it’s a pre-printed ballot that is mailed out to voters or ballots created by marking devices at a vote center, Page said.

Test ballots were marked to replicate how voters could vote, and election workers fed them through the ballot scanning devices, called Hart InterCivic Verity Voting. When the ballot is inserted, the screen shows the message: “Please wait, the device is processing your ballot.”

Once the ballot has been processed, the device chimes, and the screen shows a blue background with an American flag.

At the end of the logic and accuracy test, about 400 machines will have gone through testing, said Page. There will be two ballot scanning devices at each of the 183 vote centers in the county — 37 of which will open on Feb. 24, followed by another 146 on March 2 — and at least 20 extra just in case.

Hart machines, used by 12 other California counties, allow voters to either fill out their ballot by hand or digitally and then scan and cast their ballot using a touch-screen operated ballot scanning device.

The test, along with other election activity, is open to the public to observe. Being transparent about election activity to the public allows people to see for themselves that the elections system works accurately, Page said.

“This has always been part of the process,” he said. “We will continue to make sure that conduct transparent elections.”

A lack of confidence in the election system and whether votes will be counted correctly is a concern many Republican voters hold, according to a December poll by The Associated Press – NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. The poll found that about three in 10 Republicans nationwide have a “moderate” amount of confidence and three in 10 have “only a little” or “none at all.” On the other hand, 72% of surveyed Democrats said they are confident their votes will be counted correctly.

Starting in this election, Page said, voters could return their vote-by-mail ballot at a vote center and have it “processed and counted like a nonprovisional ballot cast in person,” according to legislation signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom last year.

Page said the greeter at a vote center will ask every voter who comes in to deliver a vote-by-mail ballot whether they would like to simply drop off the ballot or vote it as an in-person ballot. If the voter chooses the latter, their status will be changed from a vote-by-mail voter to an in-person voter, and they will be required to sign the roster for the voting location. After, they will be given a secrecy folder and directed to a ballot scanning device, Page said.

To ensure voters know where their ballot is, the Registrar has a tool that allows voters to track their ballot. Voters can sign up at ocvote.gov/track to receive notifications about the different steps in the process, Page said. Those who are signed up now will receive a notification when their ballot has been mailed. A notification will also be sent when ballots are returned to the Registrar, and when ballots are accepted for counting, the system will notify voters who have issues with their ballot, for example, forgetting to sign the envelope.

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9850644 2024-02-10T09:19:32+00:00 2024-02-10T09:19:51+00:00
Visit Newport Beach to hold 1,000 drone light show after Super Bowl to draw tourists https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/10/visit-newport-beach-to-hold-1000-drone-light-show-after-super-bowl-to-draw-tourists/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 16:45:21 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9850629&preview=true&preview_id=9850629 Sunday’s Super Bowl event between the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers proved the perfect opportunity for Visit Newport Beach to market the luxury beach community and make it part of pop culture conversation, its CEO said.

An hour after the big game, Visit Newport Beach will host a 1,000-drone light show over Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. Along with paying tribute to the winner, the display will include images of Newport Beach. It will last 12 minutes and be visible from the stadium, the Las Vegas Strip and will be live-streamed.

“Our goal in terms of positioning Newport Beach is making sure we’re part of popular culture and engaged in an event people are talking about,” said Gary Sherwin, the tourism bureau’s president and CEO.

Visit Newport Beach “did outreach” in Arizona last year when it hosted the Super Bowl and had a float in this year’s Tournament of Roses Parade.

The “Touch Down Newport Beach” drone show will celebrate football’s biggest day of the year, but is also meant to get Super Bowl fans to begin thinking of summer vacations or a place for meetings. Las Vegas is among the city’s target markets and is only a 40-minute flight away.

Those watching Sunday will be able to win a two-day stay at the Balboa Bay Resort by capturing a QR code on their phone from the drone display.

If they win, besides staying at the waterfront property along Pacific Coast Highway, they’ll also be treated to an electric boat cruise, a two-hour Moke cart rental, $500 in food and beverage credits, and a $200 gift card to Fashion Island, the city’s popular outdoor shopping center.

And if the light show doesn’t get people hyped enough, Visit Newport is also launching a commercial tailored to football fans that will air in 60,000 hotel rooms along the Las Vegas strip. Sherwin said Visit Newport Beach did something similar during Super Bowl LVII hosted at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona.

“Some of our most important markets are Las Vegas and Phoenix,” Sherwin said. “This gives us another opportunity to attach ourselves to the Super Bowl.”

Sherwin said the drone display is being flown an hour after the Super Bowl to avoid the hefty price tag that could come from dealing directly with the NFL. Still, it’s costing the marketing group $100,000.

Each year, Newport Beach draws about 7.5 million visitors. “The city takes in about $35 to $40 million each year of hotel taxes, which doesn’t include retail sales,” Sherwin said. “The total economic impact is about a $1 billion industry.”

Visit Newport Beach spends about $10 million annually to market the city. Half of that is raised from the hotels; the other part comes from the 10% assessment tacked onto a night stay by the city, which gives the tourism bureau 18% and uses the rest for public needs such as infrastructure and roads.

Sherwin said the Rose Parade float – it was the longest in the parade’s history at 165 feet – has already proven successful in drawing people to the city – event planners have reported more interest in having meetings in town. He said the parade had a worldwide audience of almost 7 billion people.

“From an awareness standpoint, it was a great hit,” he said. “We’re really excited about this one.”

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9850629 2024-02-10T08:45:21+00:00 2024-02-10T08:45:55+00:00
Orange County restaurants shut down by health inspectors (Feb. 1-8) https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/10/orange-county-restaurants-shut-down-by-health-inspectors-feb-1-8/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 16:40:51 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9850622&preview=true&preview_id=9850622

Restaurants and other food vendors ordered to close and allowed to reopen by Orange County health inspectors from Feb. 1 to Feb. 8.

I Heart Pancakes, 3001 S. Bristol St., Santa Ana

  • Closed: Feb. 7
  • Reason: Rodent infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 7

Tat Restaurant, 9191 Bolsa Ave., Suite 104, Westminster

  • Closed: Feb. 7
  • Reason: Rodent infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 8

Kim Huong, 8860 Bolsa Ave., Suite C, Westminster

  • Closed: Feb. 7
  • Reason: Insufficient hot water
  • Reopened: Feb. 7

Katella Liquor, 7556 Katella Ave., Stanton

  • Closed: Feb. 7
  • Reason: Rodent infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 8

Robata Wasa at Irvine Spectrum Center, 926 Spectrum Center Drive, Irvine

  • Closed: Feb. 7
  • Reason: Rodent infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 7

Olives Branch Express, 5365 Alton Parkway, Suite K, Irvine

  • Closed: Feb. 6
  • Reason: Rodent infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 6

Cafeteria at Magnolia High School, 2450 W. Ball Road, Anaheim

  • Closed: Feb. 6
  • Reason: Rodent infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 6

Granny’s Donuts, 6058 Lincoln Ave., Suite E-F, Cypress

  • Closed: Feb. 6
  • Reason: Cockroach infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 6

Cafe Rio, 3851 Alton Parkway, Suite B, Irvine

  • Closed: Feb. 6
  • Reason: Cockroach infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 8

Ruby’s Sports Bar, 2822 W. Ball Road, Anaheim

  • Closed: Feb. 5
  • Reason: Cockroach infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 8

Andalusia Kitchen, 111 W. Avenida Palizada, Suite 302, San Clemente

  • Closed: Feb. 2
  • Reason: Rodent infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 3

Pho Lu Restaurant, 10141 Westminster Ave., Suite M, Garden Grove

  • Closed: Feb. 2
  • Reason: Cockroach infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 3

Chicken Maison, 18030 Brookhurst St., Suite A, Fountain Valley

  • Closed: Feb. 2
  • Reason: None provided
  • Reopened: Feb. 2

Inka Mama’s, 111 W. Avenida Palizada, Suite 303, San Clemente

  • Closed: Feb. 2
  • Reason: Rodent infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 2

Moulin, 3321 Hyland Ave., Suite H, Costa Mesa

  • Closed: Feb. 1
  • Reason: Cockroach infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 2

Bun Vit Thanh Da, 9066 Bolsa Ave., Westminster

  • Closed: Feb. 1
  • Reason: Cockroach infestation
  • Reopened: Feb. 2

Updates since last week’s list:

NV Lounge at 1233 S. Brookhurst St., Anaheim, which was ordered closed Jan. 29 because of insufficient hot water, was allowed to reopen Feb. 7.

This list is published weekly with closures since the previous week’s list. Status updates are published in the following week’s list. Source: OC Health Care Agency database.

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Storm-related spills offer glimpse of possible future for the Pacific https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/10/storm-related-spills-offer-glimpse-of-possible-future-for-the-pacific/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 16:00:19 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9850614&preview=true&preview_id=9850614 This week’s torrential rains created a cluster of sewage spills in Southern California that, at any other time, might’ve been huge environmental news.

On Monday, Feb. 5, about 8 million gallons of raw waste flowed into the Dominguez Channel and from there, into the ocean at Cabrillo Beach. Just before and just after that event, at least four smaller spills hit Seal Beach, Palos Verdes and Doheny Beach among other places.

All of the spills were rain-related and all posed measurable threats to public health.

But, collectively, the spills also exemplified the stakes in what many experts describe as a race to save the ocean off Southern California, a race that’s shaped by global warming, public money and time.

Either cities and counties will redesign the century-old network of underground pipes, cemented rivers and culverts used to control sewage and storm runoff in much of Southern California, or, experts say, we’ll suffer as climate change causes enough huge storms to pull us back to a time when the Pacific Ocean was the region’s de-facto toilet.

“Stormwater is the number one source of pollution to the ocean and all our regional waterways, including rivers and lakes,” said Katherine Pease, director of science and policy for Heal the Bay, a Santa Monica-based non-profit that produces an annual “Beach Report Card” and advocates for cleaner waters in the ocean and elsewhere.

“That’s a big concern,” Pease added.

“Our storm drain and sewer systems, which for the most part have been working for many years, have become aged. Now, when we see events like this week’s storm, we see a huge pollution problem.”

That certainly played out this week. In each of the spills, health officials found that bacteria and viral counts, and evidence of fecal matter, were all high enough in the ocean off Los Angeles and Orange counties to close beaches from San Pedro to as far south as Anaheim Landing.

In that sense, experts said, this week’s spills were yet one more thing — a glimpse of one possible future.

New direction?

Depending on the time period you’re talking about, and the type of pollution you’re measuring, the local ocean is either a lot healthier today than it used to be, or it’s an ecosystem in decline.

And most shifts in ocean health, experts say, are connected to the ways that water, sewage and garbage are handled on land.

“We’re better than we were in a lot of ways,” said Garry Brown, founder and executive director of OC Coastkeepers, a Costa Mesa-based watchdog group that has pushed for ocean health for several decades.

Specifically, Brown said, water districts, cities and the county are working to prevent physical chunks of garbage from flowing through rivers, streams and water channels down into the ocean. Water agencies and others now routinely use devices that block and/or capture debris before it reaches any beach.

It hasn’t ended the problem. Brown noted that his organization held 84 beach clean-up days last year, largely related to garbage that hit the ocean. “The good news is we had 84 of them,” Brown said, laughing. “That’s also the bad news. We needed 84 of them.”

But, bigger picture, he said the debris issue isn’t as profound as it once was.

“We’ve learned tricks. We’ve invented best management practices. Cities, now, are required to manage stormwater runoff, and that’s true for counties and anybody that produces runoff.

“We’re just generally a lot better at reducing some types of pollution,” he added. “And people really care about it.”

But Brown and others said that when it comes to other types of pollution, including sewage, industrial pollutants or even fertilizer from community parks and greenbelts — stuff that heavy rains carry from cities and suburbs and farms into pipes and drainage channels — progress has been slower and, in some cases, has reversed.

“We started to plateau in this, generally, probably just before the recession, around 2005 maybe ’07,” Brown said. “A lot of people just started to say ‘No, we can’t afford to do more.’

“It’s why people are focused on fixing pipes. The resistance from (polluters) is pretty strong.”

Twin systems

In much of urban Southern California, storm runoff and wastewater are handled by two separate but closely related networks of pipes — a storm drain system and sewer lines. The storm drains handle rain and urban runoff, which can include everything from motor oil to diapers. The sewage system handles what comes from toilets and home taps.

Critically, most of these byzantine networks — which have grown to include thousands of miles of pipes and drainage channels and huge underground cisterns — were designed decades ago, when the ocean was viewed as an appropriate terminus for all that foul water.

“It was based on gravity,” Brown said. “Basically, pipes were built so the water would flow to the lowest point.”

Often, that was the beach.

As a result, even though most people now see storm and sewer water getting into the ocean as a bad thing, the design of our water infrastructure makes it hard to avoid. When 8 million gallons of sewage flowed into Cabrillo Beach this week it was, in a sense, what the system was designed to do.

That, experts said, is changing quickly.

“Look, when Heal the Bay was formed (in 1985), the major issue that our founder saw was that the Hyperion (Wastewater Treatment Plant) was releasing partially treated sewage directly into the ocean, as a matter of policy,” said Pease.

“That’s not happening anymore. And part of that is because changes are being made, as possible, here and there, but as quickly as they can be made.”

It’s unclear how much work is needed. Pease and others say water agencies are working appropriately on aging and vulnerable points.

Another unknown is money. Though voters nationally differ strongly on the need for environmental mitigation, some recent events suggest Southern California taxpayers are willing to finance water improvements as needed.

Brown pointed to how Orange County voters in 2006 approved a change in Measure M, so that some of the county’s half-cent sales tax can be used for filters on storm drains and other infrastructure that help clean up the ocean.

And Pease noted a property tax called Measure W — billed as the “Safe, Clean Water Act” because it pays for projects aimed at capturing and treating recycled rainwater — was approved by two-thirds of the voters in 2018 in a special district of Los Angeles County.

“Nobody likes rate hikes or higher fees,” Pease said. “But there is public support for cleaner water. We do need to make it clear what the true costs are for water pollution, and hold polluters accountable.”

The accountability side of that was on display this week.

A day after the new 8-million-gallon spill was reported at Dominguez Channel, the state announced a deal with the Los Angeles County Sanitation District over a massive 8.5 million-gallon spill that hit the same area over New Year’s weekend in late 2021. (And that spill was the biggest in a series of 14 incidents that hit the area from 2018 through ’21.)

As part of the deal, Los Angeles Sanitation will spend about $6 million to create a water capture system and improve groundwater treatment at Calas Park, a recreation area in Carson that state officials said has been “unfairly burdened” by multiple sewage and storm water system failures.

But spending can only improve how excess water is handled or stored. What it can’t do is prevent the water from coming.

Even in an era when big, weird storms seem to be more common, the atmospheric river that hit Southern California this week was particularly big and weird. As much as 11 inches of rain landed in some parts of Los Angeles County during a single 24-hour period.

Nobody is suggesting that size of storm is the region’s new normal.

But the nature of the storm — warmer than usual for winter, wetter and intense for a brief period — is expected to become more frequent.

And the size of this storm, while outlandish, is part of a broader trend.

Until recently, even one-inch rains were rare in Southern California. In the 1930s — a decade that saw massive flooding and prompted the creation of the Prado Dam and moves to pour concrete under the Los Angeles and the San Gabriel rivers — federal weather records show just five years in which Los Angeles and neighboring counties saw a single storm that generated an inch or more of rain.

After this week, Southern California has seen storms of an inch or more in 14 of the past 15 years.

Such storms generate more water than engineers or politicians imagined a century ago. Now, experts say, it’s a reality that could determine the future health of our local ocean.

“Rain is a good thing,” Pease said. “And in an era when drought will be a lot more common, we should be able to embrace it fully.”

Part of that embrace is for water agencies to get better at capturing stormwater. Pease noted that public works projects in Los Angeles County are believed to have captured about 3.6 billion gallons of rain this week, a sliver of the estimated 85 billion gallons hit the area.

Much of the excess, whatever it was, flowed into the ocean.

“Most of our systems are being designed to be at overcapacity, at times. And that’s great. If rain is coming in shorter, more intense bursts, we have to figure out how to handle it,” she said.

“But we’re not quite there yet in terms of infrastructure.”

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9850614 2024-02-10T08:00:19+00:00 2024-02-10T08:00:33+00:00
Beach mural by Millard Sheets washes up at Hilbert Museum in Orange https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/10/beach-mural-by-millard-sheets-washes-up-at-hilbert-museum-in-orange/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 15:30:53 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9850598&preview=true&preview_id=9850598 After five years in storage, the Millard Sheets mural “Pleasures Along the Beach” is again seeing the light of day.

The 1969 mural had been on the facade of a former Home Savings in Santa Monica for 50 years. In 2019, with the building facing demolition, the mural was painstakingly removed, in sections, and crated up.

Reassembled, it’s now been installed outside its new home, the Hilbert Museum of California Art in Orange.

When I visited in late January, at the museum’s invitation, the mural was in place but largely obscured behind three tiers of scaffolding.

“It’s been quite a project,” Brian Worley, the restoration artist, told me.

As careful readers will recall, I visited Worley last August as he made repairs to the mural. The Claremont artist had laid out the 41-foot-by-16-foot artwork on the expansive floor of what was once the Claremont High gym. There, I saw only enough of the mural to get a sense of it.

In Orange on Jan. 25, I met up with Worley and Mark Hilbert, the museum’s founder and namesake. Hilbert explained how he’d come to acquire the mural.

  • The mural on Jan. 25 was in the latter stages...

    The mural on Jan. 25 was in the latter stages of installation on a steel support structure outside the Hilbert Museum of California Art in Orange. (Photo by David Allen, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Brian Worley headed the restoration and installation of “Pleasures Along...

    Brian Worley headed the restoration and installation of “Pleasures Along the Beach.” As a young man, Worley assisted with the mural’s creation in 1969. (Photo by David Allen, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Mark Hilbert points out details in this Millard Sheets painting...

    Mark Hilbert points out details in this Millard Sheets painting during a walk-through of the Hilbert Museum of California Art in Orange. The museum opens to the public on Feb. 23 with nine exhibits, including a Sheets retrospective. (Photo by David Allen, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • Mark Hilbert is seen at the Hilbert Museum of California...

    Mark Hilbert is seen at the Hilbert Museum of California Art, which was established in 2016 in Orange by Chapman University after Hilbert and his wife, Janet, donated much of their art collection. (Photo by David Allen, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • “Girl Riding Dolphin” by John Svenson was, like the Millard...

    “Girl Riding Dolphin” by John Svenson was, like the Millard Sheets mosaic, formerly at the Santa Monica Home Savings, now demolished. Both artworks have been relocated to the Hilbert Museum of California Art in Orange. (Photo by David Allen, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

  • “Pleasures Along the Beach,” a mosaic mural done by Millard...

    “Pleasures Along the Beach,” a mosaic mural done by Millard Sheets for a Home Savings branch, has a new home outside the Hilbert Museum of California Art in Orange. The mural “represents California so well,” says museum founder Mark Hilbert. (Photo by David Allen, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

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In Palm Springs, his wife, Janet, saw watercolor versions of several murals by Sheets, including “Pleasures Along the Beach,” which she’d liked best. Wouldn’t it be great, she suggested, if the real mural ever became available?

Hilbert phoned Tony Sheets, the artist’s son. Serendipitously, the mural was coming down imminently and needed a home.

Hilbert could provide one. The museum, which was established in 2016 and which is owned and operated by Chapman University, was starting a major expansion that is adding a second building, with a plaza in between.

Visually linking the two buildings, the mural is held aloft on a steel structure.

“This mural weighs 12 tons or thereabouts,” Worley said. “You need a lot of steel to support it.”

Anyone visiting the museum will walk under the mural. Orange’s Metrolink stop is within view of it. “I suspect this will become a landmark in Orange County,” Hilbert said.

The mural’s theme ties in perfectly with the theme of the museum, which is a showcase for California art, particularly narrative works, Hilbert said.

“People having fun on the beach, families having fun on the beach. It’s so California,” Hilbert enthused. “It represents California so well.”

Sheets, whose work is in the Smithsonian, lived and worked in Claremont, where he painted watercolors, designed buildings and produced mosaics. He might be best known for the striking series of Home Savings and Loan branches he designed from the 1950s into the 1980s with murals and other art that reflected the community.

Worley, now 74, is one of the last surviving artists from the studio of Sheets, who died in 1989.

“He was a genius. There are people at the time who likened him to Walt Disney,” said Worley, explaining that Sheets was a savvy businessman as well as an artist who thought big.

“He believed art was for the public. It should be everywhere,” Worley said. “It was like air.”

Hilbert, who made his millions as a real-estate investor, was a latecomer to art. He bought his first piece, a California scene painting, in the early 1990s. Paging through a book on California art, he realized he liked almost all of it.

“I thought, I want to collect this,” he recalled.

The museum is largely drawn from Hilbert’s personal collection of 5,000 artworks. Hilbert, 79, likens the museum to the Norton Simon in his hometown of Pasadena.

Hilbert walked me through both wings of the museum, then still under renovation or construction, but almost ready to welcome the public. The opening is Feb. 23. Most of the art was in place, but without labels.

With 26 galleries and 21,000 square feet, and free admission, “I think we’re going to be one of the most popular museums in Southern California,” director Mary Platt said.

One of the nine exhibits focuses on — who else? — Millard Sheets, a retrospective of 40 of his paintings from over a half-century. I was especially pleased to see the original of the evocative “San Dimas Train Station.”

“A Matter of Style: Modernism in California Art” is a survey of postwar painting. Represented are Susan Hertel, who was the lead artist on many of the Sheets mosaics, and Karl Benjamin, a former Claremont neighbor of mine.

Agnes Pelton, a Cathedral City painter who was the subject of a profile-raising Palm Springs Art Museum show in 2020-21, is seen via three paintings that had been in the basement of a Silicon Valley college. “They haven’t been seen in 50 years,” Hilbert said.

Other exhibits focus on Navajo blankets, Disney art and Orange County scenes. Another is devoted to Norman Rockwell. “Here’s another unknown artist,” Hilbert deadpanned.

“Most of our paintings are upbeat, positive,” Hilbert told me. “We like for people to leave happy. We’re a respite from the rest of the world.”

Outside on a high wall is a sculpture of a girl riding joyfully on the back of a dolphin. It’s by John Svenson, who was well-known around Upland. Like “Pleasures Along the Beach,” the dolphin was also uprooted from the Santa Monica Home Savings.

Like a lot of former coastal residents, they’ve both moved inland.

A few days after my visit, the scaffolding that blocked the mosaic was removed and the mural unveiled. With column deadlines pressing, I couldn’t make a special trip. But on Feb. 3, a friend’s birthday in Santa Ana provided an excuse for me to stop in Orange.

There stood “Pleasures Along the Beach,” unfettered. The scene is a shoreline near sunset, colors deepening, as people toss a beach ball, sunbathe, walk or hold oars near a rowboat and a flock of birds careens past.

The figurework is a bit stiff, honestly. But the piece’s preservation is welcome.

It was afternoon and what sun there was — depending on your viewpoint, it was either partly sunny or partly cloudy — hit the thousands of pieces of glass.

The next day brought that deluge of rain. That’s how it goes in Southern California. But “Pleasures Along the Beach,” like the activities depicted, should be eternal.

David Allen writes Sunday, Wednesday and Friday, a mosaic of columns. Email dallen@scng.com, phone 909-483-9339, like davidallencolumnist on Facebook and follow @davidallen909 on Twitter.

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9850598 2024-02-10T07:30:53+00:00 2024-02-10T07:31:13+00:00
Washed out road, expiring lease add to concerns about San Onofre beach https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/10/washed-out-road-adds-to-concerns-about-san-onofre-beach/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 14:13:48 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9850532&preview=true&preview_id=9850532 Surfer Mark Gerardi looked out at the destroyed dirt road, a large gap slicing through the only entryway into San Onofre Surf Beach.

“It’s like a funeral,” he said, mourning his beloved surf spot on the empty beach this week during a brief break in storms. “It seems like 100 years of history and culture is gone.”

Surfers and countless beachgoers with fond memories of the tucked-away oasis have been in shock over the access road washing out recently at the popular beach wedged between San Diego and Orange County, a place so coveted that people wait hours in line to get a parking spot right on the sand on summer days – or any time a swell hits.

While the dirt road may be repaired in coming months, the sudden closure of the parking lot into San Onofre puts a spotlight on what’s at stake as negotiations continue over who should manage this popular surf spot and surrounding beaches, trails and campgrounds.

A 50-year lease between the military and California State Parks, a gift to the public by President Richard Nixon in 1971, expired three years ago and since then officials have been negotiating the fate of the land just south of San Clemente.

A three-year lease extension sunsets in about six months, on Aug. 31, and the question remains: Will State Parks continue to be the stewards to the land, or will the military take it back – and if they do, what does that mean for the public’s access?

“It’s a family beach, it’s always been that way,” said Don Craig, a 75-year-old San Onofre Surf Club member who has been riding waves there his entire life. “We just want to keep it that way.”

A sweet deal

San Onofre State Park doesn’t stop at the iconic Surf Beach where early-era wave riders discovered long, rolling Waikiki-like waves in the late 1920s.

There are two campgrounds, an expansive network of trails for hikers and bikers, and a string of other surf breaks, including Lower Trestles, where the world’s best surfers have battled for their championship title the last three years.

Originally, it was the native Acjachemen who called the land home, but by the turn of the century the beach was a popular fishing camp, then a surfing camp.

The Marine Corps bought the land during World War II from private landowners for $4.7 million, with about 160 square miles – plus 16 miles of coast starting at San Clemente’s southern border down to Oceanside – acquired in the deal, much of it becoming Camp Pendleton.

  • Cars in the mid-60s line the beach at San Onofre...

    Cars in the mid-60s line the beach at San Onofre Surf Beach, a popular destination still much the same today (.Photo courtesy of the Don Craig collection)

  • Cars in the mid-50s line the beach at San Onofre...

    Cars in the mid-50s line the beach at San Onofre Surf Beach, a popular destination still much the same today. (Photo courtesy of the Don Craig collection)

  • Cars in the mid-60s line the beach at San Onofre...

    Cars in the mid-60s line the beach at San Onofre Surf Beach, a popular destination still much the same today (.Photo courtesy of the Don Craig collection)

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A growing number of surfers flocking to the tucked-away beach to ride waves as the sport grew in the ’40s was causing conflicts with the military. So in 1952, surfers created the San Onofre Surf Club, a select group that were allowed on the military property provided they had a sticker on their windshield to access the surf beach.

It wasn’t long before surfers discovered the perfect, peaky waves at nearby Lower Trestles, but that area was still off limits. Military personnel who chase away the surfers, sometimes confiscating surfboards or handing out citations.

When Nixon set up his “Western White House” on San Clemente’s southern border in 1969, the idea was raised to open a portion of the Camp Pendleton land to the public.

It would become the first in Nixon’s “Legacy of Parks” program, which sought to give the public a place to escape urban sprawl, a way to make use of surplus federal land that wasn’t being used.

From left to right: Robert Mardian, Rolf Aurness, President Richard Nixon, Tom Craig and Doug Craig. The surfers were giving Nixon an honorary membership to the San Onofre Surfing Club. (Photo courtesy of the Don Craig collection)
From left to right: Robert Mardian, Rolf Aurness, President Richard Nixon, Tom Craig and Doug Craig. The surfers were giving Nixon an honorary membership to the San Onofre Surfing Club. (Photo courtesy of the Don Craig collection)

The San Onofre Surf Club lobbied to also add Trestles to the State Parks jurisdiction.

In 1971, the State Parks system got a sweet deal from the Department of Navy for 6.5 miles of coast, plus some inland space to create the San Mateo campgrounds and trails  – the lease was $1.

Over the next 50-some years, the area became a respite from urban overdevelopment, a quick escape to nature that draws an estimated 2 million visitors per year.

Surfing nirvana

Talk to just about any old-timer at the beach at San Onofre, and they’ll tell tales of long summer days on the sand, a place filled with community and culture like no other surf spot they know.

Craig’s father, Doug, was one of the early surfers in the area – he was on the beach in 1941 when Pearl Harbor was bombed. Growing up there was a “kid’s nirvana,” Craig said.

The masses have taken up surfing. Sprinter vans and campers line the area as “van life” gains in popularity and families mix in on the sand.

Craig, now 75, shows up nearly every day, watching the crowds from the sand or sitting on his surfboard waiting to catching waves at “The Point” or “Old Mans,” as he’s done for so many decades.

  • Retired lifeguard Mike Brousard stands in the shade of a...

    Retired lifeguard Mike Brousard stands in the shade of a palapa at San Onofre Surf Beach in 2019. The future of the San Onofre State Beach is unknown, with a lease agreement set to expire in six months still in negotiations. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Stephanie Gilmore of Australia throws her arms into the air...

    Stephanie Gilmore of Australia throws her arms into the air as she wins her eighth world championship, beating Carissa Moore of Hawaii, at the Rip Curl WSL Finals held at Lower Trestles at San Onofre State Park in 2022. The world’s best show up each year to battle for a world title. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • A surfer passes by a sign that shows a map...

    A surfer passes by a sign that shows a map of the famed surf breaks at San Onofre State Beach, which includes Lower Trestles, where the world’s best each year compete. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

  • A surfer showers amongst a grove of bamboo at San...

    A surfer showers amongst a grove of bamboo at San Onofre Surf Beach in San Clemente in 2019. The future of the San Onofre State Beach is unknown with a lease agreement expiring on Aug. 31, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Surfers move down a trail near Lower Trestles, which sits...

    Surfers move down a trail near Lower Trestles, which sits within San Onofre State Park. A three-year lease extension was signed on Aug. 31, 2021 between California State Parks and the Department of Navy to continue to allow public access, with that deal coming to a close on Aug. 31, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Volunteers from the San Onofre Surfing Club a few years...

    Volunteers from the San Onofre Surfing Club a few years ago helped restore the iconic “Dogpatch” beach shack, built in 1981, that had been deteriorating for years. (Photo by Laylan Connelly/SCNG)

  • Surfers, bottom, walk along train tracks near Lower Trestles in...

    Surfers, bottom, walk along train tracks near Lower Trestles in San Clemente last year. The area, home to some of the country’s best surf, is part of a lease negotiation between the State and Department of Navy. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Surfers make their way along a path from the parking...

    Surfers make their way along a path from the parking lot to Lowers Trestles beach at San Onofre State Beach in San Clemente. The future of the San Onofre State Beach is unknown, with a lease agreement set to expire in six months still in negotiations. (File photo: Mark Rightmire, SCNG)

  • A sign along Beach Club Road on the way to...

    A sign along Beach Club Road on the way to San Onofre Surf Beach. A three-year lease extension was signed on Aug. 31, 2021 between California State Parks and the Department of Navy, but that is coming to an end on Aug. 31, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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“Surfing is the fountain of youth,” he said. “I think we’re hopefully passing on this legacy to the younger generations and they will pass that on to their children.”

When it comes to California surf culture – the state’s official sport – San Onofre is as important as the famed Malibu surf break, Craig said.

“It’s an iconic place,” he said. “People from around the world come here.”

San Onofre was the reason Gerardi moved to San Clemente from Canada more than two decades ago.

“This is where we landed. This is what I think of when I dream of California in the ’50s. It’s the most special place in the world,” he said, looking at the empty beach left by the washed-out road.

San Onofre, like many other spots along the Southern California coastline, has had its share of erosion, with strong swells and high tides shrinking the sand space.

But one area that became apparently worrisome in recent months was near the Surf Beach’s entrance.

By late November, yellow caution tape was up as the beach eroded so much it cut into the dirt road. A concrete slab at the beach shower fell, palm trees toppled.

The section of beach was becoming vulnerable not just from the strong surf hitting it, but likely from a drainage system meant to keep the bluff above from eroding where a fairy shrimp vernal pool habitat existed, officials believe. The Navy had attempted repairs in November.

While, in theory, the system would help slow bluff erosion by diverting water, it couldn’t withstand the massive amounts of water from recent storms, said State Parks environmental scientist Riley Pratt.

The trifecta of big swells, heavy rain fall and a failed drainage system was too much for the road. By Tuesday, it was gone.

  • Todd Moore of Costa Mesa checks out the rain-eroded road...

    Todd Moore of Costa Mesa checks out the rain-eroded road leading to San Onofre State Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024.(Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Todd Moore of Costa Mesa climbs up an embackment leading...

    Todd Moore of Costa Mesa climbs up an embackment leading to a road that eroded during recent storms at San Onofre State Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • San Onofre State Beach offers breath-taking beauty and is one...

    San Onofre State Beach offers breath-taking beauty and is one of the state’s most beloved surf breaks. But access to the area has been cut off after recent rain storms. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • A dog folics at San Onofre State Beach on Tuesday,...

    A dog folics at San Onofre State Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. The popular surf spot has been cut off to cars after recent heavy rains destroyed the road leading into it. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Runoff water from recent storms is distributed from a pipe...

    Runoff water from recent storms is distributed from a pipe at San Onofre State Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. The drainage system likely caused the erosion of a road leading to the beloved local surf spot. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Todd Moore of Costa Mesa sits atop whatxe2x80x99s left of...

    Todd Moore of Costa Mesa sits atop whatxe2x80x99s left of a road that washed away during recent storms at San Onofre State Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Runoff water from recent storms is distributed from a pipe...

    Runoff water from recent storms is distributed from a pipe at San Onofre State Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. This drainage system likely caused the erosion of a road leading to a beloved local surf spot. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • San Onofre State Beach offers breath-taking beauty and is one...

    San Onofre State Beach offers breath-taking beauty and is one of the state’s most beloved surf breaks. But accessto the area has been cut off after recent rain storms. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • The hillside over looking San Onofre State Beach shows the...

    The hillside over looking San Onofre State Beach shows the drainage system on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024, that is likely the cause of eroding a road leading to the beach. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Runoff water from recent storms is distributed from a pipe...

    Runoff water from recent storms is distributed from a pipe at San Onofre State Beach on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. This drainage system is likely the cause of eroding the road leading to the beloved local surf spot. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • The hillside over-looking San Onofre State Beach shows the drainage...

    The hillside over-looking San Onofre State Beach shows the drainage system on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024, that likely caused erosion that wiped out a road leading to the beach. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • San Onofre State Beach at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton...

    San Onofre State Beach at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • The dirt roadway at San Onofre State Beach is destroyed...

    The dirt roadway at San Onofre State Beach is destroyed at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. A drain broke and runoff water was instead flowing down at the toe of the slope, eating away at the roadway. With the latest storm sending high velocity streams of water from the hillside, the dirt road washed away. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • A beachgoers walks his dog at San Onofre State Beach...

    A beachgoers walks his dog at San Onofre State Beach at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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Environmental teams from State Parks and Camp Pendleton met on Friday to discuss fixes to the drainage pipes and the road damage, Pratt said. Repairs will likely be a collaboration, but it won’t be a quick fix, as they still have to figure out permitting and hire contractors.

“I think everyone is in agreement that it’s an urgent matter and we need to fix it as soon as we can and restore public access to the surf beach,” he said.

A swell of concern

Then there is the looming Aug. 31 lease deadline, with no word from either parties about how the negotiations are going or any plans set yet, said Steve Long, founder of the San Onofre Parks Foundation.

Seven years ago, the foundation started a lease renewal task force to be a liaison between the state and military.

Both sides are tight-lipped on the matter, unable to give details due to ongoing negotiations.

There’s two likely scenarios: either the land continues with a lease to State Parks, or the military choses to operate the area themselves, Long said.

What if the military opts to not allow, or to limit, public access?

“There would be a tremendous outcry if access is restricted,” Long said.

Surfers on the sand are starting to buzz about the looming deadline, wondering about what the future holds.

“We are concerned that we’re not hearing anything. The public isn’t hearing anything,” Long said. “I monitor the  grapevine from the beach, people want to start writing letters and if necessary, having public gatherings.”

Long said he hopes it doesn’t come to that. The surfers, state and military have always been amicable in their partnership, and he hopes that continues.

“We’re not adversaries, but we just wish to hear something,” he said. “I know there’s so many things the Department of Navy deals with, but this is critical. The time is growing short. We’re at a point where there’s a very real sense of urgency.”

San Onofre is where Congressman Mike Levin had his family holiday card taken this year, a place he, too, grew up visiting as a kid.

While he can’t speak to the details of the current negotiation, Levin said he is in constant contact with both the state and military officials.

“I do know all parties want a resolution to extend a lease,” he said. “And I’ve expressed my desire that a long-term lease is agreed upon.

“I think we have to come to an agreement so the military can continue their operations without disruption and the State Park can maintain the public access as a result of the extension,” he said. “I hope that they can work this out.”

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9850532 2024-02-10T06:13:48+00:00 2024-02-10T10:27:59+00:00
OC welcomes the Year of the Dragon https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/09/oc-welcomes-the-year-of-the-dragon/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 04:05:09 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9849610&preview=true&preview_id=9849610 Orange County’s Lunar New Year celebrations got off to an early start Friday, with the opening of a massive three-day Tết Festival at the county fairgrounds.

The festival is hosted by the nonprofit Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California, which moved the annual celebration to the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa several years ago.

  • Kim Le Pham of Tustin has her photo take against...

    Kim Le Pham of Tustin has her photo take against a backdrop of umbrellas at the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which is celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Lion dancers perform at the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations...

    Lion dancers perform at the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which is celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Likha Agustin, left, and Penny Shao, both 3, protect their...

    Likha Agustin, left, and Penny Shao, both 3, protect their ears from the loud cymbals and drums of the lion dancers during the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which is celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Celina Ch, left, takes a family selfie with husband John...

    Celina Ch, left, takes a family selfie with husband John Tran and son Isaac Tran, during the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which will celebrate the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Jillian Pham, 19, center, celebrates after winning the milk tea...

    Jillian Pham, 19, center, celebrates after winning the milk tea drinking contest at the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which is celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • The Nguyen family, from left, Kelly, Trong and Julie, all...

    The Nguyen family, from left, Kelly, Trong and Julie, all of Washington DC, pose for in the 360-degree Peek-a-Booth during the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which is celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Eiline Tai, 15, of Irvine has her mother take a...

    Eiline Tai, 15, of Irvine has her mother take a photo of her in a photo booth filled with red ribbons at the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which will celebrate the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Lion dancers perform during the opening ceremony at the Union...

    Lion dancers perform during the opening ceremony at the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which is celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Volunteers set up an umbrella photo spot for visitors at...

    Volunteers set up an umbrella photo spot for visitors at the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which is celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

  • Samantha N. of Covina poses for a photo in a...

    Samantha N. of Covina poses for a photo in a photo booth during the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California Tet Festival which is celebrating the Year of the Dragon at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa on Friday, Feb. 9, 2024. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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At the heart of the festival is a cultural village with exhibits and activities reflecting Vietnamese culture and life. At 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 10, an Ancestral Altar Procession will be showcased and at 12:15 p.m. on Sunday a Spring Wedding ceremony will be held.

The weekend also features fun contests, lots of entertainment and food to try, games, exhibitors and more. Hours are 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Feb. 10; and 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Feb. 11.

Admission is $8; find more information at tetfestival.org.

Saturday, which marks the new year in many Asian communities, will also feature the annual Tết parade in Westminster, starting with an opening ceremony at 8:30 a.m. The parade starts at 9:30 and will travel Bolsa Avenue from Magnolia Street and turn right on Bushard Street, ending at Bishop Place.

The Asian Garden Mall, also in Westminster, will host its Firecracker Celebration at noon with “dazzling fireworks” and traditional dragon dances in its parking lot.

Flower Street on Historic Main Street in Garden Grove will feature day-long street festivals Saturday and Sunday. Main Street will be closed to traffic from Garden Grove Boulevard to Acacia Parkway and will be decorated with floral displays. There will be shopping, lion dances and activities throughout each day.

Hours are 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sunday.

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9849610 2024-02-09T20:05:09+00:00 2024-02-09T20:05:30+00:00
Prime Healthcare pleads with state for return of CalOptima contracts with 4 OC hospitals https://www.ocregister.com/2024/02/09/prime-healthcare-pleads-with-state-for-return-of-caloptima-contracts-with-4-oc-hospitals/ Sat, 10 Feb 2024 02:51:30 +0000 https://www.ocregister.com/?p=9849514&preview=true&preview_id=9849514 Prime Healthcare is pleading with the state to reverse CalOptima Health’s decision to terminate contracts with four of the company’s “safety net” hospitals serving Orange County’s poorest residents.

Since the contracts were terminated Monday, Feb. 5, physicians at Prime have reported prolonged, agonizing wait times for patients, the company’s president and chief medical officer said in a Friday letter to Dr. Mark Ghaly, California secretary of health and human services. In some cases, patients have walked out of emergency rooms in disgust and been refused transfers to other nearby CalOptima hospitals, wrote Dr. Sunny Bhatia.

“On behalf of patients, we ask that Department of Health Care Services hold CalOptima accountable to its responsibility to ensure access, continuity, and care to patients and include the safety net hospitals patients have relied on for decades,” states the letter. “These terminations are already negatively impacting patient safety, quality care, and outcomes for the vulnerable patients dependent on CalOptima, very literally putting their lives at risk.”

Ontario-based Prime operates 44 hospitals nationwide, including Garden Grove Hospital and Medical Center, Huntington Beach Hospital, La Palma Intercommunity Hospital and West Anaheim Medical Center.

In a statement Friday, Feb. 9, DHCS said Medi-Cal managed-care plans like CalOptima have the right to voluntarily terminate their contractual relationships with network providers with a 60-day prior notice.

Following termination of the Prime contract, the DHCS said, “emergency services and post-stabilization care continue to be covered” by the company.

CalOptima, which has 954,000 members and is the largest health insurer in Orange County, provides coverage to its members through three programs, Medi-Cal, OneCare, and the Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly. Its contract with the four hospitals had been in effect for more than 15 years.

The termination of Prime’s contract has sent shock waves through physicians and patients at the four hospitals, some of whom protested outside CalOptima’s headquarters last week.

“Hundreds of patients, representing the tens of thousands cared for at these hospitals, pleaded with CalOptima to allow them to continue their care at these hospitals,” Bhatia said in the letter to Ghaly. “These were the hospitals they trusted, the care that provided them dignity, the quality that saved their lives, and the access and continuity they need and deserve. Despite their pleas, CalOptima unilaterally decided for them that they do not need these hospitals.”

CalOptima claims misrepresentation

CalOptima Chief Executive Officer Michael Hunn has cited under-utilization of the hospitals as a chief reason for the termination of Prime’s contract.

From Dec. 1, 2022, to Nov. 30, 2023, 15,604 members accounted for 26,290 visits to the four Prime hospitals, with 98.6% being emergency room visits, according to data collected by CalOptima. Many members went to the ER more than once. There were 2,800 CalOptima inpatient admissions and 364 visits for elective care at Prime hospitals during the year.

Additionally, CalOptima delegates the care of approximately 750,000 members to large, managed-care medical groups, but there is no evidence of Prime contracting with any of those providers, Hunn said.

Seven other CalOptima hospitals within five miles of Prime facilities can absorb patients, he told the Southern California News Group, adding that the termination of the contract should have little impact on patients.

“We stand against activities that detract from this focus, especially the misrepresentations related to CalOptima Health’s contract change with Prime hospitals,” CalOptima said in a statement Friday. “Those misrepresentations are not consistent with what is actually occurring with CalOptima Health members who have received care at Prime hospitals since our contract ended on February 5.”

CalOptima said it is providing Prime hospitals a clinical response within 30 minutes for those patients who may need post-stabilization hospital services.

“We are collaborating closely with our state regulators, who are aware of our unwavering commitment to quality care for members, delivered by our strong network that includes 39 acute and rehab hospitals across Orange County,” the company said.

Prime reports delays, angry patients

However, in the letter to Ghaly, Bhatia said Prime’s worst fears about delays and care for patients are being realized.

“Despite CalOptima CEO Michael Hunn’s assurances that he does not need these hospitals for network adequacy and can effectively transfer and care for patients requiring inpatient care, patients are suffering and denied the quality care and continuity they deserve,” Bhatia said.

According to the letter, in just three days following termination of the contract, documented evidence shows insufficient bed capacity at other CalOptima hospitals and the inability of Prime physicians to transfer stable patients. In some cases, Bhatia said, patients have reportedly left Prime hospital emergency departments, against the advice of doctors, with untreated medical conditions due to lengthy transfer wait times.

At least 37 Prime CalOptima patients have required transfers since Monday, with an average wait time in the ER of 30 hours, with some experiencing much longer delays, according to the company.

In one instance, a 57-year-old woman who went to a Prime ER with nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea waited 60 hours but could not be transferred to another CalOptima hospital because of a lack of inpatient beds and had to be admitted to the Prime facility’s intensive care unit, the letter says

Fourteen patients had clinical conditions that deteriorated while awaiting transfer, requiring urgent inpatient or ICU admission at Prime hospitals, the letter stated.

“This could have been avoided if these patients were allowed to be admitted promptly while stable and receive the quality, inpatient care that had always been provided,” the letter states. “Patient clinical outcomes have been unnecessarily and negatively impacted, causing irreparable harm as a result.”

A physician reported that a 45-year-old woman who had an acute flare of Crohn’s disease went to a Prime hospital and was denied a transfer to Orange County Global Medical Center.

Orange County Global Medical said Friday it could not comment because of patient privacy regulations and does not speak on behalf of decisions made by physicians who are independent contractors.

Dr. Kevin Truong, an emergency medicine physician at Garden Grove Hospital, said in a phone interview that earlier this week a man came to the ER complaining of shortness of breath and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. However, after waiting for 31 hours to be transferred to another CalOptima facility, the man angrily stormed out of the ER, describing the lengthy delay as the worst service he had ever experienced.

The man’s frustration is understandable, Truong said, adding the ER is a “loud, noisy environment and is not good for inpatient care.”

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