THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2003
Volume 3, Issue 19
FR
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Santa Monica Daily Press A newspaper with issues
Miramar developers given some wiggle room
L O T T O SUPER LOTTO PLUS
17-18-22-39-42 Meganumber: 1 Jackpot: $13 million FANTASY 5 5, 24, 30, 31, 36 DAILY 3 Afternoon picks: 1, 1, 7 Evening picks: 7, 4, 7 DAILY DERBY
Blueprints for hotel expansion will be drafted in conjunction with City Hall staffers BY JOHN WOOD
1st Place: 5, California Classic 2nd Place: 8, Gorgeous George 3rd Place: 1, Gold Rush
Daily Press Staff Writer
Race Time: 1:43.34
NEWS OF THE WEIRD by Chuck Shepard
Among the themed funeral settings available for families recently at U.S. mortuaries (at $1,000 to $3,000) (according to a September Associated Press report): bales of hay, wagon wheels, cacti, a cowboy boot and a plastic horse (for the loved one who was rodeo-oriented, at the Palm Mortuary in Las Vegas), and âBig Mamaâs Kitchen,â with Crisco, Wonder Bread and fried chicken (for the loved one who was a fan of lavish feasts).
COUNCIL CHAMBERS â Elected officials agreed Tuesday that City Hallâs laws are too strict to govern the expansion of an historic hotel downtown. The City Council voted 5-1 to negotiate whatâs called a âdevelopment agreementâ with representatives of the Fairmont Miramar Hotel at Ocean Avenue and Wilshire Boulevard, giving both sides considerable flexibility. For developers, it means possibly circumventing height restrictions and other limita-
tions. For City Hall, the agreement gives staffers some negotiating leverage to push for more affordable housing, parking and other benefits to residents. Though the exact specifications of the additions are yet to be decided, developers have Del Pastrana/Daily Press most recently proposed adding 200 hotel The Bay Moreton fig tree at the Miramar Hotel, rooms, 20,000 square feet of retail space, planted in 1889, towers eight stories high. dozens of affordable housing units and more appropriate development for that site.â than 100 public parking spaces. They also hope Perhaps the most contentious feature of the to open up the Ocean Avenue side of the hotel proposal is the height of the additions. Though and feature more prominently the Moreton Bay council members repeatedly stressed they fig tree, which dates back to 1889. wouldnât back a high-rise tower infringing on But Matthew DiNapoli, who represents the views of the ocean and bluffs, which was part Miramar developers, said those and other of an earlier proposal, developers said they specifications may change. need to exceed City Hallâs height restrictions âThe real work is ahead of us,â he said for the project to be economical. Wednesday. âWe need to sit down with staff See MIRAMAR, page 5 and weigh (the communityâs input) against the
Man found with 24 kilos of coke sentenced
Fishing for gifts
Landlord found the drugs BY CAROLYN SACKARIASON
QUOTE OF THE DAY
Daily Press Staff Writer
DOWNTOWN LA â The man who was found with more than $5 million worth of cocaine in his Santa Monica apartment in October was sentenced Wednesday to seven years in state prison as part of a plea bargain. And while the discovery was shocking to Amir Aliâs neighbors, how the drugs were found was even more of a surprise. It wasnât police who initially
âI hate the outdoors. To me the outdoors is where the car is.â â Will Durst
INDEX Horoscopes Plan your weekend, Capricorn . . . .2
New leadership at SMC . . . . . . . . .3
Opinion
tant city attorney Joe Lawrence said. Unocalâs settlement offer was unanimously approved by the City Council Tuesday, bringing City Hall one step closer to the end of a contentious, three-year legal dispute. Lawrence said there are two, smaller oil companies that are expected to settle in the coming weeks for a total of $800,000. That
BY JOHN WOOD
Lights out for Bush . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4
Daily Press Staff Writer
State Peterson: Not guilty . . . . . . . . . . . . .9
National
Back Page A powerful woman . . . . . . . . . . . .16
John Wood/Daily Press
Santa Monica residents Nelindra Grebler, 9, with guinea pig âFlash,â and Johnnie Grebler, 6, with fish âBeta,â pose with Santa Claus Wednesday evening at the eighth annual Pet Night at Santa Monica Place. By the end of the night, organizers said 153 pets mugged for the camera.
Holidays! Music! Fun! Lessons ⢠Instruments (310) 453-1928 www.santamonicamusic.com
See SENTENCE, page 6
Unocal to pay Santa Monica City Hall $5M
Local
Ohio shootings connected . . . . . .10
found the drugs â it was Aliâs landlord, who had entered his subterranean laundry room to investigate a water pipe burst in the basement. Apparently, there were several kilos stashed in boxes in the laundry room, which is connected to a detached garage that led to Aliâs apartment. The landlord immediately called police and a search warrant was obtained shortly after. Police found drug paraphernalia inside the apartment, as well as several thousand dollars.
1901 SANTA MONICA BLVD. IN SANTA MONICA
CITY HALL â The money keeps trickling in from defendants named in the biggest lawsuit ever levied by attorneys here. Union Oil Company California has agreed to pay City Hall $5 million for its role in contaminating Santa Monicaâs drinking water with Methyl Tertiary-Butyl Ether, assis-
See UNOCAL, page 6
Features
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