TONY DODERO -- Editor’s Notebook
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We get lots of news tips here at the Daily Pilot and most are pretty
good, a credit to our loyal readers.
Usually, we send out the bloodhounds to pursue those nuggets of news and
often they turn into good stories. But a news tip we received at the top
of the week left us frozen in our tracks.
The tip, presumably sent by an employee of the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District, alleged that officials at a local high school were
engaging in illegal gambling.
The tipster sent off documentation, which included the names of some of
the culprits, namely the athletic director, the reputed ring leader, and
the principal. Good stuff, right?
Well, yes and no. It turns out the documented gambling evidence was none
other than a Super Bowl pool.
Hmm. How can I put this lightly and avoid the possibility of a police
raid. You see, there was no way I could assign a reporter to this story,
or even an editor to edit it. Because we at the Daily Pilot were also
guilty of having an office football pool for the Super Bowl.
And I think, it’s safe to say, we were in good company. Thousands upon
thousands of Super Bowl fans and non-fans take part in office pools each
year. For my money, I’d bet for the most part they are a harmless
exercise, but the truth be known, the large majority of them are illegal,
albeit minor, forms of gambling. Though, my police reporter assures me
that he heard some officers even talking about pools they were in.
So, alas, because of a huge case of hypocrisy, this is a news tip that
will have go the same route as the Tennessee Titans, close, but not quite
enough.
Besides, I’d probably have to give back the $50 my wife won. ...
You can say a lot of things about John Moorlach, the county’s treasurer
and chief tax collector. Top of the list of course is that he’s a great
financial whiz who, if we would have listened to him in 1994, probably
could have saved the county from suffering the worst municipal bankruptcy
in history.
He’s also the guy, I, and other property owners write our property tax
checks to each year. And I’m sure people say a lot of things about him at
that point.
But being a great judge of newspaper journalism isn’t something I’d
particularly ascribe to him. Nonetheless, we in the media now have more
than Pulitzers to aim for, now that the Moorlach Award for Excellence in
Journalism on Government Accountability is in existence.
The three awards, kicked off this year by Moorlach’s office, are titled,
Breaking the Story, The Heavy Lifting and The Insightful Column.
And apparently the only catch to winning such a coveted prize is you have
to write about something Moorlach thinks is important. Take for instance
the stories Moorlach deemed the best in all three categories of his
inaugural awards.
Each dealt with his latest cause, the 91 Express Lane toll road.
Curse that road for not stretching down to Newport-Mesa. Otherwise, I
know we would have had a chance. But I guess not everyone can win a
Moorlach.
...
I recently had the pleasure of sitting next to and across from our
esteemed mayors, Costa Mesa’s Gary Monahan and Newport Beach’s John Noyes
at a luncheon for the Orange County Coast Assn. at the Newport Nautical
Museum.
The event, which featured mayors from north and south county beach
cities, was very insightful and Noyes and Monahan did us proud.
And Monahan, after clicking off a long list of accomplishments Costa Mesa
had achieved, made a guarantee that I want to hold him to. He promised
that the old Costa Mesa High School farm site, which has been plagued by
a case of non-growing grass, will indeed open up this year complete with
new soccer fields.
But as county Supervisor Jim Silva, the emcee of the luncheon, pointed
out, he’s not getting much help from the rain. * TONY DODERO is the
editor of the Daily Pilot.. He can be reached at 949-574-4258 or via
e-mail at [email protected].
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