Although there was lengthy debate about what materials to use, a program in which the city pays half of the cost for residents to repair sidewalks in front of their homes will move forward.
About a dozen residents from neighborhoods east of the new I-5 construction asked council to call for a timeout on the CalTrans project.
Dozens of anti- and pro-nuclear power advocates, including San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station employees, showed up to sway council members in their deliberations Tuesday.
Alhough the city has little authority over operation of San Onofre, officials are set to consider a proposal to lobby for better safety and a new road out of town.
The Foothill/Eastern Transportation Corridor Agency board gave staff the go-ahead to start revising studies and obtaining approvals to finish the first four miles of the 241 extension, maybe by 2014.
The experts who spoke at Tuesday's meeting to discuss the Fukushima disaster and San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station talked about potential meltdown, NRC flubs and effects of fallout.
The San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station tests its emergency sirens annually.
Four experts brought in by a consortium of local anti-nuclear advocates talked about safety concerns about the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station and the Fukushima, Daiichi disaster.
Experts brought in by local anti-nuclear power advocates will present information and answer questions at a forum hosted by San Clemente.
The City Council told staff to go ahead with plans to add sidewalks and other improvements. One councilman argues against plan.
A committee of the Transportation Corridor Agency votes to build the extension in three segments—a plan that still needs approval from the Board of Directors.
The San Clemente Branch Library will gain almost 5,000 square feet, with more public computers, a webinar center and other renovations.
City Council extended negotiations with a nonprofit that wants to build a 1,000-seat venue at La Pata and Calle Saluda.
Nuclear Regulators and San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station officials explained important safety lessons learned by the industry from the Fukushima Daiichi disaster in March.
An angry mood Tuesday pervaded an informational meeting about the Fukushima nuclear disaster and how it relates to safety practices at San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station.
Improvements to San Clemente's water reclamation system with save nearly 304 million gallons of imported potable water per year.
Speakers and residents pack the council chambers to talk about building a possible structure at the pier, adding meters and other options to improve parking in the area.
The avid tollway foes respond to business group's efforts in support of extending the 241 toll road.
Bagpipes keened over the ocean Sunday from Park Semper Fi.
San Diego Gas & Electric CEO says that a worker changing out a capacitor in Arizona tripped a major transmission line and that failures rippled throughout the grid. A federal investigation will be launched.
The city will hire artists to paint designs and images on five gray metal utility boxes around town.
A bagpiper will play Sunday to commemorate the victims of the 9/11/01 terrorist attacks. OCFA personnel will conduct flag ceremonies in the morning.
The council also discusses an upcoming meeting with officials at San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, approves a public art program and signs anti-smoking, loud-party and picketing ordinances into law.
After years of feeling disconnected from the rest of San Clemente, residents of this ethnic enclave are enjoying triumphs on the football field, at City Hall and in other arenas.
City official credits new programs with an increase in the percentage, but some may not actually be as green as you might think.
Some 40 local artists have submitted designs for the city's upcoming general plan document.
The Second Battalion, Fourth Marines begins deploying to Afghanistan over the coming weeks.
Columnist Tom Barnes says to move forward with anything but a park and parking at North Beach, the City Council will have to rescind some past resolutions.
Soon protesters targeted at specific residences of San Clemente neighborhoods will have to back off to outside a 200-foot radius.
Until an Army Corps of Engineers project to rebuild the beach commences in San Clemente, beachgoers must put up with less towel real estate, city officials say.
The San Clemente City Council votes to allow fines against people who host loud parties, which can now only be dealt with though a cumbersome legal process.
The city will soon post signs in parks all over the city banning smoking, though will rely on park monitors and education to enforce the ban, rather than law enforcement personnel.
Three new ordinances will add restrictions on tobacco in parks, pickets in residential neighborhoods and "unruly gatherings."
The Cousineaus will donate $20,000 to name the lobby the Evan Cousineau Reception area.
The agency is contributing $56,500 to the $113,000 project that will remove litter and pollution from runoff at Linda Lane.
Coastal Commission staffers recommend the approval of a four-story building that was involved in a number of lawsuits after the San Clemente Council approved it in 2010.
The developer who petitioned the court to throw out the results still has a couple legal avenues open, attorneys say.
Officials at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station say it’s too early to know what new rules the NRC will apply to the plant as a result of its Japan Task Force. Some residents continue to fight for the plant's shutdown as media question safety.
The General Plan Advisory Committee, tasked with planning the city's new zoning maps, forwarded its suggested development priorities to the council; advocates for a park at North Beach speak out at the meeting in favor of a park.
The Orange County Register reports that nudists at San Onofre's Trail 6 say they're being harassed by state park rangers.