Lawyers for the city and a local newspaper negotiated a deal in court today. It still must be approved by the City Council.
The San Juan Capistrano Planning Commission tackles how to accommodate more affordable housing.
San Juan Capistrano city officials host an event to educate and elicit feedback.
The $72.2 million project will take four years to complete.
San Juan Capistrano Jim Reardon filed an unsuccessful complaint with the Fair Political Practices Commission.
The city reacts to having its credit rating recently lowered.
The move is directly related to the city's water woes, including financial troubles and a lawsuit.
City engineers will study whether newly added traffic measures will help traffic in an already congested area.
Shunning a settlement offer, the three councilmen named in the lawsuit and the city attorney prepare for court.
The council majority snubs the minority.
San Juan Capistrano City Council to discuss the numbers and operations plan Tuesday.
Just before Thanksgiving, residents received a serving of local politics.
With so many establishments serving alcohol in downtown San Juan, a new beer bar needs to get a second blessing before getting a license to serve the suds.
The law of unintended consequences may force water agencies to change the way water is billed. State politicians may then have to course-correct.
Unable to attend the last meeting, Derek Reeve weighs in on the issues dividing the city.
The DATA Act was approved 388-1 in the House and now goes to the Senate, where similar legislation is being considered.
The lawsuit on behalf of "Community Common Sense" seeks to lift the ban for all newspapers.
The council discussed a letter from the Chamber of Commerce, seeking to quiet the recent rancor in town.
John D. Jenkins said city residents may have been overcharged $20-30 million on their water bills.
The organization attempts to broker a peace accord.
A recent report from Washington lays out damage done by last month’s government shutdown.
It was the San Juan Capistrano council majority -- not member Roy Byrnes -- which may have committed the bigger error, a leading authority on public meetings says.
Recall supporters have until March 7, 2014 to gather enough signatures.
Accusations and insults fly at Tuesday's meeting.
Councilman Sam Allevato was re-elected just a year ago, the board of directors says.
The Orange County Traffic Authority reports some 1,074 intersections have been synchronized in the last five years. The goal is 2,000 intersections by 2016.
Meanwhile, San Juan Capistrano's city attorney wants no part of it
Short on money, the City Council will look at what to cut in plans for the Northwest Open Space.
A report detailing the environmental consequences of the project will now not be ready until early next year.
The pendulum has swung toward being business friendly. But it's bound to swing back, the local planning commissioner says.
Issa's House committee is investigating the launch of HealthCare.gov under the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare.
In a letter to the Office of Management and Budget, Issa said a “political decision” to mask the costs of insurance premiums online contributed to technical problems with the website.
Issa said he voted with the Congressional majority because even a brief default would have had "immediate and catastrophic effects on the U.S. and world financial markets."
The Orange County Board of Supervisors will discuss a proposal to place a measure on the June ballot to require all Orange County elected officials to pay the full cost of their retirement plans at its Nov. 5 meeting.
Residents on a small street in the Los Rios district have had enough and want permits to restrict parking.
The federal Office of Personnel Management said federal employees who have been furloughed since Oct. 1 should expect to return to work on Thursday.
Still, City Manager Karen Brust is optimistic.
Get ready: 50 sirens will sound several times in the communities around the San Onofre nuclear plant from 10 a.m. to noon and will last about three minutes each time.