One change is already in place while engineers are hammering out others.
A deputy watches someone throw something in the bushes. Turns out it was a baggie of meth.
Company officials didn't ask for permission first and now retroactively seek it.
SHERIFF'S BLOTTER: Also, skateboarders disturbing a neighborhood, an angry taxi driver and a missing teen.
SJC-TV: Watch more than 1,000 students say goodbye.
Requiring artists to buy a yearly business license for showing their work once or twice a year is discouraging participation to the point where the show has gone stale, says the organizer.
A recent audit found that the trash hauler complies with most of the provisions in its agreement with San Juan Capistrano.
While the Ark of San Juan's mission is to rescue abandoned pets, the relationship with the city would start off small, with an educational bent.
Numerous copies were distributed before officials at the Catholic high school discovered a boy had exposed himself in one photo.
SJC-TV as only Patch can do it.
A city worker turned off a water main for a neighborhood, damaging a water heater, two local residents claim. Should the city have to pay?
Guess how long it took to travel from Rancho Viejo Road across the bridge? Come on, guess!
In response to Newport Beach's anti-bonfire efforts, a local councilman wants San Juan Capistrano to take a pro-fire ring stance.
Eagles can't solve a hard-throwing pitcher, and Desert Christian's batting order was pretty formidable, too.
Kaitlyn Merritt continues to fulfill her promise in the pole vault, one of two Eagles to land on the podium.
SHERIFF'S BLOTTER: Also, a reported prostitute, a drunken man, and an act of vandalism.