San Clemente|News|
Occupy OC Marches Saturday With Irvine Blessing
The local version of Occupy Wall Street's anti-financial corruption movement is set to march through Irvine and host speakers at its "People's Village" campground.

Email: Adam.Townsend@patch.com
Phone: 949-436-3050
Hometown: Steubenville, Ohio
Birthday: July, 1983
Bio: I grew up in a small town in the greater Pittsburgh metro-area.
I attended journalism school at the Ohio University Scripps School of Journalism; I also studied studio art and Spanish at that school.
I've been a full-time newspaper and multimedia reporter for more than a decade. I started as a general assignment reporter at a small-town paper in the Ohio Valley and moved up through the ranks at that company as I completed my degree, doing piecework for other papers and magazines while classes were in session.
In September of 2006, I started as a reporter covering various cities in north Orange County at the Orange County Register. There I also administered the AroundDisney blog, shot hundreds of photographs, created feature and courtroom illustrations and designed informational graphics.
During my time at Patch, I've led local and national media on dozens of news stories, many of which have made national headlines. I cover everything from local business features to crime to elections and technology. I've been an occasional guest on KPBS Midday's Roundtable, speaking as an media expert on the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station.
I've always had a fascination with journalism – the excitement of the process, the leap into the vortex of events as they happen, the sociability of meeting and interviewing sources, the exposure of crime and malfeasance.
I'm also a practicing artist, completing large paintings and illustrations in my spare time. I'm involved in musical pursuits; I play a few instruments to varying degrees of proficiency, but the piano is my first love.
I'm a voracious reader, preferring smutty mystery novels as pleasure reading, literature and history if I'm looking for something meatier. I've become something of a World War I buff lately.
I do some skim boarding out on North Beach – near where I've lived in San Clemente since 2006. I also train at the local MMA gym, Finish Strong.
Growing up near Pittsburgh, I'm a rabid Steelers fan. Sorry, Chargers.
My wife, Laura Lee Townsend, and I were married at the Ole Hanson Beach Club in May 2009.
Laura Lee, who also has a background in journalism, now is a certified health and fitness coach and manages San Clemente Boot Camp. You'll be seeing her maiden-name byline -- Laura Lee Bloor -- on San Clemente Patch as a health and wellness blogger.
We're both involved in charitable causes, raising money especially for the Susan G. Komen Foundation, which fights breast cancer. We also put on a production of the Vagina Monologues at Knuckleheads in 2011. Sponsored by Patch, Knuckleheads and Buds Famous Hot Dogs, we raised more than $5,000 for Laura's House network of domestic violence shelters in south Orange County.
As San Clemente Patch editor, I am here to cover San Clemente and all that goes on here. My writers and I produce breaking local stories, feature pieces, profiles of locals, high school sports news, and whatever else affects our community.
My Beliefs
I believe in democracy, fairness and hard-nosed journalism that is vital, useful and relevant. I believe in God and Jesus Christ, but I am respectful of those with other beliefs.
I believe the First Amendment is the most crucial part of the Constitution and the best means of preserving our nation.
Politics
As a journalist, I'm not a member of any political party or organization. I lean toward candidates I believe offer the best path to good governance – independent of their political philosophy. I do not vote in the San Clemente City Council races or on San Clemente ballot measures because I am covering them and strive to maintain objectivity.
Religion
I'm a Christian who was raised as a Presbyterian, but I am not currently a member of any sect or church.
Local Hot-Button Issues
Planned development at North Beach is a subject of much controversy in town, as is the Marblehead development and outlet mall and the troubled San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. Marine and military issues are also at the forefront, considering our proximity to Camp Pendleton Marine Corps Base.
The local version of Occupy Wall Street's anti-financial corruption movement is set to march through Irvine and host speakers at its "People's Village" campground.

Fast-casual Greek food chain wants to have an indy vibe embodied by surf-folk rocker Frankenreiter and other artists, owner says.
The Cellar will be hosting the work of Orange County street artists and a local photographer Sunday for its Halloween party.
Hand crews mopped up the last of a small brush fire on the ridge overlooking Calle del Cerro, making sure all embers were out because of the dangerous conditions expected.
Marblehead Elementary is incorporating Red Ribbon Week, food donations and sustainability into its character education curriculum.
Tests, audible in the southern part of town, will commence at 8 a.m. and run to 1 p.m.
The Saturday variety show will feature singers, bands and comedians to raise money to buy turkeys and fixings for more than 1,000 military families in North Camp Pendleton.
The Saturday variety show will feature singers, bands and comedians to raise money to buy turkeys and fixings for more than 1,000 military families in North Camp Pendleton.
Joe David Nelms, who had been extradited from Texas earlier this year, admitted to molesting a 14-year-old parishioner in 1993.
Employees at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station participated in "The Great Shakeout" statewide quake drill and are meeting with first responders Oct. 26.
Local volunteer group holds its annual luncheon to recognize the contributions of San Clemente's first responders.
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.
Local commuters who use the Ortega Highway or the 241 Tollway will be affected.
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 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.
The Transportation Corridor Agency Operations and Finance Committee gave initial approval to the project Oct. 5.