Belmont Shore-Naples|News|
Breaking News

I was just 19, and still at Golden West College, when I was hired by the Los Angeles Times Orange County edition for the lowliest job in the newsroom: clerk. Apart from being asked to get a fake ID so I could buy the night copy desk beer and pizza, and to keep wives and girlfriends on different phone lines, I was ecstatic: A college sophomore, actually working at one of the three great newspapers in the country as a teenager. I did my homework in the newsroom on weekends in the event big news broke and they'd need a reporter so bad that they'd send the college newspaper student to pinch hit. And I did.
I cut my teeth on the police beat and still love breaking news, but also grew into a better writer by learning from some of the best in the country. After two decades at a newspaper, and having to commute three hours daily to L.A., I opted to reinvent myself as a more focused mom and wife and learn more about online writing. I also had more time to volunteer, and enjoy the outdoors around me.
I am a native Southern Californian, born in Whittier, where I grew up swimming in pools, building go-karts and playing kick-the-can. One thing I love about Belmont Shore is that I can be outdoors and have so many places to be. I love to swim and do laps at the Belmont Plaza Pool, float on Alamitos Bay or cycle down the bike path to the Long Beach Museum of Art. Movies are something my son and I love to do together, followed by an hour or more reading at a bookstore. I also try to meet a minimum weekly quota of one double-double, no cheese.
Your Beliefs
At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable. This disclosure is not a license for you to inject your beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that your beliefs are on the record will cause you to be ever mindful to write, report and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you ever see evidence that we failed in this mission, please let us know.
Politics
Knowledge is power, and people need to understand how decisions are made in their community and how they can participate.
I believe in government for the people and by the people, and that public officials should do what they promise. I also believe that citizens have to work harder to ensure that they do. This is where Patch journalism will be key.
Religion
I believe in God. When I hear Gospel music in church or in concert, I feel God.
Local Hot-Button Issues
Balancing the rights of residents, visitors and businesses. Public safety. Traffic, particularly along Second Street into the intersection with Pacific Coast Highway. The future of the Los Cerritos Wetlands.

This year, grab the kids and make Mom or Grandma a truly unique handmade gift, most of which are quick and close for you last-minute gifters. And a bouquet from Long Beach shops also works.
Police will be staged and having drivers go through the checkpoint to reduce drunk driving.
He's the first male harbor seal born at the Aquarium of the Pacific. Watch the moments after his birth with older Mom Shelby, and find out how you might be the one who names him.
It was ruled police were already headed for Dorner when he hijacked the truck of the Camp Tahquitz manager, known as 'Ranger Rick' to thousands of Southern California scouts.
The public will get a peak via the media Wednesday, but then the baby harbor seal will be sheltered with his mother, who has already raised the Aquarium of the Pacific's first-born pup.
In one week, Long Beach Patch will have a new design and a new way to connect.
In one week, Belmont Shore-Naples Patch will have a new design and a new way to connect.
It was not known why the man was in the stormy seas off the Peninsula.
Rainfall, which set a new record, prompted Long Beach officials to warn against entering ocean water due to unhealthy bacterial matter that is washed through urban centers to the sea.
Long Beach police hope someone can identify the suspect, who has a 'Luigi'-like moustache and can be seen in this video climbing a ladder and staring into the store surveillance lens.