With a focus on Peninsula-rooted issues, high-powered representatives from the city, county, airport, military and police department gave presentations and fielded community questions during a town hall meeting hosted by the Point Loma Association on Oct. 26. More than 100 local residents attended the event held at the United Portuguese S.E.S. Hall in Point Loma. Speakers at the town hall meeting included San Diego Police Department community relations officer David Whitfield, Naval Base Point Loma Commanding Officer Capt. Paul Marconi, San Diego County Regional Airport Authority Vice President of Development Bryan Enarson, Peninsula Community Planning Board Chairman Charles Mellor, Harbor Police Chief John Bolduc, San Diego County Board of Supervisors District 1 Supervisor Greg Cox and District 2 City Councilman Kevin Falconer. Each provided an update from their respective entity and gave a glimpse into the future before taking community questions at the end of the night. Among the highlights from the meeting: Timetable given on military projects Marconi provided an update on Project 401, the fuel-storage facility that broke ground on the base in March 2009. Marconi said the $139 million project is on schedule to be fully operational in March 2013, with fuel oil reclamation beginning this December. He also addressed the ongoing fuel plume that is leaking contaminants into the soil and ocean adjacent to the base, which he said is a five- to 10-year mitigation project. He said there will be a system in place by March 2011 to begin recovering the oil. City may install Graffiti Tracker system in 2011 Cox said the city is in the process of implementing the Graffiti Tracker system already used throughout the county in cities like Escondido and Oceanside. According to the company’s website, the system catalogs graffiti into a database in order to help identify, track, prosecute and seek restitution from taggers. At the Oct. 13 meeting of the City Council’s Committee on Public Safety and Neighborhood Services, the committee unanimously recommended that the city and county negotiate a contract for the service. For more information about the program, visit graffititracker.net.