Out of the armchair
Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Everywhere Harvey Alexander Cochran goes in the city, a
disposable camera goes with him.
Photographs are not a hobby for Cochran; they are a way to make a
point at City Council meetings.
They have become a symbol for Cochran that he is no longer -- as of
Dec. 22 -- an “armchair advocate.â€
“Ever since I moved to Costa Mesa in 1997, I have been watching
council meetings on TV,†said Cochran, a representative for Californians
for Disability Rights and Advocacy who joined the organization in 1995.
“I finally decided to get off my butt. I wanted to see changes in the
city, and I felt it was up to the citizens to advise the council of the
things that are important to them. Every time I go up to talk, it’s a
public challenge for others to get up and do something.â€
Two of the reasons Cochran said he was inspired to leave the comfort
of his armchair are Joel Faris and Michael Clifford, both of whom ran for
City Council positions in November.
Following their lead, Cochran said he plans to run for City Council in
2002.
“People with disabilities have not had a say in City Council for
years,†he said. “It’s time we had that back.â€
Another reason he came to his first council meeting Dec. 22 -- and has
come to every one since -- is the election of Councilman Chris Steel, who
was sworn in at the previous meeting.
Cochran said Steel has been receptive to his ideas and seems to agree
that code enforcement should be a top priority.
Code enforcement has become an important issue to Cochran because he
is the vice president of the Beechwood chapter of the disability
organization, and he sees code enforcement as a way to improve wheelchair
accessibility.
Another important issue for Cochran is the availability of apartments
and other rentals.
“Not everyone can afford to buy a house, and that doesn’t mean you
can’t be involved. It doesn’t mean your point of view is not important,â€
Cochran said.
Cochran said he fights for equal access for people who use wheelchairs
because he remembers the discrimination his mother, who had polio,
suffered.
“It was like she was a subclass of human being,†he said. “It’s all
civil rights. People have the right to equal liberties, to go where they
want to go, to be who they want to be.â€
Cochran, who was diagnosed with bipolar disorder when he was 10, said
he knows what it means to be discriminated against.
Bipolar disorder is a chemical imbalance in the brain that sometimes
gives Cochran a rush-like feeling. The rushes make Cochran speak quickly,
for example.
Otherwise, the condition is not debilitating, but Cochran said people
sometimes treat him as though it is.
“At one point, the [discrimination] was so serious, I ended up being
institutionalized,†he said. “At that time, there was just no
understanding of my condition, and people were considered insane if they
had problems. Since then, I have had nothing but a healthy life, but at
least now I feel I can relate to other people who have problems, and I
feel I can represent them.â€
Cochran said he would like the council members to go through one
meeting in a wheelchair and to try to wheel themselves back and forth
from the lectern.
“You can’t know what it’s like to be disabled in that way, or to have
someone look at you like you’re crazy because you’re having a bipolar
attack and you’re talking too fast but can’t do anything about it,†he
said.
HARVEY ALEXANDER COCHRAN
AGE: 35
OCCUPATION: Inventory control manager at Allied Lighting Co. in Costa
Mesa
FAMILY: None
EDUCATION: Received a journeyman degree in food service management
from Community Rehabilitation Industries of Long Beach; has been taking
leadership classes and seminars at Landmark Education Centers since 1997
COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES: Vice president of the Beechwood Chapter of the
Californians for Disability Rights and Advocacy
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