Students need to be healthy to do well in school
Ellen Wright
Tobacco companies have become enormously wealthy by enticing
school children to become addicted lifelong smokers. Proposition 10
takes money from those same tobacco giants to help poor sick kids
avoid smoking and live healthier lives.
If that isn’t a good idea, what is?
If now isn’t the right time, tell the mother of a sick child when
the time will be right.
If West Costa Mesa isn’t the right place for a free clinic for
children, why not?
Recent writers claim they’ll have to wait a few seconds longer to
make left turns. Others, living in five-year-old tract homes claim
that 25 times the cost of their homes when new is not enough -- that
prices are depressed in their neighborhood so children who are their
neighbors should either go without health care or travel to some
other area for free medical care.
What kind of a society are we becoming? What is more important
than the well-being of our community’s children? Can’t we see the
links between under-performing schools and pupils too ill, tired or
malnourished to learn?
I have lived in Costa Mesa for 40 years. During 20 of those years,
I taught in Westside Costa Mesa schools (Wilson and Whittier). I can
tell you that ailing kids do not do well in school.
They can’t wait for us to get our sense of morality and compassion
in proper order. Their minds and bodies are forming now. These
children are our future and, as we shape their futures, we are
shaping our own.
Someone reportedly asked Jesse James why he robbed banks. He gave
history’s first recorded, “Duh†answer -- “because that’s where the
money is.â€
Why does CHOC want to open a free clinic in West Costa Mesa to
treat poor, underserved, unhealthy children?
“Duh.â€
* ELLEN WRIGHT is a Costa Mesa resident.
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