Us versus them continues to hurt Costa Mesa
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Geoff West
For years, a tight-knit group of Westside residents, referred to as
the “improvers,” have waged a battle with the city powers-that-be,
hoping to resurrect their part of our city from the signs and causes
of decay.
They have participated in study after study, attended meeting
after meeting and joined committees, hoping to affect change in their
part of town. Members of their group have stood before the City
Council, Redevelopment Agency and Planning Commission and made
impassioned pleas for changes in the circumstances they feel cause
the decline in their neighborhoods. These targets have included the
Job Center and numerous charities on the Westside, as well as the
Orange Coast College Swap Meet -- all of which fit their definition
of “magnets” for undesirable elements in the community.
They have also targeted businesses on the Westside, some of which
they claim are poisoning their downwind neighborhoods with noxious
airborne pollutants. They have espoused re-zoning the Westside bluffs
industrial area, assuming that such an act will force out many of the
businesses located there -- and the jobs they provide to “undesirable
elements” -- under the guise of putting that land to its “best and
highest use,” upscale single family homes.
Among other complaints are the proliferation of vending carts and
produce trucks prowling their neighborhoods and the general
untidiness of the area, despite the fact that more infrastructure
improvement and beautification dollars have been spent by the city in
that part of town than any other in recent years.
Other complaints have ranged from the very serious -- a rising
crime rate and increased gang activity -- to others less important in
the grand scheme of things -- the “illegal” use of soccer balls in
some parks, for example.
The improvers have managed to get two sympathetic candidates,
Chris Steel and Allan Mansoor, elected to the City Council by clever
manipulation of the process, and have high hopes of acquiring a
majority on the council at the 2004 election. That potential majority
was stifled recently when Eric Bever stepped aside and allowed Mike
Scheafer to become the appointed candidate to replace departed Mayor
Karen Robinson.
They have participated in the Community Redevelopment Action
Committee, which has also frustrated their efforts to make changes
occur. At least one of their number has recently called for a
perpetuation of the group, stating that “We didn’t get what we
wanted.”
All these years of effort and, in their eyes, rejection have
resulted in what might be best described as an “us versus them”
mentality by many members of the group. The tension among some of
their members is quite obvious. This may have been a result of
disappointment in Chris Steel -- a man they felt would effectively
champion their cause when elected to the council. He has, of course,
proven to be a dismal failure in that regard -- providing no
leadership in the resolution of issues important to the group.
As acting mayor, when given the chance recently by Robinson’s
departure, he not only failed to lead, but he has been unable to
build alliances necessary to achieve majority votes on many Westside
issues. It appears that, despite his role as mayor pro tem, he has
been shoved off into a corner recently and his opinions given little
credence by the other council members. It’s highly unlikely he will
manage enough votes to be re-elected in 2004, which is good news for
a city desperate for leadership.
While most residents of this city are sympathetic to the issues
that concern the improvers, the possibility of a narrowly focused
majority on the City Council causes a good deal of apprehension among
other members of the community. This is especially so when
considering the underlying philosophy of one of their most outspoken
participants, Martin Millard, a City Hall activist known for his
controversial views.
As long as the group remains closely aligned with him, their
motives will also be suspect. As long as he appears to be pulling
strings behind the curtain, it will be assumed that they share his
philosophy on race. Clearly, it is their choice to make.
* GEOFF WEST is a Costa Mesa resident.
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