Mailbag - March 28, 2002
Job Center clearly divides Costa Mesa
I am such a longtime Westside homeowner that I can remember when Costa
Mesa was one town and when people jokingly referred to what we now call
the Westside as “Goat Hill.” It was not a derisive term, but more to
indicate that there was still open space on the Westside. I never felt,
in all the years growing up here, that I was discriminated against for
living on the wrong side of the tracks -- until now.
The actions that the City Council has taken have methodically and
seriously divided my city. They have created a class system and
perpetuate the segregation by ensuring that only the best new
construction and focus occurs on the northern and eastern parts of my
city. The Westside has become the dumping ground for not only the rest of
Costa Mesa, but the entire surrounding area.
My wife and I walk every morning about 5:30 a.m. and often pass our
city-sponsored Job Center. I have watched carefully for a long time the
names on the sides of the trucks that stop to pick up the dayworkers.
Almost invariably they will be from Newport Beach, Huntington Beach,
Balboa Island and surrounding cities. Why I and my fellow Westsiders have
been singled out to bear the brunt of what all the rest of Costa Mesans
don’t want in their neighborhood escapes me.
I have become one of the irrelevant Westside residents who lives in
the eye of the Job Center hurricane.
Last week, I had a client arrive from a foreign country. She arrived
at my business carrying a cane. As she was not physically impaired, I
asked why she carried this cane. She replied that, “from the appearance
of your neighborhood, I felt it was probably a dangerous area.”
I live a block away from the Job Center.
CHRISTIAN ERIC
Westside
City name has other options too
In regard to “Group lobbies for new city name” (March 26): If they’re
looking for a name that will improve the city’s image, how about
“Costa-Mesa-by-Newport-Beach?”
RICHARD SHOWSTACK
Newport Beach
Costa Mesa can boast tourism angle
How about Costa Mesa-by-the-sea-and-not-too-far-from-Disneyland?
BRIAN BOOHER
Costa Mesa
Flag must be respected for real survivors
Concerning “Just another Survivor,” March 22) and the image of Sarah
Jones sitting on the American flag on the ground, I could not help but
think of the hundreds of thousands of Americans who served and did not
survive following our flag into battle the past 200-plus years.
The flag, you see, is the symbol of our freedoms and justice. It
represents America -- the country that most of the world idolizes for who
and what we are, though not perfect.
Our strengths have certainly come to the forefront since Sept. 11. The
patriotism shown made us all proud. Don’t let it wane. Keep the symbol of
freedom flying high for all to aspire.
Respect it. Remember those who took it into battle. I might remind
that the flag, while never being allowed to touch the ground, should not
be flown after dusk unless directly lighted. It should also not be flown
in any foul weather. And when signs of tatter show, it should be retired
through the local firehouse or Scout troop.
ROBERT SMITH
Costa Mesa
Ducks haven’t always lived on Balboa Island
I just had to respond to the Gail Perkins letter to the editor
published Feb. 24 regarding the ducks that make their home on Balboa
Island (“Ducks lived on Balboa Island first.”
She claims the ducks have been there forever, which is not true. When
I was young and going to school in Newport, there absolutely were no
ducks that made their permanent home around the island.
That all started sometime around the mid-1950s when a teacher from
Newport High whose family lived on the canal had some pet mallards that
they raised and that all the neighbors started to feed. It all grew from
that, and the pollution has been going on ever since, which definitely is
not “charming.”
J.W. PARKS
Newport Beach
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