Forces behind banner debate need to relax
In the ongoing talks to improve Costa Mesa neighborhoods and the city
in general, the discussion often turns to blight. The rundown
apartments of the Westside, streets in disrepair, shopping carts
strewn along the sidewalks are all fair game in this battle. Nobody
should be expected to live or work within blighted conditions, and we
stand behind those who want to make this town a better place, both
visually and economically.
But when Little League banners suddenly become part of a
discussion on blight, we have to say that not only has the battle
been lost but the whole war as well. That’s because Little League
banners represent the best Newport-Mesa has to offer, in our
estimation. They are symbolic of the relationship between children,
neighborhoods and commerce and the complaints about them seem
misguided and misdirected.
For full disclosure, the Daily Pilot has sponsored and provided
banners for youth sports in the past and will most likely continue to
do so in the future.
So it’s probably no wonder that this issue has left us wondering
how there aren’t more pertinent issues to pursue, more problems to
solve, than the removal of Little League banners from local playing
fields. Judging by the response from council members, who saw the
banner brouhaha bubble to the surface at a recent meeting, we aren’t
alone in this head-scratcher.
“Just the fact that we spent the last two and a half hours [on
this] it’s a very sad day,” said Mayor Gary Monahan, after the
council denied a move to eliminate banners in response to complaints
from those who live near California Elementary and TeWinkle Middle
schools.
The complaint was that the banners, which have hung in place for
eight years now without incident, are suddenly an eyesore. It’s a
feeble complaint indeed and one that begs the question: Is there a
bigger agenda afoot to eliminate youth sporting events from these
school fields?
For the record, this newspaper has long taken a stand in favor of
youth sports and organized youth sports leagues. And we’re not going
to change that now.
If the hanging of banners helps fuel the coffers of youth sports,
whether it be Little League or otherwise, we can’t find anything
inherently wrong with that.
Frankly, those who chose to move in next to a school really don’t
have much of a case to now complain about the uses at that school,
especially those uses that involve youth activities.
As we’ve said in the past, the playing of youth sports like Little
League and AYSO soccer are all parts of the community’s fabric. Those
who now stand opposed to such activities would do well to face that
fact.
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