‘It will keep the animals out’
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Greg Risling
COSTA MESA -- Where Cindy Soto rests, her daughter does not anymore.
Soto’s 4-year-old daughter, Sierra, snuggled up with her mother every
night as they fell asleep. They would curl up with one another, holding
each other tightly.
Now Soto is left cradling a picture of Sierra and her daughter’s baby
blanket when she lies in bed. A dog named Goldie, recently rescued by
Soto from an animal shelter, licks the tears from her eyes.
But from the pain that has consumed her life since Sierra’s death in May,
there shines a light. Fiercely determined to not have her daughter’s
death chalked up as another senseless tragedy, Soto is trying to evoke
sweeping change through a foundation called Sierra’s Light.
The program’s goal calls for creating new legislation to protect children
while educating parents about safety guidelines for child-care centers
and schools.
The undertaking is enormous. Soto’s energy, sapped easily by recounting
her daughter’s death, comes from Sierra and her faith.
“I’m still in the grieving process,” said Soto, as she sat in an empty
dance studio. “I’m focused on the foundation because I don’t want this to
happen to another child.”
From tragedy, an idea arises
Just two months have passed since Sierra was killed while she was playing
with her friends at the Southcoast Early Childhood Learning Center on
Magnolia Avenue. Sierra and 3-year-old Brandon Wiener were struck by an
car driven by 39-year-old Steven Allen Abrams, who police claim
intentionally gunned his vehicle toward the children. Abrams appeared in
court Friday for a pretrial hearing. He could face the death penalty if
convicted.
Days after Sierra’s death, Soto sought refuge at a friend’s home in
Laguna Beach. There, in the midst of the wave of emotions, the idea of
the foundation sprung forth.
Soto asked for her computer at home. She began typing proposals and
getting the names and numbers of local and state legislators.
Soto began setting the platform: mandatory safety requirements to
physically protect schools and child-care centers, tapping funds from
Prop. 10 to renovate facilities, and special enhanced provisions for
criminals who willfully hurt children.
Soto hasn’t stopped there. She proposes a community-based campaign that
will support existing centers to receive assistance from various groups.
By involving different aspects of the community, Soto hopes the results
will provide a safer environment for children.
She has spent nearly every day drafting proposals since Sierra was
killed. She enlisted the help of legal and child-care advocates. Her
vision was being realized.
Then, on Tuesday, it happened again.
A gunman, reportedly bent on killing Jewish people, shot four children at
a community center in Granada Hills. Soto’s frustration grew. She worked
more furiously.
“In light of the Granada Hills tragedy, we are determined more than ever
to see these foundation goals achieved,” she said. “We have a job to do
and a purpose. Now is the time we need to make change.”
Soto is a firm believer that solid walls should be erected around
day-care centers as visual barriers. Some parents balk at the idea,
noting that children would feel caged. Soto said the Granada Hills
incident adds further weight to her argument.
“Walls with bars can keep a car out, but they can’t stop an Uzi,” she
said. “Having solid walls won’t cage our children. It will keep the
animals out.”
Soto’s foundation would like to see steps similar to what the federal
government took after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. Of the 108
facilities that have preschools, all of them have changed their safety
measures and adhere to new guidelines.
California legislators have been receptive to Soto’s proposals. Gov. Gray
Davis said in a statement this week following the Granada Hills shooting
that change is on the horizon.
“We must work to make the places where our children gather safer and more
secure,” Davis said. “We must continue to demonstrate that the good and
decent people of California stand firmly against the forces of
intolerance and evil.”Dr. Sheri Senter, a child-care consultant who sits
on the foundation board, agrees that renovations to centers and schools
are imperative.
“Through the foundation we are trying to be a catalyst for change,” she
said. “We want to make sure existing child care centers improve their
safety both with their entrance and physical parameters.”
A star only she can see
Most of Soto’s days are spent working on the foundation, although she
still teaches classes at her dance studio. With the amount of work still
ahead and the reminder of her daughter’s death fresh in her mind, simple
tasks are sometimes hard to accomplish.
“If I can get up to take a shower and make a few phone calls, that is a
good day for me,” she said.
For Soto, the wounds torn open by the tragedy won’t heal in the near
future. Abrams’ trial is pending. A memorial plaque will be placed at the
child-care center where Sierra and Brandon were killed. Her life has
taken on an entirely different look and feel.
She doesn’t drive by the center, let alone the streets that surround it
only a half-mile away from her dance studio. She hasn’t kept in touch
with the center’s teachers. The thoughts of the tragedy are too painful.
Soto will always have her daughter in her heart and on her mind. She
wears a gold ring on her right index finger that honored her recent
graduation from Cal State Fullerton. The gem she picked was a blue
sapphire, Sierra’s birthstone. Under the right lighting, a hologram in
the shape of a star twinkles inside the stone. It’s hard to see the star
most of the time. Maybe only Soto can see her daughter’s favorite shape.
“I miss her more every day,” she said. “I know my daughter would support
what I’m trying to do. She would probably say something like ‘you go,
Mommie.”’
* For more information or to make a donation, contact Sierra’s Light
Foundation, PMB 481, 1048 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach 92660 or call (714)
546-7747.
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