Community Commentary -- H. Ross Miller
By unanimous vote, the board of directors of the 5,700-member Friends
of Oasis Senior Center has requested that I respond to the insulting
remarks about the city’s senior citizens that Measure T co-chairman and
former major Clarence Turner made in the Daily Pilot on Nov. 10,
following the overwhelming victory of Measure S.
According to the Pilot, after admitting Measure S proponents were at a
“clear advantage” in the growth struggle, because most of them are
retired and didn’t have to work, Turner said, “Those people (senior
citizens) tend to think in terms of we-don’t-want-any-more-development
and are only concerned about themselves.”
Turner should hang his head in shame. Does he have any respect for the
elderly? It is true that there was heavy elderly involvement in the
Measure S campaign, and it is also clear that senior citizens are the
largest voting block in the city, which carried Measure S to victory.
More than 1,000 Measure S petition signatures were gathered at Oasis
Senior Center in the early stages of the Measure S campaign. There are
20,000 senior citizens in Newport Beach.
Most of us have been here for many years and have very long memories.
We have watched the changes in the city, the bay and residential areas
closely and observed the actions of the Planning Commission, City
Council, three city managers and the city staff.
Most of us are registered voters, and most of us vote and we have long
memories.
As for Turner’s assertion that seniors are concerned only “about
themselves,” it is fact that our elderly in this city are the backbone of
volunteer activity and efforts throughout Newport.
Now that their working days are over, they serve the community -- for
example, in schools, hospitals, and libraries. You see them everywhere --
as tutors and assistants at all public elementary schools, at Hoag,
convalescent hospitals, Taste of Newport, Sherman Gardens, the Shalimar
Learning Center, Continuation High School, the Environmental Nature
Center, Meals on Wheels, polling precincts, boards of directors of
charitable and community service organizations.
They even make historical presentations about World War II to school
students and also do fund-raising for charitable causes. We think
Turner’s comments about seniors lie more in his concern for the “bottom
line” of developer and business interests rather than our quality of life
here.
Turner in his capacity as Measure T co-chairman and former mayor
clearly owes an apology to the senior citizen community of Newport.
Hopefully when his working career is over, he will come to see things
they way we do.
* H. ROSS MILLER is a resident of Newport Beach and the Advocacy
Chairman of the Friends of the Oasis Senior Center.
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