STEVE SMITH -- What’s up
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It was something we never thought possible, but there they were. After
a wild dinner at an Italian restaurant in Tustin, Cay and I and friends
Kathy and Dave Miller and Jodi and Matt Coker wandered into the Starbucks
Coffee on Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue. Slouching there in the
store, the home of high-octane refreshments, were two people fast asleep.
How anyone could snooze after a cup of that joltin’ joe is beyond me.
***
Just around the corner from the Starbucks is the construction site for
Standard Pacific’s new, hard-fought Mesa Verde homes. I could not help
but notice how ironic it is that a mile down the street, residents fought
ICI Development tooth and nail to prohibit the improvement of Harbor
Center and the addition of a Home Depot. Yet, at Mesa Verde, these new
homes are being built so close to another busy shopping center that
anyone with a long arm could touch it. Here in the new Mesa Verde
development there is a waiting list for home buyers. What a difference
two years makes.
***
Here’s a special note to the citizenship screening crowd, whose
arguments include claims that our schools are declining and our property
values are falling because we are overrun with undocumented residents. A
friend of mine who is a real estate agent on Costa Mesa’s Westside sent
me a note about a listing on Oak Street in Canyon Park, only moments away
from the store on 19th Street where Cay bought last year’s exceptional
Christmas tamales. The home is a nice three-bedroom, one-bath place that
lists for $294,000.
My interest piqued, I e-mailed my friend and asked her how much the
home was worth a year ago. Here is her reply: “I sold a house [in the
same neighborhood] with the exact same floor plan, in similar condition,
about 1 1/4 years ago for $235,000. Some say it might have gone for
$240,000 in Jan. 2000.” So much for our declining property values.
And our declining schools? Sorry, screeners, those numbers are going
up too. In fact, it was just announced that the school district is
receiving $870,000 in state funds as a reward for their achievement on
the last batch of tests. Nineteen schools get money, including Wilson,
Whittier, Victoria, Rea and Pomona elementary schools -- all of which are
on the Westside.
So it now seems the only thing declining here in Costa Mesa is the
strength of the arguments of those who can’t seem to find anything good
to say about the county’s best city. When Ingrid returns from her
honeymoon, she’ll be a new resident of Costa Mesa -- you know, that city
that no one could ever want to live in because it’s in such decline.
“I can’t wait to live in Costa Mesa!” Ingrid told me.
***
Cay has rounded up the books that Wendy Leece has asked be taken off
the Newport Harbor High School reading list, and we are reading them. I
disagree with those who have said we have no right to comment on these
books. When it comes to the curriculum in the district where our children
attend school, we have every right. Just because others disagree with us
doesn’t forfeit our right to speak. That’s censorship.
I’m still having trouble with this concept that Leece is trying to
exercise some form of censorship. Funny, when a school district bans
books that explain creationism, it’s not censorship, it’s “separation of
church and state.” But watching out for unsuitable material for minor
children -- even, perhaps, to the point of erring on the side of caution,
well, that’s obviously censorship.
And how interesting that some chose the statue of David to illustrate
the point. The story of David is a biblical one, so if we’re going to
show children the statue, we must also explain who he is. But, alas, we
can’t do that because his is a biblical story, and we have to keep church
and state separated. Once upon a time, we didn’t have to. Cay recalls a
book in her public school in Placentia titled “The Bible as Literature.”
I’ll repeat one point. The school district has delisted books before
without anyone screaming about censorship So, please, can we move away
from censorship and go to the real issue, which is a difference in
standards?
***
One final note to those who wish to label Leece’s request as a move by
the “religious conservatives.” Sorry, try again. I am far from a
religious conservative, and I agree with Leece, as do many other people
who are not “religious conservatives.” Can’t we simply be “concerned
parents,” or is it necessary to label us with what you believe is a bad
name?
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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