Q & A -- Will the Lions roar no more?
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Lions Club member Mike Scheafer has had a busy few weeks, but he
hasn’t been tied up as usual this time of year. Instead of making the
final preparations for Costa Mesa’s beloved community tradition, the Fish
Fry, Scheafer has been scrambling to try to save it.
He, and others in the club and in City Hall, failed. There won’t be a
Fish Fry.
The reasons? A lawsuit filed by an Irvine resident, who claims she
suffered injuries after tripping on a curb at Orange Coast College after
stopping by the Fish Fry, made it impossible for the college and the club
to reach agreement over who would be responsible for similar, future
incidents.
Scheafer is no stranger to the limelight. As a city parks
commissioner, he resigned last year over the way the city was handling
plans for a skateboard park at Charle and Hamilton streets.
He will stay busy enough, though. He’s an insurance agent in the
community and will become the Lions Club’s next president, a position he
has already held.
Scheafer sat down with Pilot City Editor S.J. Cahn to discuss what
happened with this year’s Fish Fry and what the future might hold for
both it and the Lions Club.
Is there any possibility of a last-minute solution or new location
to save this year’s Fish Fry?
No, really not. And probably the biggest reason is we’ve canceled the
carnival. And there’s no date for that.
Traditionally, we’re that first weekend after Memorial Day. We don’t
mind bucking that tradition, but after that, there’s the Fourth of July,
the Orange County Fair and everybody’s gone for summer. We’ve had good
offers, but they’re basically all too late.
Until we got the phone call that the [Costa Mesa] Special Events
Committee wouldn’t allow us at Lions Park, I thought we would have it at
the park. We had the carnival people waiting. We actually had the people
who make the fish batter waiting.
Were you surprised there was not more community outcry when initial
stories were published that the Fish Fry was in jeopardy?
I’ve had probably half a dozen phone calls. And we got one letter from
a gal who said she will miss it.
I was somewhat surprised.
Probably the biggest surprise was from the mayor [Libby Cowan], which
was she wasn’t there [to help save it].
What, if anything, might the Lions Club have done differently to
secure a location for the Fish Fry? Who’s to blame for the Fish Fry’s
demise this year?
In all of our discussion, we always felt that we didn’t want to point
fingers.
The biggest fault we had was we didn’t have a backup plan. We had a
rainout in ‘92, it was our first rainout. But by Saturday, it cleared up
and we went on to have a successful weekend. That [no backup plan] was a
horrendous mistake.
Everyone wants to blame the woman [who filed the lawsuit]. But it’s
not her fault. She didn’t even sue us. It’s not her fault. I don’t agree
with the lawsuit, but she didn’t sue us.
What the lawsuit did was clarify our relationship with OCC, and what
they want us to do.
We’re lucky somebody wasn’t hurt worse. The worst incident was a kid
was killed. It was during the parade in the ‘60s. The Lions Club was
responsible. It was our event. We paid that, even though you can never
repay that.
Has the Lions Club lost any membership in recent years, and if so,
did that contribute to the Fish Fry’s apparent loss of appeal?
Very much so. The service-type organizations have lost a lot of their
appeal.
At one point, we were over 100 members strong, and now we’re down to
46, and only half of them make it to all our meetings. That has a lot to
do with the loss of the Fish Fry.
The guys are getting older. Over the last couple years, we’ve lost
some really strong members of our club.
This [the Fish Fry’s cancellation] wouldn’t have happened five years
ago, let’s put it that way.
What is the Lions Club doing to ensure the Fish Fry happens in
2002? Are efforts also underway to revitalize the Lions Club?
Over the years, our Lions Club has just done the one event: the Fish
Fry. We’re going to start doing some others. For one, the La Habra Corn
Festival, the first weekend in August. We’re going to be selling fish,
the same fish as the Fish Fry. We’re going to call it just “Fish and
Chips.”
2002 is also the 75th anniversary of the Lions Club. I’ll be the first
repeat president [in the club’s history]. We’re going to go on a severe
membership drive.
Hopefully, without having the Fish Fry this year, when people call
about how they can help, we’re going to ask them to join. The club is by
invitation, and it’s time we start inviting people.
BIO
Hometown: Costa Mesa
Family: Wife, three sons, daughter-in-law, one granddaughter
Education: Estancia High School, Orange Coast College, Cal State
Fullerton
Community involvement: Lions Club, including past district governor;
former city parks commissioner; former Costa Mesa Sanitary District board
member; founder of Costa Mesa Little League; past AYSO board of
directors; board of directors for Harbor Area Boys & Girls Club
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