The crusaders
Jennifer Kho
For more than 13 years, most of Bill Turpit’s mornings were the same.
He drove down his street, turned right on 18th Street and took it to
Newport Boulevard.
It wasn’t until 1993 that he turned another direction -- left on 18th
Street to Placentia Avenue.
Turpit’s decision to make that left turn -- guided by Save Our Youth
founder the late Roy Alvarado -- inspired him to make a lasting change in
his daily routine.
Alvarado “introduced me to a whole new neighborhood,” said Turpit,
secretary for both the Latino Business Council and the Latino Community
Network. “I never saw that part of Costa Mesa. It is representative of
what a lot of people experienced in that, for many years until recently,
it has been a kind of invisible community. Kids go to school, parents go
to work, and they are pretty quiet and don’t get any attention. It was
only gang incidents that generated attention.”
Turpit is one of many people who have been inspired, one way or
another, to spend time and effort improving the city’s Westside.
Some dedicate an hour or two a week to volunteer in some way, while
others have made the goal of improving conditions their major lifetime
work.
Since the November election, they have had much to do.
With the election of Councilman Chris Steel and Councilwoman Karen
Robinson, the council has been more divided than ever in opinion, often
voting 3 to 2.
The new council and the large number of big issues and projects it has
been dealing with have come hand in hand with higher attendance and
public involvement, as well as many heated debates.
While the different views about Westside issues are not new, the
election of Steel, who ran nine times before winning, has intensified and
given more attention to the voices of those who agree with him.
But there are still many who don’t agree with the ideas that the
presence of too many charities and illegal immigrants are the main cause
of many of the Westside’s woes.
Others still, such as Tom and Eleanor Egan, are involved politically
and often attend City Council meetings, where they advise the council of
their opinions and lobby for a Westside cleanup. Others work behind the
scenes to try to help people in need.
These activists, equipped with diverse styles, personalities and
opinions, have a wide-range of backgrounds and motivations.
The remedies they advocate differ from person to person, but the goal
is the same -- a safe, clean, welcoming and prosperous neighborhood.
BILL TURPIT
It was a number of gang problems that caught Turpit’s attention in the
early 1990s.
“I was concerned,” Turpit said. “I wondered what was going on in my
neighborhood. Then I read about Roy Alvarado, who was actually doing
something about gangs, and I was fortunate enough to develop a
relationship with him. Through that relationship, I got to personally
meet the Westside Latino community. [Alvarado] helped me remove that veil
of fear and misunderstanding by educating me about the true nature of the
Latino community, which is very family-oriented, very loyal, very proud
and very generous, but still a community that has problems that need to
be solved.”
Bad luck helped prompt him to begin volunteering at Save Our Youth and
Share Our Selves, he said.
Turpit, a lawyer, was laid off from his job at a 45-year-old real
estate development company, which closed as a result of the recession.
“The economy gave me the gift of time to learn about my neighborhood,”
he said. “I had not been a volunteer in my community at all before then,
although I had done some volunteer work at UC Irvine and Cal State
Fullerton.”
Even though he has since gone back to a busy work schedule as an
attorney at the Jackson DeMarco and Peckenpaugh law offices in Irvine,
Turpit remains active in the city.
“I get a real sense of belonging to a small-town community,” he said.
“It’s a gift to be able to walk down the street and say ‘hi’ to your
neighbor or to know the merchants you do business with.”
Aside from the friendly attitude, Turpit likes the high number of
pedestrians on the Westside and the area’s proximity to the beach,
restaurants and the freeway.
Things he said he’d like to improve include the streets -- especially
19th Street, which he said is “a disgrace” -- and the number of
businesses that sell liquor, which he’d like to reduce.
DON ELMORE
Don Elmore, 63, said he often saw things that he thought needed to be
improved in Costa Mesa, but 70-hour workweeks and a busy weekend schedule
kept him from trying to make those changes for years.
After serving in the Army, Elmore moved to Costa Mesa 25 years ago
because of a job offer.
Things were bad when he moved in and progressively got worse, he said.
“My main concern is to change the slum-like conditions in a lot of
areas, with overcrowding, noise pollution and so many other problems,” he
said. “One of my main goals is to get all the tarps out of Costa Mesa,
because I think covering stuff up with cardboard, sheet metal or tarps
makes it look like a shanty town. There are houses I see around that I
think really should be condemned, and the liquor stores and pawn shops
along 19th Street attract the wrong people. An area with a lot of liquor
stores and pawn shops is just thought of as the seedy side of town.”
In 1993, an accident at the Mercedes Benz car dealership he worked at
changed Elmore’s life.
A manhole had been left uncovered and Elmore said he fell through it,
injuring his back, shoulders and neck.
During a surgery, he said that nerves in his back were cut, putting
him on 24-hour-a-day pain pills and leaving him bedridden for four
months.
Elmore is now able to walk and drive short distances, but he said the
progressions from his bed to a wheelchair, from the wheelchair to a
walker, from the walker to a cane and from the cane to only his two feet
were difficult struggles that took about six years.
“Now I manage to do quite a bit for short periods, really,” he said.
“I do walk, I just don’t walk good or walk far.”
The accident had at least one silver lining, however.
It gave him more time and, about a year and a half ago, Elmore decided
he wanted to get involved in trying to change the things he thinks of as
amiss.
He went to a Westside Improvement Assn. meeting a year ago, signed in
and was called by Janice Davidson when she started Citizens for the
Improvement of Costa Mesa.
“I never thought about whether it was CICM or WIA,” he said. “I didn’t
care what it was called, as long as it was doing something. I put my
thoughts on the e-mail group, and I follow up on things and go to
meetings. I support whatever I personally feel is good for the city.”
Elmore said he believes that some charities attract low-income people
into the city, and he wants to encourage charities to give fewer
handouts, such as clothes, and to focus more on education, job training
and employment assistance.
“I have nothing against people without money, but there are people who
never get ahead and are always draining society, and there are charities
that enable them to remain poor instead of giving them a way to earn
their way and to better their status in life,” Elmore said.
He supports rezoning the Westside bluffs from industrial to
residential, building an airport at El Toro and keeping the 19th Street
bridge on the county’s master plan to allow younger generations to decide
whether to build the bridge.
“No matter how hard you work, things take time,” Elmore said. “These
improvements are not for our time, but I hope they will make a better
Costa Mesa for the younger people working with us and our kids and
grandkids.”
JOEL FARIS
To Joel Faris, 32, large amounts of litter -- especially on Whittier
Avenue -- are a personal insult.
The reason is that he wakes up at 4:45 a.m. every weekday to take a
walk, pick up trash on the street and spend time in his yard before work.
“I like to do my little part,” Faris said. “I always have a 5-gallon
bucket full of trash. I don’t mind picking up trash, but when I see whole
fast-food cartons, it’s like a slap in the face.”
Faris, who ran unsuccessfully for City Council in November and is
considering running again next year, is a fourth-grade teacher at Russell
Elementary School in Santa Ana.
He said he is enjoying having a child of his own.
Faris and his wife, Suzanne, in October adopted a 2-year-old Latino
boy, Matthew, because they wanted to help children in need. They are in
the process of adopting another boy, Adam.
Aside from parenting and teaching, Faris has been involved with
children in his roles as a Boy Scout leader and mentor.
But since his campaign for City Council, Faris said he has become more
active in the city.
He is involved with the Westside Improvement Assn., Citizens for the
Improvement of Costa Mesa, Latino Community Network and, in April, he
participated in the city’s biannual community cleanup, Neighbors for
Neighbors.
There are many things Faris said he likes about the Westside,
including a casual atmosphere, cool breezes, diversity and good food.
But many Westside characteristics need make-overs, he said, including
the lack of a sidewalk in front of 19th Street businesses, apartment
buildings too close to the streets, badly maintained homes, multiple
families living in single-family rentals because wages don’t match the
cost of living, graffiti, disorganized mixed zoning, noise and odors from
manufacturing.
Faris said he likes the fact that there are charities on the Westside
because “charity is very biblical,” but added that, “realistically, when
all the charities are in one area, problems are going to develop because
property values are going to go down. Every person in Orange County
should have a place to go when they need assistance. The help they need
shouldn’t only be available here.”
He favors rezoning the bluffs from industrial to residential, opening
a park centrally located on the Westside and having more townhouse
complexes to give residents control of the maintenance of their homes at
a lower cost than other single-family houses.
For a long time, it has been difficult for Westside residents to get
the city to take action on the Westside.
“I got hopeful when the city was working on the Westside specific
plan, and then nothing happened,” he said. “I realized there is no
representation on the Westside, and the Westside is kind of unique
because we’re kind of a big cul-de-sac. People don’t drive through my
neighborhood to get somewhere else because they can’t.”
He said he thinks it is essential for the Westside to have a
representative in City Hall, but added that he hopes another Westside
resident will run in his place.
“I would prefer not to be a councilman,” he said. “I would rather
somebody else stepped up to the plate who lives here and who wants to
clean things up. I don’t know who it would be, but I hope it doesn’t have
to be me.”
ELEANOR AND TOM EGAN
The Egans are not the average cute couple.
They met through Mensa, a club restricted to people with high IQs,
they have both had two previous marriages, and they disagree for fun.
“It’s part of the joy of our relationship that we’re very comfortable
disagreeing with each other,” said Eleanor Egan, 62-year-old co-chair of
the Westside Improvement Assn., board member and treasurer of the Costa
Mesa Library Foundation, and member of both the Costa Mesa Historical
Society and Costa Mesa Senior Center. “Disagreement on a subject doesn’t
mean being disagreeable. It’s just talk, and it’s very natural to us. We
hash things out at home, and we don’t always come up with a solution. But
we know that any idea would require public support to be viable and if
we’re unable to even convince each other, we’re going to have trouble.”
Tom Egan, 63, agreed.
“One thing we liked from the beginning is that we could talk with each
other,” said Tom Egan, who is the Costa Mesa Library Foundation
president, Costa Mesa 20/20 founder and chairman, and a member of the
Library Services Committee, Orange Coast River Park steering committee,
Costa Mesa Historical Society, Costa Mesa Senior Center and Leadership
Tomorrow class of 2001. “Initially, I think she was afraid to argue with
me, but then she entered into it.”
“With gusto!” added a laughing Eleanor, who has a law degree. “You
don’t marry a lawyer and expect her to be meek.”
“We entertain ourselves,” he said. “We hardly ever watch TV or
anything. We kind of have a running discussion and discuss more each
week, sometimes each day. If I talk with people, come up with new ideas
or hear a new perspective, we’ll talk about it.”
The two have many of the same views on issues.
Both agree that community members should define a vision for the
city’s future, that there is a demand for low-wage workers and are
against litter.
But sometimes, they also present opposing views to the City Council,
such as when the council considered individually appointing one member to
each of the city’s commissions.
The council traditionally votes as a whole on all the appointments and
decided to continue following the same process earlier this year, as
Eleanor urged them to do.
“She won that one,” Tom said with a smile.
Eleanor said she is less comfortable with the idea of urbanization
than Tom is and that he is more likely to come directly to the point,
while she is more likely to take a more diplomatic approach.
Tom had to work hard at becoming comfortable speaking in public, while
Eleanor said it has always suited her.
But both also said they are curious, love words and history, enjoy
learning new skills and facts, and have an urge to give back to the
community.
Tom, who already had master’s degrees in aeronautics and civil
engineering, earned a certificate in urban planning from UC Irvine in
1972 because he was interested in applying some of his engineering
experience to urban problems.
He said he got his chance to put his knowledge to use in the early
1990s when the city was discussing its Fairview Park master plan.
“I wasn’t terribly active until then,” Tom said. “I live close to the
park, but what made me get involved was I didn’t like how the plan was
going. They wanted to put in fences, and I didn’t think that was
appropriate.”
He also got involved with the Westside specific plan, which was
Eleanor’s first big public involvement.
“We were really enthusiastic about improving the Westside through the
specific plan,” Eleanor said. “When the draft came out, I was really
unhappy with it. I heard about some other people who were unhappy, we
talked, started holding meetings to let people express their thoughts,
and we got involved -- reluctantly, I must say. This is not how I planned
to spend my retirement. I planned to work on my house and my garden, but
I was needed elsewhere, and I don’t regret it.”
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