Giving an early Thanksgiving
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- It was a rare sight. Mercedes, sport-utility vehicles
and other luxury cars lined Shalimar Street on Tuesday as members of the
business community hosted a food drive in one of the city’s most
impoverished areas.
Members of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce hosted the Thanksgiving
for Costa Mesa Food Drive at the Shalimar Learning Center for the third
year in a row. The event was organized by CM900, a division of the
chamber dedicated to community service.
About 150 people lined up to receive turkey, green beans, fruit,
tortillas, salsa, milk, corn and cans of refried beans -- “everything you
need for a traditional Thanksgiving meal,” attorney and Latino community
activist Manfredo Lespier said in Spanish.
About 35 businessmen traded in their suits and set up an assembly line
on what used to be one of the city’s most notorious streets. Volunteers
were busy packing up Thanksgiving feasts for the droves of needy people
who came to collect.
“This is a great way to give back to the community you do business
in,” said Jeff Teller, who operates the Market Place on the Orange County
Fairgrounds.
Costa Mesa Police Chief Dave Snowden said he was especially happy to
help because of the progress that has been made in the neighborhood.
“This was my favorite project,” Snowden said. “I’m so proud to be here
today.”
Costa Mesa resident Margarita Mercado -- who came with five of her
friends -- sifted through her box of food, excitedly listing the items
she received.
“They even gave us milk,” she said in Spanish.
Also a part of the group, Angelina Manzo said if it weren’t for the
generosity of the chamber members and the Shalimar Learning Center, her
family of six would have a very modest Thanksgiving feast.
Her 3-year-old daughter, with long, curly lashes framing her
almond-shaped eyes, said she brought her teddy bear to get some food
also. She pulled the ragged green bear in a little blue wagon as her mom
waited to get an extra box of provisions for a friend who was bedridden
with cancer.
“We do this for Christmas too,” the toddler said.
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