Community Commentary -- Devan Mullins
- Share via
I must object to your editorial (“City took the right steps in gang
ordinance,” March 7) favoring eviction of persons convicted of drug- or
gang-related crimes.
The editorial’s thin reasoning fails to prove the merit of the new
ordinance, ignores how unequally applied the measure is and how offensive
it is to justice. We can all agree that it is a useful goal in society to
prevent crimes. But security and freedom are always a balancing act and
society must weigh the costs and benefits of any new law.
The editorial says the police lieutenant said the ordinance will
“prevent and combat crime while holding landlords more accountable.” You
also claim, without any proof, that “the eviction will provide the
convicted’s fellow tenants a greater and much deserved peace of mind.”
While it may be true that eliminating gangs or drug users might reduce
the crimes this pool of people might commit, it fails to answer the
question of where these citizens go when they are booted out of their
residences.
Surely an evicted person ends up somewhere and if they are desperate
and now homeless, they may be inclined to commit more crimes in an
attempt to better their situation. Also disturbing is the notion that
landlords should be responsible for the acts of their tenants. A
landlord’s responsibility should be limited to the leased premises and be
defined by the contract between the landlord and tenant. Further
government interference is not required in this instance.
Likewise, the notion that the government is responsible for fellow
tenants’ peace of mind is an impossibly ambiguous goal and should not be
the subject of government intrusion. If the government really wanted to
give me peace of mind, they would put a million dollars into my checking
account.
It is truly stunning how the government wants to get their sticky
little hands in our lives. In most cases, they even have good motives.
While everyone complains that government should get off our backs, many
ignore the methods by which the government got on our backs in the first
place.
This measure pushes us further down a slippery slope, thoughtlessly
setting a new precedent with stunning implications. With this type of
law, the Costa Mesa City Council can engineer evicting anyone for any
offense, trivial or serious. If indeed a drug user or gang member should
be evicted, it follows that more serious crimes like murder, robbery,
rape and fraud should also merit eviction. But the law does not apply to
those crimes and does not apply to anyone fortunate enough to own their
home.
To find the real intent of this particular law, one need look no
further than the original proposal, which would have allowed eviction for
anyone merely arrested for a gang or drug-related crime. This dangerous
idea was nothing more than a transparent power grab, to be used
selectively against certain citizens, usually the poor and the
undesirable.
The revised ordinance only penalizes people actually convicted of a
crime. But here again, even if a person pays their debt to society after
a conviction, they still stand to lose their residence, but only if they
are not rich enough to purchase their own home. So a pot-smoking
homeowner (drug dealer/gang-member) is exempt while a person who commits
the identical offense -- but happens to be a renter -- is not. This is a
selective law and is a step in the wrong direction.
In applying our balancing test of freedom and security, we must ask
ourselves if we are going to be significantly safer with this ordinance
for the freedoms that are sacrificed. In this case, the answer is no.
This law is intrusive, treats renters and homeowners unequally and
should be rejected as just one more sticky government finger. If indeed
the Costa Mesa City Council wanted to help citizens, it should have
outlawed ownership of Enron stock.
DEVAN MULLINS
Newport Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.