Growing from the roots up
Through the UC Irvine Community Outreach Center in a room in the back
of Harbor Christian Fellowship, director Victor Becerra said he hopes to
establish relationships with those living and working on Costa Mesa’s
Westside to better the community. If the model succeeds, it may be able
to work wonders elsewhere.
On Tuesday, City Editor James Meier sat down with Becerra at the new
outreach center to discuss hopes for the future.
Q: How did you become involved with the community outreach center?
A: Both my wife and I were at Arizona State University for the past 6
1/2 years, and in 2000 my wife came out to give a talk at UCI. One thing
led to another, and they had a series on ongoing conversations and asked
her if she was interested in moving. She said, “Well, let’s see what you
put together,” so they began to recruit her.
In recruiting her, to make the offer beneficial to both of us as a
family, they also talked to me separately and asked me what my interests
were. So it’s for professional development purposes that we came to UCI.
And in looking at possibilities and meeting with folks from the student
affairs side of UCI, I was informed by Dr. Juan Lara, who’s an assistant
vice chancellor there, about the work that professor Kris Day was doing
in Costa Mesa. He informed me that she was in the process of applying for
a grant from HUD -- the office for community partnerships -- to secure
funding to create this community outreach center.
So one thing led to another, and they ended up making my wife an offer
and making me an offer to be the director of this program. We found out
in October that the grant professor Day had submitted the previous spring
had indeed gotten funded.
Q: What would have happened had the grant not been received?
A: We would have continued to look for sources to support the project.
We did have some support already from the university from Vice Chancellor
Manuel Gomez’s office. And via Dr. Lara’s office, they had given us some
operating funds to allow us to begin to do some work administratively. So
we had some infrastructure. And that at least allowed me to come in, have
an office on campus and to begin to do my work as director -- cultivate
relationships here in the community.
Folks began to think about the structure of the project, began to
think about who I might want to sit on our advisory committee, so the
university’s commitment to this project via the chancellor, Vice
Chancellor Gomez and others in the higher administration at UCI never
wavered. They bought the idea, they liked the idea, and they committed to
the idea. So that helped professor Day and I proceed forward with our
work.
Q: What do you hope the center will accomplish in the short run?
A: Our primary effort at this point and throughout our tenure will be
always building relationships, bringing people together in different
sectors in this community, working with them to identify issues, to
prioritize those issues and then to put together a team of people of
which we would be one player, but not the only player or even the primary
player. And look at ways of improving a situation or a program.
But the primary focus is on building relationships and coming up with
ideas to address any concerns.
Q: What are some of the current projects or programs?
A: Our primary focus at the moment is on educational issues. In terms
of actual programmatic area, we helped sponsor the Latino Youth
Conference, and it was held this year for the first time at UCI. That was
a cooperative venture between our office, as well as the UCI volunteers
center, the center for educational partnerships, the office of financial
aid and the learning academic resource center.
So five offices contributed in one way or another to UCI for the
conference and then worked in partnership with community-based
organizations here like Save Our Youth, Girls Inc. and the Shalimar
Center. And there was a planning committee established that started
meeting in December and met every Monday up until the day of the
conference to put it together.
Our job, as a center, was coordination, predominantly organization. We
took the minutes at the meetings. We made sure that people who made
commitments to get things done did and put together calendars and
schedules. We sort of made sure the event, from an organizational point
of view, ran smoothly. We wanted to make sure the kids got the maximum
utility from the opportunity. So that was one event that we worked on.
There is, through a HUD grant that we got, a couple of research
projects that are going on at the moment. One of them is being headed by
professor John Dombrink out of the School of Criminology, Law and
Society, which is a department within social ecology. That study is
looking at the attitude and experiences of Latinos toward the legal
system and law enforcement.
That’s an ongoing research study that we anticipate being completed by
the end of the year. What we expect in the case of any of our research
projects is that they will provide information that will allow us to work
again with our community partners to see how that information can result
in some tangible outcomes. And those outcomes can be represented in a
variety of forms.
For example, they can help agencies working with a predominantly
Spanish-speaking community to look at optional models that are being used
elsewhere to improve what they’re doing, to expand what they’re doing, to
secure more resources to reach more people. But that’s very important to
us that the research that is done on the university’s end is always going
to lead to something concrete, something that can be used by folks for
doing day-to-day work in this community.
Q: And what does the center hope to accomplish in the long run?
A: What we want to do is build partnerships with folks who are
interested in one way, shape or form in improving the quality of life on
the Westside of Costa Mesa because we feel by doing that the entire city
of Costa Mesa will benefit from that.
As I said, our primary focus at least for the immediate future will
continue to be in the area of education because we feel that’s the
foundation. We have to invest in kids, in our students, in our future,
and the best way that we can do that, since the university is in the
business of education, it makes sense for us to start there.
As we achieve the kinds of successes we anticipate achieving in that
area and other issues emerge, we will begin tackling other issues where
we determine we have the expertise in terms of the university and it
makes sense for us to move in that area.
Q: Has there ever been some sort of time limit placed on this project?
A: No. I can tell you this is not going to be a project that is gone
in five years. It’s a long-term project because meaningful community
development and community change requires a long-term investment. Having
done this kind of work before and participated in activities that have
been community development-oriented short-term, you set up a lot of
expectations and then come up with a lot disappointment. It’s a no-win
situation for the community you want to help and the university.
And this is a great community. A lot of things you see going on here,
like demographic change and those kinds of things, are mirrors of what’s
going on in other communities in Orange County and throughout Southern
California, so if we can come here and achieve success and provide a
model for other communities to learn from, that is very much a goal of
ours -- to have this be a program that people can point to and learn
from.
Q: In a sense, it seems this is just a small starting point for what
could help spread throughout the region.
A: Precisely. We are moving very deliberately. We very much believe in
a process of community development that is bottom up. That is, defined in
every way possible by the folks who work here, who live here and who are
going to be here long after we’ve come and gone.
And that bottom-up process takes time because people work 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. and part of it is people from different sectors of the community
also learning to work together, establishing trust and confidence in one
another, finding common ground. Then once that common ground is found,
things actually move pretty quickly. But the process of getting to that
point is what is time consuming. But it’s an investment that is
critically important and that will yield returns that will be very
beneficial to not only the folks who participate in that, but to the
larger community that they’re interested in serving as well.
Q: What are some of the ways you hope to raise funding?
A: We will obviously be doing grant-writing and looking for funds from
foundations that have an interest in the kind of work that we do, as well
as asking some private parties who we’ve been put in contact with who
have expressed an interest in some of proposed projects for the future.
For example, a couple of projects that we anticipate starting this
summer will be SAT preparation workshops, as well as a parent institute,
which will help parents to build their capacities and learn about how to
negotiate local education systems.
And that’s especially important for a sector of the Spanish-speaking
community on this side of town. A lot of them are as interested as the
next person in their children’s education, but since they’re coming from
a different country -- the educational systems in those countries, for
example, Mexico and Central America, do operate differently than in the
United States. So starting out with very fundamental kinds of workshops
to talk to them about how to prepare for a teachers conference, what
channels they can go through to bring their concerns to the school
district.
And some of this work is already being done by the school district,
and they’re doing a very good job in terms of this, what I call community
and school engagement, but they can’t do it all because of limited
resources, so what we’ll try to do is build upon their efforts,
complement it by continuing to cover some of the topics that they’ve
already covered, but in talking to the parents, also find out if there
are other issues that they would like to learn about that aren’t perhaps
being covered in the curriculum that the school is using.
So those are two definite activities that will be going on here. And
the third activity will be our partnership with THINK Together, who will
be opening a new learning after-school program here. That will be
focusing on fifth- and sixth-graders and some seventh-graders from the
Westside schools here like Wilson Elementary, TeWinkle Middle School.
What our contribution will be there will be recruiting students from
UCI to come and serve as tutors because THINK Together’s model works
entirely on volunteers. We think it’ll be a great relationship because
students at the university, be it through courses or organizational
affiliations, are always interested in doing community service. In fact,
for our majors in social ecology -- the school that we’re located in --
community service learning is a graduation requirement. So we figure that
once students become familiar with our project here, that at least a
certain percentage of them will work here. So we’re looking forward to
that.
Another activity we anticipate doing is a community festival here in
September, around Sept. 16, which is Mexican Independence Day, but we
want to give it a broader event, a community celebration for folks here
on the Westside. So we’ll be putting together a planning committee for
that starting next month. There are a lot of people on our advisory
board, as well as other folks we’ve been working with, who have expressed
a real positive interest in that idea. They think it’s a way of getting
people from different sectors here to come together in a cultural setting
and get to know one another. So we’re very excited about that possibility
because that plays right into our primary role of building relationships.
Q: Any final thoughts?
A: Just that we’re very excited about the possibilities. We’ve put
together a very solid advisory committee with individuals who have
demonstrated their commitment to the city of Costa Mesa generally and
have shown a particular interest in the Westside, and who have vision and
who also want to do things, to talk about what needs to be done and want
to actually see things get done. Also, they’re people who have
established networks within the community here and have the respect of a
lot of people at the grass-roots level, and that’s very important to us
in terms of being able to maintain a sense of a pulse of the concerns of
residents in the area.
So we’re very excited about working with that group and continuing our
partnerships with Vanguard University -- they have a center for ethnic
urban studies and ethnic leadership headed by Dr. Jesse Miranda -- to
focus on creating community change. He’s predominantly focusing on
organizing the churches here, and that’s a very vital institution in
terms of having the ears of residents and being able to get information
to residents and from residents. So we’re very excited and pleased to
have that partnership.
BIO
Age: 47
Occupation: Director of the UC Irvine Community Outreach Center
Residence: Irvine
Education: Bachelor’s degree in sociology from UC Santa Barbara,
master’s degree in urban planning from UCLA
Family: Wife of nine years Vicki, sons Miguel and Danny
Hobbies: Attending sporting events, exercising, reading and spending
time with his wife
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