CHOC clinic would be a gift to children
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I have refrained from writing about the controversy over the
placement of a Children’s Hospital of Orange County medical clinic at
Rea Elementary School because often what I say is judged as not
impartial due to my long association with Share Our Selves, but I am
a 38-year resident of Costa Mesa and certainly have a vested interest
in my city just as many others do.
I do not reflect new ideas when I state how sad I feel that the
early vision of our city did not include proper zoning, good land-use
policy. Costa Mesa was a new city caught up in the wave of
development without oversight, something that happened to many
bedroom communities in the 1950s. Many of these cities today are
struggling to find how their community should look in the future,
what they can correct from past errors and how to come to consensus
over issues that divide people.
I can remember so vividly how north Costa Mesa homeowners were
concerned over the development of Crystal Court, Metro Point and now
Ikea. College Park homeowners felt overburdened with the Harbor
Shopping Center, and Mesa Del Mar felt the same about the
fairgrounds. Business owners were displaced with the development of
the Costa Mesa Courtyard and Triangle Square.
All of these were property rights versus the needs of people and
the growing pains of a city struggling to plan for the future and
create the present.
So, here we are today with some residents of the Westside stating
often that they see other cities as privileged and their piece of the
Costa Mesa pie as overburdened with the wrong businesses, charities,
housing and, sad to say, often the wrong people. Again, the concepts
of property rights and housing values -- as opposed to developing a
community for the good of the people, all of the people -- the
community as it is today will continue, if we are to believe the
census.
Ultimately, that brings me to the point of my letter. How can we
not care for the children whether they are from our neighborhood or
the surrounding community? The location of a children’s clinic should
be a source of pride to us as a city and, if we operate from that
base, then determining how, when, where will be easy.
If we believe caring for children and building them opportunities
for the future is a gift, then anger will no longer divide us and
that shall truly be our greatest legacy.
* KAREN McGLINN is the executive director of Share Our Selves.
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