Children’s Hospital health clinic discussion continues
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Questions that should be asked (“Rea clinic decision postponed by
district,” Aug. 10):
1. How many nonprofit organizations already exist in Costa Mesa?
The number of those, which I believe is 200 or 300, should definitely
be pointed out in the meetings; where those organizations are,
whether they are in Eastside Costa Mesa, Westside Costa Mesa, or Mesa
Verde (yeah, right); the type of nonprofit service provided. All to
get a complete picture of what Costa Mesa already provides nonprofit
permits for.
2. Why is it that people who want to put their favorite charities
or nonprofits in Costa Mesa never live in the areas where they want
to put those organizations? The least of the requirements for a
permit should be that whoever suggested CHOC be placed at Rea
Elementary School, as an example, should live within 100 feet of the
location himself or herself. Let’s see how they like it then.
3. How is Hamilton Street, between Placentia and Pomona avenues
and Harbor Boulevard, going to handle the additional vehicle or foot
traffic?
The newspaper reported an estimated 9,000 visits a year to a CHOC
clinic at the Rea school site. If the clinic is open an average of
250 days a year, that is 30 visits a day. How many of those visits
include extra vehicles? We certainly know that 30 visits a day
probably equals 60 or more additional people a day. And unless
everyone is living with their heads in the sand -- which by the way
seems to be the likely scenario of anyone living outside this area
who wants to put yet another nonprofit here -- we all know that 9,000
visits is an underestimate. In the first place, that is more than
likely a deliberately low estimate. In the second place, that number
will increase exponentially fairly quickly.
S. WERNER
Costa Mesa
As Costa Mesa residents, we are dismayed by some of the comments
made by a few of our neighbors about the proposed Rea health center.
Some have expressed their opposition to the proposed center because
of their fear that its existence will draw low-income residents to
Westside Costa Mesa.
These fears seem unfounded. The Rea center will serve only
pediatric patients. The children that will benefit from the center’s
services already live in Westside Costa Mesa. The 2000 U.S. census
found 15,761 children ages 0 to 17 in the 92627 ZIP Code. The
children who reside in this area are here because their parents can
find affordable housing and jobs; they are not drawn by the
availability of social services, as some have suggested.
In fact, although the California Department of Health Services
estimates that almost 4,000 of the children on the Westside are
eligible for Medi-Cal low-cost insurance, there are presently no
pediatricians in the 92627 ZIP Code that accept Medi-Cal.
We applaud the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and Children’s
Hospital of Orange County’s efforts to improve this situation. All,
we think, would agree that healthy children are more successful in
school and in turn grow into citizens that are more successful.
BILL AND NANCY SOUZA
Costa Mesa
I am in support of bringing the experts in children’s medical
services -- CHOC -- here to the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
to help our children in need. I am speaking for myself only, but in
my work as chairman of the board of Save Our Youth, which serves an
average of 100 Costa Mesa teenagers a night, I see the need for
medical services for our children who often do not receive it.
Many do not have medical insurance, and others have parents that
work late or far away or can’t afford to take off work to take them
to a clinic. What a wonderful opportunity to have such a professional
organization so close to our children that need it the most. I don’t
understand the controversy, when we have the opportunity to improve
the quality of life for our children.
CESAR CAPPELLINI
Newport Beach
What reasoning would support the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District’s proposal to build a free health care center at Rea
Elementary School?
Our immigration laws are indeed already being violated. Building a
CHOC health center would be one more step in providing additional
assistance for the masses of illegal immigrants who would be using
the center. They have already performed an illegal act by entering
our country without government approval. It would invite and
encourage more to do the same.
If the CHOC health center is built, I for one of the many other
like me would no longer make financial contributions to CHOC nor
would I support that organization in any way.
Maria Garcia wrote that she doesn’t blame Chris Steel for being
frustrated over what our intolerable system has done to our city
(“CHOC health center debate still lingers,” Aug. 7). I agree.
Doesn’t anybody know that illegal means against the law?
LOUISA T. ARNOLD
Costa Mesa
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