The real Westside
Kathleen Eric
Re: Geoff West’s Oct. 11 commentary, “Focus on the Westside must
be for all who live there.”
In West’s commentary on the Westside he notes that all one hears
these days is “Westside, Westside, Westside. Until recently that was
just so much ambient noise to me.” I’m pleased that West has decided
to take note of the ambient noise of the Westside. Perhaps he is
hearing more of a “Westside, Westside, Westside” buzz these days
because the decibel level is rising.
While I am happy that West is taking a more active interest in my
part of Costa Mesa, I don’t think his observations viewed from the
safety of his vehicle, compare to living, shopping, walking, working
and surviving on the Westside. Seeing nice homes side-by-side with
decaying homes, next to industrial property, next to “apartments
teeming with activity,” is detached from the reality of actually
living in that landscape.
I live and work on the Westside. Sit back. Let me take you on a
brief tour.
The “apartment buildings teeming with activity.” That’s true. You
have no idea how many people (really) live in the Westside. If you
want to get a more accurate accounting of just how many people a
two-bedroom apartment can hold, you must be around when we have one
of the numerous traffic accidents that occur on my street. The amount
of folks that pours out of the surrounding apartments to rubberneck
[is shocking].
Now, it’s no secret that we have some crowded housing over here.
During one of the above traffic drills we watched 25 guys pour out of
an apartment. They weren’t just visiting either, as the same 25
poured out of the same unit the next morning to head for the Job
Center. Welcome to the Westside.
One of the problems with Costa Mesa, and particularly the
Westside, is the lack of planning and foresight that went into laying
out this community. Basically, Costa Mesa sprang up like an unruly
weed patch. So here we are today, almost built out and finding
ourselves with an influx of new residents. This influx isn’t a
trickle, or even a steady stream. This is a tidal wave.
Our city government is letting us down on handling this problem by
saying that illegal immigration is a “national problem,” so their
hands are tied. Even before this recent wave of new arrivals, we were
battling a decaying infrastructure. Some advise us, particularly if
they are in the charity business, that all that we are left to do is
“open our hearts,” move over, make room, pay up or move on. Because
we live on the Westside.
Every morning you will find men gathered in knots at numerous
locations: in shopping centers, restaurant parking lots, mini marts,
car washes and any comfortable alcove, standing or sitting, waiting
to be hired. This population of loitering day workers is in addition
to men who choose to follow the rules and seek work at the Job
Center. There is at least an equal if not larger amount of
unemployed, unskilled workers who do not avail themselves of a legal
and safe environment in which to seek work.
Is this a tragedy? Yes, it is, and not just from my own front
porch but for the entire community and many communities elsewhere in
the United States today. This is the Westside, but look over your
shoulder, fellow Costa Mesans. You are not immune to this tidal wave.
The former description is some of the morning activity on the
Westside. Afternoon brings the traveling produce trucks, ice cream
trucks and pushcarts of all descriptions. How many of the above are
licensed in Costa Mesa is unknown to me. For the most part,
Westsiders have accommodated this new way of doing business, and
unless it directly causes annoyance, we accept that these street
vendors (if licensed) are a legitimate way to do business.
However, the vending trucks are often not considerate. They block
traffic, blare horns and play loud music. Then there are the vendors
who don’t feel the necessity to invest in building a wagon and ply
their wares out of “borrowed” shopping carts with a towel thrown over
the contents to keep them fresh. I’ve gotten used to all of the
above. After all, this is the Westside.
“Alleged gang activity.” I must correct you on the use of the word
“alleged”; this is a “for sure” thing. There is gang activity on the
Westside. Sometimes there is more and sometimes there is less
activity. How do I know? Let me explain.
We have a particular music of the night here on the Westside.
Whistling. It is the whistling of gang members up and down the
street. An otherwise pleasurable sound that no longer brings joy to
my ears. Then there was the night we left our home to drive to a safe
location for our evening walk. We found our driveway and entire
street blocked by police cars. There was a lot of commotion. Noise.
Battering rams. Doors being knocked in at the family HUD housing
units next door. Drugs, guns, men taken away. Finally quiet. However,
they had abandoned a large frightened dog in a corner of their yard.
A new pet for our family. You see, we are adaptable here on the
Westside.
“Drunks wandering neighborhoods.” Oh yes. At lunch time one day I
went out to collect my mail only to find a fellow passed out under
the back wheels of my car. Knowing that I would have need of my
vehicle shortly and not wanting to back over the slumbering fellow, I
phoned the police. Understandably, they didn’t really want to
approach him, and asked me if I had checked to see if he was alive.
Being a veteran of the Westside, I have found it wise not to touch
drunken men, as they often have weapons. “General untidiness of the
area.” It is not for want of trying to keep the Westside clean. I’m
sure there are many Westsiders reading this letter now mentally
counting how many times they pick up litter off of their lawns every
day. In some states there are fines for those caught littering.
On one of my forays to pick up garbage tossed in my front yard and
beverage containers and tissues stuck into my hedges, I came around a
corner to find a fellow taking something out of my hedge. Reacting to
the situation, I quickly saw that he was using my hedge as a “drug
drop.” He was very displeased at my discovery and the fact that I
quickly dismantled his personal mailbox. The next day all four of the
tires on my car were slashed. This is the Westside.
My husband was trimming shrubbery on our property line next to the
HUD housing -- you remember, the same place we found the family pet?
He was picking up tossed plastic toys, empty alcohol beverage
containers, decomposing diapers, half-eaten food containers, and had
started on the items stuck into the hedge. Luckily, he was cleaning
the hedge slowly and methodically, or he would have ended up impaled
with the used hypodermic that was stuck in with the dirty toilet
tissue in the honeysuckle. We called the police. After all, a lot
kids live in those units. This is the Westside
The city of Costa Mesa simply must pay more attention to this
geographic area. If anyone has looked at the statistics of where the
city finances are distributed, you will see that the Westside
consistently gets the short end of the stick.
Next, how about enforcing what laws we still have on the books
that don’t, in some way, infringe on someone’s freedom. Jaywalkers:
Ticket them. This is a big problem on the Westside. Many accidents
are caused by those who dart in front of vehicles and stand in the
median as the traffic swirls around trying to avoid them. Pedestrians
jump out of the way of bicyclists who use the sidewalk rather than
the designated bike lanes.
These are very simple things that would make a tremendous
difference. They are really just a matter of good manners and
consideration for fellow members of this planet. We do not throw
garbage on other people’s property. We follow the traffic laws. We do
not remove shopping carts from the premises of the business that own
them and leave them abandoned on other people’s property.
In addition, we need to clean up the bizarre zoning over here. And
it wouldn’t hurt if someone took a look at those “apartment buildings
teeming with activity.”
Some folks -- well, a lot of folks -- tell us we should “just move
away.” That always depresses me. This is my family home and has been
since 1949. I am continuously “integrating” myself into my
ever-changing environment. I wish others had the same attitude.
Geoff West, this is the Westside, and it’s a whole different
country over here. It shouldn’t be.
* KATHLEEN ERIC is a resident of the Westside.
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