Newport has the upper hand
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I didn’t want to believe it before but I must admit it’s true. Costa
Mesa is in Newport Beach’s shadow. While I think it’s a great place
to live (and so does half my family) the fact remains that Newport
Beach seems to just barely top us in every category.
Sure, Costa Mesa is a coastal community (hence the name) but we
don’t actually have a shoreline. We would, but way back when the
boundaries were being drawn, Newport Beach officials kept the
remaining strip of oceanfront property that runs along our Westside
and out by Talbert Park.
So Newport Beach actually has an ocean and Costa Mesa can’t even
get “by-the-sea.”
Score: 1-0, Newport.
Now, let’s talk about home prices. Homes are being built in Costa
Mesa that are a stone’s throw from the San Diego Freeway and all the
smog and traffic it brings with it. They will also be directly across
the street from a major retail furniture store that attracts traffic
from all over the region and a business district. Price tag: about
half a million. Not bad. Costa Mesa must be a great place to live.
Of course, Newport Beach has got us there. The -- yes average --
home price in the neighboring town is around $900,000. You could pay
more than $2 million for a tiny home on the sand that is about six
feet away from your neighbor. But having the beach as your backyard
is priceless.
Score: 2-0, Newport.
OK. Here in Costa Mesa we have free reign to light explosives on
Independence Day. Hah. Top that. What? You’ve got bikini-clad boozers
and non-stop parties in West Newport? Oh, yeah, well Costa Mesa has
the annual Mesa del Mar community parade. How’s that for a war zone?
Score: 3-0, Newport.
We’ve got South Coast Plaza.
Fashion Island.
Score: 4-1, Newport.
All right, last category counts for five points. We gotcha here.
The city of Costa Mesa still wins in the “non-politically correct
comments made by a City Councilman” category.
Costa Mesa City Councilman Chris Steel has been saying he doesn’t
want “illegal immigrants” in Costa Mesa for years now. A quick search
with the words “Chris Steel” and “illegal immigrants” in the Pilot
archives shows 65 hits. Articles about the Job Center, various
charities and affordable housing pop up. Not all of them are about
Steel, or even directly quote him, but at least half of them have
examples of what some people in this city -- and apparently the
progressive city of Newport Beach -- would consider offensive.
Now to be clear, Steel does not scapegoat Latinos and has never
flat out called them all Mexicans. I doubt he has any problem with
them hanging out at the beach. (At least they’re out of Costa Mesa.)
Steel says he is simply realistic about the fact that there are a lot
of “them” in Costa Mesa and “they” are driving down property values
and test scores and raising crime rates.
Steel was the top vote-getter in 2000. He has a dedicated, vocal
following in the city and I would argue, an even larger, silent one.
Costa Mesans are tolerant people. Sure, some of us cringe at Steel’s
comments but hey, live and let live. He is merely stating what he
believes to be the truth.
So, we in Costa Mesa thought we cornered the market on “the truth”
when Newport Beach pulled out its secret weapon -- Councilman Dick
Nichols.
Costa Mesa resident Chuck Cassity says its only fair.
“I’ve come to believe that each city council should have at least
one member who’s politically incorrect, says the wrong thing at the
wrong time and is of questionable intellect so that the others will
shine a bit brighter. We in Costa Mesa have had ours for quite
awhile. Now Newport is lucky enough to have one of its own,” he wrote
in a letter to the Pilot.
Not only has Newport Beach shown brighter, it’s hogging the
spotlight.
Nichols says one public comment about Mexicans on the beach and
it’s all over the news. The entire City Council has asked for his
resignation. If Nichols does not resign, there is a recall effort
underway. Broadcast news agencies snubbed car chases and fires to
cover the Nichols controversy. Rumor has it, the Nichols comment is
the talk around the Congressional water cooler in D.C.
Costa Mesa Councilwoman Libby Cowan said she definitely noticed a
contrast in response. She said she respects people’s opinions -- even
if they differ from her own -- and thinks most people in Costa Mesa
feel the same way. Again, live and let live.
“It is very interesting how people can express the same sentiment
but phrase words differently and therefore get a much different
reaction,” Cowan said. “Is it really what Nichols said, or just
because he blew the veil off the underpinning sentiment?”
Good question.
This kind of thing has been going on in Costa Mesa City Hall for
three years now. Anyone care? Apparently not. Thanks a lot, Newport,
you had to outperform us in that category too.
Final score: Newport 9, Costa Mesa 1.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or
by e-mail at [email protected].
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