Officials meet on level playing field to ‘clear the air’
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Deepa Bharath
City and school district officials met last week to examine what has
fast become the controversial way they share the community’s limited
number of sports fields.
The meeting, held on Aug. 31, was significant because it opened
the door to some necessary discussion, Costa Mesa City Councilman
Mike Scheafer said.
“We needed to get together and start a dialogue because this is
being perceived as a huge problem by the community,” he said.
The so-called joint-use agreement between the city and the school
district has been in place for more than a decade. But in the past
months, it has found a new place at the center of debate and
controversy after Costa Mesa High boys athletic director Dave
Perkins’ July 1 resignation and boys basketball coach Bob Serven’s
decision to step down on April 3. Among other problems, the coaches
said they were tired of picking up trash after games and putting in
their own time and resources to improve the fields.
Quality of the fields was, in fact, one of the major issues that
surfaced at the Aug. 31 meeting, which was attended by two council
members, two parks and recreation commissioners and several city and
school district officials.
The city needs to work on field maintenance issues and identify
funding sources to help them bring the fields to a certain standard,
said parks commissioner Byron de Arakal.
Talking to school district officials helped “clear the air” on
field-improvement issues, Scheafer said.
“We realized that the school district has a lot of other
priorities now, like getting their classrooms and facilities ready
for the school year and making the Measure A improvements,” he said.
“We also talked about the possibility of contracting field work to an
outside company and the legal issues surrounding it.”
School board member Dave Brooks said another challenge the school
district faces when it comes to field use is to figure out what is a
good time to make the improvements.
“We get a tremendous amount of field use in our city,” he said.
“We can’t seed the fields one week and have everybody using them the
following week. So, we would have to shut them down during that
time.”
The school district is not happy with the condition of the fields,
Brooks said.
“But we are working diligently to get them to the condition we can
be proud of,” he said.
Scheafer has also suggested that the different entities form a
single working group or an ad hoc committee to tackle the specific
issues relating to the joint-use agreement and field use.
“The purpose of this group will be to look at this critical issue
in our town, which we need to do something about,” he said.
The group has not yet been formalized, Scheafer said.
Another part of the problem this group will tackle is the issue of
field ambassadors, who monitor how the fields are used and help park
rangers enforce the rules. They are another sore point with coaches
who complain that they are too rigid and don’t use common sense when
it comes to citing coaches for using fields without permits or
parking illegally.
One coach, cited in July, has said he plans to fight the ticket at
his October court date.
The working group will look at how that problem can be resolved,
Scheafer said.
“Maybe we need to give them a little flexibility and better
direction,” he said. “But coaches too need to realize that the
ambassadors are doing their job and are not there to harm them.”
Empowering school ambassadors with discretionary power may be a
tricky issue, de Arakal said.
“They should be able to have some discretion without mangling the
permit process,” he said. “But we need to make sure that it doesn’t
set a precedent where people start stepping over the line. We need to
look at it more carefully.”
The joint-use agreement, which got dragged into the issue, is a
solid document, de Arakal said.
“We encourage all user groups and coaches in the community to
understand the rules of the joint-use agreement,” he said. “Without
our joint-use agreement and field-use policy, we’ll have people with
pitchforks and shotguns fighting for our fields.”
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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