Honesty, integrity and the future of El Morro
TONY DODERO
One of the first lessons I teach my introduction to newswriting
students at Orange Coast College is that plagiarism is the poison
apple of journalism. Take one taste of it and it could mean curtains
for your career.
There are lots of recent and past examples of plagiarists, and I
tell them about the worst offenders with the warning that if I find
them plagiarizing, I may not be able to end their career, but I can
give them a failing grade.
And that’s exactly what I’d like to do with the scads of e-mailers
and phone callers who hopped on a letter writing campaign regarding
the El Morro trailer park. I’d like to give them a big fat “F” when
it comes to honesty and integrity.
How do I know there is a letter-writing campaign?
Well, one tip off was the caller from Utah telling us that he or
she wanted to vote yes on our poll for El Morro, or in one case,
Switzerland.
Or, when we get multitudes of people who call in and say the same
exact thing, word for word, phrase by phrase about the same issue.
And this time, we even got this beauty of an e-mail from someone I
won’t name who resides in San Diego.
“I support Chuck DeVore’s proposals to save El Morro.”
That wouldn’t be so bad except the e-mail was followed by this
doozy of a plea:
“Hey! Everyone ... take a second to read this ... PLEASE E-MAIL
[email protected] AND VOICE YOUR SUPPORT TO SAVE ELMORRO!!!!!!
It’s so easy and SO important: Include name, hometown and phone
number (for verification only). Just say that you support Chuck
DeVore’s proposals to save El Morro!! The more people agreeing, the
better the chance for future El Morro parties!!!! Thank you so much.
Please forward to anyone that you think would be interested. For more
information about the proposals, please read the article below from
the Daily Pilot.”
As you can see, the real issue is future El Morro parties.
But what’s really galling to me is that as I warn my students to
not plagiarize and not take someone else’s idea and pass it off as
their own, full-grown adults haven’t learned the same lesson. They
are willing to lose all ethics in the quest for more El Morro
parties!
Let’s get back to the real issue at hand.
Most of our readers probably know the El Morro story fairly well
by now, but here’s the background in a nutshell.
For decades, mobile homes have been sitting on the beach at El
Morro as part of a development allowed at that time by the Irvine Co.
But some 30 years ago, the Irvine Co. sold the land the mobile
homes sat on to the state of California to be used as parkland by all
of us, not just the few mobile homeowners. The sale included a big
chunk of coastal lands and canyons that surround El Morro, which now
makes up Crystal Cove State Park.
Think about that. For 30 years, these mobile home tenants have
known that the land belonged to the state and the people of
California, not to them.
Then about 10 years ago, those very same mobile home residents
signed leases that called for them to leave the premises in 10 years.
That’s right, the big bad mean state parks department gave them 10
years to pack their bags and get their things in order. And in good
faith, some residents have left.
But of course, once the lease was up, many of them had not packed
their bags. Nope. In fact, they have become more entrenched than
ever, throwing out every red herring in the book as to why they need
to stay in their beachside mobile homes.
The state makes money from us, they say.
The campgrounds will endanger the local school, they say.
The state doesn’t have its act together, they say.
All hogwash.
Pure and simple, I have a hard time believing the residents of
this mobile home park care about any of those issues, except keeping
their ocean vistas and their parties -- all of which they get to
enjoy at the expense of every resident and taxpayer in this great
state.
And so the phony arguments and last minute charades continue.
Somehow, they were able to lasso freshmen Assemblyman Chuck DeVore
for the ride and get him to sponsor two bills that would allow them
to stay on our land for 30 more years.
DeVore, a fiscal conservative, sees the bills as a way to save the
state money. And to his credit, that’s probably his real motive in
all of this.
But the idea that the mobile home park folks and all their friends
from Utah to Switzerland have now followed in DeVore’s footsteps to
become the most fiscally conservative people on the planet is
laughable.
So all of you who have sent your letter-writing e-mails and phone
calls, save your energy and your dimes. Our Forum pages are reserved
for those with original thought, not those who take ideas from others
and pass them off as their own.
That’s what we call plagiarism.
*
Speaking of the Forum pages, I wanted to let the readers know that
with the many editing changes around here, I’ve decided to resume my
practice as editor of these opinion pages.
It seems like a good fit and will give the readers some
continuity, since I’m as close to a lifer at the Daily Pilot as
you’re going to see, and I bring with me some 15 years of
institutional knowledge of the Newport-Mesa community that many young
editors just don’t have.
So I’ll be looking forward to reading those original letters.
As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts.
TELL IT TO THE EDITOR
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He welcomes your comments on news
coverage, photography or other newspaper-related issues. If you have
a message or a letter to the editor, call his direct line at (714)
966-4608 or the Readers Hotline (714) 966-4664, send it by e-mail to
[email protected] or [email protected], or send it by mail
to 1375 Sunflower Ave., Costa Mesa, CA 92626.
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