Job Center’s future unsure
Alicia Robinson
After 16 years of helping day laborers find employers who want them,
Costa Mesa’s Job Center could be closing down.
The city opened the Job Center in 1988 on Placentia Avenue near
17th Street to combat a problem with day laborers milling around
certain spots -- particularly Lions Park -- waiting for contractors
to come by with jobs. As a place where temporary workers can connect
with employers, some people think the center has been effective, but
others say the city shouldn’t be doing the work of an employment
agency.
“It’s a service that I don’t necessarily think we need to be
providing anymore,” said Councilman Gary Monahan, who requested a
discussion of the Job Center at tonight’s council meeting. “Times
have changed ... and with all the work that we’re doing on the
Westside. I think it may be time to move the Job Center out.”
In the 2004-05 fiscal year, the center cost the city $102,967 to
run. An average of 110 workers visit the Job Center each day, and
about 34 of them find jobs on any given day, according to city
statistics.
More than half of the employers who find workers there are Costa
Mesa-based, and 79% of the workers who use it say Costa Mesa is their
home.
Monahan will recommend closing the Job Center, and he may have
some support. Mayor Allan Mansoor has suggested closing the center or
limiting it to Costa Mesa residents, and he still supports those
ideas.
“There are many ways people can find a job, and I think it’s up to
the private sector to facilitate that,” he said Monday. “It’s not
something that I believe government should be involved in.”
But the Job Center has survived past attempts to limit its
services, and it has a number of supporters.
“I’d be extremely disappointed and I’m sure my neighbors would be
as well” if the center is closed, said Bill Turpit, a longtime Job
Center supporter who lives near Lions Park. “I think it’s going to
cause people to go out to visible places to look for work.”
The center is providing a service the community needs, and it’s
unclear how well the city’s anti-loitering ordinance will address the
issue if there’s no organized place for laborers to go, Councilwoman
Katrina Foley said.
“I think whatever decision the council decides to make, they need
to seriously consider the ramifications of the loitering problem that
could be created by the loss the Job Center,” she said.
The Job Center is operated by the parks and recreation department.
City recreation manager Jana Ransom said the center gets temporary
workers off the street, but some workers don’t use it because they
choose not to follow the rules it requires, such as providing
identification and providing a small, one-time user fee.
“I think if we had two or three of these around town it would be
more effective. I don’t think it’s a panacea,” she said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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