Council could rethink decision
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Alicia Robinson
The Costa Mesa City Council could revisit its decision to close the
Job Center, if at least two council members agree with Councilwoman
Katrina Foley that the issue needs more discussion.
Foley filed a document with the city on Tuesday requesting a
rehearing of the Job Center closure, which the council approved on
March 15 in a 3-2 vote, with Foley and Councilwoman Linda Dixon
dissenting.
“I hope that they will seriously reconsider because there are, I
think, serious community issues, especially as they relate to public
safety, that have not been addressed,” Foley said.
The Job Center connects workers with employers in need of
short-term labor. Since it opened in 1988, the center has been a
flashpoint in debates about the largely Latino day worker population
and illegal immigration concerns.
Any council member can request a rehearing on an issue within a
week of a council vote on the issue. According to Foley’s request,
the council should reopen the issue because no notice was given
before the meeting to laborers or employers who use the Job Center;
the description on the agenda was vague and therefore misleading; and
the council’s decision to close the Job Center was made despite
insufficient information about an alternative for workers.
A majority vote of the council is needed to set a rehearing on an
issue. Mayor Allan Mansoor did not want to address the merits of
Foley’s request because he had not seen it Tuesday.
“To me there has to be a very compelling reason to rehear
something,” he said. “I don’t know what her reasons are. I haven’t
seen them.”
Since the council’s decision, Mansoor said, the feedback he’s
gotten about closing the center has been largely positive.
“I think there is good support for it,” he said. “People realize
that there are viable options in the private sector.”
Mansoor has questioned whether public money should be spent on the
Job Center when its services are available through private employment
firms.
The residents who have been talking to Foley are apparently an
entirely different crop.
“I would say, overall, the feedback that I’m getting is that that
was a bad idea, and the reasons are varied, but they predominantly
relate to: There was no plan for dealing with the issue of labor on
the streets and in the parks,” Foley said.
The city opened the Job Center to address ongoing complaints with
day laborers loitering in Lions Park. Some residents as well as Costa
Mesa Police Chief John Hensley expect the loitering problem to return
if the center is closed.
Hensley said it’s hard to know how much more enforcement will be
needed, but he’ll begin to get an idea after April 15, when the Job Center will be open only to Costa Mesa residents.
While the public often complains about loitering, the laws that
govern it are difficult to enforce, he said.
“The majority of the time we advise people to go to the Job Center
instead of citing [them],” Hensley 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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