Maybe I should have paid closer attention,...
Maybe I should have paid closer attention, and I would have if I had
understood that the Job Center was in jeopardy.
I support the use of city funds for the center, and I would
certainly support participation by local businesses in paying the
expenses associated with the center.
I am a 27-year resident of Costa Mesa, and I chose Costa Mesa on
purpose. I believe we are unique among Orange County cities. I love
our variety and our diversity. And I am proud of our willingness to
embrace (or at least graciously accept) our diversity and the
different ideas, attitudes and styles that come from that diversity.
I always thought we were a kind, generous and socially progressive
city. The Job Center was an example of this. Its loss saddens me; I
believe it’s a loss to our city and to my vision of the kind of
community I believed we were and should continue to be.
CATHY HIGLEY
Costa Mesa
I strongly endorse Daily Pilot columnist Steve Smith’s position
that the Job Center should stay open. The day laborers it supports
are a vital element of Costa Mesa’s business base and a convenient
source of casual labor for the proud homeowners of our community.
The Job Center provides order and dignity for this workforce. The
alternative is undesirable loitering on our street corners and an
unnecessary added burden to our Police Department.
DAVID C. WENSLEY
Costa Mesa
I have read Steve Smith’s two columns in which he is so concerned
about the Job Center being closed, and I can’t believe this is coming
out of the same person who was so incensed when that school board
member was picked up for drunken driving and wouldn’t resign.
In other words, Steve Smith, you’re talking out of both sides of
your mouth.
JULIE DANCE
Newport Beach
I am outraged that three men on the city council have once again
ganged up in an action that seems to have no justification other than
the advancement of a Westside agenda to eliminate all services to
immigrants, no matter what the disadvantage to the community. I refer
to the closing of the Job Center.
Their excuses for this action, those I have been able to cull from
the various news articles, are nonsensical and easily refuted.
“Times have changed ... and with all the work that we’re doing on
the Westside ... it may be time to move the Job Center out,” said
Councilman Gary Monahan. The time to move the Job Center out will be
when the center’s clients have been moved out.
It will be some years before the Westside has been turned into a
mini-Newport Beach. In the meantime, there are a lot of poor people
living there, poor people who want to work. As long as they are
there, they will be looking for day jobs, and they will look in
places that are a problem for the rest of us.
Our police chief apparently thinks this is the case; he stated
that he would now have to enforce loitering laws. It costs $102,000
annually to run the job center; I think it must cost more than that
to hire and equip a single police officer. Why should we use negative
enforcement when, for less money, we can provide a positive service
that actually helps people?
Monahan said he doesn’t see the major problems today that existed
before the Job Center was opened.
Steve Smith nailed that one nicely in his column this week. We
don’t have a problem with seekers of day jobs loitering in parks and
along Placentia Avenue because we solved the problem with the Job
Center.
“There are many ways people can find a job, and I think it’s up to
the private sector to facilitate that,” Mayor Allan Mansoor said.
“It’s not something that I believe government should be involved in.”
If this is not the job of government, what is? The job of
government is to solve problems in the community that the private
sector cannot solve. The private sector is not going to open a job
center; they couldn’t make any money at it without pricing the work
force out onto the streets again.
Using an agency like Labor Ready sounds like a good idea, but if
it was a viable solution, the workers and contractors would already
be using it.
And what does the fact that contractors from outside Costa Mesa
use the Job Center have to do with anything? The purpose of the Job
Center is to get workers off the streets. It will only do that if
enough people actually get jobs there. The more employers the better,
and why should we care where they came from?
It might make sense to limit the workers at the center to Costa
Mesa residents, but since well over three-quarters of them already
are residents, it is not worth worrying about where the others come
from.
The job center was a brilliant idea that solved a problem and at
the same time had unexpected positive consequences. Not only did it
reduce loitering, but it helped the workers and it helped the
employers as well.
The loss of the job center is a major loss for our city.
DEBORAH RECTOR
Costa Mesa
I’m the “fellow” who Steve Smith says insists on letting the City
Council know how to fix the city.
We live in what should be a resident-driven, participatory
democracy. That means that residents need to let their elected
officials know what the residents want.
I try to do that as often as possible because I’m tired of seeing
all my neighbors fleeing this city and the city being driven ever
lower. I’m tired of seeing the school scores being so low. I’m tired
of the crime and the gangs. I want a nice city in which to raise my
kids. In other words I care about Costa Mesa.
Newport Beach doesn’t have a job center. That city doesn’t need
one because many Newporters, and even the Newport city government,
use ours. Statistics show that about half of the employers using the
job center give out-of-town addresses, and some who give Costa Mesa
addresses are just giving their business addresses, not their home
addresses in Newport Beach.
The Job Center’s function needs to be privatized and the city of
Costa Mesa needs to get out of the job of finding work for suspected
illegal immigrants.
Why are there so many charities on the Westside? Because they are
providing food, rent payments, medical and dental care and much more
for a growing underground economy in Costa Mesa that has grown up
around the Job Center.
Let me emphasize a point. Day workers don’t get medical or dental
insurance because those who hire them don’t supply it. So what
happens when the day workers get sick? They go to the emergency room
of Hoag Hospital or they go to the charities.
In other words, residents are supplying the medical and dental
plans for the employees of many out-of-town industrial bosses so
these out-of-town industrial bosses don’t have to supply it and can
make more money so they can continue to live in Newport Beach and
other nicer cities.
Those who are trying to keep the Job Center want to give the
impression that most of the workers are hired by elderly people in
Costa Mesa who need a day’s worth of yard work; however, even in the
Daily Pilot we read about some of these day workers getting jobs for
a year or longer.
And, as already mentioned, they don’t get medical and dental care,
and they’re not paid a living wage, so they make up the difference
and fill in the gaps from the charities. We are thus subsidizing both
the employers and their employees.
It is time that we break the downward spiral in Costa Mesa and
start dismantling what has become a machine-like system that benefits
nonresidents of Costa Mesa and is making our city far less than the
shining city on the hill that it should be.
M. H. Millard
Costa Mesa
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