Sides argue economics, ethnicity
Alicia Robinson
The questions of how cities should handle under-the-table employers
and illegal immigrants and whether economic progress necessarily
means expelling the poor have been lying dormant in Costa Mesa,
occasionally flaring up when a City Council member would suggest
closing the city-run Job Center.
Such flare-ups sparked to life last month, when the council
finally voted to close the center, which pairs day laborers with
employers. The debate since has done little but fan the flames.
Elected officials have given economic reasons for closing the
center -- its cost to the city, the boost its closure will give
property values on the Westside -- and some residents are in
wholehearted agreement with that logic.
But in another segment of the community, there’s a perception that
the council’s decision, perhaps unwittingly, is bowing to pressure to
make the Westside whiter -- ethnically, that is -- by moving out an
institution that serves mainly Latinos.
Since the Job Center opened in 1988, there has been opposition to
it. Members of past councils have tried to close it but could not get
enough votes. It was a campaign promise of Chris Steel, who served on
the council from 2000 to 2004.
“If this had come up eight months ago, and Chris would have been
the one to bring it forward, he would have gotten no or lukewarm
support for it,” said former Councilman Mike Scheafer, who was
appointed to the council in 2003 and lost an election bid last fall.
“The influence of some of the Westside activists and the election of
two of them to the council has changed the dynamic.”
Councilman Eric Bever and Mayor Allan Mansoor both campaigned for
council seats -- Mansoor in 2002 and Bever in 2004 -- on platforms of
improving the Westside.
To the councilmen who voted to close the center -- Bever, Mansoor
and Councilman Gary Monahan approved the closure, while Councilwomen
Linda Dixon and Katrina Foley opposed it -- the new dynamic is about
economic progress on the Westside.
They have pointed out that the city is looking into other methods
to match short-term workers with employers, such as private-sector
employment agencies or a telephone referral system.
“We’re looking for other ways to provide work for these folks, but
just not through a government-funded, untaxed, underground economy,”
said Monahan, who proposed closing the Job Center.
But the closing of the Job Center won’t bring an end to the
underground economy. Some workers say they’ll look for jobs on the
street or in parking lots, and they won’t use a private firm, because
the jobs they get that way don’t pay well.
“My sense is that the council is addressing another issue, which
is illegal immigration,” said Mirna Burciaga, a Westside business
owner who ran for council in November. “If we close the center, are
we really doing something to prevent illegal immigration? I don’t
think so.”
The argument has been made that the city shouldn’t sponsor a
service that helps illegal immigrants get work. But to some
observers, the issue is simply brown and white.
The major revitalization effort the city has launched on the
Westside means industrial properties can be sold at a profit to
developers, resident Geoff West said.
“With the industrial uses go the jobs, and who occupies the jobs?
The Latino population,” he said. “The fact remains that what they’re
trying to accomplish here, their definition of improvement, in my
view, means extracting the Latinos, and everything will get better.”
Even some workers who use the Job Center see the decision as a
message that because of who they are, the city doesn’t care about
them.
“If we were Americans, they would send people to train us, to get
some skills,” said Arturo Hernandez. “Mostly we are Latinos. I guess
that’s the problem.”
Some view the decision to close the center as racist in part
because that’s how they see one of the center’s most vocal opponents,
Martin Millard.
His writings have been published by at least one organization that
has been characterized as a hate group, and one of his essays refers
to “little brown people” who reproduce like cockroaches and describes
immigration as an “invasion without guns.”
But when it comes to the Job Center, Millard said, “I see it
basically as an economic thing. I don’t see race as an issue at all.”
City statistics -- from crime figures to school test scores --
show Costa Mesa is in a decline, and the Westside industrial area is
like dead weight, he said.
The low incomes of Westside residents won’t attract upscale
businesses, he added.
The charge of racism is just a last-ditch effort to fight changes
on the Westside by those who have a vested interest in the status
quo, Millard said.
“A lot of the people that don’t want to see any improvement in the
city are doing anything they can to fight it,” he said. “There’s a
lot of money in the slums for those that are making a profit.”
Monahan has been on the council for 10 years. In the past, he said
the center should stay open, but he has opposed spending city money
on it.
He said his record speaks for itself, and he doesn’t need to
defend himself to people who perceive racism in the Job Center
decision. People “argue the race card,” he said, when they can’t
argue the facts.
“I think it’s a cop-out,” Monahan said. “Make a case for why it
should be open, but don’t go saying it’s an anti-Latino [measure].”
Mansoor has called the perception of racism “silly,” and Bever
declined to comment publicly on the issue.
But such dismissals don’t cut any ice with some Job Center
supporters.
“There is a racial undertone to this whether they admit it or
not,” Scheafer said. “They have to be aware that that issue is there,
and to just blow it off isn’t going to work.”
The community likely will remain sharply divided on the Job
Center, and the various arguments will be rehashed tonight when the
council considers Foley’s request to rehear the issue.
Workers who use the center felt they were denied a chance to speak
before the vote to close the center because they didn’t know about
the meeting, and a number of them plan to attend tonight.
Their comments may fall on deaf ears, however. Monahan said
rehearing an issue requires new information that may have resulted in
a different vote.
“I think I’ve heard every argument over the Job Center from every
angle over the last 10 years,” Monahan said. “I don’t know what new
information [Foley will] bring forward, but I’ll be curious what it
is.”
* 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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