What happened to Costa Mesa?
TONY DODERO
Last Friday, while on vacation, I took my son Nathan to my favorite
barber shop to get his first ever haircut.
Nate, as we call him, doesn’t have much hair yet, as he’s only 19
months old. What hair he did have was kind of scraggly, and even
worse, the tufts on the back of his neck came down in one of those
mullet-style looks.
And my wife and I were not going to have any of that.
So off we went to Miller Barber Family Barber Shop, owned and
operated by Mark Miller, a Costa Mesa native, born and raised.
I’ve been going to Mark Miller’s shop on Broadway, just a stone’s
throw from Triangle Square, for about two years now, before Nate was
even born, and Mark is as good as they get at cutting hair.
After he cleaned up Nate, gave him a cool first haircut
certificate and made him look respectable, it was my turn in the
chair.
What I got, though, was more than just a haircut. I got a lesson
on the disappointment that at least one Costa Mesa resident feels
about his town and the direction it’s heading and, more importantly,
what he thinks the problems and solutions are.
First, a little background.
As I said, Mark was born and raised here. He attended Pomona
Elementary, Rea Middle School and Estancia High. His dad, Bob Miller,
was a principal at several local schools, mainly Adams and Newport
elementary.
His baseball coaches were the legendary Luke Davis and Shorty
Scheafer, whose son Mike was on the City Council not that long ago.
Mark and his wife Diane are now raising their kids, Dylan, 12, and
Josie, 7, here in his hometown.
And he has one big question.
“What happened to Costa Mesa?”
In his mind, it’s pretty clear. City leaders abandoned the youth.
They nudged out the small mom and pops in favor of big corporations,
and they seem way too focused on putting in restaurants and bars and
less concerned about keeping the city’s small town charm alive.
“Back when I was a kid, the Fish Fry was always something to look
forward to,” he said. “We had parades and the Boys Club passed out
food to all the people. There is none of that anymore. And it’s
appalling.”
Specifically, he wants to see the Westside of Costa Mesa return to
what it was like some 20 or 30 years ago.
“They need to bring back the old Boys and Girls Club that we used
to have,” he said, noting that he began attending the Boys and Girls
Club in 1965. “We had a swimming pool and shop classes. It was great.
We used to have our own youth baseball league.”
The league once called Costa Mesa Park its home, but the land is
now called Luke Davis Field. He’s got no quarrel with the name. “Luke
was my baseball coach,” he said. But he’s positive that both Luke
Davis and Shorty Scheafer would be unhappy with what Costa Mesa has
done with youth baseball.
“There is not even snack bars for kids to go,” he said. “I want my
Westside to have its baseball back.”
And not just baseball, he said.
“The city needs more things for the youth,” he said. “I just love
Costa Mesa. I just want to make it better for these kids, so they can
have dreams and goals.”
He acknowledges that there is a Boys and Girls Club at what is now
Rea Elementary, but it’s not sufficient, he said.
“They can’t play basketball,” he said of that facility. “No
sports. Kids need to exercise. They don’t even do it at school,
nothing ... Right now, Costa Mesa is not healthy. We need more
healthy minds and healthy bodies.”
As for the Westside, where he grew up, he has some suggestions.
First and foremost is to relocate the DMV and put it near John
Wayne Airport.
“Turn that into a youth employment service and Boys and Girls
Club,” he said. “You can have shop classes and drafting. Let’s face
it, not everybody is going to USC and UCLA.”
Costa Mesa Councilwoman Linda Dixon said she agrees 100% that the
youth are not being served.
“That’s a very valid point,” she said. “We don’t have a youth
center, where kids can congregate. We don’t have dances for kids on
Friday nights or extracurricular activities, especially for middle
school kids.”
As for moving the DMV, she said that’s a pretty hefty chore,
considering the land is owned by the state of California.
“Once again, you’re talking about funding,” said Dixon, who along
with her fellow council members just voted to give $1 million to
Costa Mesa United toward the creation of a stadium and Olympic pool
for Costa Mesa’s high schools. “Would this community step up to the
plate to pay for something like that? I don’t know. But there are all
sorts of possibilities if people want to get creative.”
She said if the DMV didn’t work, maybe the city could find another
locale, even a vacant strip mall to build a center.
Either way, Mark just wants to see things get better and back to
the way they were.
“There’s plenty of space if people would stop thinking we need
more bars and restaurants,” he said. “It just upsets me. I’d love to
take my kid to the Fish Fry. I’d love to have a parade.”
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He may be reached at (714) 966-4608
or by e-mail at tony.dodero @latimes.com.
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