This is in response to Tony Doderoâs...
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This is in response to Tony Doderoâs column that ran Friday, âWhat
Happened to Costa Mesa?â I have to agree with Mark Miller entirely as
to the decline of our great town.
I am a 35-year resident of Costa Mesa, born and raised here. I
grew up on the Westside. I played Ponytail Softball for girls, I
played Harbor Area Baseball, went to the Boys and Girls Club, hung
out at Mesa Verde Center, saw movies at the Mesa Theater, etc. Rather
than what happened, Iâd like to know what we can do to bring back
some of the old amenities that so many of us miss?
We are a beautiful city, but we lost a lot of our character and
charm in the process of improving. Rather than move the DMV to build
a youth center, why donât we ask the Segerstrom family to donate
their vacant lot on the corner of Harbor Boulevard and Mesa Verde? It
would seem a small gesture from people so âyouth orientedâ enough to
give $2 million to our two high schools.
What are those high school kids doing after school?
What a perfect location for a âfamily fun center.â It is right
between the two high schools; it is on the major bus route and near
several major neighborhoods where families are growing.
The elders of our city need to remember that the kids of this town
will be the ones running it in 25 to 30 years. What are we offering
them now?
I challenge the Segerstroms: You have your performing arts; you
have your Ikea and Home Ranch; you have your mega mall. Please do
something really great with that corner for the youth and,
ultimately, the future of Costa Mesa.
MAUREEN MAZZARELLA
Costa Mesa
What Happened to Costa Mesa?
For the most part itâs gotten better.
Do we really want to go back to the days of wooden ships and iron
men? How many of us liked shopping at Fedco instead of Target and
Henryâs? Would you really rather shop at Marshallâs and Pennyâs
instead of the Home Depot and Albertsonâs?
There may be some whoâd like to see the old market at the corner
of 19th Street and Harbor Boulevard as opposed to the Courtyards, but
Iâm not one of them. Give me Mimiâs and Cold Stone any day.
If anyone wants to go back in time, tell them to shop at the Vista
Center on 19th Street and Placentia Avenue. Itâs still about the same
as it was 30 years ago.
Part of the irony of this column is it takes place in a barber
shop that is reminiscent of Floydâs Barbershop in Mayberry.
A few pages later in the same issue of the Pilot, the Best Bites
column features two old time Costa Mesa restaurants, the BC Broiler
and Super Pollo. (Although I have to admit while I love BC Broiler, I
preferred it when it was Pee Weeâs and served great hot dogs.) And
how about the Pilot itself? Talk about a throw back to the good old
days.
Some residents, and perhaps the editor, may have preferred the
bean fields to Performing Arts Center and South Coast Plaza but not
me. I love being able to drive five minutes to see a play. In fact
weâre going on Sunday to the matinee of âThe Lion King.â
Now for those of you who think Iâm a new guy, Iâm not. I go back
almost as far as Mark Miller. I wasnât born here but I was raised
here. I went to McNally school. (How many of you remember where that
was?) I also attended Wilson, and College Park elementary schools,
Maude B. Davis Jr. High School, Costa Mesa High School (proud class
of â66) and Orange Coast College. I married a Costa Mesa High class
of â72 alum.
My kids attended Sonora, California, Costa Mesa High School and
OCC also. My Dad, Bill Dunn, was the cityâs first planning director.
So Iâve got some history, too.
I remember Harbor Area Baseball, my coach was also Luke Davis. But
I coached for about 12-years in the Costa Mesa Little League and in
the American Youth Soccer Organization. In my opinion, kids now have
many more options than I did. I had Harbor Area Baseball -- that was
it.
My kids had gymnastics (city program), AYSO, city youth
basketball, Little League, and youth water polo. Many people now
complain they donât have enough unscheduled time.
Has the city abandoned the youth? No. Look at the after school
programs offered at the schools. Was it that long ago the city bought
the Farm from the school district and turned it into a park? How
about the soccer and baseball improvements at Kaiser school.
Didnât the paper just run an article about how thereâs too much
activity there and that residents want the lights turned off?
The boysâ club in Lions Park was where I spent my Saturdays. But
as nice and smelly as the old gym was, I think, given the choice,
most kids would choose the new gym over the old one. The old pool
leaked water faster than they could fill it up. But the new pool
actually holds water, and the new community center and library all
provide the Westside with more and better services than what were
around when I was growing up.
It is true you used to be able to go to the boysâ club and work on
wood, etc. in the shop. But you can blame the loss of the shop on the
cost of insurance and a lack of interest.
Just like I didnât play stick ball and mumbly-peg like my Dad, my
kids enjoy different activities than what I did growing up.
There seems to be a general feeling that things arenât as good as
they used to be. But do we really all want to go back to Mayberry and
sit in Floydâs Barbershop? Was it better then?
Whatâs really missing now, that we used to have in the past, is a
sense of community. It is not new business versus old business, or
large business versus small business.
Look around Costa Mesa and youâll see hundreds of old time
businesses. Granted, Pinkâs Drugs is now longer with us, but neither
is Pink. But I ate at the Bamboo Terrace a couple weeks back -- itâs
been there for years.
What about Nickâs Pizza, Winchellâs on 17th and Oh Those Donuts on
Newport (stopped there this morning), Taco Mesa, MarVac Electronics,
the legendary Goat Hill Tavern?
Iâll give you the Fish Fry. I agree that was a big loss and a pet
peeve of mine. I think losing the parade was the beginning of the
loss of our sense of community. Whyâd it change? My Lionâs club
friends say the biggest reason was because the prescient city fathers
at the time wanted the Lions to pay for the additional police
overtime required over that weekend.
That and closing down a mile or so of Harbor Boulevard on Fish Fry
Saturday for the parade.
How short sighted was this?
Huntington Beach, on arguably the busiest day of the year for that
city, sponsors a 3-mile race and closes down Pacific Coast Highway
and Main Street for several hours on the Fourth of July. But Costa
Mesa canât supply and pay for the police to re-route traffic down
Harbor Boulevard for a couple hours on the first weekend in June?
Come on.
You want to rebuild our sense of community? Give us back our
parade. So what happened to Costa Mesa? It has indeed changed but not
necessarily for the worse. I love it here and Iâm glad the Miller
Family Barber Shop is still here and Iâm glad we still have a small
town paper that focuses on the people and businesses that make Costa
Mesa so special.
MIKE DUNN
Costa Mesa
In response to Tony Doderoâs days-gone-by musings, I offer the
following: Youth sports are alive and well in Costa Mesa.
However, with Newport Beachâs control of the facilities through
their joint-powers agreement, the children of Costa Mesa are left
with only those areas that Newport Beach chooses not to use.
Every year we are told by our leaders that we need more locations
for sports; the true cause of this problem is never addressed. Wait
till you see what happens at the proposed âstadium.â
We also have a very active Boys & Girls Club, but due to its
location in a âgang controlledâ area, many parents forbid their
children from attending. Donât take my word for it: Stroll by the Rea
some dark night (ask your barber to join you); tell us what you see.
Remember, reality is 90% perception.
What has happened to Costa Mesa is no different than what has
happened to many a growing city that has flirted with blind political
correctness.
Sadly, Costa Mesa has been perceived (thereâs that word again) as
gang friendly, and surrounding cities have taken advantage of that by
encouraging the gang element to âplay outside,â meaning of course
Costa Mesa.
Again, donât take my word for it. Read the police reports, many of
these violators arenât from Costa Mesa. Our prior councils have
spoken loudly and often on the subject, referring to youths in gang
attire as fashionable. Give me a break!
In the honorable-mention category, our school district deserves
recognition. By placing at-risk children in one small area and
refusing to enforce their dress code, they flaunt their autonomy,
while our council is left to rearrange the deck chairs.
MICHAEL BERRY
Costa Mesa
I read with interest Tony Doderoâs column in the Daily Pilot,
âWhat happened to Costa Mesa?â
Although I agree with Doderoâs favorite barber, Mark Miller, in
many of his assessments, Iâm afraid he may have left the impression
that the annual Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club Fish Fry is no
more.
Nothing, Iâm pleased to report, could be further from the truth.
From itâs inception in 1947, the Fish Fry was held every year until
2000. The Lions Club was forced to relocate the event to OCCâs campus
due to construction at Lions Park. It was held there for two years,
but a lawsuit completely unrelated to the event unfortunately caused
the Fish Fry to go dark for two years.
The club proudly reestablished the Fish Fry in 2003 and itâs been
going and growing strong ever since.
This yearâs event will be held June 4 and 5 at Lionâs Park, at
18th Street and Park Avenue.
The always popular Icelandic cod fish and chips will be served for
both lunch and dinner all weekend. Many community organizations will
also take part in the festivities. A full slate of entertainment,
including several excellent local blues, rock and folk bands, will be
performing.
The Miss Costa Mesa beauty contest will be held at 2:15 p.m. on
Saturday, and the ever popular baby contest is scheduled for 2 p.m.
on Sunday. A much-expanded carnival will be entertaining children of
all ages.
And, as always, 100% of the net proceeds from the event will be
donated to worthwhile local charities to help our kids and others in
need.
Millerâs right in that the parade is no longer held. But he will
be able to take his kids to the Fish Fry this June. Weâll be on the
lookout for Miller, his kids and the rest of Costa Mesa as this
signature community event unfolds once again.
CHUCK CASSITY
Costa Mesa
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