Hope for the best in the rest of ’05
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Geoff West
Several months ago, I wrote a commentary for these pages in which I
bemoaned the condition of our streets and commented on the fact that
we had been lucky to have had below-normal rainfall amounts, because
even normal rainfall would have exacerbated the problem.
Well, as you well know, the rain gods have been angry this year,
and now many of our streets resemble the roads in a bombed-out city.
Of course, for those of you who ski, this isn’t all bad news. You
can practice your slalom techniques and pretend you’re charging
downhill through moguls as you swerve your way around the
disintegrating pavement and potholes on East 17th Street, for example.
As I make my way around town these days over these miserable
streets, lots of words go through my alleged mind. Most of those
words cannot be printed here, but there are others that seem to be
appropriate and that we can actually say in mixed company.
For example, “perspective” is an interesting word, don’t you
think?
My trusty dictionary includes this definition: “The capacity to
view things in their true relation and relative importance.”
As some of you will recall, a little over a year ago, a man who
had been my best friend since we were 5 years old passed away after a
long hospitalization in Las Vegas as a result of a motorcycle
accident. The 45 days I spent at his bedside were very painful for
me, and this past year has been extremely difficult. I wouldn’t wish
that experience on anyone. I couldn’t imagine anything worse.
Then came Dec. 26, 2004, and the catastrophic tsunami that struck
many South Asian coastal areas. As the clock ticks, the number of
dead and presumed dead continues to rise -- at this time it’s
estimated that more than 250,000 people lost their lives in the
tragic event. The term “mind-boggling” was coined for just such
circumstances. I cannot imagine the scope of this kind of loss, no
matter how hard I try.
And then came La Conchita. The proximity to media outlets gave us
nonstop coverage of the drama as it unfolded. We’ve seen the stories
of heroism as neighbors pulled survivors from the mud. We’ve also
witnessed the helpless agony of the dreadlocked man, who lost his
wife and three young daughters in the slide. Once again, the scope of
this loss is hard to imagine.
And then, closer to home, we had the threat of the failure of
Prado Dam and the subsequent evacuation of thousands of people
downstream. I watched the news coverage of the cars lined up in the
threatened neighborhoods, trying to make their way to a safe
location, and I knew they wouldn’t stand a chance if the dam actually
let go. I also wondered about the damage further downstream, in
Anaheim, Tustin, Santa Ana, Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach if
there was a catastrophic failure.
And then the last set of storms, which raised our total rainfall
to levels unseen for more than a century, has brought us stories of
children crushed by boulders rolling through their homes, garage-size
boulders waiting to fall, sinkholes large enough to swallow a couple
of homes, and more than one hundred homes sliding down hills all over
the Southland. Even closer to home, our street is only a block long,
with seven houses lining it. Within these homes, four men recently
recovered simultaneously from major health issues. They included
severe head trauma from a car accident, serious back surgery,
reconstructive surgery of a shoulder, and a very prolonged recovery
from what was supposed to be a fairly minor surgical event.
All of these things have put the growing number of potholes in our
streets into perspective. Even though things are booming these days
for our friends in the wheel-alignment business, I find myself angry
at the delay in repairing our streets. Despite the fact that a call
to the Pothole Hotline usually generates a rapid response, in many
cases it’s like putting a Band-Aid on a compound fracture.
However, now when I drop into one of the craters that the
combination of tardy maintenance and heavy rains have left in our
streets and feel my suspension bottom-out, I think of the folks in
South Asia who have no streets about which to complain. I recall my
grief at the passing of my friend -- then try to mentally multiply
that by a quarter of a million.
I think of the folks in La Conchita, who lost everything they own
to a wall of mud that hit so quickly that even the fastest sprinters
couldn’t have escaped. I think of the man who lost his wife and three
daughters. Today, as I think of my recuperating neighbors and all the
storm-related tragedies, I realize just how lucky I am that some of
the biggest problems in my life are potholes.
As we slog through the first half of 2005, I hope potholes are the
biggest problems in your lives too.
* GEOFF WEST is a Costa Mesa resident and regular contributor to
Forum.
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