Costa Mesan provides motivation and much more
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Michael Miller
The first time Elsie Maurizi met Chris Byrd she wondered just what he
was doing in her house.
She was in the kitchen of her home in Costa Mesa and saw him on
her computer, said Maurizi, 53, a self-employed antique seller and
mother of three. She remembered their exchange.
“Who are you?” she said, and “Where are you from?”
Her question turned out to have a complex answer. Byrd was a
friend of Maurizi’s son, Gary, and had come to their house looking
for a place to crash. During the 16 years before that night, Byrd’s
life had provided little in the way of consistent beds; he moved from
one relative’s house to another, wound up for a time at Orangewood
Children’s Home in Orange, slept on friends’ couches and in cars.
This time, though, he had knocked on the right door. Over the past
decade, Maurizi has sheltered, fed and mentored more than 20 youths,
most of them friends of her children who needed advice or a bed.
After her initial meeting with Byrd, Maurizi kept a close watch on
him, enrolling him back in school and ultimately taking him as her
foster son.
Today, he will join three of his current and former housemates --
Gary Maurizi, Keola Akana and Fara Botzheim -- in graduating from
Monte Vista High School.
“They give you the work,” Byrd, 18, said about the alternative
school. “It’s all about how much motivation you have. I told Elsie,
‘If I don’t do my homework, yell at me.’ And she did.”
Whatever prodding Maurizi may have used, it worked. All four of
her graduating seniors plan to attend Orange Coast College in the
fall, after years when many of them thought they would never make it
out of school.
Akana, 18, ventured to Costa Mesa after struggling at a regular
high school in Yucaipa; Maurizi, a friend of his mother, sheltered
him this winter. Botzheim, 19, who lived at Maurizi’s for a time
before moving back with her mother and sister, works full time to pay
her family’s rent.
Maurizi said that the majority of children she takes in are
bright, artistic and troubled -- and Monte Vista is the perfect
location for them.
The school, located within earshot of the 55 Freeway in Costa
Mesa, requires students to attend only two hours a week, and lets
them do the rest of their studies at home.
Many Monte Vista students are in special education or have medical
or behavioral problems, but some are merely independent learners who
prefer to work at their own pace, said Deborah Davis, Monte Vista
principal.
Into this small campus, which also houses the continuation Back
Bay High School, Maurizi has brought 19 children over the years.
Every week she drives her current tenants to the school and then
bides her time, volunteering in the office or cleaning shelves, while
they meet with teachers.
She has become such a fixed presence at the school that
administrators refer to her proteges as “Elsie’s kids.”
Davis views Maurizi as an activist as much as a guardian. A few
years ago, Maurizi lobbied successfully to put a full-time special
education teacher on campus, after the school had made do with one
for only two days a week.
“That’s how I first met Elsie,” Davis said. “She was very involved
in special education here, and we’ve changed it a lot. The way it was
being done wasn’t very good for the kids.”
Maurizi is no stranger to disabilities; all three of her own
children are special-needs students, and Botzheim overcame a speech
impediment in elementary school.
However troubled her charges may be, though, Maurizi handles them
in a businesslike way. Anyone who stays at her home must follow three
rules: no drugs, no lying, and mandatory school.
Otherwise, the atmosphere in the cluttered Costa Mesa home is
downright familial.
“It’s a kick-back-and-relax sort of thing,” Akana said. “You do
chores every other day -- dishes, vacuuming, and so on.”
Maurizi learned her charitable values early in life.
Her father, who once ran a secondhand store on Newport Boulevard,
often helped neighbors and even strangers who were down on their
luck.
Once, Maurizi said, he met a man lifting boxes at an auction and
brought him home, gave him a change of clothes and made him manager
of the family’s trailer park.
“It’s expensive to do it,” she admitted. “We never had a lot to
give, but we did what we could.”
In sheltering and mentoring children, Maurizi has had moments of
triumph, but not all of her cases have ended smoothly.
One of her first tenants, who fled his father to live with Maurizi
about seven years ago, eventually moved back home and fell into drugs
and prison.
The last Maurizi heard of him, he had a child of his own and was
going back to college.
She fears that another of her former guests, who was
half-Indonesian, may have returned to his native land and died in the
tsunami.
For others, though, the future looks brighter.
On Tuesday evening, Maurizi, her son and foster son sat back in
the living room of her house, taking a breather two days before
commencement.
Amid the big-screen television, fish tank and used furniture
lining the tiny room, a large rack of photographs by the door showed
the faces of people who had stayed in the house -- some Maurizi’s
children, some current guests, some long gone. Cradled in one of the
time-worn chairs, Byrd reflected on his last four years.
“I’m going to have a diploma in my hand this Thursday,” he said.
“Wow. That feels good.”
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