Editorial
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Some look to the Westside of Costa Mesa and see blight.
A place where the hopeless, the homeless and the unwanted congregate
and spoil what otherwise could be paradise.
A place where criminals rule and law-abiding citizens have no say. A
place where the predominant culture and language comes from Latin
America.
A place where, they say, the problems are many and overwhelming:*
overcrowded apartments;
* gang-infested streets;
* too few single-family homes;
* illegal immigration without limits;
* piecemeal and misplaced commercial and industrial development;
* a lack of parks;
* overtaxed schools.
We agree that the Westside of Costa Mesa has problems that need
fixing. The living conditions and degradation that have occurred need to
be reversed. The community needs solid answers from its leaders.
There is reason to be hopeful, though.
Because in addition to those who look at the Westside and see blight,
there are even more who see the answers. Better yet, they see an
opportunity.
An opportunity to turn one of the most diverse populations in Orange
County into a thriving community that welcomes all people and ideas.
In their eyes, it is a place that can be a model for how other parts
of the country should tackle tough, divisive problems.
“Those of us who live here think it is just a great place,” activist
Eleanor Egan, co-chair of the Westside Improvement Assn. told reporter
Jennifer Kho. “It’s got the sea breeze, a diverse community, easy access
to commercial stuff on the Eastside and access to the freeway. It has
great potential and isn’t making good use of its potential.
But Egan knows the challenges also.
“These problems have been there for years,” she said. “I think we’ve
been ignored for a long time. I mean, look at the pavement. I think what
happened is people felt helpless and hopeless and didn’t try to do
anything.”
It is clear that the residents of the Westside have had to deal with
issues that their counterparts on the other side of town have not.
The good news is that the Westside activists have everybody’s
attention right now and the chances for solid, comprehensive changes are
better now than ever.
The bad news is the remedy some are proposing is bad medicine.
Many have aimed their sights at the Latino population, which comprises
44% of the Westside, implying that if only they weren’t here, the
problems would go away.
Unfortunately, they lay the blame for the poor school quality, the
crime, the lowering of property values, the existence of charitable
organizations squarely on the back of the Latino population.
But such rhetoric poses a clear and very real danger of racism and
hurtful stereotypes. Turning an entire race of people into a scapegoat
just promotes hatred and bigotry and even violence.
It’s un-American and, even worse, downright evil.
What many need to know, and presumably already know, is that the
Latino community is not going away. Recent census figures should make
that clear.
Furthermore, the Latino community is comprised of an overwhelming
number of people who toil daily in blue-collar jobs, who stimulate the
local economy with their purchasing power, who pay taxes, who fight
crime, who are equally concerned with preserving the quality of life in
Costa Mesa.
But some of those same people are uneasy or unfamiliar with many of
the cultural norms that we take for granted. And for that they suffer.
So, instead of name-calling and divisiveness, we urge the Westside
leaders to include all members of the community, listen to all ideas, for
that is where the keys to victory lie.
City and law enforcement leaders, churches and charities, business
owners, schools and universities, and, most important of all, the
residents can all work toward creative and innovative answers to the
Westside’s challenges.
It won’t be easy. But with so many rich rewards to be gained, the time
is now to cash in.
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