Job Center survives another council vote
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Deirdre Newman
The Job Center opened its doors 15 years ago as a clearinghouse for
day laborers to find temporary work. Before that, the laborers
congregated in Lions Park and other open spaces on 19th Street.
While the center has been controversial since its inception, it
has been fairly successful in providing a place for laborers to
gather.
So when Councilman Allan Mansoor proposed requiring the laborers
to be Costa Mesa residents, many wondered whether the move would turn
back the clock on the neighborhood and send day laborers from out of
town spilling onto 19th Street and beyond.
“As neighbors of Lions Park, I’m concerned if there are any
limitations, that people who are not permitted will hang out in Lions
Park and make it unfit for recreational purposes,” resident Deborah
Koken said.
On Monday, the City Council narrowly voted down the restriction,
showing its preference for the status quo. Only Mansoor and Mayor
Gary Monahan backed the restriction.
Mansoor expressed disappointment with the outcome.
“I tried to do what I thought was best, and it failed,” Mansoor
said Tuesday. “I would like to see [the restriction] happen. I think
it’s a very valid way to reduce solicitation on the street and to
make more room for people who live in Costa Mesa to find work.”
Over the past 14 years, the council has received numerous reports
on the center.
In March, city staff reported that 37% of the day laborers at the
center came from outside of Costa Mesa and that 30% to 40% of the
total laborer pool was being turned away each day.
Councilman Chris Steel said he opposed restricting the laborers to
residents only without limiting the employers in the same way. Staff
found that 49% of the employers using the center were from outside of
Costa Mesa, with Newport Beach having the highest percentage at 31%
and Huntington Beach next at 6%.
“I want to eventually close our center down until Newport Beach or
Santa Ana has one -- if they have one -- so our day laborers will go
to theirs,” Steel said Tuesday. “We need to provide incentive for
other cities to have their own.”
Monahan, however, said he felt Mansoor’s reasons for wanting to
restrict the laborers to residents only made sense.
“I think Mansoor’s idea would have meant much more employment for
Costa Mesa workers and less bodies into town, which is [now] forcing
workers out onto the street,” Monahan said. “I thought this was a
good compromise and something that would make a good benefit, and
apparently, [Steel] doesn’t know how to play that game.”
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