Restrictions on Job Center weren’t meant as cure-all
I brought the issue of the Costa Mesa Job Center forward at a recent
City Council meeting. My reason for doing this was simple. I wanted
to reduce solicitation on city streets and at the same time increase
the likelihood of Costa Mesa residents finding work.
According to staff reports, 37% of the people using the job center
come here from other cities. At the same time, 30% to 40% of the
total people using the job center are turned away each day. In other
words, there are plenty of Costa Mesa residents who are looking for
work but are turned away each day. By eliminating use of the center
by people from outside of the city, we would probably not have to
turn away that 30% to 40% each day who probably end up on the
streets. In other words, the job center would still be at full
capacity.
As for the Pilot’s claim that “those from other cities would
congregate in those streets and parks and, in turn, defeat the
purpose of the job center,†I sincerely disagree. For one, the job
center started small and has grown tremendously, yet we still have
solicitation at our street corners, stores and yes, even some in the
parks. It has clearly not solved the problem, it has only moved it.
As Mayor Gary Monahan said at the council meeting, people have
incentive right now to come to our city to use our job center. It is
unlikely they would come here just to stand on a street corner. And
as I already stated, people already do solicit on our street corners.
The solution for that is enforcement of our no soliciting ordinance
in terms of solicitors and employers.
Our taxes pay for the job center, therefore it should benefit the
people who live here. If people live and work here, they are more
likely to spend their money here. If people come here to work and
live elsewhere, that is where they will spend their money. Will
limiting use of the job center solve all of the problems? No. Is
limiting it a step in the right direction? Absolutely.
* ALLAN MANSOOR is a Costa Mesa city councilman.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.