A tale of two days in our cities
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TONY DODERO
Tuesday night, Igal Israel stared into the cable-access camera and
told those watching to get up off their seats and come on down to
Costa Mesa City Hall.
And the funny thing was, that’s exactly what I had done.
Starting this week, my plan is to write about community meetings
and events and other ideas inspired by our readers and local leaders.
So my first stop was Costa Mesa City Hall for the twice-monthly
City Council meeting.
I learned I need to get out more, and I ran into some familiar
faces.
Police Chief John Hensley and Fire Chief Jim Ellis were there,
probably giving the council some moral support. I also spotted
Planning Commissioner Bruce Garlich and local activists Cindy
Brenneman, Judith Berry and Paul Bunney.
The meeting started off on a nice note, as they all do.
There was a prayer from the Pastor Martin Benzoni from St. John
the Baptist Church.
I recognized the good father as the priest who recently tried to
put a salve on a small wound that festered at the church’s parochial
school when 18 parents requested that two kindergarten boys be tossed
from the classroom after it was learned they were the adopted sons of
two gay men.
Then there was a cheery speech from Rhiannon Gudde, who along with
fellow Aussie Joel Anderson was the first of two students to take
part in a student exchange program with Costa Mesa’s sister city Down
Under, Wyndham, a small town near Melbourne, Australia.
But the cheeriness didn’t last long, as it was time for public
comments.
During this public-speaking portion of the meeting, it struck me
that if Israel has his way and more and more people come down and
take part in this verbal free-for-all, they might be yelling at empty
seats.
You see, there is only so much abuse people can take, even city
officials.
Israel was there to threaten the council and city officials with
lawsuits and the like because of the way they are treating him and
his parents.
The city has hit his parents’ business, Bengal Industries on
Newport Boulevard, with code violations in connection with the
storage of autos and other material on the property.
Israel, who has teamed up with fugitive property owner Sid Soffer,
contends the city’s law is null and void. The city says he’s reading
the law wrong.
Either way, he didn’t let the moment pass without taking a few
pretty beefy shots at the council.
But Israel wasn’t alone. Taking the podium also to fire away at
the council was regular critic and letter-to-the-editor-writer Martin
H. Millard, who warned the council that it needs to act fast because
the city has had a 30% drop in the number of white people in town.
He was followed by some folks from the west side of Santa Ana
Heights, who were downright offensive in their remarks about Costa
Mesa and the idea that the city would annex their unincorporated edge
of town.
One lady, whose name I didn’t catch, even said “ew,” when
describing her experience as a Costa Mesa resident years ago.
I wondered if these naysayers ever venture to South Coast Plaza or
the Performing Arts Center or Triangle Square, or Metro Pointe or
Orange Coast College, or Fairview Park or the Orange County Fair --
all Costa Mesa venues.
In my hunt for a place to live last year, I basically got locked
out of the market in Costa Mesa, which has beautiful neighborhoods in
Mesa Verde, College Park, Mesa del Mar and the Eastside, to name a
few. Even the Freedom Homes on the Westside of town are enjoying a
resurgence as the housing market continues to soar.
I just don’t understand how this city could be equated with
something so terrible to be a part of.
Still, should Costa Mesa officials force people to become part of
the town if they don’t want to? No. But they also need to be watchful
and make sure the border along Newport Beach is contiguous.
Of course, we all know it will be a long time before the Santa Ana
Heights issue is ever resolved.
Finally, I thought of both Berry and Bunney, who seem to bristle
at the idea that the council should arrive at a consensus on
anything. Bunney even scolded the Pilot for suggesting that the
council members need to get along.
It was as if they were saying to the council, we like having you
as a punching bag.
Hopefully, the council members have thick enough skin to take it
and won’t start leaving the dais right after the invocation.
The next day was a whole different scene as I attended the
memorial services for former Corona del Mar High journalism teacher
and union leader Linda Mook, who died of cancer on Dec. 30.
The services at the high school’s auditorium were filled with
administrators, teachers and students past and present in addition to
Mook’s friends and family.
There were lots of tears, but even more laughter as friends and
colleagues shared a litany of anecdotes that gave those of us who
didn’t know her as well a fairly clear snapshot of what this
strong-willed lady was all about.
Those who shared their memories were Newport-Mesa Supt. Robert
Barbot, Newport-Mesa Federation of Teachers President Jim Rogers,
California Federation of Teachers President Mary Bergan, Newport Mesa
Federation of Teachers executive board member Jo Ann Copp, Carol
Hallenbeck, past president of the South California Journalism
Educators Assn., Cindy Means of the California State Educators Assn.,
Maya Decker, co-founder of Newport Mesa Federation of Teachers, Dana
Black, Newport-Mesa school board member and former Corona del Mar
Principal, Dennis Evans.
At the end of his talk, Rogers, who spoke fondly of working in the
trenches with Mook on union negotiations, said this to her husband
Harland and daughter Katie: “I just want to thank you from the bottom
of my heart for sharing her with us,” he said. “Particularly with
me.”
I met Mook a couple of times in my years at the Pilot, but hearing
about her stories and her love for journalism just made me regret
that I didn’t get to know her well.
“She could help her students accomplish anything,” said Loren
Krause, a former student who worked on the yearbook staff at Corona
del Mar when Mook was running it.
For me, the funniest story came while Means was talking. She used
the following quote that she credited to Newport-Mesa administrator
Lori McCune:
“If there weren’t unions in heaven before, there are now.”
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