A most unwelcoming pattern
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FLO MARTIN
The sign just down Newport Boulevard from our house reads “Welcome to
Costa Mesa.” So why is it that the Costa Mesa City Council keeps
shutting doors?
Recently, the council voted to restrict parking on Fordham Drive,
Joann Street and Wake Forest Road. Apparently, too many residents
from around the corner (College Drive and Wilson Street) were causing
problems.
The restrictions, the neighbors also hoped, would get rid of the
folks who spent daylight hours lounging in Wilson Park and nighttime
in their trucks and vans.
Then I read in the Daily Pilot that what I call the Testosterone
Triumvirate on the council voted to close the Job Center. What on
earth for? What so-called problems will disappear? Are the neighbors
complaining?
The area around 17th Street and Placentia Avenue is commercial,
not residential, right? Does the trio plan to evict other businesses
in that neck of the woods? The boat yards? The small-business parks?
The auto shops? The SOS buildings? What is this call for
“revitalization” of the Westside? Is Costa Mesa going to throw out
the baby with the bath water?
What sorts of Job Center laborers does this trio think will go
looking for jobs in other places? How do Costa Mesa residents in
general perceive the folks who currently live or work in the western
area of Costa Mesa?
Who are these people seeking a better life for their families? Why
do we call them “aliens” taking away “our” jobs and “our” schools?
In this move to revitalize, will we restrict the use of Lions Park
or Wilson Park and other public facilities to “legal” people? Will we
demand that park goers show identification and be photographed? Will
police officers also patrol the parking lots in front of the Home
Depot stores on Harbor and MacArthur boulevards and arrest loiterers?
Will I have to show my passport or citizenship papers while waiting
for my husband to come pick up the big plant I just bought? Crazy!
How many of us living in Costa Mesa have walked in the shoes of
immigrants trying to survive? How many of us have been homeless or
gone to bed hungry?
I have. My mom and dad and their little girl begged for food in
war-torn Germany after World War ll. My family was homeless and
stateless.
“Displaced persons”, they called us. (Reminds me of “collateral
damage.”) In 1948, the U.S. Army forces stationed in a town south of
Munich found my folks and other local homeless families some rooms in
an apartment building in the area. My dad went to work as a janitor
on the base. My mom and several other women worked as kitchen help.
No one worked for money. Money was worthless.
The hot-ticket items on the black market were eggs, butter, flour
and cigarettes. Everyone worked for food.
My mother would come back to our room at night with her apron
pockets laden with food. So did the others who worked in the
commissary. If any food delivered to the Army base was left over at
the end of the day, the Army cook would give it away.
“Why didn’t your family go back to Bulgaria after the war,” you
wonder?
Well, for one thing, my dad was a political refugee and had been
sentenced to death in absentia. Go home and you lose your life.
Secondly, Bulgaria was now Communist. Going “home” was not an option.
Later, we became boat people -- the Cunard steamship, White Star.
The Canadian government hired bunches of “displaced persons” to
work the farms of Manitoba. We ended up in Quebec. My father did
manual labor for quite a while, and my mom was a daytime nanny. We
got our Canadian citizenship papers just in time to be offered work
in California.
So, we packed our meager belongings and lived five more years as
immigrants in this land of fun and sun. All tolled, my family
struggled to stay alive for over 13 years.
Now, back to the question of removing the loitering workers and
bringing in new life to the Westside.
If the undocumented-workers issue is what the Costa Mesa council
wants to address, then let’s find a better solution. Let’s start
levying huge, and I mean really huge, fines on the employers who
break the law in hiring them. Costa Mesans who want to get cheap
labor will think twice before driving by the park or the Home Depot
for a pick-up.
Let the senior citizen who needs a ride to the doctor’s pay for a
taxi or take the bus. Let the gal who needs yard work done hire a
gardener. Let the fellows who need help with housework go to the
Yellow Pages, the Pennysaver or the newspaper want ads.
There would be no worries about driving the worker home in my car
and having the worker in my house.
Better yet, if you need your house painted, give me a call.
I have a friend who did a great job on my home, twice now. If you
do, plan to pay him over $2,000. That’s what I did.
FLO MARTIN is a 38-year Costa Mesa resident.
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