Council to hear job center report
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As community members meet to discuss how and where to open a
privately run center for day laborers, the city of Costa Mesa
continues preparations to close down its own Job Center for good.
The City Council will hear an update Tuesday on the progress of
the private group, which has been tight-lipped about its activities
because of the controversy over the city’s Job Center.
Costa Mesa’s Job Center was opened in 1988 to help match day
laborers with employers. After years of debate, the council voted in
April to shutter the Job Center at the end of December.
Businesses, churches and other organizations have offered their
help in setting up a private center, said Crissy Brooks, who has
participated in the private group’s meetings and will report to the
council Tuesday. She said that it’s premature to discuss possible
locations for the new center.
“We’re just going to take it one step at a time, and we’ve had
very positive support, so we’re grateful for that,” she said.
Preparations for closing the city’s center will begin in October,
Assistant City Manager Steve Hayman said. After it closes, both day
workers and any new privately run center here are likely to face
difficulties.
Some council members have suggested workers could use a private
employment firm such as Labor Ready, but Hayman said most probably
won’t.
“It’s essentially the difference in how the operations work,”
Hayman said. “With Labor Ready, typically they [the workers] have
said they get less money.”
That’s because the private services need to pay their own
overhead. Also, some argue, employers who hire day workers on their
own can afford to pay higher hourly wages because they may be dodging
taxes, workers’ compensation costs and other state and federal fees
they’re supposed to pay.
But a bigger obstacle may be a backlash from people who believe
job centers support illegal immigration. Several well-publicized
protests have been held recently at Laguna Beach’s day worker center,
which was modeled on Costa Mesa’s.
Some of the Laguna protests were held by a Ventura-based group
called Save Our State. The group likely would have protested in Costa
Mesa if the council hadn’t chosen to shut down the Job Center, Save
Our State founder Joseph Turner said.
“One of the reasons we go out to day labor centers is we feel it’s
a small enough target that we can actually make some headway,” he
said.
“There’s no doubt in our mind that these cities [that operate job
centers] are in clear violation of federal law, and they need to be
punished.”
Turner said he wasn’t sure whether he would protest a private
center in Costa Mesa, but his overall goal is to close job centers.
But to David Peck, who chairs the nonprofit group that operates
the Laguna Beach center, the protests there have generated little
more than publicity.
“It hasn’t changed anybody’s thinking that I know of, and I doubt
that it will,” he said.
Peck hopes to see the private Costa Mesa effort thrive, not least
because he’ll be seeing more day laborers if it fails.
“If they’re not successful, that will really impact our site as
well. But my impression is that’s a really dynamic group of people,
and they’ve been really successful,” Peck said. “We hope they are.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at o7alicia.robinson
@latimes.comf7.
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