Latino leaders to discuss plans for the West Side
Elise Gee
WEST SIDE -- Printing bilingual newsletters and providing
interpreters at public workshops has not been enough to coax the Latino
community into participating in the West Side revitalization process.
Latino community leaders, led by El Ranchito owner Maria Elena Avila,
will meet Wednesday morning to come up with strategies on how to collect
the valuable feedback from the section of the community that makes up
more than a quarter of the city’s population, according to 1995
estimates.
Consultants are wrapping up a yearlong process of gathering community
input and anticipate that a draft specific plan for improving the West
Side will go to the City Council later this fall. EIP consultants were
hired last year to come up with a plan that would address the
incompatible zoning and rundown conditions in the part of the city
located roughly west of Harbor Boulevard and south of Wilson Street.
“When I would speak to other people in the community and asked ‘Do you
know about the West Side plan? Are you aware of it?’ I realized that
somehow the Latino population had not been reached,” Avila said.
The group of Latino community advisors will work to reach out to the
Latino community and also collaborate with the UCI School of Social
Ecology to study the demographics of the area -- something not within the
scope of the West Side study commissioned by the city.
So far, Latino participation has been limited to a meeting with the
Madres, a group of Latino mothers, to a living room dialogue at the
Shalimar Learning Center and to meetings with the Latino Business
Council. However, attendance at the larger public workshops has been
poor. In fact, the interpreter at the last public workshop went unused.
The few Latino residents who have attended West Side meetings have
expressed frustrations and fears that important decisions were being made
about the West Side without the input of a good majority of the people
who live there.
Leticia Hermann, a West Side Latino resident spoke frankly at a
meeting in March about the “shyness” of her community and how hard it was
for her to work up the courage to attend a meeting.
“The Latino population, I think perhaps don’t think their voice
matters or their opinion is important,” Avila said. “Some of them come
from a country where they really weren’t part of the governmental process
as they are here.”
Councilwoman Libby Cowan said she hopes the effort will help city
leaders connect with the portion of the community which has so far eluded
them.
Cooperating with UCI graduate students also will give the city
important information that has not been included in the specific plan,
she said.
“What (UCI) really brings us is an opportunity to go beyond what the
West Side study was charged with and that is doing an in-depth
demographic study of the West Side, which I think is a piece that is
essential in determining where we want to go,” Cowan said.
Although consultants are nearing completion of the draft specific
plan, it doesn’t mean that it’s too late for community input, Cowan
added. In fact, another meeting is being held with business owners
Wednesday who had been accidentally left out of the last public workshop
because of a mistake in address notifications.
The West Side Specific Plan is still changeable until the council
adopts it. All residents will still have a chance to shape it through
public hearing processes that haven’t been held yet, Cowan said.
“I’m interested in ensuring that we have the community input which
creates the community buy off, which creates the community support for it
before we have the vote,” Cowan said. “If that means we slow down, we
slow down.”
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