EDITORIAL
There is a way for good to come from the apparent fiasco that could
cost Orange Coast College hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.
In recent weeks, Costa Mesa scrapped the college’s weekend swap meet,
for the time being, because OCC is only allowed to have the shopping
extravaganza one day a week, and with far fewer than the nearly 500
vendors who have been hocking wares recently.
Now, while the city was within its rights to do so given the
conditions placed on the swap meet, the decision turned out not to be
quite so simple. As recently as two years ago, the city approved the
swap meet’s operation. The sudden change of heart understandably shocked
both OCC officials and the vendors.
The fiasco appears to be that the inspection of the swap meet was done
on a Tuesday -- not the day to check on a weekend event. City officials
do say the inspection was not necessarily done mid-week. Possibly, the
date simply marks when the paperwork went through.
Whatever the truth turns out to be -- and it may ultimately be
impossible to determine what the Tuesday date refers to -- it does not
change the suddenness of Costa Mesa’s decision to crack down on the meet.
Until a few months ago, OCC officials had every reason to believe the
event met with city approval. They had it in writing, after all.
Given what can only be called the unfairness of the decision, it
behooves Costa Mesa officials to work with the college and rectify their
decision. And given that two years ago the swap meet met city criteria,
bringing back the full weekend event should be the end result of
discussions, even if some other conditions are put on OCC.
But even more good can come from this incident, which raises another
serious question: Are there other inspections that need to be done more
closely?
This incident provides a perfect reason for both Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach to evaluate their inspection process and make sure city
workers are doing their jobs.
Permits should be reviewed closely and fairly. And if either city
finds it hasn’t been doing its job, it should take responsibility and fix
the problem.
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