Time for tough decisions on the Westside
It is difficult to imagine how anyone could oppose a plan to get
doctors, nurses and basic healthcare where they are needed. But that
is just what is happening on the Westside of Costa Mesa.
A plan is in the works that calls for a 4,800-square-foot health
center at Rea Elementary. By its third year, the center -- a joint
venture by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and the
Children’s Hospital of Orange County -- is expected to handle 9,000
doctor’s visits annually, and CHOC would lease the building from the
district for $12 a year. The laudable mission, supporters at the
district and the hospital say, is to serve Westside children,
regardless of their race, financial situation or legal status,
thereby keeping them healthy and best able to learn.
They hope to have it open by June 2003.
Given the clear need in the area -- where school test scores are
lower than elsewhere in the district, where there are more low-income
families and where more students speak English as a second language
-- it is hard to imagine opposition to such a well-meaning idea.
But it is not impossible. And, for a number of reasons, the
opposition is even understandable.
Central to opponents’ complaints about this project: The Westside
is saddled with all the charities and aid organizations in
Newport-Mesa. Enough is enough, they say. The rest of the community
should share what they see as a burden on their part of town.
The problem with that argument is that the need is on the
Westside; placing a health center, for instance, in Mesa Verde and
providing transportation there would create an unnecessary obstacle
and burden for those seeking help.
That is not to minimize the burden of poverty and under-performing
schools that exists on the Westside. It is an unfortunate truth that,
right now, the Westside needs aid organizations such as Share Our
Selves and Someone Cares Soup Kitchen. But while these charitable
groups do much-needed, important and valuable work, their mission is
limited: to provide basic needs -- healthcare, food, clothing, jobs
and housing.
At some point, efforts on the Westside need to be directed toward
improving the lives of the people who live there and toward
redeveloping rundown areas and shopping centers, as well as just
providing for basic needs.
Simply put: There is no reason to be satisfied with the status
quo. But there is nothing simple about changing it.
City leaders need to begin serious discussions about how to make
improvements, discussion that have been stalled for too long. These
discussions are likely to be difficult and potentially caustic.
Issues of immigration, race, school performance and crime are all
likely topics. But they are issues that cannot and should not be
avoided if the Westside’s future is to be truly addressed. Hard
decisions will have to be made.
One that is immediately necessary is paring down the nearly
80-member Community Redevelopment Action Committee to a manageable
number. Serious, in-depth debates need to take place about the
Westside. Eighty people all trying to be heard will not be able to
accomplish that.
Specific goals need to be set that detail when improvements will
be made so there can be accountability. Businesses that will improve
economic conditions on the Westside need to be started; the area, for
instance could use banks that will loan money to Westside residents
instead of check-cashing companies.
The school district is scheduled to look at the health center plan
again at its Aug. 27 meeting. That date would be a fine one to mark a
new beginning to the Westside debate.
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