CHOC would add to Westside magnets
Ila Johnson
In a letter to the editor, Jean Forbath, the founder of the Share
Our Selves charity (SOS), expresses the misguided notion that adding
yet another charity on the Westside is a good idea (Sounding Board,
“Clinic will serve a valuable purpose,” Aug. 4). The charity in
question is the proposed 4,000-square-foot CHOC health center, to be
located in a residential area at Rea Elementary School.
Forbath knows a lot about charities. In addition to being the
founder of SOS, she has served on the board of directors of Save Our
Youth (SOY) and Families Costa Mesa, and has served as treasurer of
Save Our Youth.
In defense of the addition of yet another charity on the Westside,
Forbath asserts “unfortunately, that’s where the needs are.” Did it
ever occur to her that perhaps the ever-increasing size, number and
need of charities located exclusively on the Westside could be the
existence of the charities themselves? Charities that seem to be a
magnet drawing people to the area who then permanently locate there.
It seems obvious that the proposed clinic will prove to fit the
“build it and they will come” scenario. It is a vicious circle. The
more free services, the more poor; the more poor, the more charities
needed.
Ironically, Forbath does not live on the Westside, the location of
the above-referenced charities that is looking more like a ghetto
every day.
Providing free services on the Westside has served to keep the
poor, predominately Latino population on the Westside segregated
there.
That tends to keep Mesa Verde, where Forbath lives, relatively
immune from the problems the Westside deals with on a daily basis. It
would seem that none of the people so intent on locating the CHOC
clinic on the Westside of Costa Mesa live there. Sequestered, as they
are, in their neighborhoods in other areas of Costa Mesa, Newport
Beach and Laguna Hills, unlike the beleaguered residents of West
Costa Mesa, they can return home each evening untroubled by high
crime, drug dealing, blight and pockets of slum-like conditions.
Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustee Dana Black, when
advocating for the health clinic, stated that the district is
required by law, and committed to, educating all children. I
unequivocally agree that it should have that commitment. If children
are here, without exception, they must be educated. An uneducated
populace is a threat to a free society and to representative republic
form of government in this country.
But large numbers of undocumented immigrant students have put and
continue to put an undeniable strain on the district. I support the
district in its efforts to rise to the challenge.
Nevertheless, I fail to see the connection between the CHOC clinic
and the primary mission of the school district to educate students.
There are many free clinics in existence in the Santa Ana Unified
School District, with no data showing a correlation between the
clinics and improved student learning.
Gwen Parry, director of community services for Hoag Hospital, who
also favors the CHOC charity, speaks about the “poorest of the poor”
in need of medical assistance in Orange County. Parry notes that most
or all are undocumented. That is a tragic situation with no easy
answers.
But setting up and perpetuating a system that continues to
encourage and reward migrants seeking free services, now termed
entitlements, is really unfair to working citizens; citizens so
overburdened by taxation that mothers are forced out of the home and
their children into day care, because it is very difficult for
families to make ends meet on one income.
When those concerned about illegal immigration, a politically
incorrect position, voice their concerns, they are invariably labeled
racist.
Yet Maria Garcia, (“CHOC health center debate still lingers,”
Wednesday) made a great point by stating: “abide by laws and enter
this country legally.... We not only go out of our way to ignore them
(those here illegally), we actually encourage them.”
That says it all. Legal immigrants are hurt by encouraging illegal
immigration, and Garcia is very articulate in her explanation of how
they are hurt.
The simple fact is, there is a limit to what a citizenry can bear.
We can’t save Third World countries, but we can become one.
* ILA JOHNSON is a Costa Mesa resident.
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