Race an issue in swap meet vote
Lolita Harper
Vendors at the Orange Coast College swap meet can once again sell
their wares all weekend, the City Council decided Monday, though not
before members were taken to task for suspected prejudices.
While the major concern was traffic management, Councilmen Chris
Steel and Allan Mansoor had other concerns about the venue.
Steel had asked that college officials verify the legal residency
and state tax numbers of all vendors, and Mansoor suggested they try
to “upgrade the venue” to attract people from Newport Beach and
Garden Grove instead of those traveling on Fairview.
Resident Rachel Perez-Hamilton took both men to task, saying their
suggestions were proof of a prejudice against the customers and
vendors at the swap meet, who are largely Latino.
“Mr. Mansoor says he wants to see less traffic from Fairview,
which really means less Latinos from Santa Ana,” she said, while
Mansoor shook his head on the dais. “I wonder if you are concerned
about all of the [sport utility vehicles] and Mercedes that would
come from Newport or all the traffic from South Coast Plaza that
backs up Bristol [Street] and the 405 Freeway.”
Many of the working poor of this community benefit from that swap
meet and they are the same neighbors that many of those opposed to
the swap meet see everyday but refuse to acknowledge, she added.
Perez-Hamilton said she was disturbed that Steel and Mansoor were
only concerned about the competition that OCC swap meet vendors
present to various Costa Mesa businesses, but have never given a
second thought about the same type of retailers who gather just
across the street for a much larger and more expansive swap meet.
Her comments were met with overwhelming applause, which Mayor
Karen Robinson did not quell.
Mansoor denied that he had any prejudice against any race or
ethnicity and said his concern was with traffic, not color. The
traffic problem was on Fairview Road and the fact that the street
happens to run directly from Santa Ana was purely geographical.
When the council is set to consider the widening of the Costa Mesa
Freeway, which turns into Newport Boulevard and runs into Newport
Beach, Mansoor said he will be as concerned about the cars that
travel that path, even if the drivers are predominantly white.
“The issue is traffic, no matter what color the people are,”
Mansoor said.
After almost two hours of scrutiny and public comment, council
members voted 5 to 0 to grant the permit for a return of the swap
meet to Saturdays, saying enough of their concerns had been
addressed.
Swap meet vendors have been running a Sunday-only swap meet for
almost eight months, since college officials agreed to scale back
operations because of traffic problems on Fairview Road.
Council members had vowed they would not endorse another day at
the swap meet until they saw tangible plans to alleviate the traffic
problems. Planning staffers and outside consultants scrambled last
week to ensure that the City Council could review a detailed traffic,
parking and management program before Monday’s meeting.
In that time, city and college officials worked together, a
private consultant was hired, options were proposed to the Planning
Commission and a new swap meet was approved with an average of 260
vendors per day.
A detailed presentation was made by consultant Paul Wilkinson from
Greenspan, Law and Linscott, proposing a variety of signs on the
perimeter and interior of the venue to better direct traffic.
Additional swap meet staff would also be posted throughout the area
to keep track of parking spaces and help direct patrons to more
vacant lots.
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