Citizens corps in the wings
Deepa Bharath
A Citizens Corps Council, designed to keep the community informed
about the city’s disaster preparedness programs, is a step away from
fruition.
City officials unveiled the concept Thursday evening during a town
hall meeting at the Neighborhood Community Center in Lions Park. The
council is set up as a group of community leaders who officials
believe will help distribute information about the city’s programs
that aim to prepare residents for emergency situations.
The original idea came from Fire Chief Jim Ellis, who says he has
been working on it since Sept. 11. The city had sent out letters to
about 50 community members including members of homeowners
associations, churches, schools and other community organizations
such as Girls Inc. and Boy Scouts.
“I think we had 40 people show up on Thursday, which I thought was
a pretty good response,” Ellis said.
He added that there was a lively question and answer session that
proved to be educational for officials as well.
“The specific questions people were asking me made me realize that
this thing is not set in stone,” Ellis said. “It’s a living,
breathing program that will keep evolving with time.”
Costa Mesa will be only the fourth in the county to do so, behind
Placentia, Laguna Niguel and the Orange County Sheriff’s Department,
Ellis said. The city already has in place programs such as in
Neighborhood Watch, the Citizens Emergency Response Training Team and
Volunteers in Policing.
Ellis has set up a Medical Corps Database so local hospitals will
be able to network and help in the time of a disaster.
The job of this citizens corps will be to oversee all of these
components, attend meetings and take the information back to their
respective communities. On Thursday, most of those invited to
participate in the corps signed up to be part of it, Ellis said.
Among them was Cindy Brenneman, president of the Mesa Verde
Community Inc. Brenneman said she believed the people who she saw
sign up Thursday night “can definitely carry the message and be part
of the planning stage.”
“It’s only going to get better and better,” she said.
Brenneman said she is planning to initiate Neighborhood Watch
groups in the Mesa Verde community.
Diane Hill, a longtime Killybrook resident and avid proponent of
emergency preparedness, said “this is a high priority issue.”
“It’s important that every citizen in Costa Mesa has an
understanding of what to do in an emergency situation so they’re not
terrified when it happens,” she said.
“We definitely need to invest a little bit of time to make sure
our families and our neighbors can survive any such situation.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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