BYRON DE ARAKAL -- Between the Lines
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Clutter is an affliction most common among writers. With some of us,
only the brain is infected. In others, it is a disease that ravages the
office. With really gifted scribes, we often find clutter worming its
way around in both places. Now since clutter is generally not lethal to
the writer most writers wear their disease like a badge of honor. Clutter
is what writers do.
My office is cluttered with ideas scratched on Post-It notes stuck to
the walls. It’s littered with clipped news stories, City Council reports
and half a year’s worth of Maureen Dowd columns. I have three different
coffee mugs, each containing the beloved java juice in various states of
decay. By the way, did you know coffee takes on the consistency of maple
syrup the longer it sits? Now if I could just get it to ferment.
Dispensing with that rather windy aside, here’s the trouble. I have so
much clutter that I have no more room for new clutter. This means purging
is in order. So here we go.
You may have noticed in the pages of this fine newspaper in recent
weeks a rather indirect tete a tete between Costa Mesa City Councilman
Chris Steel and my column colleague, Steve Smith, over Steel’s insistence
that Costa Mesa is the “least safe big city in Orange County,” according
to the FBI. To date, the back and forth has been a contest of
generalities void of any statistical muscle.
Knowing that, I went wading through the 2000 crime statistics released
by the California Department of Justice and the population figures of the
2000 U.S. Census. Here’s what we have.
The FBI statistics show that 3,472 crimes were reported in Costa Mesa
in the year 2000. These include violent crimes, crimes against property,
larceny (theft) and arson. The 2000 U.S. Census placed Costa Mesa’s
population at 108,724 folks. Now the math will tell you that Costa Mesa
experienced .031 reported crimes for every Costa Mesa resident in 2000.
By comparison, Fullerton’s per capita reported crimes rate in 2000
came in at .032. So in pure numerical speak, Fullerton seems to be the
“least safe big city in Orange County” but not by much.
Costa Mesa’s .031 crimes per citizen rate for 2000 placed it in a tie
for second with Garden Grove (.031) and Santa Ana (.031). Anaheim
finished third with a .030 crimes per citizen. Just for grins, Orange had
a .026 rate, Huntington Beach turned in a .024 rate and Irvine a .022
rate. Newport Beach crime statistics were not available in the California
Justice Department Crime report.
Nevertheless, Costa Mesa did lead Orange County with the largest
percentage increase in property crimes in 2000, rising 6% over 1999 to
921 reported incidents of burglary and auto theft. And, in my book, I’m
not thrilled that Costa Mesa’s per capita crime rate is on par with Santa
Ana’s.
Note to City Council: Hire more cops.
Under the heading, “A Man’s Got To Know His Limitations,” the junk
drawer turns up the names of philanthropist-without-equal John Crean and
former Costa Mesa Mayor Bob Wilson.
Crean grabbed the above-the-fold headline in Saturday’s Daily Pilot
for his rather indelicate trial balloon regarding his interest in running
for what is assumed to be the soon-vacant U.S. House seat of Rep.
Christopher Cox (R-Newport Beach). Said Crean: “It would be kind of a fun
thing to take a shot at something like that. If anyone would want a
75-year-old congressman.”
Now I’ve long admired Crean for his entrepreneurial moxie and his
unselfish heart. But, indeed, no one wants a 75-year-old congressman
given the blood battles that are going to erupt over reapportionment and
the shift of the El Toro debate to the national battleground. We need a
vibrant and experienced warrior with brass knuckles and bazookas. Crean
is simply too nice and too old.
As for former Costa Mesa Mayor Bob Wilson, one could only cringe with
the rest of the audience during his lengthy and mostly inconsequential
lecture on the city’s history during last Monday’s City Council
deliberations regarding annexation of Santa Ana Heights. Invited to make
a five-minute presentation by the City Council (a decision that was
apparently made at a study session and that seems -- at first blush -- to
run afoul of the Brown Act), the elderly Wilson careened through his
historied involvement in Costa Mesa for nearly 20 minutes. The audience
and several council members visibly squirmed in wonderment of his point.
Even as Wilson meandered, Mayor Libby Cowan and Councilman Gary Monahan
were seen quietly chewing out one another behind the dais.
No one appreciates more than I Bob Wilson’s founding contributions to
Costa Mesa and the high stature he holds in the community. But a man’s
got to know his limitations.
Finally, this from Balboa Islands’s Thomas A. Butterworth: “Now that
the county has $5 million to promote El Toro, I think I know a way to use
part of it far more effectively than mailers. Remember the flight
demonstration tests? Maybe some of those aircrafts landed at the wrong
field. Perhaps a 747 cannot safely land at JWA in its present
configuration but a 747 could surely fly the (JWA approach) pattern in a
simulated landing. It would overfly all those cities only marginally
affected by current operations at JWA, the same cities that supported
Measure F. I think that as few as five such approaches would make
individuals in at least eight cities think more than twice about
supporting Son-of-Measure-F next March.”
* BYRON DE ARAKAL is a writer and communications consultant. He lives
in Costa Mesa. Readers can reach him with news tips and comments via
e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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