Building bridges in the community
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Lolita Harper
WESTSIDE -- It is a bridge of unusual proportions.
Large steel beams are absent from its architecture and are replaced by
a modest room with four bare walls and a couple of desks. Enormous
concrete support pillars are substituted with dedicated individuals.
The UC Irvine Community Outreach Center may differ in structure from
traditional models but its function is the same: to provide a link
between two points -- the university and Costa Mesa’s Westside.
The UCI Community Outreach Partnership Center, at 740 W. Wilson St.,
is a new venture between the university and the Westside community
designed to strengthen the connection between the school and the
community it serves.
Kris Day, the center’s executive director and a professor for the
university’s Department of Urban and Regional Planning, hatched the idea
for the program after extensive work on the Westside with various
classes.
“I initially got involved because I taught a class that did research
on the Westside,” Day said. “As I got more involved, I found that there
were a lot of other professors working independently in the same area.”
The center will make sure professors are working to reinforce each
other and see that the university’s resources are used in the most
effective manner.
University officials chose the most western neighborhood in Costa Mesa
to house the center because of its diverse makeup and the issues present
in the community. Those issues include educational quality, racial
tensions, the overall appearance of the neighborhood and the recent
efforts to improve the area by both the city and residents.
Victor Becerra, the center’s director, is charged with managing
ongoing projects, cultivating new ventures and cultivating funding
sources. One of the collaborative projects involves Keep Costa Mesa
Beautiful -- a campaign to pick up litter on the Westside.
“Our overarching goal is to make Costa Mesa a stronger community, and
we want to do that by helping low-income neighborhoods,” Becerra said.
Manuel Gomez, the vice chancellor of student affairs at UCI, said the
real genius behind the project is the most basic connection between
education and civic well-being.
“We cannot enjoy one investment without the other,” he said.
Gomez said the center is about recognizing that the fate of any one
social pillar affects all of them, and all must be strong to build the
proper community foundation.
The center integrates Costa Mesa businesses, churches, residents,
social services, youth organizations, schools and city officials with UCI
faculty, staff, students and all the resources the campus offers.
His hope is that the Westside community would grow stronger through
its partnership with the university, and he also believes UCI will grow
and deepen its connection to the mandate of the mission, Gomez said.
“I truly believe we have the opportunity to create a model of
cooperation between the university and the Costa Mesa community,” Gomez
said. “All is in place to accomplish great things.”
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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