With a little help
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Michele Marr
Jack and Carolyn Allen were looking for project -- one more project
for the twice-yearly Community Service Days sponsored by the north stake
of their Huntington Beach Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day
Saints.
Isabelle Teraoka needed help building 12 portable carts, carts to hold
back packs, books and jackets in the classrooms at Oak View Elementary
School.
“It was one of those happy meetings that are the life blood of our
services” said Teraoka, Coordinator of Volunteers for the Oak View
Collaborative.
In Huntington Beach, a city with a population of about 200,000 and an
average household income of nearly $100,000, Oak View is a neighborhood
vexed with overcrowded housing, gang and domestic violence, substance
abuse, child abuse and extreme, persistent poverty -- problems more often
found in large urban areas.
Teraoka is devoted to changing that.
“We are kidding ourselves if we think these issues don’t affect us as
long as we live on the good side of town,” she said.
About 98% of the residents of Oak View are Hispanic, with incomes that
fall below the federal poverty level. As many as 50% of the students’
parents are illiterate in their native language, Spanish, and 90% are
illiterate in English.
“I am an immigrant myself. Can you guess why I identify with the kids
in Oak View who must adapt to life here,” Teraoka asked.
She was in third grade the first time her family moved from her
Belgian birthplace to the U.S. in 1986. She was in the eighth grade when
they moved here a second time in 1990 and stayed.
“Oak View reminds me of the village I grew up in. There is a sense of
community, people out in the streets talking, kids playing outside,” she
said.
The Oak View Collaborative is part of FaCT, Families and Communities
Together, a countywide partnership of similar community-based
collaborations and the County of Orange Social Services.
Under the direction of its lead agency, the Children’s Bureau, the
program works to provide the children of Oak View and their parents with
the prospect of a better future.
In an effort to improve the grim statistics that characterize the
neighborhood, the collaborative provides families with support services
and education programs, among them a literacy program, English as a
second language classes, adult and child tutoring, homework clubs, before
and after school programs, a Headstart center and community education
classes.
In addition to funding from FaCT, all the programs depend on the work
of volunteers and the donations of supporters. So Teraoka is grateful
when people like the Allens find her.
A lot of people tell her they drive down Warner Avenue, west from
Beach Boulevard, for years and never realize a neighborhood like Oak View
is right there.
“There are people who have incomes in the hundred thousands living
just a couple blocks from families crammed three to an apartment scraping
by on no more than $10,000 a year. It boggles my mind,” she said.
The Allens and their north stake church have continued to work with
Teraoka.
“We love working with Isabelle. She is easy to love. She is so sweet
and so unassuming. The people in the community are very appreciative of
anything we do,” said Carolyn Allen.
Recently church members planted flowers in front of the school and
library. In April they arranged for hundreds of pounds of food, soap and
toothpaste -- donated by the Humanitarian Aid Fund of the Church of Jesus
Christ of the Latter-day Saints -- to be delivered to the Oak View
Collaborative.
“I notice the difference. Little by little, it helps,” she said.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer and graphic designer from
Huntington Beach. She has been interested in religion and ethics for as
long as she can remember. She can be reached at o7
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