CHOC clinic loses another round
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At first glance, it appears the Children’s Hospital of Orange
County and Newport-Mesa school district-sponsored health clinic on
the Rea campus is a good way to provide free care to the students (A
Closer Look, “Rea plan becomes center of debate,” Monday).
A closer look reveals that this is not the case.
The clinic will be serving all young people from zero to 17 (21
for chronically ill) that need not be students of Rea or any other
district school. The people served need not even be residents of the
school district, or even citizens or legal residents of this country.
With all the talk about upgrading the quality of life on the
Westside, this clinic will work against that by attracting people
from across the county looking for a handout, and not living in or
contributing to Westside’s community.
CHOC and the district have attempted to ramrod this project
through with no input from the Westside community. In their zeal to
get a share of Proposition 10 money, they have run roughshod over the
interests of the residents of the Westside. This is another case of
the liberal establishment purporting to know what is best for the
rest of us.
BILL JOHNSON
Costa Mesa
Never let it be said that we Westside Costa Mesans aren’t a
generous lot. We take care of more of our city’s poor and downtrodden
than virtually any other city our size. Charities abound here on the
Westside.
However, enough is enough.
When we begin to endanger our own schoolchildren to benefit all
those from surrounding cities, we cry, “foul.” If CHOC must locate
another free clinic in Costa Mesa, at least let it be placed in an
underserved area. Eastside or north side might be fine; ask the folks
in those areas. Those of us on the Westside have already done our
duty.
CHRISTIAN ERIC
Costa Mesa
I am writing in opposition to the idea of locating the CHOC
medical clinic on the grounds of the Rea school on Hamilton Street.
Why place a medical clinic in the middle of a residential
neighborhood on an elementary school ground?
We need to be protecting our children from strangers entering the
school area, not adding unknown persons visiting school grounds and
adding traffic to an already busy street. Trying to make a left turn
onto Harbor Boulevard from Hamilton in the afternoon is already
impossible.
JAN PETERSON
Costa Mesa
While the writer’s difficulty following the final outcome of the
school board’s deliberations on the proposed CHOC/district free
clinic at Rea school is understandable, her conclusion is incorrect
(“Trustees waver on Rea health center,” July 18).
Rather than proposing to postpone the clinic issue “for the
discussion by the full board,” as the Pilot reported, trustee Martha
Fluor can be seen and heard on the video stating, and I paraphrase,
that the board needs two members, that this is going to die right
here if the board doesn’t get two members to bring this forward to
the August agenda.
Fluor repeated her plea several times and received no response, at
which point she changed her plea to: “I need one member to bring this
forward, I need one member.” Board member Jim Ferryman then replied:
“I can go with you on that.”
After failing to convince two of her peers on the board to agree
to bring the Rea clinic issue up for later discussion, Fluor, a board
member who had appropriately excused herself from voting on the
issue, then made a motion to keep it alive.
If Fluor’s voting on an issue is inappropriate, wouldn’t a motion
regarding the issue also be inappropriate?
This action is especially troubling because Fluor admits the issue
was dead at that point, and apparently no two members were willing to
resurrect it.
Fluor was also vociferous in her lobbying for the clinic, and this
observer wonders if lobbying also constitutes a conflict of interest.
Given the actions taken by Fluor, this observer believes that the
issue should be allowed to die for lack of support.
The proposed clinic at Rea is simply the wrong idea in the wrong
place. I doubt many Pilot readers would want a free clinic in their
neighborhoods.
ERIC BEVER
Costa Mesa
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