Westside already has received its share of charities
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Oh, for crying out loud (A Closer Look, “Rea plan becomes center
of debate,” July 29). For the audience following the most recent
debates in the Pilot on the Children’s Hospital of Orange
County/Newport-Mesa Unified School District plan at Rea Elementary
School, let’s review.
What did those letter writers who oppose the most recent charity
addition to the Westside really say? Well, first of all, no one said
that the clinic was not a “nice thing to do.”
What they did say was to put it somewhere else. Jean Forbath says
there is nowhere else (Sounding Board, “Clinic will serve a valuable
purpose,” Sunday). She says, “That’s where the needs are.” We are not
buying that opinion. Our local charities have created a need and
filled it.
For years, I have watched as buses disgorged masses of people
headed to the various charities -- many of these charities within
blocks of my home. I can assure you they are not all Costa Mesa
residents. I see many of these same folks over and over again, year
after year, as they board buses out of my neighborhood. As they wait
for the bus, I watch them selling and exchanging food items for
[cigarettes and liquor].
If we must have such a preponderance of charities in Costa Mesa,
please let’s not abuse the taxpayers’ kindness and hard-earned money.
Our charity tax dollars should be spent to help fellow citizens, as
my granny would call it, “over a bad patch.” Charity should not be,
as I have seen it become for so many, a way of life.
There may even be doctors and hospitals supporting this new
clinic. It takes the pressure off of them and their hospitals that
are so burdened that they are hemorrhaging red ink and overloading
their health-care workers. Even UC Irvine, which bills itself as a
“safety net” hospital, has announced that it will begin cutting
services for medical services for indigents starting this month.
For the record, and something that everyone seems to forget,
charities are businesses. They employ people. They make money.
Sometimes those who run charities make astounding incomes. I would
suggest that those who give to charities do as I do, check to see
what the salaries are for those running the charities and note
exactly what percentage of their donation dollar actually goes to the
cause of their choice. I think you will be very surprised to know
that in many instances the highest percentage goes to the running of
the charity machine.
Forbath throws in a number of comments that have nothing to do
with the CHOC project. One of which is low-cost housing. What does
that have to do with CHOC? Isn’t it interesting to note that the
ivory tower types who tell us what to do and how to feel do not even
reside in this part of town, yet they have created and maintain the
environment in which we must now live?
Like a rainstorm that goes on too long, eventually the earth
rebels. A disastrous flood results. The earth reaches its maximum
ability to absorb. That’s where we are on the Westside folks.
Please locate this facility elsewhere.
KATHLEEN ERIC
Westside
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