Competing views of the Westside
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RE: “Focus on Westside must be for all who live there,” Geoff
West’s Community Commentary of Oct. 11. West’s essay was moving and
obviously heartfelt. I would like to add my feeble voice to his
eloquence by suggesting just one specific effort that this diplomatic
visionary leader could address to achieve “the integration of the
Latino population” into the mainstream of (the Costa Mesa) community.
Costa Mesa leaders -- and this applies also to Newport Beach
leaders -- could lobby the commercial banks in Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach to accept the relatively new identification card that is issued
by the Mexican Consulate in Santa Ana to its migrants as the primary
identification necessary to open a checking or savings account.
Utility bills should be sufficient as secondary ID.
It was my understanding that businesses in Orange County had
widely agreed to accept this photo identification, but, recently, I
witnessed it being rejected, with courtesy, of course, by the manager
of my local branch of a major multi-state bank. I knew the applicant
involved very well, and even my offer to co-sign the account was
rejected.
The failure of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach banks to allow even
longtime local residents to open checking and savings accounts helps
to exclude these established working members of our community from
the benefits of our modern financial economy and, instead, relegates
them to the unnecessary rigors of the cash-only economy. Banks do not
lose money on these kinds of accounts; and we are not talking about
loans here.
A neighborly first step for the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
leaders to take would be to convince our own local banks to accept
the new business that these excluded customers are anxious to bestow
on them. I do, of course, realize that the various local
check-cashing outlets may not appreciate losing some of their
business to the banks.
ROBERT M. BEARD
Newport Beach
Geoff West has fallen victim to the well-executed, often repeated
fantasies regarding Costa Mesa’s Westside. I would like to address
these: Coming from areas that the city administration chooses to
maintain does leave one confused when accidentally arriving on the
Westside. While West believes the problem has to do with a
class/ethnic “access” discrepancy, he is unaware that research shows
that for the last 10 years the Westside has received less than 9% of
the expenditures by the city as compared with other neighborhoods.
During this period no elected official lived, worked or schooled
their children here. Is West aware that the city uses a separate
repair schedule for the Westside infrastructure? Is he aware that the
city receives millions each year in federal funds for housing, but
somehow the slums prevail? Somehow West would have us believe that
the Westside is predominately Latino and this somehow is the cause of
the problem. (The Latino population is approximately 34%).
West, like so many, has been fooled into thinking this is a Costa
Mesa problem with a Costa Mesa solution. One only has to look at the
millions in dollars provided to various charities and ask, “Without a
slum, how would they prosper?” The Westside is a slum of
“convenience” created by the city of Costa Mesa and hijacked by the
poverty franchises ensuring the longevity of their “honey pot.”
If all the council, all the council candidates and all the
politicos’ citywide really wanted to fix the problem, how could it
continue? While West summarizes the problem as the exclusion of the
Latino population, this exclusion applies to all groups on the
Westside.
MICHAEL W. BERRY
Member, Westside Improvement
Assn.
Geoff West “hit the nail on the head” when he described the
Westside as somehow being disconnected from the rest of Costa Mesa.
He, however, suggested the lack of participation by the Latino
population was the basis for the separation. I disagree with his
assumption. It is not a lack of anything, rather an excess of
participation by special interest groups who for the most part are
not residents of Costa Mesa.
I have lived in Costa Mesa (Westside) for more than 10 years. I
would love nothing better than being considered a “Costa Mesan”
rather than a “Westsider.” But as long as UC Irvine gets
multimillion-dollar grants to help the poor people of Compton, Santa
Ana and “Westside” Costa Mesa, and we continue to live with
substandard housing, a disproportionate number of charities and
deteriorating streets, we will not be considered in the same context
with the rest of Costa Mesa.
JUDITH M. BERRY
Costa Mesa
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