Costa Mesa’s fields of broken dreams
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Mark Gleason
I am compelled to comment on the article in the Tuesday issue of the
Pilot (“Coaches dream of improved use”) on the joint-use agreement.
The article on the agreement is interesting in that it shows how
clueless most of the people in a position to do something about this
really are.
All the discussion is about control, none about who’s actually
responsible for maintaining the facilities and the deplorable
conditions our kids are supposed to play high school sports. The
various bureaucrats who attempt to defend this agreement obviously
have not looked at the grounds at Estancia High School, Costa Mesa
High School, Parsons Field, Davis Elementary School or any of the
other schools. Only one school district or city person quoted in that
article stepped up and accepted any responsibility for the current
condition of the facilities and their use.
Parks and Recreation Commissioner Wendy Leece is at least willing
to look at modifying the agreement. All others simply defend the
status quo. The status quo is a portfolio of dilapidated and
dangerous facilities and is indefensible.
Several of those quoted speak authoritatively while they clearly
have no idea what they are talking about. Jaime Castellanos,
assistant superintendent of secondary education, says that the Costa
Mesa joint-use agreement is “conventional” and “not too different
from what other cities have.” That’s incorrect, and I would challenge
Castellanos to produce one other agreement from any other city in
Orange County that cedes full maintenance responsibility and control
of high school athletic facilities to a city.
I’ve looked extensively. The Costa Mesa agreement is unique in
several respects, most of which are detrimental to the welfare of our
student athletes and to the sanity of our coaches. You only have to
look as far as Newport Beach to find an agreement that is simpler and
works much better, simply because the responsibilities are clearly
delineated. Many of the facilities at Newport Harbor are not all that
great either, but at least we know who’s responsible.
Jana Ransom, city recreation manager, defends kicking a high
school coach off of a high school field at 5 p.m. during his season
of sport by saying “after 5 p.m. the fields are the city’s
responsibility.” What “responsibility” happens after 5 p.m. that
isn’t in place prior to 5 p.m.?
Why can’t the “ambassador” exercise enough rational thought to
ascertain that the coach has a far more vested interest in the
condition of the field than the city does? The city does nothing to
the fields except mow them (badly) and aerate some of them once a
year. Why won’t the city accept the “responsibility” for maintaining
the facilities in safe and playable condition? If the facilities were
actually halfway decent, the coaches would have less reason to
complain and the city would have a real reason to ask that coaches
leave when conditions may warrant extra care.
The current run-down condition of the facilities fully justifies
the coaches’ complaints.
The only thing the coaches can see the city, district and
joint-use agreement doing is hindering them while doing nothing to
actually care for the facilities for which Ransom claims
“responsibility.”
Parks and Recreation Commissioner Byron de Arakal is also wildly
wrong on a couple of other key points, clearly illustrating his
nearly complete lack of understanding of some of the most fundamental
issues. He contends that “High school teams are not favorites over
AYSO and AYSO is not favorites over high schools.” That is
unequivocally wrong. High school teams, during their season of sport,
on school facilities, absolutely are “favorites” when it comes to the
use of their own facilities, whether it’s 4:30 or 5:30 p.m. The same
is true of AYSO on the fields which they reserve for their use during
their season. And if AYSO is not a “favorite,” why does the city
maintain the Farm, which is used almost exclusively by AYSO, in top
condition while letting the high school fields fall into complete
disrepair?
De Arakal’s most fundamental misunderstanding, though, is that he
believes that Costa Mesa’s problem “boils down to a lack of fields.”
Byron de Arakal ought to get out once in a while and look around.
There are actually plenty of fields, it’s just that so many of them
have been rendered unsafe and unplayable by the city’s and school
district’s mutual lack of responsibility that no one even wants to
use them. There’s a great location at Parsons Field, on top of the
bluff with palm trees and ocean breezes -- with one of the
worst-maintained fields ever seen. There’s about 20 acres at Estancia
that could be one of the finest locations in Orange County, but
they’re rutted, weedy and dangerous. The field at Davis school is a
nice tucked-away location that’s mostly dirt patches and weeds.
There’s a long list of others.
What de Arakal and most others fail to recognize is that they have
created and are supporting a policy that perpetuates the downward
spiral of these facilities. By letting these facilities deteriorate
and adding oppressive control, they are chasing away a key source of
funding that could be used to actually maintain them. It is a fact
that several soccer tournaments have left the city and gone to Irvine
and Tustin. They have taken not only the use fees, but the many
hundreds of parents who spend money in restaurants and hotels in
Costa Mesa. Club soccer teams, which could commit to long-term use
agreements that would generate a reliable and forecast-able revenue
stream have also left.
“If you build it, they will come” is as true as ever. But so is
the converse: “If you let it go, they will leave.” Those who can
leave have left, taking their money with them. The high school
student athletes have no such option, so they get to risk injury
every time they step on one of these disgraceful fields.
Shame on all of these people for abdicating their responsibility
to provide a safe and decent place for the high school athletes,
youth sports participants, and all of the other users of the public
facilities. This will be a key election-year issue for a motivated
and vocal constituency of parents, none of whom are buying these
brush-offs from the people who are supposedly “responsible.”
* MARK GLEASON is a resident of Costa Mesa and president of the
girls soccer boosters at Estancia High School.
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