Thursday, May 22, 2008

CM PRESS # 370


DAY 2--OF THE GREAT EL CAMINO CENTER DEMOLITION

7:45 a.m.--Two workers were seen with pickaxes on the roof of the former gas station. No other activity was observed.

Say, did we mention that the El Camino Center is located in Mesa Del Mar across from a major slum and that Katrina Foley lives in Mesa del Mar and that she planted flowers in front of the slum last year but that the flowers haven't had much of an effect on the crime problems in that slum?

Now that the snow has melted at the ski resorts, Ms. Foley may have the time to take even more drastic action to stop slum problems in her neighborhood.

In fact, we wouldn't be surprised to soon see a photo in the Return to Reason Daily Pilot of Foley standing in front of the slum singing Kumbaya while collecting cans of food for earthquake victims in China.

That should certainly improve her neighborhood.
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ANOTHER CONDO CONVERSION ON COOLIDGE

At its regularly scheduled meeting on 5/27, the no-Planning Commission will rule on whether or not to allow a Tri-Plex at 3028 Coolidge to be converted to condos. LINK

Many existing homeowners in Mesa North generally support such conversions--this will be the second one on Coolidge--because it is hoped that new homeowners will have pride of ownership and care about the neighborhood.

On the negative side of things is the possibility that the conversions will simply be on paper and that the units will continue to be rented out by absentee owners.
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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.


Wednesday, May 21, 2008

CM PRESS # 369














DEMOLITION OF EL CAMINO CENTER TO START TODAY ?

(FOR UPDATE SCROLL DOWN)

At its regularly scheduled meeting last night, the Costa Mesa City Council granted the owner of the El Camino Center a requested one year extension on its plans to build 24 homes on the site.

This came after the owner said that demolition, which will cost the owner $100,000, will begin today.

Unfortunately, it appears that until homes are built, the site will remain a dirt covered empty lot with a chain link fence all around it.

Linda Dixon wanted the owner to plant the site with grass and let people use the site. The CM PRESS pointed out that this could cause problems including, possibly, a claim of an easement by prescription if the land laid fallow long enough.

NOTE: We'll update this report in this spot later today concerning the demolition.

About that slum in Mesa del Mar...

The CM PRESS suggested to the Council that one of the problems facing a developer who wants to build quality homes on the El Camino Center site is the fact that the city has done nothing to thin out the massive slum that is right across the street from the site.

We also pointed out that the City Council, in allowing hundreds of condos and upscale apartments to be built in South Coast Metro, with no requirement for affordable housing in that area, is not doing any favors for the central core of Costa Mesa which will be under increasing pressure to not only not thin out the "affordable" slums--such as are found in Mesa del Mar--but to build even more to fulfill the increased state required quota for such units that should have fallen on the developers in South Coast Metro since they're the ones who have increased our quota by adding to our housing stock.

After we spoke, Lisa Reedy, the President of the Mesa del Mar Homeowner's Association, told the Council that it's not helpful for people to talk about the slum in her neighborhood and that Mesa del Mar is just one big [happy] community.

Huh?

Bury your head in the sand, Ms. Reedy, but most people can read the police reports and people we know who live very close to the slum report much crime activity and an almost constant police helicopter overhead. You also have at least one of the most active gangs in Costa Mesa in that slum.

Your slum is a problem, Ms. Reedy. And, it's not going to get better by pretending it doesn't exist. Slums don't improve with age.
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DEMOLITION UPDATE: 12:15 p.m.--5/21/08--The CM PRESS saw a single passenger car and a single small Bob Cat type tractor along with its trailer on the site, but there were no people there that we could see. There was an approximately four foot high, four foot wide, pile of dirt on the parking lot pavement and a few metal poles lying on the ground, but it's not clear if they were there before today or not. There are no clear signs of demolition that we can report. Just the crew's lunchtime?

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MAYOR BEVER CALLS FOR COUNCIL TO STUDY ORANGE'S DAY LABOR LAW

Also at the City Council meeting last night, Mayor Eric Bever called on staff to prepare a report on Orange's day labor law for discussion at an upcoming study session.

When this is discussed, the CM PRESS plans on being there and will report what happens.

The Orange ordinance has some provisions that the CM PRESS believes will be good for Costa Mesa, but there is a Constitutional issue relating to a reasonable time, place, and manner that will have to be addressed and handled correctly.
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REA SCHOOL

During our comments to the Council, we again asked that the Council look into what's being done on the Rea School campus which seems to be stuffed with all sorts of non-profits and uses that are far beyond what one expects to find on an active school campus.

Whether the Council will look into this or not we're not sure.

The Councilmember most qualified to look into this is Wendy Leece who used to be on the School Board.

But, perhaps Ms. Leece is slightly shell shocked (we hope she's tougher than that) about the uproar from some numbnuts who didn't want her to ask some simple questions about where the money is going at the Senior Center, and who think it's not the City's business where taxpayer money goes.

Keep asking those questions, Ms. Leece. Ignore the haters.
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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

CM PRESS # 368


CM PRESS 3 MINUTE NEWS PROGRAM ON THE AIR TONIGHT CMTV24
(stock photo)


COSTA MESA--Be sure to tune in to the CM PRESS 3 MINUTE NEWS PROGRAM on Channel 24 tonight as we once again report on problems in Costa Mesa and possible solutions. LINK

As usual, the CM PRESS will give you the latest information about our City in a tightly managed 3 minute report at the beginning of the City Council meeting starting at 6:00 p.m. during Public Comments.


The CM PRESS will also have some succinct comments about the El Camino Center later in the program.

In between the comments by the CM PRESS, you can go get a snack. Nothing important will be happening. In fact, in between our comments, there will be little but the mumbling sounds of the do-nothing no-City Council members which is the Costa Mesa version of elevator music. Yawn.
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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

Monday, May 19, 2008

CM PRESS # 367


WHEN YOUR PARTICIPLES DANGLE

According to the OC REGISTER, a man is on ICE hold at Harbor Boulevard and Hamilton Street. LINK

As far as we can tell, ICE must have the guy locked up either in the Taco restaurant or in the community garden until he can be deported. And, we thought the jail was open again.

Here's the item from the OC REGISTER (Just in case they correct it in our link).

David Martinez-Rios, 44, of Costa Mesa was arrested on suspicion of hit and run causing property damage, driving under the influence of alcohol/drugs, using false information provided to the Department of Motor Vehicles, perjury, driving without a license and presenting false identification to a police officer and is currently on ICE hold at Harbor Boulevard and Hamilton Street on May 18.

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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

CM PRESS # 366


MORE GANG GRAFFITI IN MESA NORTH
(stock photo)

The CM PRESS spotted some more gang graffiti in Mesa North this morning.

No, we won't give the exact location. We want as many Mesa North homeowners as possible to see what is happening in the neighborhood and have their awareness raised to the terror of these gangs.

We know what will happen now. City staff reads the CM PRESS and even before most readers see this issue, the City will have its graffiti paint-over crew out searching Mesa North for the graffiti to try to cover it up before too many people see it and demand that the City Council start doing more than mumbling sweet nothings.

We dispatched the crack CM PRESS photographer to the site of this terror and we'll have a photo for the City Council meeting tomorrow night during the CM PRESS 3 MINUTE NEWS PROGRAM--at its usual time during Public Comments.

If you can't be there, be sure to tune in on your TV.
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I'M NOT A REPORTER, BUT I PLAYED ONE IN A MOVIE ONCE

Yes, dear friends, I once had a starring role as a reporter in a movie that also had Richard Dreyfuss, Gene Barry, Sondra Locke and some others playing lesser characters.* LINK

And that was after I had taught Robert DiNiro everything he knows about acting.**

And it was before I had made Woody Allen famous.***

And, it was close to the time that I made wine common in the US.****

And, it was before I made the All In the Family TV show a big hit.*****

And it was after I had made Pendleton Shirts a household name.******

And, it was after I told Andy Warhol....*******

*(Well, actually, what he meant to write was that it wasn't exactly a starring role.)

**(Well, he did do a play with Robert DiNiro in NYC and some believe DiNiro's ex-Marine character, Travis Bickle, in Taxi Driver was partly based on this guy, who was just out of the Marines when he met DiNiro and who used to dress like the Bickle character, had a similar walk-up apartment, etc.)

***(Okay, he was in a Woody Allen movie.)

****(So, he did a national wine commercial on TV. Big deal.)

*****(Aw, geez. Yawn. The guy had a bit part. Blink your eyes and you missed him.)

******(Phooey. This is getting to be too much. The guy did a print ad for Pendleton Shirts, and they even cut his head off when they published the photos in magazines.)

*******(Andy....That's it. We're going to kick this guy off the computer down here at CM PRESS Central. We're running out of asterisks.)

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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

Friday, May 16, 2008

CM PRESS # 366


EL CAMINO CENTER AND A LITTLE QUID PRO QUO

At its upcoming May 20th meeting, the City Council is expected to sign an extension agreement with the owner of the closed down El Camino Center located in Mesa del Mar, where Snow Bunny Katrina Foley lives, that will give the owner an additional year to complete off-site and street improvements around the site.

These off-site and street improvements will consist of removal of existing improvements, new sidewalk, curb/gutter, cross gutter, spandrel, asphalt paving, storm drain inlet and pipe, and traffic striping and markings.

In exchange for granting the one year extension, the City is requiring the owner to demolish the center within 30 days after receiving a demolition permit from the city.

Here's the timeline: Council approves the agreement on May 20. Owner must apply for demolition permit within 5 working days--by May 28. Owner must complete demolition of all buildings on site within 30 days. The agreement is silent as to whether this 30 days is working days or calendar days, but assuming working days, all buildings should be demolished by July 10, 2008.

Will we actually see the buildings gone by July 10?

Hopefully, yes. But we wouldn't be surprised if a number of requests for extensions aren't suddenly received by staff. On what basis? Oh, we can think of about a hundred things an owner could use if he wanted to.

And, there's not much teeth in the agreement except a performance bond, and that's the same performance bond that was in the agreement the last time the owner asked for a year's delay that was granted by the City Council.

What then? When will homes be built on the site?

Even if the present buildings are demolished, there will still be a large empty lot with an ugly chain link fence around it until homes are finally built on the site. And, there's no telling when that will be.

Still, at least something seems to be moving forward and that's a step in the right direction.

Now, if the City will thin out the slums right across the street from this site, a developer might be more inclined to put in some homes that will be an asset to the community.

With the slums remaining there, a developer is risking his investment.

Say you're a home buyer from out of the area and you're not yet sold on the benefits of Costa Mesa, as are so many of us who choose to live here--cool breezes, close to ocean, close to Newport Beach, a certain "feel."

Would you buy an expensive home across the street from a slum in a city with the negatives that some of us are trying to fix--failing schools and gangs, etc., and an establishment that is fighting to keep the slum status quo?

Or, would you, as have so many others, simply flee Costa Mesa and buy a home for about the same price in South County and not have to put up with the crime and problems that our successive City Councils have allowed to grow in Costa Mesa?

In other words, would you trust that the Improvers can fix broken Costa Mesa or would you be fearful that they'll fail, and instead of improving, the city will go in the other direction and become a new Santa Ana?

Would you risk being trapped in a slum by buying a home on the El Camino Center site while a massive slum sits right across the street from your home and all you see happening in the slum is that Snow Bunny Katrina Foley and her fou fou pals are planting flowers in front of the slum and telling you that everything is now fixed?
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HOT THIS WEEKEND

According to the Daily Pilot, merchants in Newport Beach are expecting to make a lot of money this weekend as people from inland travel to the ocean to cool off.

Maybe those merchants should cough up some of their profits to help put the 55 Freeway in a tunnel so their customers don't keep screwing up Costa Mesa as they rush right past our merchants to the sea.
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CHUCKY DOESN'T LIKE GAY MARRIAGE AND GETS SMARMY

The California Supreme Court said yesterday that gay marriages are okay...under the law.

It didn't take long for Assemblyman Chuck Devore, as reported in the Daily Pilot, to say that the ruling will now stop the state from being able to ban "polygamous marriages." LINK

We've heard that argument before. What those saying this are really saying is "I don't like gay marriages, but gays are militant. And, because of their militancy, they've become PC and will have some moral high ground to attack me if I attack them. So, being a typical politician, I'm only going to attack gay marriage obliquely by attacking polygamous marriages [such as practiced by the FLDS down in Texas], because polygamists haven't become militant enough yet and are still easy targets for bigotry."

Or, in good old boy speak: "Why, shucks, gay marriages are okay with me boy, but gee if we allow them to marry, then those evil polygamists will also get a pass."

Bigotry doesn't change. It just changes targets.

Our position on marriage

Marriage is a contract between individuals and is not the business of the state.

However, as with many of our positions on the bigger questions of existence, we look to what we can observe or infer from nature for a deeper understanding of existence and our place in it.

It seems clear to us that nature's primary directive, written in the genes of everything that lives, is "expand yourself [no matter who or what "yourself" is] by making more like yourself." We see that as part of the eternal struggle to be.

If we are right, then all arrangements, including polygamy, that help you expand yourself by making more like yourself, are in concert with nature, and all arrangements that do not do this are counter to nature and what can be called the life force [but not used here as it is sometimes used in esoteric philosophies].

In either case, and to repeat, we don't think marriage is the business of the state, or at least not in our culture that pretends to want diversity in all things. Of course, this leads off into a long discussion about the nature of the state and nations and peoples and religion and even physics (yes, physics), but we'll forgo that for now.
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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

CM PRESS # 365


HEY KIDS, LET'S MAKE THE WESTSIDE A LATINO BARRIO JUST LIKE HUNTINGTON PARK!

These days, you won't hear many brown racists and assorted anti-white bigots and special interests put it as directly as the headline above, but that's been the plan of some for many years, and that's exactly what they said they wanted to do several years ago.


And, those who want the Westside to be an official Latino Barrio have allies in their plan--some of the charity bosses and some out of town industrialists along with a few dimwit liberals who wrongly think they're on the side of social justice in helping keep the area downscale and full of pollution.

"Pollution?" Why, according to former City Council candidate Bruce Garlich--who was supported by the out of town industrialists and the crowd that wants to turn the Westside into an official Latino Barrio--there's no pollution on the Westside.

Baloney.

There is pollution and it's been well documented. And, worst of all, the 60 acre swath of industrial buildings on our Westside Bluffs is upwind of most of our homes and schools full of people--including vulnerable kids and senior citizens--who are forced to breathe air that first passed over the industrialized Westside Bluffs.

You don't think there's pollution? Go look at the seven acre site on Monrovia that has to have its dirt trucked away because of the toxic soil.

And, guess what? The source of that pollution is not on that site, according to representatives from the state, but migrated there from another site that they wouldn't officially identify. The implication is that this source site may still be putting dangerous chemicals into the ground.

And if that site on Monrovia doesn't convince you of pollution on the Westside Bluffs, just drive down Placentia Avenue with your windows down. That odor is not flowers, folks. That odor is caused by chemicals being put into our air where it is quickly blown over our homes and into our lungs.

THERE'S MONEY IN SLUMS FOR SLUM PROFITEERS

As a very rich guy once told me: "There's money in slums." This guy had made his first millions in the slums of Detroit before moving to Southern California where he now lives in a custom built mansion and is making money in the slums of LA.

I know of another guy, who lives in a mansion in Beverly Hills and who belongs to the most private and exclusive millionaire's club in the state, who makes his money from an old factory he owns in the worst part of Los Angeles.

Neither of the above two industrialists would want any changes to their respective golden goose slums and would fight any changes should any of the people who live near their factories start trying to improve the area for the people who actually live there.
Of course, these industrialists would never think of living near their factories. They're not crazy.

So, what about the middle class people who live in those areas? They're not there anymore.

They all moved. They've been replaced by illegal aliens who work off the books in the factories. That's the stuff of a falling tide lowers all boats; that is, all boats except the yachts of the rich who sail in to collect their money during the day and then sail away on the evening tide.

We're seeing the same thing on the Westside of Costa Mesa. A few people are making lots of money by keeping the Westside as slum central.

These slum profiteers don't want real improvement. Some minor cosmetic things such as flowers along the streets are okay with them, but they begin howling when there is talk of making the structural changes that are truly needed.

As we reported before, a group actually came to a Costa Mesa City Council meeting several years ago with a formal scheme to turn the Westside into a new Huntington Park. They even used the name Huntington Park and held it up as a model for the Westside!

Huntington Park, for the uninformed, is a city near Watts and Compton in LA and is more Tijuana than Tijuana. LINK

The slum profiteers, the out of town industrialists and the assorted haters and bigots are afraid that any changes--especially to the Westside Bluffs--would start bringing in upwardly mobile citizens who see the area as a more affordable version of Newport Beach, and that the presence of these people would kill their golden goose.

These slum profiteers are one of the main reasons why the Westside is not improving and that's why Improvers want a tough City Council that actually does something to improve the lives of the citizens and voters of Costa Mesa instead of the slum profiteers from Newport Beach and other cities upwind of their factories on OUR Westside Bluffs.

Improvers have consistently said that they don't want Costa Mesa split up into ethnic neighborhoods or barrios but to be a typical American city where people can live in any neighborhood that they choose.

They want the City Council to jump start the transition of the Bluffs to their highest and best uses. They want to see homes built on the Bluffs where people will stand in line to buy them.

They don't want to be under the iron heel of out of town rich industrialists or brown racists or left wing kooks or special interests.

And, they don't want to hear the Councilmembers mumble sweet nothings and high school level theories about the free market as an excuse for doing nothing.

It's as though some of these elected officials think that a city will improve spontaneously. Sorry, it doesn't work that way.

Thinking that way would be a little like thinking that if you want to go someplace, all you have to do is jump in your car and it'll start itself up and drive you to your location with no effort on your part.


THE REAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COSTA MESA AND HUNTINGTON PARK


The Pacific Ocean.


Because of Costa Mesa's closeness to the ocean and tony Newport Beach, we have a unique opportunity to pull ourselves up by our flip-flops that Huntington Park does not have.

Come on City Council, you've been given the power to improve Costa Mesa--make it happen!

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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

CM PRESS # 364


REPORT FROM THE 5/13/08 CITY COUNCIL STUDY SESSION ON GANGS

The CM PRESS was at the City Council Study Session yesterday when Captain Gogerty of the CMPD and Deputy District Attorney Tracy Rinauro presented the "Gang Enforcement, Intervention and Prevention Strategies," report. Bever, Leece, Foley and Dixon were present. Mansoor was absent.

The initial presentation was short and simply told what Anaheim and San Juan Capistrano are doing about gangs.

We felt sorry for Captain Gogerty because he appears to have been blindsided about this meeting and seemed unaware that his presentation had not been requested by the full Council (as would be proper) but that Snow Bunny Katrina Foley had unilaterally asked for the presentation without consulting with other Councilmembers.

And, as Mayor Bever and Councilmember Leece correctly pointed out, Costa Mesa is already doing things that are similar or identical to those being done in Anaheim and San Juan Capistrano.

What was unsaid by Bever and Leece but which seems to have been just beneath the surface of many other comments they made, was the question: "Why is this presentation being made at all?"

At one point, the session got pretty silly as Councilbumponalog Linda Dixon said she was taking a college class and that her professor told the class that melatonin works differently in kids, and that we may have a problem in enforcing our 10 pm curfew because schools start too early in the morning and kids are not fully awake until, say, 11 pm. So, ah, the school day should start at 11 pm?

Oh, and by the way, Ms. Dixon, it's Captain Gogerty, not Sergeant Gogerty. (He got a couple of promotions)

Mayor Bever also mentioned, more than once, that the CMPD had made a presentation about a gang prevention plan last year that promised to "eradicate gangs" in Costa Mesa in five years and that he wanted to see the results of that plan. The CM PRESS agrees.

One good thing that came out of this meeting was that Bever and Leece asked Captain Gogerty a number of times to come back to the Council with hard statistics about gangs in the city.

Deputy DA Rinauro, who is helping Anaheim and San Juan Capistrano fashion their programs to combat gangs, was asked if there was a model being used to design such programs, and she indicated that they were looking at what Los Angeles is doing wrong to stop gangs, to avoid the same mistakes in OC.

We agree with this approach. But we'd go even further. The CM PRESS has long held that the gang situation in LA is so markedly different from our situation in Costa Mesa that it's absurd to try to use LA as a model for Costa Mesa.

Specifically, in large areas of LA, the gangs are scattered throughout very large neighborhoods, and there are two types of gangs: Black gangs and Latino gangs. They have different characteristics and require different approaches.

Costa Mesa doesn't have any Black gangs. We just have Latino gangs.

Also, in Costa Mesa, the Latino gangs have not yet spread into every neighborhood, but are mostly just confined to specific areas with barracks type apartment buildings and in areas where there is an over concentration of charities that are acting as magnets for criminals.

In other words, the cancer of gangs has not yet metastized in Costa Mesa and can be removed with a surgical approach--if we act now.

Speaking of charities; some of them aren't part of the solution but are part of the problem. Some appear to be little more than gang hangouts and recruitment offices for gangs, while others seem to only attract nerdy goody-two shoe kids who wouldn't join gangs anyway. In both cases, they are wasting taxpayer funds.

The CM PRESS also learned something at this meeting that we weren't aware of and which troubles us. Apparently, the City Council has been holding closed sessions (meaning secret meetings out of view of the public) on gangs.

As we've reported before, many activists are saying that the City Council is holding too many secret meetings on matters that the public has a right to attend and participate in.

The CM PRESS will now attempt two things:

1. Request a copy of the gang statistics supplied to the City Council by the CMPD.

2. Request that the public be informed of what was discussed in the closed meetings and that the Council stop holding these secret meetings on matters that the public has a right to hear and participate in.

We understand that on matters relating to law suits and personnel matters, that closed sessions are appropriate. On most other matters, however, the public should be included. This is OUR city and the City Council works for us.

We have a right to know what's going on and to participate. We do not need a City Council that acts like a star chamber.

WE SHOW SOME GANG GRAFFITI

Also at the Study Session, the CM PRESS held up a picture of graffiti that some gang terrorists on the Westside had painted on the side of a home. The graffiti was put up some time during the night of 5/12 or early 5/13 and an alert neighbor took a picture of it and emailed it to us.

The Westside is being terrorized by illegal aliens, brown racists, and Latino gangs. When will the City of Costa Mesa take strong action to stop the terror and the attempts to drive U. S. citizens out of the Westside?
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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

CM PRESS # 363




SOCIALISTIC THINKING CAN'T SOLVE THE GANG PROBLEM

Summary of Main Article

Zero tolerance for gangs and removing the gang habitats is the only way to solve Costa Mesa's gang problem.

It is up to our elected officials to take the actions necessary to thin out and remove slum buildings that are serving as habitats for gangs and to stop funding and supporting charities that reward gang members and make them feel comfortable here.


Main Article

At today's City Council Study Session, the CMPD will make yet another presentation on gang suppression that will "include enforcement and prevention/intervention strategies." LINK

Note that word "intervention." That's where the problem lies.

The last time the CMPD made such a report, it was written, at least in part, by a Return to Reason cop who tried very hard to defeat the present majority on the City Council.

And, in that report, there were recommendations to give a pile of your money to the NMUSD which was going to use your money to help fund some Return to Reason connected charities that would have taken some NMUSD students for after school intervention.

Some of these same Return to Reason charities have been at it for years and have nothing to really show for all the money that has been pumped into them, except that the charity bosses have had nice jobs all these years and have been able, because of their secure charity jobs, to use some of their leisure time in trying to elect fellow travellers to the City Council.

In the discussion of gangs in Costa Mesa in the earlier CMPD report, there was no use of the terms "Latino" or "Hispanic" to be found, even though in other reports the CMPD has admitted that the gangs causing problems in Costa Mesa are Latino--almost exclusively.

But, the report did mention one racial group and tried to falsely link that racial group, in reader's minds, to the problems we have.

It said that while we don't have a White gang problem, we may have some White gang members living in Costa Mesa. So, if Whites are not the problem in our city, why did the report single them out? Why were Whites the only racial/ethnic group mentioned in the report by race or ethnicity? You know why.

Okay, the CM PRESS is getting blue in the face, but we'll say it again.

To solve a problem, you have to correctly define the problem and know all its characteristics. You can't let your prejudices and PCitis cause you to pretend certain characteristics don't exist and still hope to solve the problem.

It is important to state and understand that Costa Mesa's gang problem is a Latino gang problem and not try to hide that fact.

Now, knowing that the gangs are Latino tells you some other things:

1. Latino gangs are territorial. They are "habitat" oriented. They come into existence as neighborhood groups with a specific geographic area where they feel comfortable. They need those neighborhoods in order to exist.

2. Most gang neighborhoods have low rents and dense housing.

3. Latino gangs exist in neighborhoods full of illegal aliens and have a very strong connection to illegal aliens.

So, with that information, how can Costa Mesa get rid of gangs and gang members?
The same way you get rid of alligators in a swamp.

YOU GET RID OF THEIR HABITAT AND THEY'LL LEAVE ALL ON THEIR OWN.

Remove the swamp, and the alligators will soon be gone. Without the swamp, you wouldn't even be able to bribe them to come back.

Without the dense barracks style apartments in Costa Mesa, the gangs will be gone and you won't even be able to bribe them to come back.

Why would the above "remove the habitat" strategy work in Costa Mesa?

It would work because all living things gravitate to where they are comfortable and avoid places where they are not comfortable.

Remove the swamp and the alligators will leave and move to another swamp--call that other swamp, er, Santa Ana or Anaheim or Stanton or.... Who the hell cares? We need to take care of Costa Mesa and Costa Mesa citizens.

We need a little enlightened self-interest in Costa Mesa and we need to look out for our citizens first and foremost. Let other cities do the same for their citizens. That's why we have cities in the first place: to take care of the citizens who live there.

The way our American society works is that we're all supposed to do the best we can for ourselves. Yes, that sounds a little selfish, but in balance, a little selfishness is good when everybody else also tries to do the best for themselves.

That's the way things improve for individuals--don't you try to get the best job you can find? It also works for families--don't you try to do the best for your family and get the most comfortable home? And, it works for neighborhoods--don't you want your neighborhood to be the best it can be? And, it works for cities, states, and nations. This is the reverse of a socialist system. Remember all the hippy communes based on socialistic thinking? They didn't work. And, the reason they didn't work is because they weren't based on the way humans really are.

Yes, we should be compassionate and help others but, and I repeat, we need a little enlightened self-interest. In the long run, this will help others the most. It's the rising tide raises all boats way of looking at things.

THE PIGEON EXAMPLE

If you have a problem in your town square or local park with flocks of pigeons and want the pigeons gone, the first thing you do is locate the pigeon lady who has been feeding them and stop her from doing that. And, there will always be a pigeon lady in the picture. Count on it.

The wrong thing to do is tax citizens to give the pigeon lady more bird seed or to treat the pigeons as your new best friends.

And, you don't make a report to the City Council about the pigeon problem and never mention pigeons, but do mention robins even though the robins aren't the problem.

What we've been seeing in Costa Mesa is that citizens who actually live here and who have their kids in schools, and who shop in our stores and who have their lives and property at risk from gangs, are being told by some "experts" who often don't live here, and/or who have liberal/socialistic tendencies or political agendas, that the citizens need to pony up more money to make the gangs feel comfortable and that somehow that policy, that has never worked, will somehow now work.
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GASOLINE BREATH

The CM PRESS noticed a number of cars with their gas doors ajar, jimmied or missing this morning in the north part of Costa Mesa. Siphoners? If you got hit, call the CMPD (714) 754-5252. They may have an intervention plan for gas siphoners that will send them to some Return to Reason-friendly charities.
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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

Monday, May 12, 2008

CM PRESS # 362

COSTA MESA NEEDS TO UPDATE ITS ANTI-SOLICITATION ORDINANCE

(Generic photo)

Costa Mesa's anti-solicitation ordinance 10-354 needs to be reviewed and rewritten in order to be effective. LINK

One ordinance that should be looked at in any such rewrite is the one now in effect in Orange.LINK

Especially note Section 9.37.040.

If Costa Mesa had a similar provision, day workers seeking work from a private parking lot such as the convenience market at the corner of Victoria and Placentia could only do so with the permission of the owner of the property.

But, if the owner gives such permission, he must apply for a permit to operate a job center on his property.

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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.




CM PRESS # 361

JUST RIGHT PORRIDGE

Cities are works in progress. They are being shaped and re-shaped all the time. The shaping may be intentional and planned or it may be unintentional and unplanned; but the shaping and re-shaping don't stop.

Some cities, Irvine comes to mind, are intentionally shaped and planned to the nth degree. To some, this seems a good way to do things. Everything is in place and every blade of grass is cut just right.

To others, including the CM PRESS, that's too much shaping and planning. We see Irvine as being too plastic, too artificial, and too antiseptic. Sort of like living in a Disneyland without the rides. It lacks authentic life and spontaneity. But, that's just our personal taste in things. There is no right and wrong about it. It comes down to what one likes.

By contrast, some other cities have too little shaping and planning and they have slums and gangs and many problems that most people would rather not have in their city.

Most Improvers think that there should be a middle ground between being overly planned and not being planned at all. They believe there must be a way to balance things and come up with the just right porridge of a city.

Costa Mesa

We at the CM PRESS have long felt that Costa Mesa has the potential to be the just right porridge city.

Things in our dynamic universe are never static. Something that is just right is always balanced between not being just right and being just right. Take that porridge. If cooked slightly less, it would not be just right. If cooked slightly more, it would not be just right. The trick is to get it just right.

What is just right for Costa Mesa? That's the question that Improvers have been asking for years and why they became active in the city.

To the CM PRESS, "just right" means a number of things, and we are advocates for what we think is right. Others may disagree and we expect to hear their logical arguments in this regard. It's up to them to advocate for what they think is just right.

And, that's what elections are about. Ultimately, and in the best of all worlds, intelligent voters will hear the various arguments and make an informed choice about which candidates will help make the city what the most voters think is best.

Improvers have been getting many improvement minded, or at least improvement talking, people elected to the the City Council over the past few years, because many voters agree with what the Improvers are saying about making Costa Mesa nicer.

Unfortunately, instead of logical arguments from the other side, we are now hearing from a small group of extremist haters, brown racists, bigots, assorted neurotics, and special interests who have crawled out out from under their rocks and who try to confuse the public with red herrings.

For example...

When Improvers say we need to allow homes on the Westside Bluffs to attract upwardly mobile people back to our city, we don't hear logical arguments on the other side.

Instead, we hear haters and bigots, who are often acting as the unpaid shills for rich out of town industrial interests, saying that we're just trying to chase Latinos out of the city.

When we say we need to reduce the number of barracks style apartment buildings and replace them with modern low income housing, we hear the same nonsense about trying to chase Latinos out of the city.

When the CM PRESS complained about a dangerous situation where cars were double and triple parked with motors running on Presidio Way behind Davis School, and little kids were running between these cars, we heard that we were trying to make it uncomfortable for Latinos.

When we joined with others and complained about dangerous conditions at Paularino Park, we heard that we were trying to bar Latinos from the park. We even saw this nonsense repeated in the Return to Reason Daily Pilot by a liberal editor who lives in Fullerton.

When we say that non-profits in Costa Mesa shouldn't receive our tax money if they are discriminating based on race, the kooks say we're trying to harm Latinos.

Of course, it's just nonsense. All of the improvement suggestions are race neutral. Improvers are simply saying: "We want a pleasant and safe city with good schools where we can raise our families." See anything about race in that?

A COUPLE OF SPECIFICS ABOUT WHERE WE THINK WE NEED IMPROVEMENT

Let's look at just two of the things that we think are unbalanced and which need to be put into balance in order for Costa Mesa to improve.

Industrial--too much and in the wrong place

Today, Costa Mesa has a whopping 14% of our land zoned for industrial uses and much of it is on the best land in our city--the Westside Bluffs.

By contrast, Newport Beach only has 2% of its land zoned that way. We think Costa Mesa has too much industrial zoning and that it should be reduced by about half and that most of this reduction should be on the Westside Bluffs.

Does it make sense to have 60 acres of industrial buildings upwind of most of the homes in the city? Not to the CM PRESS, it doesn't. All the pollution is blown over all the homes. Costa Mesa is designed backwards. It needs a redesign.

Slums

Costa Mesa has too many barracks style apartment buildings that are functionally obsolete.

"Functionally obsolete" means they can't be fixed. The problem with them is not in a lack of upkeep--or that they need new paint or flowers planted out front, the way Katrina Foley did with some of the slums in her Mesa del Mar neighborhood--the problem is in their design.

A healthy balance of renter occupied to owner occupied residences in a city is 30% to 40% renters vs. 70% to 60% owner occupied. In Costa Mesa, we have 60% renter occupied vs. 40% owner occupied. This is just the reverse of what it should be.

Making sense of claims and counter claims

To avoid confusing he said/she said arguments about improving Costa Mesa, the CM PRESS long ago started comparing our city to the five cities that surround Costa Mesa and which touch some part of our land.

This gives us a look at the vital signs and establishes base lines. So, we compare Costa Mesa with Newport Beach, Irvine, Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Santa Ana.

What we usually find in looking at the statistics is that Newport Beach is at the top in most good things and Santa Ana is at the bottom.

We believe that Costa Mesa's rightful place should be second to Newport Beach in most good things.

Instead, we find that Costa Mesa is often at the bottom just above Santa Ana.

We think this is absurd and that it is not our natural place given our traditional closeness to Newport Beach.

We want to change things. That's what Improvement is about.
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Those are our opinions. Thanks for reading them.

  FOUR IMPORTANT QUOTATIONS ABOUT HUMANS “[T]he varieties of mankind are so different that similar differences ...