STEVE SMITH -- What’s Up
Having read Costa Mesa City Councilman Chris Steel’s comments over the
past few years, I know that he is big on headlines and short on details.
So it was no surprise to read once again that Steel would like only the
rich to live in Costa Mesa.
Except that I’m fairly certain that’s not what he meant or meant to
say. I’d like to tell you I know for sure, but he did not return the two
phone calls I placed prior to my deadline.
The statement I hope that Steel wanted to make was one supporting an
end to any rent subsidies or any other residential support.
Steel’s libertarian side shows up now and then, especially when it
comes to determining who should be walking the streets of Costa Mesa. The
criteria used to be only that we must be ready to produce papers
declaring our right to be here. Now it seems we must also carry our last
bank statement to prove that we’re not on the dole. Steel’s statement
about the new condition he’d like to impose, that the city needs to
attract people who can “afford to live here,” has such a great touch of
irony that I can’t let it pass.
One of Steel’s favorite collections of sound bites has been Costa
Mesa’s “abnormally high crime rate, “ its “declining property values” and
its “declining schools.” I cautioned Steel about the use of these terms,
but he is more insistent on telling what he perceives to be the truth
than he is in attracting to Costa Mesa both the new businesses the city
needs and the type of residents he wants. I then pointed out that he was
mistaken on all three points.
Steel has been spouting off this three-point shot for years. Last
year, about 10,000 voters in Costa Mesa agreed with him and voted him
into office. Many more than that did not vote for him, but that hasn’t
stopped him from believing that he has a mandate to trash this great
city. And that is exactly what he has started to do.
Instead of heeding warnings about how his comments could affect
property values and business relocations, Steel continued his tirade.
Now, the chickens have come home to roost as Costa Mesa is tagged as a
high-crime area.
Here’s the ironic part.
Three weeks ago, in a span of two days, I received two e-mails from
colleagues who were thinking of relocating to Costa Mesa. One person is
renting in Newport Beach and the other owns a home in Aliso Viejo. Both
of these people are married, one has a child and both are the type of
resident Steel would like to attract: American-born citizens with money
to spend. Neither household is likely to receive government assistance
and neither is likely to stand in line at the city-supported job center.
The e-mails wanted to know more about Costa Mesa, and having lived
here for 15 years, I qualified to answer. But did these people ask me
about the state of the city’s infrastructure? No. Did they ask about the
city’s position on the El Toro Airport? No. Did they ask about whether
the city was solvent? No. Both of these potential residents -- the kind
Steel wants to attract -- had heard about high crime in Costa Mesa and
they wanted to know if it was true.
You see, as long as people like Chris Steel continue to be
irresponsible with their comments, they will continue to repel these
people -- exactly the type they believe is best for Costa Mesa. It’s
funny how that works.
That’s bad enough, but the real truth is that these statements are
just not true. School test scores are up. Property values are up and the
city does not have an “abnormally high crime rate.”
The declaration that Costa Mesa is safer comes directly from police
chief Dave Snowden, who was quoted in the Daily Pilot on March 29 as
stating, “Numbers are misleading... The city’s overall crime rate is
still down, as it has been for the last 12 years.”
I believe the chief. And I hope that Steel will schedule a chat with
him so he can start telling the real truth about Costa Mesa: This is a
great city in which to work, live and play.
So, city bashers, please take it down a notch or two because you’re
only making things worse. If you can’t say anything nice about Costa Mesa
in public, don’t say anything at all.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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