EDITORIAL
Costa Mesa got a shot of good news at the end of last month when the
FBI released its crime reports for the nation’s biggest cities.
Those numbers show the city ranked 30th among the 209 cities with more
than a 100,000 population.
The report -- the preliminary 2000 Uniform Crime Report -- also showed
that most crimes were down compared with 1999. Violent crimes were down
16%, while they stayed about the same for the country as a whole.
Property crimes were off 3%. The only increase was in motor vehicle
thefts, which rose 21%.
These numbers are a testimony to the hard work of the Costa Mesa
Police Department, the members of which work 24 hours a day, 365 days a
year to protect and serve the city. The numbers also reflect the
close-knit, protective community residents help create across the city.
Compared with a similar city near the coast, such as Oceanside, it is
clear how safe Costa Mesa is. While in Costa Mesa there were fewer than
3,500 crimes in 2000, Oceanside had almost 6,000. Those figures are
particularly higher for the most heinous of crimes, murder and forcible
rape.
The numbers are not without some cause for concern, however. While
Costa Mesa rises to the top across the country, it floats near the bottom
in Orange County, ranking seventh of eight big cities here. Only
Fullerton ranked lower. Across the Santa Ana River in Huntington Beach,
there were about 4,500 crimes -- but with about 75% more residents.
The Police Department, led by Chief David Snowden, believe the reason
for that is that Costa Mesa is more thorough in reporting crimes than
those cities. But that doesn’t mean the police shouldn’t redouble their
efforts to bring the numbers down. And in a city where residents are so
concerned with their community, the police should be able to find ample
aid to make Costa Mesa an even safer city.
The answers won’t be easy, and they shouldn’t be. The easy answers
have been tossed around too often in recent months -- at City Council
meetings, in letters to the editor and at community gatherings.
Get rid of charities and the people committing the crimes will leave
the city, one of those answers goes.
Not true. What such conclusions fail to address -- other than not
clearly proving that people who have to make use of charities also commit
crimes -- is that, without the lifeline charities provide, it only makes
sense that crime would rise as people are forced by desperate times to
take desperate measures.
Get rid of low-income housing and the people most likely to commit
crimes will be forced to leave, goes another.
Aside from the ethical problems of this answer -- pricing people out
of their homes is not only bordering on immoral, but laws regarding
affordable housing make it illegal -- there also is no logical basis for
that conclusion.
Indeed, Newport Beach residents will tell you that being in an
affluent community certainly doesn’t protect you from being a target of
those criminals from outside the city limits.
And Costa Mesa is conveniently located next to the San Diego Freeway,
making it easily accessible to would-be criminals from not only Orange
County, but Los Angeles as well.
In other words, the easy answers aren’t really answers at all, just
the same old destructive finger pointing that we hear from some groups.
And to make Costa Mesa safer, these non-answers should never be a part
of the solution.
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