Editorial
Some will argue to no end that Costa Mesa’s Job Center does nothing
but cost the city more than $100,000 a year while attracting illegal
immigrants to the city.
But, in truth, the Job Center does much of what it was intended to do
when it opened Oct. 4, 1988. Rather than face complaints from residents
that day laborers were lining the streets and crowding Lions Park, the
city took the initiative and created the hiring hall at Placentia Avenue
and 17th Street.
On Sept. 17, the City Council will discuss the center at its meeting.
During that session, a few will argue that the city should stop funding
the center or eliminate it altogether.
If the city decides at some point to stop supporting the Job Center,
the center will fail and the problems that existed before its existence
will return. And residents’ complaints, too, about the influx of day
laborers lining the streets will return. It’s that simple.
And it’s quite obvious that the city has been a model in its effort.
After setting up the center, Brea and Laguna Beach followed suit within a
few years with their own incarnations of hiring sites.
Not only does the Job Center appease residents’ worries about blight
along the streets and at Lions Park, but it provides work for those who
need it and employees for those who need them.
For some people, it’s a ritual -- a way of life -- to wake up before
the sun shines and show up at the center before everyone else. That way,
they have a better chance of obtaining work that day. The employers then
show up and hire a few here, a few there. Basically, that’s how it works.
But the Job Center hasn’t been without its enemies.
Councilman Chris Steel, elected in November after nine previous
attempts, ran a campaign blasting the city for funding the center, which
he argues attracts illegal immigrants to the city and drives legal
residents out of it. Instead, the center’s funding can be used for street
improvements, crime, etc., he has contested.
While some of Steel’s argument may be true, it should be noted that
the city does screen workers at the job center to ensure they have the
legal status to work here.
When the city created the center, it didn’t expect to recoup its
expenses. And no one should expect that to happen now, either. It’s
called a public service. It cures a blight that residents wanted removed,
provides jobs and provides employees.
And to our way of thinking, the $100,000 Steel is complaining about is
a drop in the bucket compared with the problems created by loitering at
city parks and businesses that would return with a vengeance if the Job
Center went away.
If there’s something actually wrong with the Job Center, then fix it,
don’t eliminate it.
That won’t solve anything and will only take Costa Mesa backward and
re-create a problem solved nearly 13 years ago.
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