CHOC clinic doesn’t fit at Rea Elementary
Cindy Brenneman
On behalf of the board of directors of Mesa Verde Community Inc.
and its membership, I am requesting the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District board reconsider its plan to establish a new medical clinic
at the Rea Elementary School site in the Estancia school zone. While
we realize our knowledge of the project is limited to recent
newspaper accounts and the numerous letters from affected members of
the community, based upon that information, we strongly oppose this
project.
The proposal as presented is just too idealistic -- providing
medical treatment to ill children at their very own school site.
However, common sense dictates that medical treatment would not be
limited only to the students at Rea school. Of course nobody wants to
deny medical treatment to sick little children. Everyone knows there
is a huge health-care crisis, and that this crisis is not limited to
the medically uninsured, but to the underinsured and others as well.
As soon as the public learns of the free medical clinic’s
existence, the seriously ill of all ages from all over will converge
on the Rea school site. The Newport-Mesa Unified School District is
liable for the health and safety of its students and therefore
exposing them unnecessarily to infectious diseases and kidnapping
possibilities is unacceptable in this day and age.
There are other issues to consider as well. As you are aware, the
Westside of Costa Mesa presently is overwhelmed with unresolved
social issues and is working very hard to overcome those problems.
Adding even one more social service to an area already suffering from
the impacts of the high number of existing social services will
seriously harm fragile relationships. Rea school already houses a
nonprofit, Save Our Youth.
Therefore, please do not overlook the concerns of the community.
The idea of locating this clinic on the campus of an elementary
school in the middle of a residential neighborhood is simply
ludicrous. We need more classrooms and quality teachers on school
grounds, not a free clinic.
We would like to propose that CHOC and the district consider other
locations for this clinic. We understand the serious need for health
care and support the concept in general, but please, not at this
location. We ask you to please consider the negative impact this
location would add to the already overburdened Westside residents.
We will attend the next school board meeting to learn more about
what is being proposed at Rea school and express our thoughts. In the
meantime, if there is any information you could provide for us to
share with our board and membership, it would be appreciated.
* CINDY BRENNEMAN is president of the Mesa Verde Community Inc.
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