BETWEEN THE LINES -- Byron de Arakal
- Share via
On occasional mornings in my household, I’ll receive a dispatch from
the supply sergeant (read: wife) even as she remains firmly hunkered
down, mildly comatose, beneath the covers. And the order is conveyed in a
single word.
“Milk,” she’ll say.
This means I’m to head to the Vons in Mesa Verde Center and acquire
four gallons of 2% low fat. I’m then to return to the barracks -- milk in
hand -- before the grunts rise. This way, we avoid those cranky
“Mom-there’s-no-milk” insurrections.
Now, I don’t normally noodle much on issues confronting Costa Mesa
while out stumbling around town this early in the morning. But on a dawn
milk mission in late August, the thorny debate over the city’s Job Center
took a seat squarely in the middle of my thinking. That’s because I was
greeted at the Mesa Verde Vons by a half dozen laborers camped out
looking for some work.
My memory recalls that it was in October of 1988 when the city --
blistered by angry residents protesting the daily encampment of day
laborers in Lions Park -- transformed a ramshackle gas station into a
kind of open-air market for job seekers. The idea was to give day
laborers a central place to go to find some work and make a buck. For
folks with odd jobs to be done, the center would make it easy to track
down temporary -- and yes, cheap -- labor.
In either case, the Job Center was supposed to be the city’s solution
for sweeping the town’s streets, parks and storefronts of loitering job
hunters.
It hasn’t worked. And the more I think about it, I’m pretty sure that
it never will. The reasons are both obvious and subtle, which we’ll get
to in a moment.
Meantime, witnessing the various platoons of day laborers popping up
throughout the city (hardly an image Costa Mesa wants to trumpet), and
knowing the Job Center dings Costa Mesa’s wallet for $130,000 every year,
it’s probably time the center be given the pink slip.
It’s clear to me the Costa Mesa Job Center -- beyond its very early
success -- is failing its original mission. Aside from the various chaps
I now regularly spot sitting and standing outside my neighborhood
supermarket, other concerned residents have documented day laborers
loitering by the dozens in front of storefronts and businesses from the
Westside to the Eastside.
Which then raises the question: Why does such a small gaggle of
laborers seek work at the Job Center, while a growing number shuffle
around parking lots and strip malls hoping for a gig?
One theory is that the burgeoning population of day laborers steer
clear of the Job Center because many, if not most, are residing in the
United States illegally and see the center’s requirement for proof of
legal residency as a guaranteed deportation ticket.
So they look for work, increasingly, in the city’s nooks and crannies
where no forms and no proof of legal status are demanded of them. And
often they take up their positions on private property where the city has
no jurisdiction to remove them for loitering.
I’ve got to think that the ballooning legions of immigrant workers
throughout the city make the Job Center less attractive for the folks who
give these guys jobs too. A street-corner hire is quicker, cheaper (an
immigrant worker with no legal status isn’t in a position to demand a
living wage), formless (no I-9s and W4s) and clandestine.
All of which brings me back to the argument that it’s time for the
city to shutter the Costa Mesa Job Center. Which is a timely conclusion,
I think. In its latest go-round over what to do with the center, the
Costa Mesa City Council -- while stopping short of shuttering the place
-- gave its staff roughly 60 days to cobble together more options for
improving the center’s operations. Among them should be a reexamination
of shutting the Job Center down.
Doing that won’t leave legal immigrants seeking legitimate work
without options. The California Employment Development Department
operates a number of full-service job centers in Orange County.
Established under the 1998 Workforce Investment Act, the centers offer an
array of skills development, training, job placement and other employment
services free of charge. And the good news is one of these employment
centers is located on Scenic Avenue in Costa Mesa.
Turning the lights out on the Job Center won’t stem the proliferation
of loitering day laborers, but it will save the city $130,000 a year.
Solving the other problem means the City Council -- which recently
retooled the city’s ordinance banning certain public solicitations for
employment -- should follow the lead of the city of Orange, which
aggressively enforces its no-public-solicitation laws by turning over
workers in the United States who are here illegally to the U.S. Border
Patrol.
* BYRON DE ARAKAL is a writer and communications consultant. He lives
in Costa Mesa. His column runs Wednesdays. Readers may reach him with
news tips and comments via e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.