JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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Several weeks ago, I wrote a column questioning the ethical propriety
of C.J. Segerstrom & Sons offering a substantial gift to Costa Mesa
public schools contingent on approval of its Home Ranch project. A few
days later, the Pilot printed a strong rebuttal from Paul Freeman,
Segerstrom’s director of community and government relations.
As a result of this exchange -- and my admission that I wasn’t
knowledgeable enough to judge the project, itself -- I was invited to
meet with a half-dozen representatives of an organization called Costa
Mesa Citizens for Responsible Growth, which is strongly opposing Home
Ranch. They were earnest and rational and supplied me with a cornucopia
of data supporting their position. As a result of this session, I felt a
need to hear the other side. So I attended the hearing on Monday night --
or, more accurately, Tuesday morning -- at which the Planning Commission,
by a 4-1 vote at 1:30 in the morning, decided to recommend that the City
Council approve Home Ranch.
Listening to some four hours of both sides with only the framework of
my existing biases and minimal background left me with only extremities
to contemplate. The Segerstrom people would have me believe that Home
Ranch will offer a kind of financial Eden to local residents while
surrounding us with the best of all possible worlds at no sacrifice of
quality in the air we breathe or movement of the traffic we fight. And
the opponents see this project as a full-scale, all-out blight on Costa
Mesa, whose residents will be awash in traffic and pollution as a result.
So while I couldn’t have reached a conclusion on the project, itself,
from what I heard Monday night, one thing did become clear to me: that
residents go into such a fight at a considerable disadvantage.
I couldn’t help creating matchups in my head as I watched the hearings
unfold. The New York Yankees against the Toledo Mud Hens. The suits
against the T-shirts. The slick graphics against passion. Pros against
amateurs. Bullet points that had to be taken at face value and often
didn’t get much below surfaces against arguments carefully written out
and sometimes haltingly read.
One example was the repeated Segerstrom use of the word “mitigate,”
especially with reference to traffic. If I understand their argument
correctly, they contend that a vast department store, multiple office and
industrial spaces, 192 new homes and acres of parking will not add to
traffic problems in the area but will rather “mitigate” them because of
creative new traffic controls. One commissioner said he found this a
little incredible, too, but after many hours of poring over studies and
talking with Segerstrom traffic consultants he became a believer. As most
of us are both unable and unwilling to go that route, I suppose we are
stuck with his assessment until another growing out of similar research
is offered.
But before this heavy stuff took place inside, a different kind of
contest was going on outside during the two hours the commission dealt
with other matters before taking up the Home Ranch. The front porch of
the City Council chambers looked like a USC tailgate party -- with the
frat and sorority members on one side and the independents on the other.
Segerstrom had set up a table staffed by a half-dozen attractive and
cheerful women who were dispensing cookies, bottled water and pledges.
Since my dinner had consisted of a martini and cheese and crackers
because this meeting was scheduled so unconscionably early, I was hungry.
But I thought I should identify myself and tell them I didn’t plan to
sign a pledge to support Home Ranch before I took one of their cookies.
They were so pleasant about all this that I ate two, which may or may not
influence the place I finally come down.
Across the way, a card table set up by the opposition offered only
fellowship and a flier that said: “Stick to the general plan” -- which
might sound cryptic but was the genesis of their argument.
While I was enjoying their fellowship, a young man dressed impeccably
in a Boy Scout uniform approached and offered a lengthy and quite
articulate argument in favor of Home Ranch. He said he was in the sixth
grade at TeWinkle Middle School, which is to be one of the benefactors of
the Segerstrom largess. To my considerable journalistic embarrassment, I
was so taken by his poise that I forgot to ask his name. I do know this
for sure: If the Segerstrom folks had used him in the meeting to speak on
their behalf, it would have been a slam dunk.
Now all this goes to the City Council, where the whole exercise will
be repeated in a few weeks in a somewhat truncated form, but with the
school contribution bait still on the table. The major hope I take from
the Planning Commission hearing to the City Council is that the ideas and
convictions of residents who lack the resources of a large and wealthy
organization will be given equal weight and attention.
Meanwhile, I think the Home Ranch opposition should consider offering
some sort of libation outside the City Council hearings. It just might
bring some fence straddlers over to their side. But not that TeWinkle Boy
Scout.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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