Seniors want more control of center
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Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- A growing number of Costa Mesa Senior Center members --
some who called for the ousting of the center’s recently fired director
months ago -- want more control of their facility, starting with greater
input in staff hiring.
“There’s been an abysmal lack of communication between us, the staff and
the board,” said Kathleen Cole, a member of a newly formed board of
directors’ advisory committee, which met Monday. “The board is too
complacent. It needs to pay attention to the seniors.”
She said the board should have listened to seniors’ reservations about
the center’s former executive director, Alan M. Meyers. The board fired
him just nine months after he was hired, after Costa Mesa police
investigators presented a detailed report to board members in May.
Authorities alleged Meyers had impersonated doctors, skimmed money from
several nonprofit organizations and served jail time for choking a doctor
whose identity he allegedly assumed. The center is partially funded by
the city.
Police officials haven’t pressed charges, but are investigating whether
the board hired Meyers based on bogus credentials and professional
degrees, Lt. Ron Smith of the Costa Mesa Police Department said last
week.
Meyers, who has turned down repeated requests for comment, has denied all
allegations. On Wednesday, he is scheduled to go to trial for allegedly
stealing money from a nonprofit group in Oregon.
Three months before the board fired Meyers, more than 100 seniors signed
a petition questioning his motives and calling for him to be replaced.
“It soon became apparent after his appointment that he had little, if
any, interest in the seniors or the Senior Center except to use it as a
stepping stone for his own personal advancement,” said a letter
accompanying the seniors’ petition, which was presented to the City
Council in February.
“They completely ignored us until the police got involved,” said Jack
Hernance, who led the signature-gathering effort and is chairman of the
new committee. “We formed this group in response to not being heard.”
The committee’s stated goals include lobbying for improved building
maintenance, writing articles in the center’s monthly newsletter and
recommending new programs at the center.
Senior center board member Jerry Richards, who is also a member of a
hiring committee for the new executive director, agreed that the board
should seriously listen to what the center’s members have to say about
each candidate.
“If he doesn’t have an affinity or affiliation with seniors, why bother?”
he asked. “We don’t need another senseless bureaucrat.”
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