These days, Leece occupies the vortex of another dust storm of her making over at the Costa Mesa Senior Center. The center is a valuable community resource for Costa Mesa’s elderly that’s run from a city-owned facility on 19th Street by a private nonprofit corporation.
Now, the Costa Mesa Senior Center’s membership roster boasts some 1,900 seniors. Having briefly served as a member of the center’s board of directors, I can tell you the vast majority of the seniors who visit the center and take advantage of its exceptional programs and services love the place.
A few don’t. And I mean a few. Like, maybe three. There are folks regularly disjointed over the board of directors’ refusal to cater to their every gripe or whim.
So when Leece showed up as the Costa Mesa City Council’s liaison to the senior center board (not a voting position on the board), the malcontents sank a fishing line in her ear. They bemoaned the quality of the center’s furniture. They complained about the center’s hours of operation.
They whined about how the center’s program director did his job. They didn’t like the location of the executive director’s office.
They accused staff members of taking money. And, strangely, they were put off that the board of directors wouldn’t present personnel and compensational information to them on demand.
In response, Leece launched a withering inquisition of the senior center’s board.
She’s peppered the all-volunteer body — made up of some of this community’s longest-standing, most respected citizens — with a litany of accusatory questions. More than 40 in all. And morale in the place has gone in the tank.