NEWSMAKER OF THE DECADE -- Marian Bergeson
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Tony Dodero
It was November of 1994, and then-state Sen. Marian Bergeson was coming
off one of her greatest political triumphs.
She had just run, unopposed, for the 5th District county supervisor seat
formerly held by Gen. Tom Riley -- a stunning affirmation of her
commanding political presence.
But the sweet taste of victory was soon to sour.
One month before she was to take office, Bergeson learned the news that
was to rattle Orange County government like a 7.0 quake. Longtime county
Treasurer Bob Citron’s financial gamble with the public’s money had gone
horribly wrong and the county was spiraling into the largest municipal
bankruptcy in U.S. history.
“I had great hopes for county government,” Bergeson says today. “I
happened to hit the Orange County bankruptcy at the wrong time. I think I
had a recall after me even before I took office.”
Those political twists and turns Bergeson’s life took in the 1990s --
like helping pull the county out of bankruptcy, pushing for smaller class
sizes, boosting teaching standards and championing the preservation of
the Upper Newport Bay -- prompted the Daily Pilot to crown her the
Newsmaker of the Decade.
It was the beginning of the 1990s when her political star really began to
rise, though it was a bumpy start.
In 1990, she was nominated by the Republican Party to be the lieutenant
governor candidate, only to lose the race to Democrat Leo McCarthy.
“The one (ballot box) defeat which she suffered, her bid for the office
of lieutenant governor, was a confirming example of how very difficult it
is for any Orange County elected official to obtain statewide office,”
says longtime colleague Tom Fuentes, the chairman of the Orange County
Republican Party. “Marian was the victim of the media ghetto of which we
live here. Marian, like others from Orange County, faces very limited
name recognition.”
She returned to the state Senate to battle one of the worst recessions to
ever hit California.
“We were trying to balance a budget that was about $15 billion down,” she
says. “Luckily, the economy turned around.”
In 1992, she became a victim again, this time of former Assembly Speaker
Willie Brown’s legendary vindictiveness. Brown successfully squelched her
nomination by then Gov. Pete Wilson to be the state’s superintendent of
public instruction.
Then, of course, there was the bankruptcy and those dark days. At the
time, Bergeson’s political prestige was gaining still, so much so that
candidates often sought her endorsement.
For example, the recall Bergeson speaks of began to brew actually
because of a non endorsement. She had declined to support John Moorlach
in his bid to unseat Citron from the county treasurer post.
At the time, Moorlach, now the country treasurer, had predicted the
collapse of the county dividend fund and he publicly noted Bergeson’s
nonsupport.
“When I look back at how the race went, that may be the turning
factor,” he said at the time.
But through all the bankruptcies ups and downs, Bergeson kept an
optimistic outlook.
“You don’t really have disappointments, you have experiences,” she
says.
And that she does.
Bergeson, who moved to Newport Beach’s Baycrest community in 1958 with
husband, Garth, has been in public life since 1964, making her the most
seasoned politician in Orange County.
“When I worked with her at the county level, we always relied on Marian
to help us with state legislation that was needed to get us through the
bankruptcy,” says county Supervisor Jim Silva, who was sworn in the same
time as Bergeson, right when the bankruptcy began. “We would never have
been able to get some of those bills passed without her help.”
Bergeson’s long political tenure began as a Newport Elementary School
District board member in 1964 and later in 1966 in the newly unified
Newport-Mesa district. In the late 1970s she went on to become a state
assemblywoman, in the 1980s a state senator and then county supervisor in
1994.
Two years into her stint as county supervisor, Bergeson was tabbed by
Wilson again, this time to serve in his cabinet as his secretary of child
development and education.
The education theme running through her life is hard to miss.
Today, Bergeson is a member of the state board of education. She followed
in her mother’s footstep and became a teacher, and her daughter continued
the tradition and is now a principal at Pomona Elementary in Costa Mesa.
She can certainly point to public instruction as the bedrock upon which
her legacy has been built.
“Teachers are the most valuable resource that we have,” she says. “In
Japan, the teachers are the most revered professions. We have to instill
in our communities a greater respect for the role of the teacher. And
teachers also have to accept a greater responsibility.”
As part of Wilson’s administration, Bergeson was instrumental in pushing
for statewide class-size reductions, improving teacher training and
curriculum standards, providing more incentives to lure in good teachers
and boosting test scores.
But she cautions that impatience can kill any future progress. She says
the seeds have been planted in statewide education that will bring much
fruit in the coming years.
“A lot of people get frustrated and want to start all over and that would
be a big mistake,” she says. “Instant gratification doesn’t happen in
education. The biggest challenge is staying the course ... of getting
every parent involved and making sure they know they have a role to
play.”
Bergeson’s biggest accomplishments, however, center around the
relationships she’s established and the loyalty she’s engendered with her
staff members and colleagues, political and otherwise.
“I cut my political teeth with Marian Bergeson,” says former Newport
Beach Mayor and Councilwoman Evelyn Hart, who has worked on some of
Bergeson’s campaigns. “There are a few women in politics and none of them
are role models like Marian Bergeson. She’s very quotable, very down to
earth and a very loyal friend over the years.”
Fuentes is another admirer.
“It has to be said that Marian is very first, a beautiful Mormon woman,”
Fuentes says. “As a devoted Christian, she has carried her values into
her service in public office from school board right up through the top.
As a woman, that was very courageous. She never caved on core values,
which is significant in the political debate.”
And Supervisor Silva says he fondly remembers Bergeson’s friendship
during the bleakness of the bankruptcy.
“At Christmas time in 1994, Marian and I talked on the phone about
whether or not we wanted to be sworn in,” Silva says. “I’m glad we made
the decision to do so.”
Silva says during Bergeson’s tenure on the board, he remembers showing up
in the parking lot at the same time as her and having her coax him into
walking up the five flights of stairs to the county supervisors office as
a way of working out.
It’s a practice Silva continues to this day.
As for her success, Bergeson credits the talented people she has always
surrounded herself with and her love of public service, which she calls
the “greatest opportunity.”
And what does the future hold for 2000 and beyond?
“I sort of take each week as it comes,” she says. “Luckily I have good
health and great expectations for involvement. I’ve never had to worry
about opportunities coming forward. And when I can’t (be involved
anymore) I will just continue to walk my dog around the block and enjoy
my grandkids.”
Marian’s legacy
* Family
Husband Garth, four children, nine grandchildren with two on the
way
* Teaching in the genes
She taught in Santa Monica schools and substituted locally. Her
mother was a teacher in Utah, daughter, Julie, is a principal at
Pomona Elementary
* The name game
An elementary school in Laguna Niguel and the aquatic center at Corona
del Mar High School bear her name.
* Education
Attended UCLA for three years, graduated from BYU.
* Favorite books
“Book of Virtues” by Bill Bennett and “Little Women,” Louisa May
Allcott
* Heroes
Winston Churchill; mother, Clara Crittendon
* First major legislative victory
Getting legislation passed to dredge the Upper Newport Bay
* Notable
Son, Jamie, played on the U.S. Olympic water polo team
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