The race is won
- Share via
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Barely a week into his new job as Newport Beach’s
public works director, Stephen Badum has already made some drastic
changes.
He’s moved the desk in his office so his back faces the window and put
up a couple of car race posters. Gone is his predecessor’s hat stand --
Don Webb kept about 20 specimens at City Hall from his 200-plus hat
collection.
“I’m not really a hat guy,” Badum said, as virtual sea gulls chirped
from the speakers on his computer. “I just have to evolve my own little
quirks.”
A self-confessed “car guy,” Badum is probably going to miss the
15-mile drive along Coast Highway from his Lido Sands home to Seal Beach,
where he worked as public works director until recently.
But when Badum talks about his new job, it becomes clear that he
doesn’t mind living within walking distance of his office.
“I’ve never wanted a job more than this one,” said Badum, 44.
He’s wanted it for about 13 years.
In 1988, after stints with Caltrans and a private engineering firm,
the New York native interviewed for an engineer’s position with the
department.
Ben Nolan, who was public works director at the time, asked Badum what
he expected to do five years later.
“I expect to have your job,” Badum remembered telling Nolan.
It took a little longer than that, but Badum began working toward his
goal soon after he took the job in Newport Beach.
He enrolled in a master’s program for public administration at Cal
State Long Beach and attended night classes to prepare himself for his
dream job.
“My wife sacrificed a lot,” he said, adding that the couple’s
10-year-old twins, Stephanie and Tom, were born around the same time.
His education taken care off, Badum also decided to gain leadership
experience elsewhere.
In 1995, he became Seal Beach’s public works director but kept in
touch with Newport Beach folks to stay on their radar screen.
“I was always bugging Don [Webb],” he said. “I’d say to him, ‘When are
you going to retire?”’
Now that he’s back, Badum said he’s planning to build on relationships
at City Hall and elsewhere in town that he’s developed over the past 15
years.
“The hardest thing about going to Seal Beach was leaving all these
people,” he said. “There’s an incredible talent pool.”
He added that he hopes to find a middle ground between the management
styles of his two immediate predecessors, with Nolan more “hands off” and
Webb, “who communicated more with staff and was more hands on.”
“Hopefully I learned the best from all the people I worked for,” he
said.
He’s also ready to start an aggressive capital improvement projects
program, which includes the renovation of Balboa Village, the Bonita
Canyon sports park, the rehabilitation of the city’s piers and the
Mariner’s Mile village project.
Badum said he’ll face some tough challenges in the coming year.
Revitalizing Newport Beach’s older parts without losing their
character, “those are the real challenges,” he said. “The last thing you
want to do is a project that wipes the slate clean.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.