Politics & Government
County Promotes Waste Chief to CEO
Mike Giancola, the county's waste chief, will take the county's top job for $245,000. He replaces the former CEO who resigned amid a county sex assault scandal.

Orange County supervisors today hired a new chief executive officer, nearly a year after the county's top administrator resigned because of fallout from the prosecution of a former county executive on sex charges.
Supervisors approved a contract with Mike Giancola, the county's waste chief, to take the CEO job after 34 years working his way up the ranks from a parks groundskeeper.
Giancola, 54, will earn a base salary of $245,000, less than former CEO Tom Mauk's annual pay of about $253,000.
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"I'm humbled and honored," Giancola told City News Service after the vote approving his contract.
Giancola has a bachelor's degree in business administration from the University of Phoenix and earned certification as a hazardous material manager at UC Irvine.
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Giancola has been the director of OC Waste and Recycling since 2009. Before that he was deputy director of the agency's south region from 2006 to 2009.
Giancola has worked in the county's waste department since 1988.
Supervisor Todd Spitzer launded Giancola's ascension through the ranks.
"There's just something so rich and vibrant about someone who's worked their way up," Spitzer said, adding his experience working in the county will give him an added sense of "empathy and understanding" of his co-workers.
The supervisors in March wanted to hire Santa Barbara County CEO Chandra L. Wallar, but she turned them down when the board wasn't willing to meet her demand of about $290,000 in annual salary. She also wanted $15,000 in moving costs.
Wallar's current employers voted in April to not renew her contract, which expires Oct. 31.
When the recruitment of Wallar fell apart, county officials took a look within their own ranks for a successor, Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Shawn Nelson told City News Service before today's meeting.
"We all looked at each other and (Supervisor) Pat Bates and I decided to form our own subcommittee, and we just tried to short-list people we should be interviewing and we hadn't," Nelson said.
In the initial search for a new CEO, the county-hired recruiter only had one internal candidate, Nelson said.
Nelson and Bates encouraged Giancola to apply, and he interviewed well, Nelson said.
"We sat down to negotiate terms and he couldn't have been easier to deal with. It's like a dream come true," Nelson said.
Hiring Giancola would send a positive message to county employees, Nelson said.
"This guy truly worked his way from the bottom up, and it's healthy for any organization that people believe you can have dreams, work hard and start at the bottom and there's no artificial ceiling if you don't have a certain pedigree. You can still get to the top," Nelson said.
"I think it's a great pick. He's a proven leader in the county, he's got a long track record and it speaks volumes to everyone in the county."
The supervisors were unconcerned that Giancola was the subject of a lawsuit that county officials have tentatively agreed to try to settle for $350,000. County officials say an independent review of the matter cleared Giancola.
The lawsuit involved allegations that Giancola demoted a former human resources manager for refusing to bend county recruitment policies and for the way he handled a sexual harassment case.
Spitzer lamented how allegations can smear county officials. Former county public works executive Carlos Bustamante was charged with sexually assaulting seven women he worked with.
"It's one of my biggest complaints in this county post-Bustamante -- people can make allegations against you and, without a prima facie showing," there's an investigation, Spitzer said.
Supervisor Patricia Bates called Giancola a "stand-up guy."
Before today's meeting, Orange County Supervisor John Moorlach said he is "comfortable" with Giancola in the top administrative spot.
"I believe he has a high integrity level," Moorlach said. "He knows the drill. He's been here and I think it speaks well that you can work your way up the ranks here and the county and make it to CEO."
The supervisors have been searching for a new CEO since Mauk resigned in July following the prosecution of Bustamante, who is also a former Santa Ana City Councilman. Chief Financial Officer Robert Franz has been interim CEO since then.
Bustamante is awaiting a preliminary hearing on the charges later this year.
- City News Service
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