Success won’t spoil him
Watching Robert Martinez at work, you wouldn’t know the city employee won
an election earlier this month.
The engineering technician will soon take his seat on the board of
directors for the water district of his hometown, Pico Rivera.
But he usually keeps the thrill of victory inside, he said.
“Until I get in the car,” he said. “Then I go, ‘Ya!’ ”
After taking his oath of office Dec. 6, Martinez will spend two nights a
month making sure that homes and businesses receive the best service
possible from the Pico Water District.
He brings 24 years of experience in engineering and construction to the
board. The last 19 years have been spent in the Public Works Department
of Huntington Beach.
No one else on the board has his technical background, he said.
“That’s a big advantage,” he said. “I know the business.”
As a director, 45-year-old Martinez will shape decisions on issues
ranging from the rates to water quality, he said.
In talking to his constituency, he has come across complaints about odors
in the water.
It’s a problem Martinez thinks can be remedied by replacing certain pipes
in some of the older homes in Pico Rivera, which, over time, have
accumulated bacteria that can affect the nature of what flows from the
tap.
Complete replacement of some equipment is not always necessary, he said.
The problem often can be solved by retrofitting existing mains, water
lines, fire hydrants and meters before they are damaged.
Martinez’ co-workers tease him about his newly exalted status as a
politician, but they aren’t surprised he won over voters because he’s so
warm and friendly with customers at City Hall.
His supervisor, Dave Webb, hopes Martinez is prepared for the pressures
of public office.
“It’s definitely a different world,” he said.
But the father of two sees a bright future in the political fishbowl. And
so does his mother.
“My mom used to say, ‘Someday, you’re going to be mayor.’ ”
“I’m very pleased. I’m excited to serve the community,” Martinez said
after the election.
With 24 years of experience in public works, surveying and water
distribution, Martinez pinned his hopes in the water district race, on --
well, lots of technicalities.
“I’m really surprised that nobody with an engineering background has ever
run for a technical position,” he said.
“I’ve got the experience in construction, the ability to analyze field
data,” Martinez said. “I can look at a set of plans and say, ‘Oh yeah,
they’re putting in a water main.’
“I wonder if the existing directors can do that,” he added. “In my
opinion, I don’t think they do. In an emergency situation, are they
qualified to make those important technical decisions?”
Martinez, who has also worked in the engineering divisions for the Los
Angeles County Sanitation District and for Pico Rivera, also proposes to
bring that technical mentality to the district’s full-time employees.
“I think it’s very important that our water district starts looking at
more technical people, not just directors, but office and field
personnel,” he said. “If they make a wrong decision, that can cause a lot
of unnecessary expenditures, which could cost the taxpayer a lot of
dollars.”
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