Q&A; -- A view from atop the fair
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There are pig races, wine tastings and big-name concerts. There is a
rodeo, a derby, crafts, quilts and crops. Clowns, jugglers, dancers,
singers . . . the list of people and events at the Orange County Fair
stretches on and on.
And the person tasked with overseeing it all is Becky Bailey-Findley,
a short-haired blond mother of three who spends the 17 days of the fair
working long hours and at night retires to the quiet of the nearby hotel
room she rents every year at this time.
Bailey-Findley spoke with Pilot Features Editor Jennifer K Mahal about
the challenges and fun of putting together the event that will bring
close to a million people to Costa Mesa in the coming days.
How did you become involved in the Orange County Fair?
We moved to Fullerton when I was about 5. My father started teaching
agriculture at Fullerton High School and then moved to Sunny Hills High
School in Fullerton. And at the same time, he became the livestock
supervisor here at the Orange County Fair.
So I started coming -- as you will see as you tour, you will see kids
in among the people setting up, and they are the children of either the
exhibitors or whatever -- but I was one of those kids. I ran around this
place a lot when I was a kid.
Then I joined 4-H, and when I was about 10, I started participating in
the programs that were offered here at the fair through 4-H.
I . . . started working part-time, fair-time only, when I graduated
from high school in 1972, and worked every summer here. Went to college
and got a couple of degrees, taught high school -- did other things, but
I always had the summers where I would come work at the fair.
In 1982, I stopped teaching, and I did some contract work for the
fair. At that point, they still didn’t have a lot of full-time employees,
maybe six or seven in the early ‘80s. So I did a lot of part-time
contract work for them. We started Youth Expo, which is our youth fair in
the spring, and I was very involved in that. . . . Then I went full time
working at Phoenix House (a residential treatment facility) for about
four years and then came full time here in 1986. Finally at that point
they had added some full-time positions that were attractive. And what I
started back doing was the contests and the competitions. I was the
exhibit supervisor. And that’s how I entered back in the fair.
How long does it take to prepare for these 17 days?
You know, we used to say that we would start in August for the next
July, but we’re really now, we’re probably 18 months out. Some of our
planning and work, we’ll start that soon. Of course, not all the details,
but you have to have some things in place so that you can solicit
sponsorships and can try and bring in partners for the following years.
So, I’d say now we’re at about 18 months.
There have been problems in the distant past with fair workers and
rides. What steps has the fair taken to ensure the safety and well-being
of fairgoers?
I think one of the most significant changes that happened with the
fair in terms of safety was RCS -- Ray Cammack Shows carnival -- came to
us in the early ‘90s. And their standards of how they treat their
employees and what they do to train them and the preventive steps that
they take, such as mandatory drug testing, and we also do the Megan’s Law
on all of our employees, not just the carnival workers. The fair hires,
as well, an independent safety company who inspect the rides daily, and
they’re also inspected by Cal-OSHA. And then the rides are also highly
supervised by the workers and sometimes shut down if they notice
something, then they’ll bring a safety team in to inspect. Our safety
company also inspects the fairgrounds, because it isn’t just the carnival
where you have potential problems.
What is the best part of the fair for you?
Of course, this week, all we can hardly wait for is when will the food
stands open up. We’re just like everyone else. You know one day,
Wellmon’s, the grinder sandwich stand, opened early and we just -- wooosh
-- ran over there. And yesterday Rose’s Mexican stand opened early, so we
can hardly wait today to see what opens early.
The fair to me is a huge -- it’s a bringing together of diversity and
it’s a lot of different types of diversity. It’s ages, young and old.
It’s people from different economic levels, people from different parts
of the nation. It’s people from different parts of the world, different
ethnicities, different cultures -- and I don’t mean just ethnic cultures.
There’s a culture that follows Speedway races. There’s a culture that
follows rodeo. There’s a culture that are many of the people who sell
things here -- we call them pitchmen. That’s a culture. It’s a certain
type of people, and it is so fun for me to watch all those people come
together.
Once the fair is up and running, then I just like standing out there
and watching people interact and do the things that we’ve planned for
them to do and have a good time with it.
What’s the biggest challenge you have in overseeing all of this
being put together?
Well, the biggest challenge is also the greatest joy. The biggest
challenge is bringing all that diversity together and then making sure
everyone gets along.
And it’s a coordination not only of people then, it’s a coordination
of details. You can’t move a piece of equipment without it having a
ripple effect and so, it’s not only training staff to deal with that, but
then we have all these outside contractors that come in. And how do you
get them to make sure and say, ‘Hey look, we’ve got to follow a certain
plan with this so you can get your job done, but you’re not adversely
affecting someone else.’
What is your favorite fair food?
Tasti Chips. I love Tasti Chips. They’re way down on Livestock Lane,
and they’re fresh potato chips. They’re thinly sliced potato slices, deep
fried, of course. I’m surprised I don’t have a child that looks like a
Tasti Chip.
Bio Box
Becky Bailey-Findley
Age: 47
Birthplace: Corona
Residence: Anaheim Hills
Job: General manager of the Orange County Fair and Exposition Center
Family: Husband of 26 years and three children -- two daughters and a
son
Miscellaneous: Once raised sheep and cattle. Her son, 19, is dyeing
his hair green to reflect the fair’s citrus theme (green for lime).
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