No Anaheim move for Costa Mesa city manager
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- City officials can breathe a sigh of relief. City
Manager Allan Roeder is not going anywhere -- at least for now.
In an unexpected move, the Anaheim City Council voted Tuesday to fill
its city manager vacancy from within its organization, eliminating an
opportunity for Roeder to leave.
“While I certainly think Allan is very well qualified, we are just as
happy to have him stay here,” Mayor Libby Cowan said.
Last month, Roeder announced he would be interested in filling the
soon-to-be vacant city manager position in Anaheim, now held by the
retiring James Ruth. He was waiting to hear if Anaheim would launch an
outside search for other candidates before he would seriously consider
it.
The decision was made for him when Anaheim council members appointed
Assistant City Manager David Morgan to fill the position that will be
vacated by Ruth. Roeder is good friends with Morgan and congratulated him
in person at the monthly Orange County City Managers Assn. luncheon
Wednesday.
His City Hall colleagues are not the only ones breathing easier,
Roeder said. The council’s decision means Roeder gets to avoid making a
difficult choice between his professional and personal priorities, he
said.
“I wasn’t looking forward to making that call. It would have been a
tough decision,” Roeder said.
Roeder said he has never been unhappy in the city of Costa Mesa but
could not ignore the management opportunities Anaheim boasted -- its own
utilities, as well as being home to two professional sports teams and
popular tourist attractions such as Disneyland.
If given another ideal opportunity, with the right mix of professional
enhancement and a good community, Roeder said he would consider leaving
Costa Mesa.
“It would really have to be a perfect fit,” he said. “If it doesn’t
happen, I will have had a fabulous and wonderful opportunity in Costa
Mesa.”
Rumors of his possible departure sparked a lot of resident and staff
input, Roeder said, both good and bad. But all the positive comments --
which outweighed the negative -- reminded him of the wonderful people he
would be leaving.
“The accolades I’ve gotten are really representative of my colleagues
and the community,” Roeder said.
Starting as an unpaid intern, Roeder quickly climbed to the top of
Costa Mesa, becoming the city manager in 1985.
Colleagues were not surprised by Roeder’s announcement and agreed the
move would be a step up. Cowan called the Anaheim city manager job a
“plum position.”
“Allan has an incredible reputation as a city manager and a problem
solver. It’s no doubt his name would surface as a replacement,” Cowan
said last month.
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