Balboa ‘mayor’ retires
Deepa Bharath
He’s not just a familiar face on the peninsula.
Officer Bob Stephens is Mr. Balboa.
He’s there when the children at Newport Elementary get out of
school. He stops for a cups of coffee at little beachside cafes and
diners.
He pops into a neighbor’s yard to play with his dog. He chats up
bartenders. He greets the surfers. He makes house calls on sick
neighbors.
For years, this officer has owned the beach beat.
He has pounded the sand and sidewalks from Newport Pier to 42nd
Street, handling a range of calls from less serious loud parties and
disturbances to far more serious rapes and robberies.
On Thursday, on his 50th birthday, the cop walked his favorite
beat one last time. Stephens will officially retire today after
serving the city for more than 30 years.
He was given a fond farewell by members of the community and his
colleagues during a breakfast at Ruby’s Diner on the Balboa Pier on
Thursday.
“I’m going to miss it,” Stephens said. “It’s hard to suddenly stop
doing what you’ve been doing for 30 years.”
He started off as a cadet in the Newport Beach Police Department
in 1972. Three years later, the department hired him as a police
officer. He performed a variety of duties within the department, but
he always returned to what he loved to do the most -- foot patrol on
the peninsula.
Stephens is an outstanding example of how community policing
should work, Newport Beach Police Chief Bob McDonell said.
“He has an ownership of his beat, and that’s the way it should
be,” he said. “He has this connection with the community. That’s how
you get beneath the symptoms and get to solve the problems.”
Stephens’ ability to feel the heartbeat of the community is the
reason for his success, McDonell said.
“It’s enhanced his ability to get information and helped him to do
some exceptional police work,” he said.
Stephens sets a great example for the younger officers in the
department, Lt. Tom Gazsi said. Stephens was Gazsi’s advisor in the
city’s Explorer Scouts program.
“His whole career is an exceptional example for the department in
terms of integrity and enthusiasm,” he said.
Community members, who fondly call the officer “the Mayor of
Balboa,” said they will miss seeing him walking the beat.
“He’s a very compassionate man,” longtime resident Barbara
Thompson said. “He really cares about us, the people.”
Ron Miracle said he met Stephens 17 years ago.
“He actually saved my son,” Miracle said. “My son was a lifeguard
then, and he was near a place where this fishing boat knocked a few
people into the water and sailed away. The people there were angry
and tried to take it out on my son, but fortunately, Officer Stephens
came to his rescue.”
Robert Foster said he has been amazed at the way Stephens
interacted with children.
“He’s a very special person,” he said.
Foster said he’d even seen Stephens “face off” with Dennis Rodman,
the former NBA superstar and West Newport’s notorious party host.
“Everybody listens to Officer Stephens when he talks to them,” he
said. “Even Dennis Rodman.”
Stephens, who doesn’t live in the city, said he can’t stay away
from the peninsula.
“I’ll come back every now and then,” he said, gazing at the deep,
blue water by the pier.
The peninsula is one of a kind in terms of its neighborhoods and
community, Stephens said.
“If you come here on the Fourth of July, you see all these people
partying on the beach,” he said. “But you also see the people who
have lived here for years and years, their grandkids riding around on
their little bikes -- it’s a neat area.”
It’s got “a little bit of everything,” Stephens said. Even when he
started as a rookie, he knew this was the place he wanted to police
for the rest of his career.
His biggest accomplishment over the years?
“Making it to retirement,” he said with a laugh.
His life has been enriched by the experiences his job has given
him, Stephens said.
“I’ve been involved in people’s intimate and private moments --
life and death,” he said. “It’s a privilege to be able to do that.”
Stephens said it’s always a thrill for him to get letters from
kids whom he once dealt with.
“They write to me saying, ‘Officer Stephens, I don’t know if you
remember me or not.’ And then they say they’re doing OK now in spite
of the problems they had,” Stephens said. “It’s nice to get that
update.”
He also enjoyed working with his longtime partner Officer Mike
Deladurantey, better known as “Officer Del” on the peninsula,
Stephens said.
“We went to the academy together,” he said. “We worked in Crime
Scene Investigation together.”
But Deladurantey retired a few days earlier than he did because of
an injury, Stephens said.
“This area was as dear to him as it is for me,” he said.
Stephens said he planned to spend his last day on the job saying
his goodbyes.
Bob Friend, a longtime resident, said Stephens is irreplaceable.
“Someone will come in and take Bob’s job,” he said. “But they can
never take his place.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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