A closer look at Arbitech
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Barbara Diamond
“Who are they? And what are they doing trying to influence our local
election?” folks demanded when Arbitech LLC jumped into the City
Council race with an aggressive campaign against incumbent Wayne
Baglin.
Unable to put a face with the name, locals labeled the company as
“outsiders.”
“We’ve been here 4 1/2 years and we’ve been very active in the
community, but most of our customers aren’t in Laguna Beach and we
didn’t feel the need to advertise our presence or our [philanthropic]
activities,” said Torin Pavia, chief executive officer, board
president and a founder of the company, which sells computer hardware
on a global scale. “‘A Laguna Beach Company Reaching Around the
World’ is one of our slogans.”
The first time many locals ever heard of Arbitech were the
outraged cries when campaign donations were filed. Arbitech
executives had donated $35,000 to fund Citizens for Good, Honest
Government and Civility in Local Politics and Therefore Against Wayne
Baglin. More donations were reported in later filings, including
$15,000 from Ohana Holdings, an investor in Montage Resort and Spa,
to fund a poll.
The final accounting for all contributions and spending by
candidates and independent committees is due in January. All three
council candidates were the targets of “hit pieces” by independent
committees, over which the nontargeted candidates had no control.
“This past election was the worst on record in my 43 years in
town,” said Eleanor Henry.
WHO KNEW?
Despite their low profile, the election was not Arbitech’s first
foray into community affairs.
The company will be a Bronze-level sponsor for the Community Art
Project fundraiser in February.
This year, the company donated $1,000 to Laguna Outreach Community
Arts to support LOCA’s service programs to local children and another
$1,000 to the family of a nanny who was killed in a traffic accident.
The company also has sponsored, for three years, the Jimmy
Campanis/Tommy Lasorda Charity Golf Tournament, which raises funds
for underprivileged children in Southern California, notably the Gary
Center.
In 2002, Arbitech donated 15 state-of-the-art flat-screen monitors
to the Laguna Beach Police and Fire departments.
“We are Guardian Angels [department award] of the Police
Department,” Pavia said.
The company fields a softball team -- not nearly as successful as
the business -- and sponsors Little League teams here and elsewhere.
“One of our employees moved to Florida, so we have a team there,”
Pavia said.
The company was founded in 2000 by Pavia and Chief Operating
Officer William Poovey and is wholly owned by them with junior
partners Josh McCarter and Doug Kari.
Both founders lived in Laguna Beach when the company opened its
doors and both are surfers.
“We held literal and figurative board meetings in the water off
Thalia Street Beach,” Pavia said.
The company started with nine employees, with two children among
them.
“We now have 45 employees with 26 children,” Pavia said.
Pavia estimated that 25% of the employees and executives live in
Laguna Beach, including Poovey, Vice President Stuart Jeffries,
Facilities Manager Dave Williams and his assistant, Ryan Neptune.
Neptune is a fourth generation Lagunan, the grandson of the late
Terry Neptune.
“Ryan is our athletic director,” Pavia said of the former
volleyball coach at Laguna Beach High School. “Because of his
connection to the school, the first place we go with used, and
sometimes new, equipment is Laguna Beach High School,” Pavia said.
Donations to the school totaled about $10,000 last year.
“And we’ve already committed to a donation of $11,000 in products
for this year,” Poovey said.
The basis of the company was spelled out in Pavia’s thesis for his
master’s degree in business from USC. Two deans still act as
advisors.
MISSION STATED
“The definition of arbitrage is to buy low and sell high,” Pavia
said. “That’s what we do. We are a boutique of cutting-edge
technology, second-tier brokers that sell to corporate clients.”
The company occupies somewhere between 10,000 and 15,000 square
feet on the corner of Thalia and Glenneyre streets -- including the
old Reef Liquor store and suites upstairs from Sunset Drugs.
The large office space is divided into sales cubicles and the
“Pentagon,” an oddly shaped room where Jeffries heads up the buyers,
a conference room with a mural painted by Arts Commissioner Mike
Tauber.
The staff works on the latest equipment.
“We upgrade about every 18 months,” Pavia said.
Pavia may authorize the new equipment, and he knows what it can
do, but not necessarily why.
“I look so ‘dot-com,’ but I’m not. I’ve never played a video
game,” said Pavia, a trim, baby-faced, 32-year-old, comfortable in
casual duds.
He studied Roman history and business as an undergraduate at UCLA.
Poovey, also 32, is an attorney, but equally laid back in style.
The downstairs facility, which opens onto the alley between
Glennerye and Catalina streets is what first brought Baglin to
Arbitech’s attention -- and vice versa.
“We realize that deliveries are disruptive,” Pavia said. “That’s
why we are moving some of the functions to Carson, which we tried to
tell Wayne, but he wouldn’t listen to us.”
BACK STORY
“I think the situation with Arbitech was aggravated by
communication from the city manager that I was solely responsible for
the enforcement of the zoning code,” Baglin said. “I had not issued a
formal complaint. That was done by residents and businesses.”
City Manager Ken Frank declined to comment on Baglin’s statement.
Pavia said the spitting contest that led to Arbitech’s involvement
in the election began before the zoning issue was raised. He traces
it back to two years ago when the company complained to the police
department about Baglin’s customers allegedly parking in the
company’s loading zone, which they admit was overworked.
Baglin’s one-person real estate office is across Thalia Street
from Arbitech.
“We took pictures which we submitted to parking enforcement,”
Pavia said. “In my opinion that was the beginning. Baglin refused to
meet with us but said he would recuse himself from any Arbitech
issues.
“The next thing we knew, the senior code enforcement officer
showed up here. He ruled in our favor. No problems. Zero compliance
issues.”
Pavia absolutely believes that Baglin was the source for the
complaints about the zoning code violations that brought the code
enforcement officer to the business.
Baglin said not true.
“Inaccurate information was leaked to Arbitech by a council member
or a staff member at a closed session and leaked in a fashion that
led Arbitech to think I was out to get them,” Baglin said. “I have
documentation of the erroneous belief.”
After getting a favorable review from code enforcement, Pavia said
police officers took photographs of the delivery area. Arbitech
officials contacted council members and the city manager, complaining
of harassment.
“A few weeks later, we saw Wayne taking pictures of FedEx delivery
trucks,” Pavia said.
Speaking with the self assurance of youth and heady success, Pavia
said Baglin’s activities did not shake up company officials.
“We don’t lose often,” Pavia said.
That doesn’t mean they flout the law, Pavia said.
“A [Fire Department official] specified the best places for us to
park for deliveries and we absolutely have enforced that,” Pavia
said. “We are one of the few buildings on a double-wide alley so we
don’t block traffic if we park against the building.”
Neighbors have been asked to notify the company of any violations.
They have been given a direct line to call with complaints, Pavia
said.
“Wayne said that maybe Arbitech was against him because of zoning
problems with the city and [us] trying to intimidate other council
members,” Pavia said. “Those were all resolved.”
As of last week, Pavia and Baglin had never met.
THE CAMPAIGN
In an e-mail to employees dated Oct. 22, Pavia said that Baglin
continued to bully the company, but that was not reason enough to
launch a negative campaign.
Far better reasons, Pavia said, were the stories he heard from
business people who told him they feared retaliation if they spoke
out against Baglin. He also learned that the Police Employees Assn.
would not endorse Baglin for a consecutive term. Accusations of
rudeness toward the public, the city staff, and City Atty. Philip
Kohn rankled Pavia and the public.
Pavia had seen for himself the effect on one of his employees who
claimed Baglin had ridiculed him in public.
One employee had a negative experience with a home renovation
project.
“Wayne Baglin refused to meet with Jimmy [Whalen, the employee] to
talk about the issues,” Pavia said.
When the project was appealed, Pavia said, Baglin referred to the
employee as a 25-year-old kid and voted against it.
“The project was approved on a 3 to 2 vote, but Jimmy was so
appalled, he didn’t want to live there and sold the property at a
fire sale price and moved to Skyline Drive,” Pavia said.
Whalen, who was named Arbitech’s 2004 Salesman of the Year,
chaired the committee to oppose Wayne Baglin.
“I feel responsible for every person here,” Pavia said.
“I see our role as business is to take out the big bully who is
kicking sand in someone’s face. Bullying a bully is justice.”
Baglin admirer Tom Gervin said if putting pressure on staff is
being a bully, someone should look up the definition of bullish.
“It means optimistic,” Gervin said.
Pavia didn’t quite see it that way.
“I believe in a lot of Wayne’s environmental policies, but
everyone has a right to be heard and treated civilly,” said Pavia,
who moved out of town because of a distasteful experience with a
residential project.
Pavia said he felt Arbitech was ideally positioned and obligated
to reach out to the voters of Laguna.
The reach was brutal; perhaps not quite as nasty as the 1992
campaign against Ann Christoph, but it ranked right up there.
The mailers, no doubt carefully vetted by attorneys that Arbitech
could well afford, contained no lies, but not the whole truth,
either, and some sketchy accusations.
True: as each of the mailers stated, Baglin was indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on six counts of violating the state law
that says an elected official cannot benefit from deals with the
city.
But, the mailers did not include the fact that a jury found Baglin
not guilty of taking a commission on a property sale to the city in
which he represented the seller.
True: Laguna’s beaches are not pollution free. Baglin and admirer
Roger von Butow are the first to point out problems.
But, Baglin has been in the forefront of the effort to clean the
shoreline and the waters that feed into it.
The Arbitech mailers inflamed Baglin supporters and even some of
his critics, who decided to vote for him in protest.
Pavia makes no apologies.
“We knew we would have to do something to get people’s attention,”
Pavia said. “If Doug or I or a few Arbitech people have to answer a
few uncomfortable political questions -- so be it.
“What we gave Laguna was information. It was up to the voters what
they did with it.”
Baglin said, during a show of support for him at the Nov. 16
council meeting, that officials shouldn’t be elected on the basis of
negative campaigns.
“Say good things about your candidate,” he advised. “Don’t twist
and don’t malign.”
In fact, Pavia said, he would have had no problem if Baglin had
won the election, as long as the voters were aware of his conduct and
style and kept a closer watch.
Pavia does regret taking a $15,000 donation from Montage Resort
and Spa investor Ohana Holdings to fund a poll that he didn’t even
want.
“It was a mistake,” Pavia said.
COSTLY DECISION
Pavia made the decision to go after Baglin the day after he
watched “The Lion King” with his 2-year-old daughter.
“It’s the circle of life -- you can’t take more than you give,”
Pavia said.
The decision may or may not have cost Baglin the election --
absentee ballots cast before Arbitech entered the fray reflected the
final tally, according to the part-time political consultant Norm
Grossman -- but it did cost the company in terms of local public
esteem.
Arbitech’s integrity was called into question when the company
called Baglin’s integrity into question.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman named Arbitech as one of the senders of
mailers composed by “hostile, negative, bottom-feeding consultants.”
She said it would take Arbitech years to recover its good name.
Contrary to some remarks, Pavia said the company does not deal in
off brands but only in first-tier products: Hewlett-Packard, Compac,
Cisco, Sun and IBM.
“We had earmarked $30,000 this year for the computer wing at the
center,” Pavia said. “My grandmother is moving here and I wanted to
be able to take her to the center for bridge buddies.
“But a lot of that went into defending ourselves from Baglin’s
attacks. We fight fire with fire.”
Council members Toni Iseman and Elizabeth Pearson said negative
campaigns could cost the city some good candidates.
“Who’d want to put themselves through all that?” Pearson said.
HOW’S BUSINESS?
In March, the Orange County Business Journal presented Arbitech
with one of its five Excellence in Entrepreneurship Awards. Three
months later, “Entrepreneur” magazine and Dun and Bradstreet named
the young company No. 1 on the list of America’s 100 fastest growing
new businesses for 2003. It was a step up from the previous year, but
the company didn’t have far to go. It ranked No. 2 in 2002 and 2001,
when it debuted on the list.
“The reason for our success is integrity,” Pavia said. “I thought
we would be successful, but not this successful.”
Sales grew to $86 million in 2003 and are expected to increase
again this year.
“We couldn’t stop growing right now if we tried,” Pavia said.
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