Revved up about work
Marisa O’Neil
If you spot a 50-something dude, sporting a long ponytail and a
Harley-Davidson shirt, riding a Costa Mesa Police motorcycle, don’t
panic.
Costa Mesa city mechanic Billy Folsom, 52, has kept the police
department motorcycles running smoothly for the past 15 years. But
when the Harley-Davidson enthusiast -- who’s been around bikes since
he was 12 -- has to test drive the patrol motorcycles before
releasing them to the officers, he draws a fair amount of attention.
“People will call in, thinking the bike’s been stolen,” he
laughed.
Before working for the city, Folsom had his own shop, repairing
motorcycles. But with a wife and family, he opted for the security of
a city job as a general mechanic about 23 years ago, he said.
At that time, the city contracted motorcycle repair work to
outside sources, while the city garage maintained four-wheel city
vehicles, including police cars, maintenance trucks and fire engines,
said Paul Lewis, the shop’s lead mechanic for 30 years.
City officials decided about 15 years ago to also have the
motorcycles worked on in-house to save maintenance costs, giving
Folsom the chance to go back to fixing motorcycles.
He maintains the department’s nine Kawasakis and seven BMWs. The
department is gradually phasing out the Kawasakis in favor of the
BMWs, which have anti-lock brakes.
Just as the officers have had to adjust to a new kind of
motorcycle, Folsom has had to learn how to work on the new machines,
motorcycle Officer Bryan Wadkins said.
“It’s been a challenge for him the past couple years,” Wadkins
said. “He does a good job for us.”
In addition to repairing and maintaining the bikes, Folsom
conducts investigations on vehicles involved in major crashes to
determine if a mechanical failure was to blame.
The bikes are generally taken out of service every 50,000 miles to
prevent high maintenance costs, Folsom said. Because motorcycle
officers put about 1,000 miles a month on them, the average patrol
lifespan for a bike is four or five years, he said.
And officers tend to ride the bikes harder than the average
motorcyclist, he said.
“They learn to push the bike to its limits,” Folsom said.
Motorcycle officers have to rely on their instincts, training and
their machines to avoid accidents on the road. And while nothing can
stop distracted drivers from pulling in front of a motorcycle,
well-maintained brakes and other parts help keep officers as safe as
possible, Costa Mesa Sgt. Scott May said.
“Just riding a motorcycle is one of the most hazardous jobs you
can have in the police department,” Folsom said. “You have to treat
[motorcycles] like a helicopter or airplane. You can’t have anything
wrong with them. If a bike goes down, an officer’s going to get
hurt.”
In a job that requires reliable machines, officers’ lives are in
Folsom’s hands, May pointed out.
And Folsom has developed a good rapport with those officers over
the years, which helps put them at ease about the safety of their
bikes, May said.
“He puts a lot of care into it,” he said. “If we get hurt, if we
fall, you could imagine the amount of stress that puts on him. It’s
personal, like a friend doing the work, not someone we don’t know
doing the work.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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