Bill Bracken is the former chef at a Newport Beach hotel began feeding the homeless and needy with his Bracken’s Kitchen social enterprise a few years ago. In response to the pandemic, he ramped up the number of free meals served from 450,000 in 2019 to 1.3 million so far this year and has employed laid-off restaurant workers to produce those meals. (File photo by Matt Masin, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner poses for a portrait during Spring Training Photo Day at Camelback Ranch in Phoenix on Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020.
The former Cal State Fullerton player hit three home runs in the Dodgers’ postseason run, including two in the World Series, to help lead the Dodgers to their first championship since 1988. He was criticized for returning to the field to celebrate the Dodgers’ title after he received positive coronavirus results during the final game but later apologized. During the pandemic, his foundation has helped the Dream Center provide meals to those in need. (File photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Daniel Kim, the co-founder of the Dragon Kim Foundation, along with his wife Grace, saw the work being done in Las Vegas to feed those in need because of the pandemic and launched an effort in Orange County in June. Delivering Food With Dignity has raised more than $300,000 and served more than 50,000 meals so far. “It’s not just delivering food,” Kim said in June. “It’s delivering a message that we all care.” (Courtesy of Daniel Kim)
Rabbi Marcia Tilchin is the founder of the Orange County Jewish Collaborative organized and facilitated a variety of programs that serve people of all faiths, including social justice programs to enhance the lives of the homeless as well as detained refugees. Also she holds weekly internet religious and educational programs via the Internet. (File photo by BILL ALKOFER, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Former Saddleback College football player Phillip Blanks, 28, rushed to an apartment building ablaze in Phoenix, Ariz. on Friday, July 3 and made a diving catch of a burned 3-year-old boy dropped by his mother off a third-story balcony. (Courtesy of ABC7)
Carlos Perea became the first undocumented resident to serve on a commission in Santa Ana (or Orange County, for that matter). He has continued to push the conversation on immigrant justice as an activist for more than a decade in Orange County. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Oscar Rodriguez, who was a candidate for city council, was commended by a reader who nominated him for his work on housing discrimination, immigration rights, tenant protections, code enforcement compliance and food insecurity. He has organized large food distributions in Huntington Beach’s Oak View neighborhood. (Photo courtesy Oscar Rodriguez)
Laura Gomez, a third-grade teacher at Glenn Martin Elementary School in Santa Ana, sits in her empty classroom after teaching her students online on Wednesday, December 16, 2020. Gomez was named California Teacher of the Year in October and has taught in the Santa Ana Unified School District for 26 years. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Lisa Ackerman: The founder and executive director of The Autism Community in Action remained a rock for the county’s autism community despite the challenges of distance learning and budget constraints. “I’m watching all of this and I’m scared to death for our families,” Ackerman said earlier this year. “In the 20 years doing this, it’s probably the most stressful time I’ve seen (for) parents.” (File photo by Drew A. Kelley, Contributing Photographer)
In November, Tanya Doby, a 41-year-old business owner and mother of two young children, became the first Black person elected to the Los Alamitos City Council. That accomplishment carries a dose of irony. Doby ran against longtime City Councilman Dean Grose, who as mayor in 2009 brought national and cringe-worthy attention to the city — mass-emailing an image of watermelons growing on the White House lawn after President Barack Obama’s inauguration. (Photo by Kyusung Gong/Contributing Photographer)
Raffi Kaprelyan, who started at Knott’s while a student at Kennedy High, is now a VP with parent company Cedar Fair and guided the strategy to pivot to food events as a way around the park’s closure. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Ellen Anh’s work as Korean community services executive director has been a lifeline for many Korean Americans in OC as they battle the pandemic. She has also been a part of the OC Health Care Agency’s API Testing Strike Team. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
The needs of others during the pandemic prompted Jay Doshi to create the California Social Resource Database, an online directory to help those in need during pandemic, specific to each of the state’s 58 counties; other teens kept it updated (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
UC Irvine’s chancellor Howard Gillman oversaw what some call the greatest crisis in the school’s 55-year-history with the drastic changes necessitated by the pandemic. Most on-campus activities were suspended in a shift to remote instruction. At the same time, UCI Health became a focus of Orange County’s fight against COVID-19. (Courtesy of UC Irvine)
Anne Grey, executive director of the Alzheimer’s Association in Orange County, guided her staff and volunteers in an effort to keep serving vulnerable older adults and their caregivers despite the pandemic. On March 12, every program and class offered in Orange County pivoted to virtual without any cancellations to continue providing support and resources to guide caregivers whose circumstances were thrown into turmoil. (File photo by Sam Gangwer, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Scott Jennie, a Laguna Beach fire captain and state director of the Firefighter Cancer Support Network has worked hard to clean the sooty image from the fire service. This year, he helped raise $10,000 for firefighter education and in October partnered with a East Coast nonprofit to bring responder wipes to the West Coast for the first time. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Since the early days of the pandemic, Dean Kim has opened his OC Baking Company as a storefront to help a dozen industry colleagues do takeout and retail. There are also free meals for healthcare workers. Kim, who has diabetes, used his Payroll Protection grant to train all his employees as bakers. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
As CEO of both MemorialCare Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley and MemorialCare Saddleback Medical Center in Laguna Hills, Marcia Manker, 60, has been tasked with keeping thousands of health workers safe during the coronavirus crisis. The demand last March was sudden and competitive. “We have spared no expense to get our employees the protective equipment they need,” said the Huntington Beach resident. “It continues to be very expensive and economically challenging. But we make our staff our No. 1 priority.”
(File photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Jonathan Martinez is an up and coming muralist from Santa Ana whose wild-life themed artwork is being put to use in National Wildlife Federation campaign to save L.A. County’s cougars (Photo by Drew A. Kelley, Contributing Photographer)
The technology Tiffany Pang innovated and created played a key role in getting several hundred people experiencing homelessness into services and off the streets as part of the North Orange County Public Safety Task Force. It’s generating significant interest from other parts of the state as they look at her technology and the approach of the task force as a model for other parts of the state. “You no longer have to rely on the enthusiasm of the case manager or the outreach worker,” she said. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Ada Briceno and her union, UNITE-HERE, pushed for a bill to give laid off workers in the hospitality industry a guaranteed right to return to their jobs when their employers resume business. Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed the bill, but the union has won similar provisions in some local cities, including L.A. and Long Beach. Also, the Democratic Party, which she chairs in OC, ran more local candidates than any time in its history and flipped 20 seats from red to blue, including in deep-red areas like Huntington Beach and San Clemente, and took a plurality of school board seats across OC for the first time.
(File Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Former UC Irvine chancellor Michael Drake was named president of UC statewide, the first Black person to hold the job. “Dr. Drake personifies the qualities we looked for in selecting a new president: He is committed to seeing the whole student and to supporting all our students. He recognizes the incalculable value of faculty and staff to the University’s mission, and he understands the importance of the public and private partnerships that help us achieve that mission,” John A. Pérez, chair of the UC Board of Regents, said when Drake was appointed. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
History buff and author Chris Epting gave people something to talk about besides coronavirus with his public television series “Hidden Huntington Beach.” The show highlights a whimsical and often quirky past. Reminders of the past “hide in plain sight”: old jail cells outside a pub, a gas station designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Jr., a century-old silo. “Focusing on history instead of political differences,” Epting said, “helps pull the city together in a positive way.” (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Jordan Harding, the general manager of City National Grove of Anaheim has been responsible for overseeing 40 drive-in, COVID-safe live events and keeping staff employed during a pandemic. He and his team at Nederlander and The Grove pivoted quickly to keep things intact in an otherwise crumbling industry. (Courtesy of Jordan Harding)
Dr. Edward Kim was named physician-in-chief to guide the staff and community outreach for the comprehensive hospital campus City of Hope is building in Irvine to improve cancer care here. (Photo courtesy of City of Hope Orange County)(Photo courtesy of City of Hope Orange County)
Once the pandemic hit, Los Amigos High teacher Rebeca Martinez made herself accessible to students longer hours than required. She understood that many students were low-income and didn’t have access to regular study or academic materials, so she made her social media a way for students to engage in the material. (Photo by Billy Hoang)
Girl Scouts of Orange County nominated Saachi Pavani and said she stood up to make a difference when the pandemic hit. She not only made hundreds of masks personally but she coordinated the distribution of 38,000 masks to local nonprofits. Saachi also conducted a donation drive raising $3,513 and collecting 7,193 units of food to be donated to the Southern California Hospice Foundation. (Courtesy of Saachi Pavani)
Jacob Eusebio, left, Natalie Rodriguez, center, and Andy Loughran, right, all juniors at Orange Lutheran High School, started a program called, Serving Advantage, for special needs kids to learn how to play tennis, in Villa Park on Friday, December 11, 2020.(Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
J.P. Rose, the lawyer for the Center for Biological Diversity, was successful in a lawsuit that could help sustain the mountain lion population in the Santa Ana Mountains. The suit scales down the size of the Altair development in Temecula, keeping clear land targeted for a freeway wildlife crossing. (Courtesy of J.P. Rose)
In conjunction with the OC Probation Department, Kirk Anderson, the program administrator for Juvenile Hall School, created the first distance-learning model in California to provide education for all of OC’s incarcerated youths during this pandemic. He accomplished this at several sites within the first month of the stay at home order in March.
(Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Vanessa Bryant is the wife of one and mother of another of the victims of the January helicopter crash that claimed the lives of nine OC residents. She also became the face of the region’s grief for her husband Kobe, daughter Gianna and the others who died, and her occasional updates via social media were welcomed by fans who sought out a connection. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP, File)
UC Irvine professor Rick Hasen has been quoted by or appeared on just about every news outlet out there as an expert on election law, opining about the Trump campaign’s numerous unsuccessful legal challenges.
(Courtesy of UC Irvine)
OC native Ferin Kidd not only creates videos of young hip hop artists, but he has become a community organizer after the killing of George Floyd. He shot a documentary on the protests in Minneapolis and in Orange County, entitled, “Bang4Change.” (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Mike Kraman led the Transportation Corridor Agencies as its CEO for six years, retiring earlier this year after helping finalize an agreement with Caltrans and the Orange County Transportation Authority to end decades of debate over the extension of the 241 Toll Road. The agreement announced in March plans for the extension Los Patrones Parkway to Avenida La Pata instead of running the 241 through San Clemente to the 5 freeway. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
The hometown celebrity, who made his name as a mixed martial arts star, took the most votes in a field of 15 Huntington Beach City Council candidates. His first night on the job, Tito Ortiz was named mayor pro tem, putting him in line for mayor next year. Affable and outspoken, Ortiz has raised eyebrows for embracing far-right conspiracy theories – including the belief that coronavirus is an exaggerated health risk.
(Photo courtesy City of Huntington Beach)
Rep. Katie Porter speaks to supporters during the opening of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s battleground station for the 2020 election in Irvine on Saturday, Nov. 9, 2019.
Porter continued to establish herself as a force in the House of Representatives as the Democratic Party’s go-to person to ask tough questions. She handily won reelection after proving herself to be a strong fundraiser for her campaign as well as others’. (File photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)
After a Feb. 2 fire that destroyed the organization’s Irvine headquarters and amid the pandemic, Jerri Rosen, the CEO and founder of Working Wardrobes, rebuilt the organization and reopened in the early fall. “We are beyond blessed with donations, good quality donations,” Rosen said. “The community really rallied.” (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Henry Samueli, the owner of the Ducks, along with his wife Susan, announced plans for OCVibe, a $3 billion mixed-use entertainment development around Honda Center. The first phase is expected to be open to the public in 2024. “As we continue to deal with the challenge of coronavirus and a struggling economy, we look to OC Vibe and other major projects as a vital part of our recovery,” Anaheim spokeswoman Lauren Gold said in a statement. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
After three decades in the military and fire service, John Pono Van Gieson took on the job of launching Placentia’s newly created fire department as chief when the city left the Orange County Fire Authority.
(Photo by Michael Kitada, Contributing Photographer)
Orange County Latino Giving Circle founder Luis Cachua
led an effort to raise money to support Latino-led nonprofits in OC. In September 2020, the circle announced its first round of grants. It invested $13,500 to support Chicanos Unidos CHISPA Education Fund, both from Santa Ana. (Courtesy of Luis Cachua)
Nadia Ansari, a junior at Sage Hill High School, earned a $5,000 grant from the Dragon Kim Foundation to produce a documentary about chronic pain for children. Nadia is also a student who suffers from chronic pain, and has endured intense physical and emotional stress since being diagnosed in middle school. She has already won an Outstanding Achievement Award from the Indie Short Fest, a Los Angeles international film festival.(Photo courtesy of Ansari family)
Chloe Mei Espinosa Mater Dei High freshman Chloe Mei Espinosa was nominated for Nickelodeon and Time Magazine Kid of the Year awards after her Skip the Plastic Straw drive led some 120 OC schools to eliminate plastic straws on campus. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)
From the ocean to the mountains, Mark Girardeau wants to show people the best of Orange County. The photographer created the website orangecountyoutdoors.com, a way to connect nature enthusiasts who share his passions. He’s documented countless whales up close, creating several viral videos that reach millions online. (Courtesy fo Mark Girardeau)
Santa Ana neighborhood leader Dale Helvig successfully led the fight against a controversial development project, forcing the city council to overturn its approval. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
From left, comedians Chad Kroeger, of San Clemente and JT Parr,, of San Juan Capistrano present themselves as guileless surfer dudes, visited the Huntington Beach Pier last summer on a mission to “solve the mask shortage.” Toting a box of face masks, the duo offered freebies to unamused non-compliers – eliciting reactions that speak volumes of the coronavirus divide. Captured on video, the laugh-out-loud exchanges have attracted more than 2 million YouTube views. They also took their act to their hometown of San Clemente.(Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Dave Min defeated incumbent Sen. John Moorlach to represent the 37th District in the California Senate. “It is an incredible honor and I am unbelievably humbled by the fact that well over 250,000 Orange County voters chose to mark their ballots for me,” said the UC Irvine law professor, who outraised Moorlach by more than $1 million. (Min For Congress via AP)
Alana Yegsigian-Smith has worked tirelessly with Saddleback Church food distribution. She worked since March all over Orange County. She volunteers at distribution sites, like this one in Anaheim, 3-5 days a week since March. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
John Villa, the executive director for the Huntington Beach Wetlands Conservancy, has been doing a lot for these often overlooked estuaries, especially securing $2.5 million to buy the Newland Marsh at the corner of Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway for restoration. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Like millions of other seniors, the Santa Ana High valedictorian Priscilla Arceo could not attend an in-person graduation. Still, selected in a nationwide audition, Arceo ended up with a much bigger audience – giving a taped address in a virtual ceremony headlined by Barack Obama. “When we get knocked down, we get up stronger,” she assured the Class of 2020. Arceo, 18, now attends UC Santa Barbara. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Local pitmaster Daniel Castillo quit his job as a corporate chef for Whole Foods and, despite pandemic setbacks, opened Heritage Barbecue in San Juan Capistrano. In May he was awarded $10,000 from national charcoal company Kingsford as part of a program to recognize America’s outstanding pitmasters. (Courtesy of Heritage Barbecue)
Ex-El Modena High baseball player Freddie Freeman won the NL MVP award after four top-10 finishes earlier in his career. He was tremendous in the shortened season that started soon after his battle with COVID-19, during which his fever reached 104.5 degrees at one scary point. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
Anthony Hsieh is the CEO of Loan Depot, the nation’s second-largest non-bank mortgage maker. Not only is the company preparing to go public and growing fast in this year’s housing rebound, but he also helped organize the War Heroes on Water sportfishing fundraiser for vets. He paid $61 million in OC’s priciest home purchase ever and survived a serious fight with the coronavirus. (Photo courtesy of National Philanthropy Day Orange County)
Remember “Parasite”? Miky Lee financed the making of the Oscar-winning movie. The Laguna Beach resident also has been a Korean entertainment mogul, working on various K-Pop projects such as KCON. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)
Tustin Police Sgt. Robert Nelson who grew up in Compton made a heartfelt, candid video about racism for his friends after the killing of George Floyd. Police Chief Stu Greenberg got word of it and, despite the video’s edgy message, embraced it – posting it on the department’s social media. (Photo courtesy of Tustin Police Department)
Potrock achieved his dream job of president of the Disneyland resort in May, two months after its parks and hotels were closed by the pandemic. In the nine months since, he has lost 11,500 employees to layoffs, thousands more to furloughs, and has made the case to the state that the parks should be able to reopen when Orange County reaches the orange or moderate tier for COVID transmission. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Coupon blogger Gina Schweppe from Ladera Ranch provides families the tools to save money each week on groceries and essentials. She shares her insights on hot deals with her audience of more than 30,000 subscribers to her YouTube channel. (Courtesy of Gina Schweppe)
Cal State Fullerton president Fram Virjee and others at the university made the early decision to have a fall semester that was mostly virtual while many schools delayed the tough call as long as possible. The plan, at this point, is to have students return to campus for the fall semester in 2021. “Today, despite being in the throes of a national surge of the virus, we are seeing glimmers of hope for the future,” he said in a recent statement. (File Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Orange County’s health officer and the director of the Orange County Health Care Agency Dr. Clayton Chau handled both roles at the most crucial time possible. In the health officer position, he replaced Dr. Nichole Quick, who resigned June 8 after facing significant public backlash for some of her decisions. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Stanford student Olivia Fu became a key organizer member of CUSD Against Racism, a student-led group that has inspired change in the county’s largest school district. (Courtesy of Olivia Fu)
Philanthropist Julia Argyros and her husband, former U.S. ambassador George Argyros, donated $7.5 million in November to Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian to help the hospital’s nursing services. “As a direct result of Julia Argyros’ extraordinary generosity and kindness, her name has become synonymous with Hoag’s commitment to nursing excellence,” Flynn A. Andrizzi, president of the Hoag Hospital Foundation, said in a statement.(File photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
UCI professor Elizabeth Cauffman launched a “young adult court” program in 2018 after receiving a $780,000 grant from the National Institute of Justice that helps young men who have served time get back on their feet and clear their record. The program had its first graduate in June.(Courtesy UC Irvine)
The Coyle family at Fable & Spirit in the Lido Marina neighborhood in Newport Beach on Sunday, June 23, 2019. Pictured, from left, Son Drew Coyle, director of spirits, Darren and Jean Coyle, owner, and daughter Ali Coyle is the sommelier. Fable & Spirit in Newport Beach was one of only two O.C. restaurants to be awarded “discoveries” status in this year’s California Michelin Guide. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
OCFA Fire Chief Brian Fennessy is shown in an area recently burned by the Bond Fire off Santiago Canyon Road near Silverado Canyon on Wednesday, December 16, 2020. Fennessy oversaw the battles against fires that devastated large areas of the county in 2020. OCFA worked with neighboring agencies and Cal Fire as the region’s so-called fire season seemed to expand once again.
(Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Angels’ manager Joe Maddon embraced his return to the community and worked with groups to help homeless people and other groups. Recently, the Salvation Army turned to him as a digital ambassador to help make up for its lack of physical locations for people to donate. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Tam Nguyen, owner of Advance Beauty College started the do-gooder group “Nailing it for America” during the pandemic. He’s one of the leading Vietnamese Americans looking out for the nail industry in California during shutdowns. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Buena Park’s chief of police Corey Sianez is the chairman of the North Orange County Public Safety Task Force. The group is comprised of several police departments working together with community-benefit organizations to provide services – a service first, enforcement-as-a-last–resort approach. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Kyle Hansen and Andrew Levin started Recycle for Veterans, which held multiple beach cleanups this year and has placed several dozen veterans in new jobs. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
From left, Harald Hermann and Mark Lowry, directors of Orange County’s two food banks, Second Harvest Food Bank and OC Food Bank, respectively, worked individually and together to get food to thousands of people hurt economically by the pandemic. (Photos by Orange County Register photographers, Jeff Gritchen and Leonard Ortiz)
Jason Austin took over as director of care coordination when Susan Price left for Costa Mesa’s assistant city manager job. It fell to him to oversee Project Roomkey and Project Homekey that put at-risk homeless people in hotels and motels. (Photo courtesy Jasson Austin)
Geoffrey Clayton: JSerra High’s girls basketball coach mentored his team in social justice issues after the killing of George Floyd and inspired them to do community service in L.A. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
With help from three friends, Sage Hill School graduate Jackie Ni built SupplyCrate.org, an online nexus for procuring and distributing PPE (more than 375,000 pieces). Then came BLMsupplycrate.org, to facilitate requests and donations to organizers and activists involved in social justice protests. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Amanda Ells, is an LVN and a hospital liaison for St. Joseph Home Health. She has been working two jobs to care for patients throughout the pandemic. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Andrew Pulver, the superintendent of Los Alamitos Unified, led his district to become the first in the county to receive the state waiver to reopen and help the district through numerous challenges in the pandemic. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Leo Razo, chef at Villa Roma in Laguna Hills prepares meals for homeless shelters and each week creates more than 250 additional meals for families in need and vulnerable people. He also distributes grocery boxes to families. His Paella with a Purpose program benefits local nonprofits. (Photo by Drew A. Kelley, Contributing Photographer)
Tammy Tumbling, executive vice president and chief operating officer of Orange County Community Foundation started the African American Alliance Fund with her own money in the wake of George Floyd’s killing to raise awareness about systemic racism and support programs that advance African Americans within Orange County and surrounding communities. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Iliana Soto Welty is the executive director of MECCA, a multi-ethnic collaboration of agencies aimed at reducing disparities for people of color. She launched a mental health initiative for the underserved. (Photo courtesy Iliana Soto Welty)
Danilo Batson started the Spicy Green Book online directory of Black-owned eateries and food services, taking his inspiration from the historic Green Book directory. (Photo by Brittany Murray, Press-Telegram/SCNG)
Before the pandemic, Kim Goll and First 5 Orange County issued the report “Orange County Child Care Landscape Analysis.” that found there was a dearth of quality and affordable child care in the county. Thanks in part to that report, the Orange County Board of Supervisors approved $5 million in CARES Act funds to be given to child care providers. In response to problems created by the pandemic, Goll and First 5 OC an additional $5.1 million from the county.
(Photo by Steven Georges)
Dr. Jim Keany heads up Mission Hospital’s Emergency Room and has directed much of the COVID response. He also led a federal task force that treated some of the first Americans at Miramar after being infected with COVID on the Diamond Princess cruise ship.(Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Fine-dining chef Joshua Lozano who was suddenly out of work because of the pandemic, started selling food on Instagram, where his Basque-style burnt cheesecakes became an instant hit. Despite being self-employed, he still held a charity dinner/turkey drive to provide Thanksgiving meal kits to 250 Santa Ana families.(Courtesy of Sobremesa)
Hugh Nguyen, Clerk -Recorder for the County of Orange, at a temporary marriage center he placed at the Honda Center. When the pandemic shut down public offices that issue marriage licenses, Orange County’s Clerk-Recorder Hugh Nguyen made love happen in the Honda Center parking lot, using ticket booths to protect his employees. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Mariana Nita, a registered nurse who owns Best Elderly Care in Villa Park, a facility for six women ranging in age from 85 to 95, realized early on COVID-19 would likely reach Southern California, possibly endangering her vulnerable residents. So in early February, Nita, one of the first nursing home operators to do so, stepped up cold and flu protocols for her residents and implemented other protection measures.(Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Jack Rico was a standout among the Fullerton College graduates this summer at age 13. The La Mirada teen was the youngest ever for the campus, earning four associate degrees – art and human expression, social behavior, social science and history. (Photo by Keith Durflinger, Contributing Photographer)
For years, chef Bruno Serato, through his Caterina’s Club, has been cooking up pasta meals for thousands of children a day. But since the coronavirus outbreak, the food assistance program has served more than 1.6 million meals to more than 160,000 families. The nonprofit also provides pantry packs, containing an assortment of staples, and rental assistance. (Photo By Jeff Antenore, Contributing Photographer)
When elected in 2018, Anaheim mayor Harry Sidhu promised to keep Angels baseball. This year he delivered, shepherding a stadium sale deal that – while not universally cheered – will lead to a major redevelopment of the area with shops and restaurants, a showpiece public park and thousands of new homes. (File Photo by Kevin Sullivan, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Michael Sean Wright, the founder of Wound Walk, Wright, a former EMT, goes out to homeless folks in parks and on the streets with medical supplies to tend to their wounds. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Laguna Hills High graduate Shane Bieber dominated the shortened baseball season and was the unanimous winner of the American League Cy Young Award. The 25-year-old led all MLB pitchers with eight victories, 122 strikeouts and a 1.63 ERA.(AP Photo/David Dermer, File)
Donald Dermit has been a street pastor to the homeless in Orange County and has become Judge David O. Carter’s grassroots surrogate in moving people from encampments in Buena Park, Placentia and Fullerton to new shelters. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Beckie Gomez termed out on the Tustin City Council in 2018. Although respected, she was never named mayor in her eight years as men kept trading around the title among themselves. She ran again this November and comfortably won. Gomez also sits on the Orange County Board of Education, where in July she cast the only vote against schools reopening without mandatory masks and social distancing. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Orange County Registrar of Voters Neal Kelley was the voice of competence and information about election integrity in a highly volatile year. There were no significant issues in a general election where more than 1.5 million Orange County voters cast their ballots – that was 87.3 of all registered voters in the county, by the way. (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Andrew Noymer is an epidemiologist and professor of public health at UC Irvine and has become an essential and independent interpreter of Orange County’s pandemic trends. (Courtesy of UC Irvine)
Alesia Robinson emerged as an African American activist who helped organize and use social media to get word out about protests after George Floyd’s killing. (Courtesy of Alesia Robinson)
Former Irvine Company executive Dan Young helped quietly push the OCVibe project at Honda Center through Anaheim’s political maze without any controversy for Ducks owners Henry and Susan Samueli. (Courtesy of THE IRVINE COMPANY)
Richard Stein led ArtsOC’s successful efforts to generate more than $2.7 million in COVID-19 relief for local artists and arts organizations. (Courtesy of Richard Stein)
Young Kim, left, and Michelle Steel were elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in November, 2020.
After all of Orange County’s House seats turned blue in 2018, Republican Kim unseated Gil Cisneros in California’s 39th District and Steel ousted Harley Rouda in the CA-48. They became two of the first three Korean American women elected to the House of Representatives (along with a Democrat from Washington). (Photo by Paul Bersebach, Orange County Register/SCNG)
Hoag emergency room doctor Eric Alcouloumre has drawn a good-sized Facebook following with his ongoing “private citizen, not speaking for Hoag” commentary on the covid crisis. (Courtesy of Eric Alcouloumre)
In a year that was dominated by a worldwide pandemic, our list of the Most Influential People in Orange County for 2020, of course, reflects the battle with coronavirus on so many fronts.
It also highlights people who were were involved with the social justice movement and those who work tirelessly to keep us safe.
And, yes, it mixes in a little bit of fun when possible because some people made our lives a little easier in 2020 by making us laugh, cheer or smile.
As has been the case every year we put together this list, we tried to shine a spotlight on those who aren’t often in it, so some familiar names – people who might seem obvious because they do so much good year after year – might not be on the 2020 list. For instance, we know the Angels’ Mike Trout still is the best player in baseball, but this time we left him off the list.
By the way, several of the people who made the list were brought to our attention by you, our readers. Thank you for your nominations.
Here is our list of the 100 Orange County influencers we thought you should know from 2020:
Lisa Ackerman
The founder and executive director of The Autism Community in Action remained a rock for the county’s autism community despite the challenges of distance learning and budget constraints. “I’m watching all of this and I’m scared to death for our families,” Ackerman said earlier this year. “In the 20 years doing this, it’s probably the most stressful time I’ve seen (for) parents.”
The Hoag emergency room doctor has drawn a good-sized Facebook following with his ongoing “private citizen, not speaking for Hoag” commentary on the covid crisis.
Tom Allen (“Chad”) and John Parr (“JT”)
The comedians, who present themselves as guileless surfer dudes, visited the Huntington Beach Pier last summer on a mission to “solve the mask shortage.” Toting a box of face masks, the duo offered freebies to unamused non-compliers – eliciting reactions that speak volumes of the coronavirus divide. Captured on video, the laugh-out-loud exchanges have attracted more than 2 million YouTube views. They also took their act to their hometown of San Clemente.
Kirk Anderson
In conjunction with the OC Probation Department, the program administrator for Juvenile Hall School created the first distance-learning model in California to provide education for all of OC’s incarcerated youths during this pandemic. He accomplished this at several sites within the first month of the stay at home order in March.
Nadia Ansari
Ansari, a junior at Sage Hill High School, earned a $5,000 grant from the Dragon Kim Foundation to produce a documentary about chronic pain for children. Nadia is also a student who suffers from chronic pain, and has endured intense physical and emotional stress since being diagnosed in middle school. She has already won an Outstanding Achievement Award from the Indie Short Fest, a Los Angeles international film festival.
Priscilla Arceo
Like millions of other seniors, the Santa Ana High valedictorian could not attend an in-person graduation. Still, selected in a nationwide audition, Arceo ended up with a much bigger audience – giving a taped address in a virtual ceremony headlined by Barack Obama. “When we get knocked down, we get up stronger,” she assured the Class of 2020. Arceo, 18, now attends UC Santa Barbara.
Julia Argyros
The philanthropist and her husband, former U.S. ambassador George Argyros, donated $7.5 million in November to Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian to help the hospital’s nursing services. “As a direct result of Julia Argyros’ extraordinary generosity and kindness, her name has become synonymous with Hoag’s commitment to nursing excellence,” Flynn A. Andrizzi, president of the Hoag Hospital Foundation, said in a statement.
Jason Austin
Austin took over as director of care coordination when Susan Price left for Costa Mesa’s assistant city manager job. It fell to him to oversee Project Roomkey and Project Homekey that put at-risk homeless people in hotels and motels.
Danilo Batson
He started the Spicy Green Book online directory of Black-owned eateries and food services, taking his inspiration from the historic Green Book directory.
Shane Bieber
The Laguna Hills High graduate dominated the shortened baseball season and was the unanimous winner of the American League Cy Young Award. The 25-year-old led all MLB pitchers with eight victories, 122 strikeouts and a 1.63 ERA.
Phillip Blanks
The ex-Saddleback College wide receiver, who played there after serving four years in the Marines, made national headlines by catching a 3-year-old dropped by his mother from a burning building in Arizona. “His character was revealed,” said Mark McElroy, who coached him at Saddleback. “He prepared himself in his life for any opportunity to help someone. (He was) nothing short of heroic.”
Bill Bracken
The former chef at a Newport Beach hotel began feeding the homeless and needy with his Bracken’s Kitchen social enterprise a few years ago. In response to the pandemic, he ramped up the number of free meals served from 450,000 in 2019 to 1.3 million so far this year and has employed laid-off restaurant workers to produce those meals.
Ada Briceno
Briceno and her union, UNITE-HERE, pushed for a bill to give laid-off workers in the hospitality industry a guaranteed right to return to their jobs when their employers resume business. Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed the bill, but the union has won similar provisions in some local cities, including L.A. and Long Beach. Also, the Democratic Party, which she chairs in OC, ran more local candidates than any time in its history and flipped 20 seats from red to blue, including in deep-red areas like Huntington Beach and San Clemente, and took a plurality of school board seats across OC for the first time.
The reader-nominated founder of Orange County Latino Giving Circle led an effort to raise money to support Latino-led nonprofits in OC. In September 2020, the circle announced its first round of grants. It invested $13,500 to support Chicanos Unidos CHISPA Education Fund, both from Santa Ana.
Daniel Castillo
This local pitmaster quit his job as a corporate chef for Whole Foods and, despite pandemic setbacks, opened Heritage Barbecue in San Juan Capistrano. In May he was awarded $10,000 from national charcoal company Kingsford as part of a program to recognize America’s outstanding pitmasters.
Elizabeth Cauffman
The UCI professor launched a “young adult court” program in 2018 after receiving a $780,000 grant from the National Institute of Justice that helps young men who have served time get back on their feet and clear their record. The program had its first graduate in June.
Dr. Clayton Chau
Orange County’s health officer and the director of the Orange County Health Care Agency handled both roles at the most crucial time possible. In the health officer position, he replaced Dr. Nichole Quick, who resigned June 8 after facing significant public backlash for some of her decisions.
Fable & Spirit in Newport Beach, which Coyle opened with his wife and children in the summer of 2019, was one of only two O.C. restaurants to be awarded “discoveries” status in this year’s California Michelin Guide. The family operation is headed up Darren and Jean Coyle, with their son Drew as the director of spirits, and daughter Ali as the sommelier.
Donald Dermit
He’s been a street pastor to the homeless in Orange County and has become Judge David O. Carter’s grassroots surrogate in moving people from encampments in Buena Park, Placentia and Fullerton to new shelters.
Tanya Doby
In November, Doby, a 41-year-old business owner and mother of two young children, became the first Black person elected to the Los Alamitos City Council. That accomplishment carries a dose of irony. Doby ran against longtime City Councilman Dean Grose, who as mayor in 2009 brought national and cringe-worthy attention to the city — mass-emailing an image of watermelons growing on the White House lawn after President Barack Obama’s inauguration.
Jay Doshi
The needs of others during the pandemic prompted him to create the California Social Resource Database, an online directory to help those in need during the pandemic, specific to each of the state’s 58 counties; other teens kept it updated.
Dr. Michael Drake
The former UC Irvine chancellor was named president of UC statewide, the first Black person to hold the job. “Dr. Drake personifies the qualities we looked for in selecting a new president: He is committed to seeing the whole student and to supporting all our students. He recognizes the incalculable value of faculty and staff to the University’s mission, and he understands the importance of the public and private partnerships that help us achieve that mission,” John A. Pérez, chair of the UC Board of Regents, said when Drake was appointed.
Amanda Ells
The reader-nominated nurse has been working two jobs to care for patients throughout the pandemic. Read a longer profile of Ells.
Chris Epting
The history buff and author gave people something to talk about besides coronavirus with his public television series “Hidden Huntington Beach.” The show highlights a whimsical and often quirky past. Reminders of the past “hide in plain sight”: old jail cells outside a pub, a gas station designed by Frank Lloyd Wright Jr., a century-old silo. “Focusing on history instead of political differences,” Epting said, “helps pull the city together in a positive way.”
Chloe Mei Espinosa
The Mater Dei High freshman was nominated for Nickelodeon and Time Magazine Kid of the Year awards after her Skip the Plastic Straw drive led some 120 OC schools to eliminate plastic straws on campus.
Brian Fennessy
The chief of the Orange County Fire Authority oversaw the battles against fires that devastated large areas of the county in 2020. OCFA worked with neighboring agencies and Cal Fire as the region’s fire season seemed to expand once again. Read a longer profile on Fennessy.
Freddie Freeman
The ex-El Modena High baseball player won the NL MVP award after four top-10 finishes earlier in his career. He was tremendous in the shortened season that started soon after his battle with COVID-19, during which his fever reached 104.5 degrees at one scary point.
UC Irvine’s chancellor oversaw what some call the greatest crisis in the school’s 55-year-history with the drastic changes necessitated by the pandemic. Most on-campus activities were suspended in a shift to remote instruction. At the same time, UCI Health became a focus of Orange County’s fight against COVID-19.
Mark Girardeau
From the ocean to the mountains, Girardeau wants to show people the best of Orange County. The photographer created the website orangecountyoutdoors.com, a way to connect nature enthusiasts who share his passions. He’s documented countless whales up close, creating several viral videos that reach millions online.
Kim Goll
Before the pandemic, the reader-nominated Goll and First 5 Orange County issued the report “Orange County Child Care Landscape Analysis.” that found there was a dearth of quality and affordable child care in the county. Thanks in part to that report, the Orange County Board of Supervisors approved $5 million in CARES Act funds to be given to child care providers. In response to problems created by the pandemic, Goll and First 5 OC an additional $5.1 million from the county.
Beckie Gomez
Gomez termed out on the Tustin City Council in 2018. Although respected, she was never named mayor in her eight years as men kept trading around the title among themselves. She ran again this November and comfortably won. Gomez also sits on the Orange County Board of Education, where in July she cast the only vote against schools reopening without mandatory masks and social distancing.
Laura Gómez
The third-grade teacher from Martin Elementary in Santa Ana was one of five California Teachers of the Year and the only one from Orange County selected in October. Read a longer profile on Gómez.
Anne Grey
The executive director of the Alzheimer’s Association in Orange County guided her staff and volunteers in an effort to keep serving vulnerable older adults and their caregivers despite the pandemic. On March 12, every program and class offered in Orange County pivoted to virtual without any cancellations to continue providing support and resources to guide caregivers whose circumstances were thrown into turmoil.
Kyle Hansen and Andrew Levin
Hansen and Levin started Recycle for Veterans, which held multiple beach cleanups this year and has placed several dozen veterans in new jobs. The Marine veterans created the venture to help other veterans transition from the military to civilian life.
Jordan Harding
Harding, the general manager of City National Grove of Anaheim has been responsible for overseeing 40 drive-in, COVID-safe live events and keeping staff employed during a pandemic. He and his team at Nederlander and The Grove pivoted quickly to keep things intact in an otherwise crumbling industry.
Rick Hasen
The UC Irvine professor has been quoted by or appeared on just about every news outlet out there as an expert on election law, opining about the Trump campaign’s numerous unsuccessful legal challenges.
Dale Helvig
The Santa Ana neighborhood leader successfully led the fight against a controversial development project, forcing the city council to overturn its approval.
He is the CEO of Loan Depot, the nation’s second-largest non-bank mortgage maker. Not only is the company preparing to go public and growing fast in this year’s housing rebound, but he also helped organize the War Heroes on Water sportfishing fundraiser for vets. He paid $61 million in OC’s priciest home purchase ever and survived a serious fight with the coronavirus.
Scott Jennie
Jennie, a Laguna Beach fire captain and state director of the Firefighter Cancer Support Network has worked hard to clean the sooty image from the fire service. This year, he helped raise $10,000 for firefighter education and in October partnered with an East Coast nonprofit to bring responder wipes to the West Coast for the first time.
Raffi Kaprelyan
Kaprelyan, who started at Knott’s while a student at Kennedy High, is now a VP with parent company Cedar Fair and guided the strategy to pivot to food events as a way around the park’s closure. Read a longer profile on Kaprelyan.
Dr. Jim Keany
He heads up Mission Hospital’s Emergency Room and has directed much of the COVID response. He also led a federal task force that treated some of the first Americans at Miramar after being infected with COVID on the Diamond Princess cruise ship.
Neal Kelley
The OC Registrar of Voters was the voice of competence and information about election integrity in a highly volatile year. There were no significant issues in a general election where more than 1.5 million Orange County voters cast their ballots – that was 87.3 of all registered voters in the county, by the way.
Ferin Kidd
At the age of 20, the OC native robbed a liquor store and served 10 years in prison. He used the $200 given parolees upon release to start Black OC, a one-man business/activist group that emerged this summer as an organizer of protests, community activities and mentoring of at-risk youth. Read a longer profile about Kidd.
Daniel Kim
The co-founder of the Dragon Kim Foundation, along with his wife Grace, saw the work being done in Las Vegas to feed those in need because of the pandemic and launched an effort in Orange County in June. Delivering Food With Dignity has raised more than $300,000 and served more than 50,000 meals so far. “It’s not just delivering food,” Kim said in June. “It’s delivering a message that we all care.”
Dean Kim
Since the early days of the pandemic, he has opened his OC Baking Company as a storefront to help a dozen industry colleagues do takeout and retail. There are also free meals for healthcare workers. Kim, who has diabetes, used his Payroll Protection grant to train all his employees as bakers.
Dr. Edward Kim
Kim was named physician-in-chief to guide the staff and community outreach for the comprehensive hospital campus City of Hope is building in Irvine to improve cancer care here.
Kraman led the Transportation Corridor Agencies as its CEO for six years, retiring earlier this year after helping finalize an agreement with Caltrans and the Orange County Transportation Authority to end decades of debate over the extension of the 241 Toll Road. The agreement announced in March plans for the extension Los Patrones Parkway to Avenida La Pata instead of running the 241 through San Clemente to the 5 freeway.
Miky Lee
Remember “Parasite”? She financed the making of the Oscar-winning movie. The Laguna Beach resident also has been a Korean entertainment mogul, working on various K-Pop projects such as KCON.
Joshua Lozano
This fine-dining chef, suddenly out of work because of the pandemic, started selling food on Instagram, where his Basque-style burnt cheesecakes became an instant hit. Despite being self-employed, he still held a charity dinner/turkey drive to provide Thanksgiving meal kits to 250 Santa Ana families.
Joe Maddon
The Angels’ manager embraced his return to the community and worked with groups to help homeless people and other groups. Recently, the Salvation Army turned to him as a digital ambassador to help make up for its lack of physical locations for people to donate.
Marcia Manker
As CEO of both MemorialCare Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley and MemorialCare Saddleback Medical Center in Laguna Hills, Manker, 60, has been tasked with keeping thousands of health workers safe during the coronavirus crisis. The demand last March was sudden and competitive. “We have spared no expense to get our employees the protective equipment they need,” said the Huntington Beach resident. “It continues to be very expensive and economically challenging. But we make our staff our No. 1 priority.”
Once the pandemic hit, the Los Amigos High teacher made herself accessible to students longer hours than required. She understood that many students were low-income and didn’t have access to regular study or academic materials, so she made her social media a way for students to engage in the material.
Dave Min
Min defeated incumbent Sen. John Moorlach to represent the 37th District in the California Senate. “It is an incredible honor and I am unbelievably humbled by the fact that well over 250,000 Orange County voters chose to mark their ballots for me,” said the UC Irvine law professor, who outraised Moorlach by more than $1 million.
Robert Nelson
The Tustin police sergeant who grew up in Compton made a heartfelt, candid video about racism for his friends after the killing of George Floyd. Police Chief Stu Greenberg got word of it and, despite the video’s edgy message, embraced it – posting it on the department’s social media.
Hugh Nguyen
When the pandemic shut down public offices that issue marriage licenses, Orange County’s Clerk-Recorder made love happen in the Honda Center parking lot, using ticket booths to protect his employees.
Tam Nguyen
The owner of Advance Beauty College was a leading voice in California’s nail industry during the pandemic, which closed down hair and nail salons more than once. Nguyen is also co-founder of a new non-profit, Nailing it for America, which among other things pushed back when Gov. Gavin Newsom said that COVID-19 “started in the state of California, the first community spread, in a nail salon.” The group’s work includes supporting health care workers and other frontline worker with deliveries of food, drinks and thank you cards.
Jackie Ni
With help from three friends, the June graduate of Sage Hill School built SupplyCrate.org, an online nexus for procuring and distributing PPE (more than 375,000 pieces). Then came BLMsupplycrate.org, to facilitate requests and donations to organizers and activists involved in social justice protests.
Mariana Nita
Nita, a registered nurse who owns Best Elderly Care in Villa Park, a facility for six women ranging in age from 85 to 95, realized early on COVID-19 would likely reach Southern California, possibly endangering her vulnerable residents. So in early February, Nita, one of the first nursing home operators to do so, stepped up cold and flu protocols for her residents and implemented other protection measures.
Andrew Noymer
The epidemiologist and professor of public health at UC Irvine has become an essential and independent interpreter of Orange County’s pandemic trends.
Tito Ortiz
The hometown celebrity, who made his name as a mixed martial arts star, took the most votes in a field of 15 Huntington Beach City Council candidates. On his first night on the job, Ortiz was named mayor pro tem, putting him in line for mayor next year. Affable and outspoken, Ortiz has raised eyebrows for embracing far-right conspiracy theories – including the belief that coronavirus is an exaggerated health risk.
Tiffany Pang
The technology she innovated and created played a key role in getting several hundred people experiencing homelessness into services and off the streets as part of the North Orange County Public Safety Task Force. It’s generating significant interest from other parts of the state as they look at her technology and the approach of the task force as a model for other parts of the state. “You no longer have to rely on the enthusiasm of the case manager or the outreach worker,” she said.
Saachi Pavani
Girl Scouts of Orange County nominated the seven-year Girl Scout and said she stood up to make a difference when the pandemic hit. She not only made hundreds of masks personally but she coordinated the distribution of 38,000 masks to local nonprofits. Saachi also conducted a donation drive raising $3,513 and collecting 7,193 units of food to be donated to the Southern California Hospice Foundation.
Carlos Perea
He became the first undocumented resident to serve on a commission in Santa Ana (or Orange County, for that matter). He has continued to push the conversation on immigrant justice as an activist for nearly a decade in Orange County.
Katie Porter
The owner of Congress’ most famous whiteboard continued to establish herself as a force in the House of Representatives as the Democratic Party’s go-to person to ask tough questions. She handily won reelection after proving herself to be a strong fundraiser for her campaign as well as others’.
Ken Potrock
Potrock achieved his dream job of president of the Disneyland resort in May, two months after its parks and hotels were closed by the pandemic. In the nine months since, he has lost 11,500 employees to layoffs, thousands more to furloughs, and has made the case to the state that the parks should be able to reopen when Orange County reaches the orange or moderate tier for COVID transmission.
Andrew Pulver
The superintendent of Los Alamitos Unified led his district to become the first in the county to receive the state waiver to reopen and help the district through numerous challenges in the pandemic.
Leo Razo
The reader-nominated chef at Villa Roma in Laguna Hills prepares meals for homeless shelters and each week creates more than 250 additional meals for families in need and vulnerable people. He also distributes grocery boxes to families. His Paella with a Purpose program benefits local nonprofits.
Jack Rico
He was a standout among the Fullerton College graduates this summer at age 13. The La Mirada teen was the youngest ever for the campus, earning four associate degrees – art and human expression, social behavior, social science and history.
Alesia Robinson
Robinson emerged as an African American activist who helped organize and use social media to get word out about protests after George Floyd’s killing.
Natalie Rodriguez
Rodriguez, a junior at Orange Lutheran High, and her friends Andy Loughran and Jacob Eusebio created Serving Advantage, a program that teaches tennis to and helps connect with kids who have special needs. Read a longer profile about Rodriguez and Serving Advantage.
Oscar Rodriguez
Rodriguez, who was a candidate for city council, was commended by a reader who nominated him for his work on housing discrimination, immigration rights, tenant protections, code enforcement compliance and food insecurity. He has organized large food distributions in Huntington Beach’s Oak View neighborhood.
J.P. Rose
The lawyer for the Center for Biological Diversity was successful in a lawsuit that could help sustain the mountain lion population in the Santa Ana Mountains. The suit scales down the size of the Altair development in Temecula, keeping clear land targeted for a freeway wildlife crossing.
Jerri Rosen
After a Feb. 2 fire that destroyed the organization’s Irvine headquarters and amid the pandemic, Rosen, the CEO and founder of Working Wardrobes, rebuilt the organization and reopened in the early fall. “We are beyond blessed with donations, good quality donations,” Rosen said. “The community really rallied.”
Henry Samueli
The owner of the Ducks, along with his wife Susan, announced plans for OCVibe, a $3 billion mixed-use entertainment development around Honda Center. The first phase is expected to be open to the public in 2024. “As we continue to deal with the challenge of coronavirus and a struggling economy, we look to OC Vibe and other major projects as a vital part of our recovery,” Anaheim spokeswoman Lauren Gold said in a statement.
Gina Schweppe
The reader-nominated coupon blogger from Ladera Ranch provides families the tools to save money each week on groceries and essentials. She shares her insights on hot deals with her audience of more than 30,000 subscribers to her YouTube channel.
Bruno Serato
For years, the chef, through his Caterina’s Club, has been cooking up pasta meals for thousands of children a day. But since the coronavirus outbreak, the food assistance program has served more than 1.6 million meals to more than 160,000 families. The nonprofit also provides pantry packs, containing an assortment of staples, and rental assistance.
Corey Sianez
Buena Park’s chief of police is the chairman of the North Orange County Public Safety Task Force. The group is comprised of several police departments working together with community-benefit organizations to provide services – a service first, enforcement-as-a-last–resort approach.
Harry Sidhu
When elected in 2018, Anaheim’s mayor promised to keep Angels baseball. This year he delivered, shepherding a stadium sale deal that – while not universally cheered – will lead to a major redevelopment of the area with shops and restaurants, a showpiece public park and thousands of new homes.
The founder of the Orange County Jewish Collaborative organized and facilitated a variety of programs that serve people of all faiths, including social justice programs to enhance the lives of the homeless as well as detained refugees. Also, she holds weekly internet religious and educational programs via the Internet.
Tammy Tumbling
The executive vice president and chief operating officer of Orange County Community Foundation started the African American Alliance Fund with her own money in the wake of George Floyd’s killing to raise awareness about systemic racism and support programs that advance African Americans within Orange County and surrounding communities.
Justin Turner
The former Cal State Fullerton player hit three home runs in the Dodgers’ postseason run, including two in the World Series, to help lead the Dodgers to their first championship since 1988. He was criticized for returning to the field to celebrate the Dodgers’ title after he received positive coronavirus results during the final game but later apologized. During the pandemic, his foundation has helped the Dream Center provide meals to those in need.
John Pono Van Gieson
After three decades in the military and fire service, Van Gieson took on the job of launching Placentia’s newly created fire department as chief when the city left the Orange County Fire Authority.
John Villa
The executive director for the Huntington Beach Wetlands Conservancy has been doing a lot for these often overlooked estuaries, especially securing $2.5 million to buy the Newland Marsh at the corner of Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway for restoration.
Fram Virjee
Cal State Fullerton’s president and others at the university made the early decision to have a fall semester that was mostly virtual while many schools delayed the tough call as long as possible. The plan, at this point, is to have students return to campus for the fall semester in 2021. “Today, despite being in the throes of a national surge of the virus, we are seeing glimmers of hope for the future,” he said in a recent statement.
Iliana Soto Welty
She is the executive director of MECCA, a multi-ethnic collaboration of agencies aimed at reducing disparities for people of color. She launched a mental health initiative for the underserved.
Michael Sean Wright
The founder of Wound Walk, Wright, a former EMT, goes out to homeless folks in parks and on the streets with medical supplies to tend to their wounds.
Alana Yegsigian-Smith
Yegsigian-Smith, who was nominated by a reader, has worked with Saddleback Church’s food distribution program. Since March, she has worked all over Orange County helping to feed those in need. Read a longer profile on Yegsigian-Smith.
Dan Young
The former Irvine Company executive helped quietly push the OCVibe project at Honda Center through Anaheim’s political maze without any controversy for Ducks owners Henry and Susan Samueli.