60.6 F
Laguna Hills
Wednesday, Apr 8, 2026

Big A Hopefuls Making Rounds; Folino for Rudy

The city of Anaheim expects to pick a developer for 53 acres next to Angel Stadium by mid-June, the Insider is told. The three finalists,Windstar, Archstone Smith and Hicks Holdings (Texas Rangers owner Tom Hicks),have been circulating plans and meeting one-on-one with Anaheim Council members. The developers are proposing various retail, commercial and housing combinations. And despite the NFL’s inaction on a proposed team for SoCal, each has a football stadium option …

It’s official: Paul Folino’s on board with Rudy Giuliani’s campaign as state finance co-chairman. Back in February, the Insider wrote the Emulex chairman was an “unofficial” Giuliani backer. What changed: Folino’s term is up as chairman of the New Majority, which is neutral. NM’s new chairman: Auto Club’s Tom McKernan. Dwight Decker takes over McKernan’s spot as political affairs chair. Folino becomes state membership chair …

Regression: Forbes again has ranked Santa Ana as the best place to do business in California, as well as the nation’s fourth-most expensive housing market. Which may come as a surprise to the city’s 3 million residents. Huh? Actually, the numbers in Forbes’ annual survey pertain to all of Orange County, not just Santa Ana and its 340,000 or so people. Government statisticians prefer to call every metropolitan area by a city name rather than accommodate an obvious anomaly. So two years ago, “Orange County” was replaced with “Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine,” which Forbes has shortened to “Santa Ana.” “This is a grossly inaccurate label that shortchanges a county that already has an identity problem,” says corporate strategist Tim Cooley, who in the 1990s helped to persuade the feds to switch to “Orange County” from “Santa Ana-Anaheim” …

The OC was all over the Holy Land in March. Sarah Tolkoff recently reported on the 11 local Jewish execs who went on a six-day trade mission to Israel. Separately, 41 execs from OC’s Southern California chapter of the Young Presidents Organization made a five-day visit. Only a half dozen were Jewish, though the trip was organized by Boaz Shonfeld (of Santa Ana gift company Shonfeld’s), the son of Holocaust survivors. The contingent included Gavin Herbert Jr., Glenn Stearns, Paul Heeschen, Allergan exec Robert Grant, Mark Van Ness and Steve Bilt (Bright Now! Dental). They met Israeli Vice Premier Shimon Peres and hosted a reception that marked a rare get-together of the Israeli and Palestinian YPO chapters. “It was a mind-blowing, overwhelming trip,” said Rich Gadbois …

Happy anniversary: to Editor Mike Lyster and lovely wife Diane, married on this day in 1994, with EE RR in attendance.






P RR adds his favorite paper to a newsstand in Beijing

Want more from the best local business newspaper in the country?

Sign-up for our FREE Daily eNews update to get the latest Orange County news delivered right to your inbox!

Would you like to subscribe to Orange County Business Journal?

One-Year for Only $99

  • Unlimited access to OCBJ.com
  • Daily OCBJ Updates delivered via email each weekday morning
  • Journal issues in both print and digital format
  • The annual Book of Lists: industry of Orange County's leading companies
  • Special Features: OC's Wealthiest, OC 500, Best Places to Work, Charity Event Guide, and many more!

Rick Reiff
Rick Reiff
Rick Reiff, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, is editor at large of the Orange County Business Journal. He also is a host and producer of public affairs programs. He has covered Southern California for 34 years in print and on air. He is a four-time Golden Mike winner, three-time Emmy nominee and 2018 recipient of the Orange County Press Club's Lifetime Achievement Award. Reiff has been with the Orange County Business Journal since 1990, serving 10 years as editor. He originated and wrote the paper's popular "OC Insider" column for 15 years.

Featured Articles

Related Articles