Los Angeles Times

L.A. County’s CEO will retire

Sachi Hamai, the first Asian American woman in the job, implemente­d the Measure H sales tax for homeless services.

- By Matt Stiles

Sachi Hamai, the first Asian American woman to lead Los Angeles County’s sprawling government, is retiring as chief executive officer. She made the announceme­nt Tuesday afternoon.

Hamai, a low-key figure known for championin­g women in leadership and implementi­ng the county’s sales tax increase to tackle homelessne­ss, is leaving after a three-decade career in county government. She plans to step down in early 2020 but didn’t give an exact date.

The announceme­nt means the county’s governing body, the Board of Supervisor­s, must begin a search for a new CEO to manage a $36-billion budget and a workforce of about 110,000.

Hamai, 53, told the supervisor­s about her plans Tuesday morning before the board’s weekly meeting, officials said.

An accountant by training who was born to Japanese American parents who were interned during World War II, Hamai joined L.A. County government in the late 1980s, working for the auditor-controller. She rose through the ranks, eventually serving for several years as the supervisor­s’ top administra­tor before the board appointed her interim CEO in December 2014 and made it permanent in 2015.

Hamai, in a statement, said the job of CEO was the “greatest honor” of her life.

“The county confronts some of society’s toughest issues every day, often on behalf of people who have nowhere else to turn,” she said. “I believe I am leaving the county in better shape than when I started.”

Hamai said she worked to transform the structure of county government, pressing for department­s to better coordinate their resources to address the board’s most-pressing priorities, including homelessne­ss, criminal justice reform and healthcare.

She did so with mixed success. Hamai leaves unreoffice solved struggles to reform mental health treatment in the county’s aging central jail and to prevent scandals that have plagued the child welfare and juvenile probation operations.

During her tenure, a lowlevel employee in her office’s real estate division pleaded guilty in federal court to a bribery scheme involving a developer seeking a county lease. But by the time federal prosecutor­s announced charges last year, county officials had already conducted a separate internal investigat­ion and, as a result of the findings, Hamai had restructur­ed the division and developed new ethical standards to prevent corruption.

Hamai leaves the post with a good reputation among many at the county. She has largely avoided public tensions with powerful elected officials, though her recently led an effort to control spending by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department — an action seen as a rebuke of the independen­tly elected sheriff, Alex Villanueva.

The county also is in a historical­ly strong financial position.

Among Hamai’s signature accomplish­ments was implementi­ng Measure H, the county’s sales tax initiative that raises more than $300 million annually to fund services for homeless people. The initiative, she said, has helped tens of thousands of people get into temporary and permanent supportive housing.

Hamai, an avid runner who serves on the board of the United Way of Greater Los Angeles, hasn’t announced her post-retirement plans, saying only that she’s leaving government service.

 ?? Michael Owen Baker For The Times ?? SACHI HAMAI has been chief executive of Los Angeles County’s sprawling government since 2014.
Michael Owen Baker For The Times SACHI HAMAI has been chief executive of Los Angeles County’s sprawling government since 2014.

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