New Assistant CEO to Join County in January
Renée Bahl Caught Etching Her Name onto Historic Structure in 2001
Renée Bahl, currently executive director of the Arizona State Parks Board, will join Santa Barbara County in January as a new Assistant CEO.
Bahl worked for several years under CEO Chandra Wallar when they both were in San Diego County. “I am pleased and excited to have Renée join the County’s leadership team,” Wallar said in a statement. “She is known as an excellent leader who possesses a strong business and financial acumen, and is well-respected for her highly successful communication skills as well as proven results-oriented track.”
While she does appear to have solid administrative credentials, Bahl — who will step in to fill the position of Jason Stilwell after he left to become the city administrator in Carmel — got into trouble in 2001 when she was caught etching her name into the wall of a historic adobe barn in Arizona. At the time, she was in charge of overseeing historic preservation at the ranch. According to news reports, another employee caught her, and a photo of the scratches was sent to the entire state legislature. She was disciplined for the act before leaving in 2002 for San Diego County.
Wallar said she was aware of the incident during her time in San Diego and that Bahl had self-disclosed it during the interview process there. “It’s an issue that had occurred many, many years ago,” Wallar explained.
Bahl spent roughly seven years in San Diego before heading back to Arizona for her current job as executive director of the Arizona State Parks Board. She is also on the board of the American Academy for Park and Recreation Administration and has been a member of the California Association of Regional and Open Space Administrators, the National Association of County Park and Recreation Officials, and the National Association of State Outdoor Recreation Liaison Officers.
When she begins with Santa Barbara County, Bahl will oversee six departments: agricultural commissioner, community services, general services, planning and development, public defender, and public works. Bahl joins Terri Nisich as the other assistant CEO to Wallar, a downshift from several years ago when then-CEO Mike Brown had, at times, up to five assistant CEOs under him.