Harbor Master Marty Kasules weighs anchor
Deepa Bharath
The harbor has a new captain.
Capt. Marty Kasules officially retired as Harbor Master for the
Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol on Friday after taking a
voluntary retirement to cruise in his powerboat to Mexico. Stan
Jacquot, who is also the acting Mission Viejo police chief, has taken
the helm.
As harbor master for four years, Kasules, 46, oversaw the county’s
coastline from Huntington Beach to Dana Point. Colleagues, former
associates, friends and community members on Wednesday bade Kasules a
fond farewell at a retirement party at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club, down the street from the Harbor Patrol base on Bayside Drive.
Kasules said he will follow his heart and fulfill his lifelong
dream of taking a long cruise, but will miss everything about working
on beautiful Newport Harbor.
“I’m going to miss my office, which has the best view,” he said.
“I’m going to miss all the wonderful people I work with. I’m going to
miss the harbor, the wildlife.”
“I’m even going to miss Rupert,” he added with a laugh.
In about a month, Kasules with take off with a friend in his
24-foot powerboat, Slip Away, and head south.
“I’ll see how it goes and, if we like it, maybe I’ll get a
sailboat and sail the South Pacific,” he said.
Before his appointment to the Harbor Patrol, Kasules worked at the
Sheriff’s Transportation Bureau and as a SWAT team commander. Over
the 20 years he has been with the department, he has worked as an
investigator, and a patrol and training sergeant. He worked as a
Harbor Patrol deputy for seven of those years.
Kasules said he is proud of his achievements in the area of
customer service.
“I think we have succeeded in increasing and improving the level
of service we provide to our homeowners, boaters and businesses,” he
said. “I had the good fortune of working with men and women who have
a sincere interest in boating.”
Other highlights of his career are setting up a Rescue Operations
Center and equipping fire boats with machines to resuscitate heart
patients by shocking them, he said.
“The best way to succeed is to surround yourself with good
people,” he said. “They always make you look good.”
Sgt. Daryl Parker, who worked with Kasules, called him a “true
leader.”
“He genuinely cared about the people who worked for him,” he said.
“He knew our wives’ names, our children’s names. He enjoyed his job.
He taught us how to separate your job from your private life and how
to enjoy both.”
Jacquot, 54, said he looks forward to his new assignment. He said
he will gradually move to Newport Beach once a replacement is found
for Mission Viejo, which will likely happen within the next few
weeks.
“I’ve never worked the harbor,” he said. “I’ve been in gang
detail, I’ve been on a horse and I’ve flown on a helicopter. But this
is new to me. But I look forward to the challenge.”
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