Coastal Fire Spurs Entrepreneur to Run for Laguna Niguel City Council

Coastal Fire Spurs Entrepreneur to Run for Laguna Niguel City Council
The Civic Center building of Laguna Niguel, Calif., on Sept. 20, 2022. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
Jack Bradley
9/27/2022
Updated:
10/4/2022
0:00

When the Coastal fire of May 11 blazed over 200 acres of Laguna Niguel, Javad Mokhbery received a text from a local city councilman saying his neighborhood was on fire.

Javad, who is running for a seat on the Laguna Niguel City Council in the upcoming Nov. 8 election, quickly left his office in Irvine and went home to find the canyon near his backyard engulfed in flames.

“I honestly thought we lost the house,” he told The Epoch Times.

His house, along with the neighborhood, was ultimately spared, thanks to a shift in the wind. But over 20 homes across the canyon were burned to ashes and more than 900 people were forced to evacuate.

Javad held a community gathering at his home after the fire to create a plan so residents can be more prepared for the next disaster.

“I’m the type of person I cannot sit back,” he said.

Laguna Niguel City Council candidate Javad Mokhbery in Irvine, Calif., on Sept. 20, 2022. (Jack Bradley/The Epoch Times)
Laguna Niguel City Council candidate Javad Mokhbery in Irvine, Calif., on Sept. 20, 2022. (Jack Bradley/The Epoch Times)

The incident pushed Javad to run in the race, he said, to help prepare the city for whatever comes next: be it a wildfire or an earthquake.

Javad said “when elected” he would work to create a water reserve in the canyon that first responders can access in case of fire.

He also said he’d like to help improve the quality of life for Laguna Niguel residents.

“I work eight days a week,” he said. “Someone like me has to be really crazy to get into ... local politics.”

Javad, who owns a sensor manufacturing business, said he wants to make Laguna Niguel a good example for economic development.

He said in 1999, he was urged to take his operation to China, which could have saved his company money.

“I completely resisted that,” he said.

He also said he wants to encourage more residents to participate in city council meetings.

“We should not take things for granted. [We] should not just sit back and blame people who are in power,” he said.

Participation and awareness of the issues facing the community are key, he said.

American Dream

Javad is a living example of the American Dream, that anything is achievable through hard work.

In 1974, Javad was 20 when he moved from Iran to Michigan with less than $350 in his pocket, he said.

He landed a job as an ice cream truck vendor in Detroit and learned he could sell more in the city’s poorer and more dangerous neighborhoods.

“It’s a package deal. You want to make more money. You have to risk going into that,” he said.

Javad said over time he saved up enough money to put himself through college, obtaining a mechanical engineering degree from Lawrence Technological University in Michigan.

Now, Javad is a distinguished alumnus and was recently inducted into the university’s Engineering Hall of Fame.

After college, Javad moved to Fullerton, where he started his business, FUTEK, which manufactured the sensors on the Mars rover Curiosity.

Later, he moved the business, which now employs 150 people, near the Irvine Spectrum.

He is endorsed by the Lincoln Club of Orange County.

There are two seats open in the city council. Also in the running are Jeff von Waldburg, who is also endorsed by the Lincoln Club, Melissa Caldwell, Ray Gennawey, Stephanie Winstead, and Stephanie Oddo.