14 January 2025

Mesa faces big transition as mayor and city manager retire | Jan 10, 2025 - Politics Jessican Boehm writing in Axios

Brady told Axios Phoenix that after nearly two decades, "it was time" — for the city, and him personally, to make a change. 
He'll become a mission leader for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 
He said he coordinated his departure to align with the end of Giles' term to provide a smooth transition for the new mayor and city manager to work together.

Mesa, the Valley's largest suburb, is about to undergo a major shift as two of its highest-ranking and longest-serving officials say goodbye

Mesa mayoral race: Mark Freeman vs Scott Smith
Mark Freeman sworn in as Mesa's 41st mayor, succeeding John Giles
Two side-by-side photos of men.

Former Mesa Mayor John Giles (left) and City Manager Chris Brady. Photos: Courtesy of City of Mesa

John Giles: Longtime Mesa mayor leaves office after a decade of change

The big picture: Former Mayor John Giles, the elected leader of the city for more than 10 years, officially handed over the reins to newly elected Mayor Mark Freeman Tuesday.

  • On Wednesday, city manager Chris Brady — who's served as the city's CEO for 19 years — announced he will retire in May.

Why it matters: During their combined years of service, Mesa added more than 50,000 residents and became one of the fastest-growing manufacturing hubs in the country while revitalizing its sleepy downtown with a light rail line and ASU campus.

Driving the news: Brady announced his intent to retire Wednesday in a letter to city employees.

  • He told Axios Phoenix that after nearly two decades, "it was time" — for the city, and him personally, to make a change. He'll become a mission leader for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
  • Brady said he coordinated his departure to align with the end of Giles' term to provide a smooth transition for the new mayor and city manager to work together.

Context: Mesa, like all Arizona cities, operates under a council-manager style of government, where the mayor and council direct policy, but the city manager carries out day-to-day operations.

Flashback: When Brady arrived in 2006, he said Mesa was in a financial tight spot because of an over-reliance on sales tax to fund its growth. But his bigger challenge came in convincing the city it could — and should — be more than just a suburb of Phoenix.

  • He recalled that in the days after he interviewed for the position, city leaders told the local newspaper Mesa wouldn't join Phoenix, Scottsdale and Tempe in competing for a new Google facility because the area "wasn't ready for something like that."
  • "I said then, 'When I'm city manager we're always gonna get in the game. We can play with the big boys,'" Brady told us.

Catch up quick: Brady credited former mayors Scott Smith and Giles for promoting the new "big city" Mesa mentality.

  • That led to a major employment center around Mesa Gateway Airport, with global companies like Boeing, Meta and Apple building facilities there.
  • And in downtown Mesa, hundreds of new apartment units have opened since 2020 after nearly three decades without a single residential building permit issued in the area.

Zoom in: Giles, a self-described "McCain Republican," will likely be most remembered for crossing the aisle to work with Democrats locally and nationally.

What's next: Both Brady and Giles said they're confident Freeman and the city council will continue Mesa's momentum and bring more quality developments and employers to the city.

The bottom line: "I think the great thing about cities is they're never done," Giles said. "We're all building on what came before us."

Who is John Giles? What to about his endorsement of Kamala Harris

 

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