Randy Mazick, Lake Havasu City wastewater supervisor, highlights unseen work keeping sewers flowing

Lake Havasu City · December 17, 2025

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Summary

Randy Mazick, utility wastewater supervisor for Lake Havasu City, described 21 years of city service and day-to-day oversight of 'close to 80 lift stations,' about 300 miles of gravity sewer line and roughly 6,000 manholes, and praised his behind-the-scenes crew.

Randy Mazick, the utility wastewater supervisor for the wastewater department, said he will mark 21 years with Lake Havasu City next January and described overseeing the city’s sewer infrastructure.

"My name is Randy Mazick, and I am the utility wastewater supervisor for the wastewater department," Mazick said during a short City-produced profile segment.

Asked about his daily responsibilities, Mazick said, "I kinda oversee the operations and maintenance of close to 80 lift stations and about 300 miles of gravity sewer line, 6,000 manholes. And I just kinda work with my team on making sure everything works." He added that much of the crew’s work is unseen by residents.

"There is a lot of great, great, great dedicated people that help maintain all this stuff," Mazick said, "You'll probably never see them, never hear about it. And to us, that's the best compliment if people don't know who we are or what we do." The host, Jerry Braccamani, thanked Mazick and noted appreciation for his more than two decades of service.

The segment serves as a brief public-facing profile to spotlight city staff who maintain essential infrastructure. No policy decisions, budget figures or service changes were discussed during the segment. The profile concluded with the host’s sign-off, "These are the faces of Havasu."