Sam Waldman
1934 -2000

Sam Waldman was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, and was a graduate of the NYU School of Finance. He started out in a small accounting firm. He then joined Airco Industrial Gases, where he was employed for 30 years, until he retired in 1991. BOC bought Airco in 1979 and Sam went on to be its comptroller. He spent 10 years in Japan and the Pacific Rim before settling in Incline Village.
Waldman was heavily involved in the business
life of the area. He was the owner of Bowl Incline, Kings Beach Car Wash and
Incline Car Wash and Storage, and the member of numerous community
organizations, including the local Citizen Advisory Board and Chamber of
Commerce, where he was a past president.
Waldman and his wife Lorri, who were married for 41 years, came to Incline
Village in 1986, and bought Bowl Incline two years later.
He served as an Improvement District trustee for one term in 1995-1998. IVGID
Risk Manager Mike Pennacchio said that among his outstanding achievements while
a trustee was to take the lead in the District's strategic plan, the management
audit and the reorganization of the District.
"He was the main fiscal person on the board," said Pennacchio.
"He had lots of business and financial sense."
Despite his busy work life, he nevertheless found time for charitable deeds.
"Sam was a very rare person," said long-time friend Doug Brimm, owner
of Austin's Restaurant. "I considered Sam a leader in this town, a man of
substance. He not only created lots of jobs and supported the business
community, but he cared about people, and devoted a lot of his personal time to
helping them.
| "In my opinion," he said,
"his most recent important achievement was his Kids and Horses
program in Minden, at his ranch. I thought it was one of the most
wonderful organizations I've ever heard of. When we opened a new
restaurant in Reno, we had a fundraiser and were able to donate $17,000 to
Sam's program." Waldman, an avid horseman, patterned Kids and Horses after the North American Riding for the Handicapped Association children's program. He felt that riding horses helped build the self-confidence of handicapped children and let them experience the freedom of horse riding. He felt strongly enough about it that he started it with his own funds. "What's more enjoyable than seeing kids and a horse?" he said of the program. "... when you look in the faces of those children who are on top of the horses, they are smiling." |
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For this work, Waldman was named as 2000's Humanitarian of the Year by the 30th Annual Community Awards organization in Carson City.
Sam Waldman died at age 65 at his home in Incline Village on October 30, 2000, after having been diagnosed the previous August with cancer.
- North Lake Tahoe Bonanza, November 2000
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| Photo
by Abe Harbatkin |
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