It's not easy to follow an Oxy culinary legendâbut Amy Munoz made the job her own over the last four decades. Somewhere, Clancy Morrison is smiling
When Amy Munoz interviewed with Clancy Morrison for the position of assistant director of food services in the fall of 1984, Munoz was upfront about her intentions: She expected to work at Âé¶čÆ””Àfor three to five years and then open a restaurant with her husband, Robert.
âAnd that never happened because other things happened,â says Munoz, who 37 years and approximately 40 million meals later retired in January as associate vice president for hospitality services. âThis has been a great job. I always felt I could really make a difference here.â
During those four decades, Munoz became an Âé¶čÆ””Àinstitutionâjust like her old boss and mentor, who retired in 1989 (for the second time, but thatâs another story) after 45 years at Oxy. âItâs not easy following in the footsteps of a legend,â says Amos Himmelstein, Oxyâs chief operating officer and Munozâs boss since 2012. âBut Amy really made this job her own, and has developed a department we are really proud of."While serving under eight Âé¶čÆ””Àpresidents (from Gilman to Elam), Munoz has transformed dining services at Oxyâfrom what, how and where food is served to where that food comes from. Consider this menu of accomplishments:
- Munoz moved Oxyâs dining services into the modern era, from a single-price, cafeteria-style operation to what is known as the debit model, where patrons can visit different food stations and have food prepared for them individually.
- The food served during her tenure has developed a national reputation, ranked among the countryâs best college cuisine by such outlets as The Daily Meal, Chowhound, and The Vegan Report Card. (Her own favorite: charbroiled sustainable salmon, steamed white rice, and stir-fry veggies.)
- Munoz has been a fierceâand successfulâadvocate for Âé¶čÆ””Àto maintain its self-operated food service, rather than contracting it to a large outside firm.
- Munoz was intimately involved in two major renovations of dining services facilities, the 1994 transformation of the Art Barn into Samuelson Pavilionâaka the Coolerâand the 1997-99 renovation and expansion of Johnson Student Center. The JSC project required Munoz and her staff to relocate and feed students in temporary buildings known as Tiger Town (located where Mullin Entrance is today) for almost two years.
- Thanks to Munoz, Dining Services has been a leader in sustainability on campus, with a popular student internship program and an 8-year-old commitment to the national Real Food Challenge that, prior to pandemic-driven supply chain issues, came within a lettuce wrap of its goal of purchasing 30 percent sustainable food.
âI never get bored here,â says Munoz, who has fed the Âé¶čÆ””Àcommunity not only through construction chaos but in the aftermath of earthquakes, power outages, and now two years of a global pandemic. âI am never, ever bored.â
A Michigan native, Amy Andrews majored in hospitality business at Michigan State and originally planned to become a hotel general manager. When, post-graduation, she was recruited for Sheratonâs management training program and was placed at the flagship Boston Sheraton, the future looked bright. But then she was moved to what is now the Langham Pasadena, and found that at age 23 she was in over her head. âI totally floundered. I lasted five months,â she says. But it was in Pasadena that she met a handsome maĂźtre dâ, Robert Munoz, whom she married.
Jobs in fine dining and catering sales in Santa Monica and Pasadena followed, all of which provided valuable experience. But none proved to be the career she was looking for. Thatâs when she found Morrisonâs ad in the Pasadena Star-News.Munoz cites a number of factors behind her longevity at Oxy, foremost among them the opportunity to manage change. âWith change and challenges there are always wonderful opportunities. As I moved on, I saw how much there was to do here, and that I had the ability to do it.â
Another was the opportunity to have a better work-life balance than many of her colleagues in the hotel and restaurant industries. âSo many of my peers dropped out of the hospitality industry because they couldnât have a good balance,â she says. âThey left for different careers or developed substance abuse or relationship problems.â
Her own family is all-Oxy: Daughter Chelsea â10, assistant director of Oxyâs Vantuna Research Group (VRG), is married to Jonathan Williams, a VRG research scientist and NTT faculty member, and Sofie â14, a Ph.D. student at the USC Chan Division of Occupational Therapy, is married to classmate Alex Ringold. âMy husband, Robert [a UNLV alumnus], is pretty outnumbered,â she jokes.
Among the other challenges she took on at Âé¶čÆ””Àwere management of a wide range of what are known to the College business office as auxiliaries: the Bookstore, the Postal Center, Master Calendar, and Conference Services and Filming. (Card Services was moved to Institutional Technology in 2017.)
Regardless of the enterprise, her management style remains the same. Munoz is a consummate professional and an effective communicator with a real eye for talent, says Robert Starec, associate director of campus dining and a 29-year Âé¶čÆ””Àveteran. âShe not only recognizes peopleâs strengths and talents, she finds a way for you to use those to better the department and to use as opportunities for advancement,â Starec says. âEven if you donât recognize them in yourself, sheâd say, âI think youâd be really good at that, I want to help you develop this.ââOver the years, Munoz has received almost every accolade the College offers to staff members, including the Administrative Achievement Award. In 2019, then-President Jonathan Veitch awarded her the Presidential Medal in recognition of her longevity, dedication, and devotion to the College.
When the official announcement was made about Munozâs retirement, tributes poured in on social media from alumni, colleagues, and former colleagues. âYou always approached random studentsâ questions and quandaries with openness, warmth, and as âLetâs see what we can do,â which was so full of possibilities,â Janet McIntyre â96 posted on Facebook.
The idea that Munozâthe only boss most Hospitality Services staff have ever knownâis finally retiring hasnât quite set in yet, Starec says. âThereâs a little bit of anxiety there. Itâs going to be strange. She will be deeply missed, for sure.â
Through it all, Munoz never lost sight of a fundamental truth: âItâs not just about food, and our relationship with food is not rational,â she says with a laugh. âFood is not just sustenanceâitâs also comfort.â