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Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Alvarez Feels Backlash Over Raises
Tuesday, August 25, 2009 10:54 AM


(Source: The Miami Herald)trackingBy Matthew Haggman, The Miami Herald

Aug. 25--Several Miami-Dade commissioners are demanding drastic cuts to Mayor Carlos Alvarez's budget amid revelations he gave generous raises to favored staffers while pushing for unprecedented job and salary cuts throughout the rest of County Hall.

Commissioner Audrey Edmonson said she would support cutting the County Executive Office budget by as much as 45 percent next year, saying there's too much duplication between the mayor's staff and that of the county manager.

Commissioners Sally Heyman and Carlos Gimenez are seeking a 25 percent cut, citing outrage over the raises Alvarez quietly handed to his chief of staff and director of policy in March. Heyman filed a public-records request in July seeking raise information, but the pay hikes were not disclosed because they had been backdated to last year.

The Miami Herald reported the raises on Sunday, showing how 12 Alvarez employees have received pay increases of more than 10 percent since last year.

"It's pretty clear what Commissioner Heyman asked for, and she didn't get it," said Gimenez, who also complained that staff redundancies have not been eliminated since the county manager and mayor's offices were merged in 2007.

"We need to starve the beast -- force them to become efficient."

The comments came at a budget committee meeting Monday, foreshadowing a potentially brutal fight between the mayor -- who proposed a countywide budget -- and the 13-member commission, which ultimately must adopt it. The mayor has veto power.

Commissioners, bracing for irate taxpayers at public hearings starting next week, made clear they are demanding the mayor make steeper cuts than the 10 percent reduction he has proposed for his office.

Alvarez spokeswoman Victoria Mallette said Monday that the mayor's office budget has shrunk in recent years.

Last fiscal year, according to Mallette, the mayor's office budget was $9.2 million. Next year's proposed budget is $7.9 million, she said.

"We've been methodically reducing the budget," said Mallette, who saw her pay climb 54 percent in 2008.

PAY RAISES

In March, three weeks after delivering a speech calling the current recession the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, Alvarez gave Chief of Staff Denis Morales an 11 percent pay raise, bringing his salary from $185,484 to $206,783. On the same day, he gave a 15 percent raise to his policy director, Robert Villar, bringing his salary from $95,779 to $109,879.

The raises were backdated to Sept. 21, 2008, which meant each man also got a generous "retroactive" paycheck: Morales for $17,281, Villar for $9,747.




(1)
 
9/9/2009 12:10:02 AM
by kevin sutherland
can we recall this guy....if so how. total failure if leadership and outright selfish greed. I don't know aybody who gets a backdated 15% raise. if a company was losing money and faced a 427 million dollar shortage they would not be rewarding the idiot braintrust that was in charge. I am serious how do we recall this guy.
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