From FlaglerLive.com, comes word that controversial former Assistant St. Johns County Administrator JERRY THOMAS CAMERON has been hired permanently as Flagler County Administrator.
CAMERON a/k/a "CONMAN" ran for St. Johns County Commissioner and lost by seven votes to Paul Waldron in the August 2016 Republican Primary, which was tantamount to election.
CAMERON is most noted for:
- unethically serving -- despite two conflicts of interest -- in lieu of qualified special magistrate, ordering dog-killing (later reversed after litigation) of Cyrus, a 15 pound lapdog falsely called a "dangerous dog";
- being a pal of controversial St. Johns County Sheriff David Shoar, having him to his home for "discussion groups";
- obstructing requests for the water use record for the night of the O'Connell homicide;
- obstructing requests for data on May and San Marco Street evacuation plans
- being a dupey, dopey developer tool
- being former Fernandina Beach Police Chief who left under a cloud
- promoting controversial $32 million 800 megahertz radio system
- contriving to bring unhinged opponents of the St. Augustine National Historical Park and National Seashore to discuss Agenda Item 1 of the November 1, 2011 County Commission meeting and omitting any background materials or staff report from the Commissioners' packet
- went to work for controversial Louisiana-Based ARDURRA Group after hurricanes, with the organization paid some $142,295 for seven months of CAMERON's work as a putative "subject matter expert/government liaison for Constantine Engineering, a local firm aligned with Ardurra, which was hired in January to bolster the county’s recovery efforts following Hurricane Matthew.", part of some $1.4 million doled out under CAMERON's ex-boss, County Administrator MICHAEL DAVID WANCHICK.
- falling asleep in meetings in Flagler County.
Don’t Call Him Interim Anymore: Flagler Stops Search and Settles on Jerry Cameron as Administrator
FLAGLERLIVE | APRIL 18, 2019
Those problems also mean divesting the county of three properties it bought for a combined $3.2 million, and that it no longer can occupy, no longer needs or no longer wants: the doomed Sheriff’s Operations Center in Bunnell, bought in 2013 for $1.23 million and converted from an old hospital, the old Wachovia Bank building off Old King’s Road bought last year for $900,000 and intended to be a permanent sheriff’s district office, and the Sears building off Palm Coast Parkway it bought just last month for $1.1 million.
Commission Chairman Donald O’Brien proposed to his colleagues on Monday that “we basically slow down” the search for a new administrator “or discontinue it right now.”
“One, I’m extremely pleased with Mr. Cameron’s performance at this point and his dedication and commitment to our county,” O’Brien said. “So we know that long-term we’re going to have to do that, but he’s also given indications to me and I’m sure some of you as well that his time horizon is not necessarily what we thought it might have been originally or six to nine months, it may be two to three years, I’m not sure.” It was.
O’Brien was speaking immediately after Cameron and his staff had submitted options to move on from the plagued Sheriff’s Operations Center and build a $12 to $15 million new building near the county library in Palm Coast, a plan that would have the collateral consequence of condemning the homeless camp there. Commissioners voted unanimously to approve the plan, thus scoring Cameron’s first significant achievement and setting him up to be the county’s clean-up hitter. His demeanor–unassuming, relaxed, disarming, though it hides a steely streak that can burn red even as he velvets his tactics in flattery–is hitting it off with most commissioners.
“There’s a lot of problems here as we’ve seen over the last few months that have been just ignored, neglected, manipulated, that need to be resolved,” Commissoner Joe Mullins said, “and to switch someone real soon would be setting up that new person for failure, and it would also be taking away from the progress and the strides that Mr. Cameron is making. I think he’s done a phenomenal job. I would like to see us totally stop this right now to looking for a new one and let him get in here and continue the path of utilizing the staff and allowing them to work to move forward.”
Cameron has been receptive and responsive to Mullins’s barrages of information, requests and proddings of all sorts while keeping other commissioners equally apprised of issues on their own terms.
“Mr. Cameron has demonstrated out of the blocks that not only he can do the job but he can take us to new heights and he’s got some vast knowledge of some other options available to that,” Commissioner Charlie Ericksen said, citing the resolution of the Sheriff’s Operations Center.
Cameron is being paid an annual salary of $160,000, not including a $1,000-a-month car allowance (Craig Coffey,m his predecessor, had a $400 car allowance) and other benefits and compensation totaling $237,000. He would be in line fora raise in accordance with the inflation rate next March.
He’d been referred to as an interim county administrator. But County Attorney Al Hadeed told commissioners that regardless of their move on Monday, “his title is county administrator. That’s by law.”
Commissioners did not vote on a motion to suspend the search or to name Cameron their permanent manager, the latter being legally a moot point, but rather by consensus directed the administrator to–in Hadeed’s words–“suspend the present search and await for further instructions from the board.” The move was reminiscent of the Flagler Beach City Commission’s relationship with an interim of its own several years ago, Bernie Murphy, who ended up remaining the city manager in that formalized limbo for four years. That ended only when Murphy himself finally told the commission he was done extending his services.
“The time I’m here depends on what they want me to do,” Cameron said this morning. “I just don’t have a crystal ball on that, things are going really well right now.” He credited the county staff as “probably the strongest staff” he’s worked with, though it’s inconceivable that he;d have said any less of staffs he’s worked with elsewhere. His liberating approach to the work ahead would be summed up in six words he spoke this morning: “You just do the right thing.”
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