Pepe Diaz’ Key Largo bungalow … Miami,Florida
By Gimleteye at 19 May, 2009, 6:36 am
A month ago, The Miami Herald’s Jack Dolan broke the story of Miami-Dade county commissioners using sergeant-at-arms as private chauffeurs, costing hundreds of thousands of dollars including massive overtime charges. County Commissioner Jose “Pepe” Diaz was ferried “at least 144 times in 2007 and 2008″. Diaz explained to the Herald “that he used the sergeants-at-arms to carry out his duties.” From the dais in county chambers, those duties include fronting for big developers like Sergio Pino and an application to move the Urban Development Boundary by Lowe’s Home Improvement. Commissioner Diaz’ duties also included, apparently, the hour and a half drive to his vacation get-away in the Key Largo mobile home park, Calusa Campground where he he has owned a lot since 2004. Diaz, Miami-Dade county commissioner, is assisting fellow lot owners at Calusa to rezone the property as single-family residences. It is a controversial issue in the Keys; a county that has had enough speculative real estate development to fill a county a hundred times its size. This 2007 photo shows a Miami-Dade police cruiser parked near Commissioner Diaz’ lot at Calusa Campground. (The photo was provided by an Eyeonmiami reader. Hit it to enlarge.) ”As you know, the responsibilities of a County Commissioner extend far beyond meetings at the Stephen P. Clark Center,” Diaz told the Herald. “I have used sergeants-at-arms when necessary to ensure my safety and security.” Posted on Sun, Apr. 19, 2009 Police taxi Miami-Dade politicians, and public pays tab BY JACK DOLAN jdolan@MiamiHerald.com Despite pocketing an $800 monthly car allowance, several Miami-Dade commissioners use sworn police officers to chauffeur them in county cars — costing taxpayers hundreds of thousands a year in overtime and raising concerns about personal abuse of public money. Commissioner Jose ”Pepe” Diaz was ferried at least 144 times in 2007 and 2008 by Kevin Greenwood, one of the commission’s sergeants-at-arms who provide security at meetings and, of late, have essentially become personal drivers for a handful of commissioners. Greenwood’s service frequently stretched beyond his normal eight-hour shift, according to his signed logs, earning him overtime on at least 125 trips. Some nights, he put in exceptionally long hours, dropping the commissioner off at midnight or later at least 15 times. Being Commissioner Diaz’s personal chauffeur helped drive Greenwood’s $85,050 base salary to $142,240 last year. Another officer, Paul Hernandez, drove Diaz to the celebrity-packed grand opening of the Fontainebleau hotel in Miami Beach last fall, a fellow commissioner said. Hernandez logged 27 hours of overtime over that weekend with Diaz. In an e-mail Friday, Diaz declined to discuss the Fontainebleau weekend but wrote that he used the sergeants-at-arms to carry out his duties. ”As you know, the responsibilities of a County Commissioner extend far beyond meetings at the Stephen P. Clark Center,” Diaz wrote. “I have used sergeants-at-arms when necessary to ensure my safety and security.” While Diaz appears to be the most frequent user of the service, he is certainly not alone. Commissioners Bruno Barreiro, Audrey Edmonson and Barbara Jordan are among the others, according to a Miami Herald review of the officers’ activity logs. The practice has tripled the number of police officers working for the commission since 2002, and increased their cost to taxpayers from $211,000 to $743,845 in 2008, payroll records show. The number of commissioners, 13, did not change during that time frame. Driving the politicians has turned the generally ceremonial job of a sergeant-at-arms — they spend much of their time asking visitors to remain quiet and take their seats during commission meetings — into one of the most lucrative assignments on the county police force. Newly elected commission Chairman Dennis Moss, who drives himself to County Hall and to almost all public functions, sent a memo to the board on March 25, laying out strict new rules for how the commission security staff shall be used. ”Sergeants-at-arms are not personal chauffeurs and are not specifically assigned to any commissioner,” Moss wrote. He explicitly prohibited his colleagues from using them to run personal errands, accompany them out of town, or “provide personal transportation for family members in situations that have no relevance to a county event.” Moss added that his office will review all requests for overtime and will approve them only when necessary. The armed, plainclothes chauffeurs are part of a growing list of trappings that county commissioners have bestowed on themselves in recent years, including an expanding pot of taxpayer money they distribute with few rules and little oversight to voters in their districts. The current total exceeds $700,000 a commissioner per year. While their listed salary is low — $6,000 a year — commissioners pocket more than $50,000 annually from an accumulation of other perks, including a $24,000 expense account, a $10,000 executive bonus and the car allowance, which totals $9,600 a year. At a time when essential county services are threatened by declining tax revenues, some on the dais think it’s unseemly for their colleagues to be driven around town. Commissioner Carlos Gimenez, whose name rarely appears in the logs, noted that

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Pepe Diaz’ Key Largo bungalow … Miami,Florida
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