Daily Press

Portsmouth fires assessor

Interim replacemen­t selected

- By Natalie Anderson Staff Writer Natalie Anderson, 757-732-1133, natalie.anderson@virginiame­dia.com

PORTSMOUTH — The City Council formally fired City Assessor Patrick Dorris at its meeting Tuesday and appointed an interim who previously served with the city.

The council met in a closed session Monday and informed Dorris he was being terminated before the official vote at Tuesday’s regular meeting.

In a 5-1 vote, the City Council appointed Janey Culpepper to the position beginning immediatel­y with a salary of $120,000. Culpepper was promoted to city assessor in 2011 after working for the city for more than 20 years. She retired in 2017.

Dorris will receive six months worth of severance. The city hired Dorris in September 2021, with a salary of $114,450.

Councilman Mark Whitaker was the lone no vote. Councilman De’Andre Barnes was not present for the vote. Shorty after the meeting began, Mayor Shannon Glover directed Barnes to be escorted out of the chamber because he was filming the meeting on his phone from his seat — which violates a new policy the majority of council members recently enacted. Whitaker and Barnes supported Dorris’ appointmen­t.

Before voting against the terminatio­n Tuesday, Whitaker credited Dorris with “courageous moral service” for “exposing some things that some people in this city were being privileged by.”

Whitaker cited the revelation from Dorris’ office that aggressive use of tax liens were used against Sugar Hill residents over the past decades in an effort to obtain their properties in favor of various developmen­t projects.

Vice Mayor Lisa Lucas-Burke previously told The Virginian-Pilot members had concerns about Dorris’ performanc­e, including the lack of a functionin­g CAMA system that’s used for real estate assessment­s and another being inadequate staffing that she said has been an issue before.

CAMA, or computer-assisted mass appraisal, is an automated system that keeps property data and uses uniform valuations.

But Whitaker said Tuesday the issue was less about performanc­e and more so the city’s desire to maintain the “status quo good ole boy system.”

“I’m glad Mr. Dorris had the moral courage to stand up against that,” he said.

 ?? ?? Culpepper
Culpepper

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States