Miami Herald

Opa-locka fires police chief after review finds disarray

■ The city manager said he dismissed Police Chief James Dobson because the city’s high crime rate and the chief’s failure to implement change after a scathing review determined the department was in disarray.

- BY CHARLES RABIN crabin@miamiheral­d.com

Less than three months after an outside agency review determined Opa-locka police lacked even the ability to respond to residents in a “profession­al manner” and after half its sworn officers called morale within the department “terrible,” one of the city’s longest-serving police chiefs has been fired.

James Dobson, who took over an already-troubled agency in 2014 after stints with the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t, the Florida Highway Patrol and Doral Police, was let go early Friday by City Manager John Pate, who said Dobson was terminated because of the city’s high crime rate and a lack of progress in the agency in the months following the May report.

“When our residents voted for change, one of their main concerns was public safety,” Opa-locka Mayor Matthew Pigatt said in a statement released by the city. “This new commission took that into considerat­ion when we recruited a former chief of police as our current city manager.”

Dobson couldn’t be reached for comments.

Pigatt didn’t immediatel­y name a new chief of police and said the city would look outside South Florida to replace Dobson. Opa-locka police employ 54 sworn officers and 10 civilians.

“Now we have the opportunit­y to conduct a national search for a police chief who will consider the latest research on police reform, accountabi­lity, and community policing to enact evidence-based strategies to protect, serve and reduce

State Laurel M. Lee, who oversees Florida’s elections.

Florida law requires that mail-in ballots be received by no later than 7 p.m. on Election Day for them to be counted, except for overseas ballots, which have a 10-day extension.

The Washington Post reported Friday that 45 other states and the District of Columbia received similar letters from the Postal Service, warning that “it cannot guarantee all ballots cast by mail for the November election will arrive in time to be counted,” the Post reported.

President Donald

Trump has been claiming for months, without evidence, that vote by mail is ripe for fraud. Congressio­nal Democrats have been pushing for increased funding of the Postal Service ahead of the November election but that has stalled over negotiatio­ns in a coronaviru­s relief package.

The issue became more acute when Trump, in an interview with Fox Business on Thursday, said he was taking a tough stand on Postal Service funds to make it harder to process mail-in ballots that could decide the election.

In the case of Florida, the Postal Service letter recommende­d that all mail-in ballots be sent back no later than Tuesday, Oct. 27, a week before Election Day.

But Florida law allows voters to request a ballot up to 10 days before Election Day. In cases where a voter requests a ballot in and around that time, “there is a significan­t risk” the ballot won’t be mailed back before the state’s Election Day deadline and therefore won’t be counted, the Postal Service letter said.

In fact, the Postal Service recommende­d that Florida voters submit their ballot request early enough so that it is received by elections officials at least 15 days before Election Day, and “preferably long before that time,” the letter said.

The Postal Service also recommende­d to Lee that election officials use firstclass mail, not bulk-rate mail, to deliver blank ballots and allow one week for delivery to voters.

Some postal employees have raised concerns that Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a major donor to Trump and other Republican­s, would push for treating ballots as bulk mail, rather than the usual first-class mail.

As of Friday afternoon, 1.9 million vote-by-mail ballots have been cast for Tuesday’s Florida primary and nearly 2.4 million have yet to be returned, according to the Florida Division of Elections.

Voters in Florida have the option of hand delivering their mail ballots to early voting polling places or on Primary Day or Election Day, dropping them off at their Supervisor of Elections headquarte­rs.

A statement from Lee emailed to the Herald Friday afternoon said she “has made it a top priority to engage with local elections officials and the USPS regarding the timely delivery and return of vote-by-mail ballots for the August and November elections.”

As a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic, many voters have been opting to vote by mail during the primaries instead of standing in lines where social distancing isn’t always possible.

In fact, as many as 80 million mail-in ballots may descend upon elections offices nationwide this fall, according to a recent New York Times analysis.

Florida’s deadlines for requesting and submitting mail ballots have recently led to thousands of votes being rejected.

In the 2018 U.S. Senate race between the Democratic incumbent Bill Nelson and the Republican Gov. Rick Scott, more than 10,000 mail ballots were postmarked before Election Day but were deemed invalid because they did not arrive at elections offices in time to be counted, according to a Miami Herald analysis.

Deadline concerns aren’t the only issue facing mail-in ballots.

NBC News reported Friday that DeJoy, the postmaster, will be decommissi­oning 671 of its letter sorting machines located across the country.

Losing these machines could mean a delay in the delivery of election-related mail.

The Associated Press has obtained memos that show Postal Service leadership has pushed to eliminate overtime and curtail late delivery trips to ensure mail is delivered on time.

 ?? KAREN BLEIER AFP/Getty Images ?? In a letter, the United States Postal Service told Florida its election laws and deadlines conflict with USPS’ mailing capacity. This could mean some mail-in ballots won’t be delivered in time to be counted.
KAREN BLEIER AFP/Getty Images In a letter, the United States Postal Service told Florida its election laws and deadlines conflict with USPS’ mailing capacity. This could mean some mail-in ballots won’t be delivered in time to be counted.

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