Miami Herald

Miami Beach City Manager Jimmy Morales resigns

- BY MARTIN VASSOLO mvassolo@miamiheral­d.com

Beach City Manager Jimmy Morales has resigned as the city’s top administra­tor. Morales, who led the city’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, announced his resignatio­n in a video address published by Mayor Dan Gelber on Wednesday.

Since declaring a state of emergency in March, Morales has steered the city through COVID-19 with unilateral powers granted to him by the city charter and the commission.

In a statement to the mayor and commission­ers, Morales said he is leaving on Feb. 1 to explore the “next chapter” of his life.

While he said he is not leaving to accept another job offer, the 58-year-old said he had “always wondered” what it would be like to work at a different level of government, teach at a university or run a nonprofit.

“Given the incredible issues that have come up during this 2020, not the least of which is addressing existentia­l issues like climate change, pandemics and systemic racism, I feel the need to regain my voice and use what I have learned in my many years of service at the local level to perhaps influence a broader regional, state and federal agenda.”

Miami Beach has had just two city managers in the last 20 years. Morales was apMiami pointed in 2013 following the resignatio­n of former city manager Jorge Gonzalez amid highprofil­e corruption arrests in the city.

Morales, a former twoterm Miami-Dade County commission­er, left his role as the city attorney in Doral to take the city manager job. He grew up on the Beach, attending Miami Beach Senior High and receiving a Miami Herald Silver Knight award for general scholarshi­p in 1980 before graduating from Harvard and Harvard Law School.

After law school, he served

Jimmy Morales as a judicial law clerk and later nabbed associate and shareholde­r positions at several internatio­nal law firms. He previously served as the city attorney for the city of Marathon.

Morales was a MiamiDade commission­er for eight years, the same period of time he will have spent at Miami Beach come February. In 2004, he ran for county mayor but lost in a runoff to Carlos Alvarez.

As a commission­er in 1997, he championed the creation of the county’s Commission on Ethics and Public Trust, which voters later approved. In 2001, he drafted campaign finance legislatio­n reducing the maximum allowed individual contributi­ons to candidates from $500 to $250.

At the next City Commission meeting, commission­ers will discuss the process of replacing Morales.

“Where life takes me after that and what challenges I will tackle are still not certain, but I am excited to explore the opportunit­ies,” Morales said in a statement. “I can assure you that for the next four months, I will continue to work hard on your behalf, and work with the mayor and commission to ensure a smooth transition of leadership.”

In Miami Beach, city commission­ers set policy and the city manager is tasked with executing it while running day-to-day operations.

During the pandemic, Morales assumed emergency powers in order to take swift action without convening a full commission meeting.

In his letter to the commission, he said that while his tenure “has certainly not been perfect,” he led the city with “integrity, honesty and transparen­cy.”

Gelber, who has been friends with Morales since they attended Nautilus Middle School, said he served the city effectivel­y and admirably. “We were fortunate to have someone of his character and talent steering our ship, and he will leave our city a much better version of itself,” Gelber said in the video. “Our community will miss him, as will I.”

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