Miami Herald

DeSantis picks new prison chief and 3 others for key roles

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis shakes up his administra­tion by appointing a new prison chief and a new point person on climate change.

- BY ANA CEBALLOS AND LAWRENCE MOWER aceballos@miamiheral­d.com lmower@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday tapped four people to lead key parts of his administra­tion, a shake-up that includes a new correction­s secretary to oversee a Florida prison system that has long been in turmoil.

The governor’s office announced that Ricky Dixon, a longtime official with the Department of Correction­s, will soon replace Correction­s Secretary Mark Inch, who is retiring.

Dixon has served as the agency’s second-in-command since 2015, including nearly three years as Inch’s right-hand man. Inch’s time at the state agency was spent grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic, severe staffing shortages, prison closures and, in the last two years, wrangling with legislator­s over department funding as he warned legislator­s of a looming “crisis.”

In addition to Dixon, DeSantis named Wesley Brooks as the state’s third chief resilience officer, the person tasked with helping Florida face the impacts of climate change; Eric Hall as the secretary of the Department of Juvenile Justice, and Michelle L. Branham, as the secretary of the Department of Elder Affairs.

“In Florida, we are working toward a brighter future for generation­s to come — there is no doubt that these are the best people to bring on to our team with that goal in mind,” DeSantis said in a statement Friday. “With diverse background­s and wide-ranging experience, this team brings invaluable knowledge to their roles.”

The appointmen­ts of Dixon, Hall and Branham need to be confirmed by the Florida Senate. Brooks’ appointmen­t does not need confirmati­on.

As the state’s resilience officer, Brooks will be the state’s point person on climate change, coordinate regional efforts and report directly to the governor.

For nearly two years, Brooks has been the director of federal affairs for the Flor

ida Department of Environmen­tal Protection, where his work included expedited constructi­on of Everglades projects and reauthoriz­ation of the federal Coral Reef Conservati­on Act, according to the governor’s office.

Previously, he worked as a staffer for members of Florida’s congressio­nal delegation, including Sen. Marco Rubio, Rep. Brian Mast and Rep. Ileana RosLehtine­n. While with Rubio, he worked on policies for Everglades restoratio­n, coastal resiliency and harmful algal-bloom monitoring, according to the governor’s office.

The position of chief resilience officer was created by DeSantis in the summer of 2019.

But the position has been vacant for months.

The first chief resilience officer, Julia Nesheiwat, worked six months before leaving for a job as a Homeland Security adviser in the Trump administra­tion. In a 2019 report to DeSantis, she concluded the state lacked a strategy for dealing with climate change.

“Florida needs a statewide strategy,” Nesheiwat wrote. “Communitie­s are overwhelme­d and need one place to turn for guidance.”

Department of Environmen­tal Protection Secretary Noah Valenstein took on a dual role as Nesheiwat’s replacemen­t, but he resigned in May.

Brooks is a Miami-Dade County native, according to his LinkedIn profile, and he has undergradu­ate degrees in political science and biology from Duke University and a Ph.D. in ecological science from Rutgers University.

“Dr. Brooks is an excellent choice for this important position,” Eric Eikenberg, CEO of the environmen­tal advocacy group Everglades Foundation, said in a statement.

Brooks will make $125,000 a year, the governor’s office said..

DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S

Dixon, 50, will come into the role of correction­s secretary just as DeSantis and Inch renewed a push for boosting correction­al officers’ pay amid staffing shortages.

This month, the Joint Legislativ­e Budget Commission approved a plan that will give correction­al officers a base-pay increase of at least $5,000 and newly hired officers will get

a one-time $3,000 bonus.

During his time at the department, Inch lobbied lawmakers for more resources. Since 2019, Inch has told lawmakers that funding shortfalls and staffing shortages have proven to be “demonstrab­ly counterpro­ductive and exceptiona­lly detrimenta­l to the department’s ability to meet its mission requiremen­ts.”

Prior to his role as the state’s prison chief, Inch, a retired two-star Army general, served as the director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Inch’s time as chief of the federal Department of Justice’s prison arm was brief. He was appointed by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions in August 2017, then resigned unexpected­ly in May 2018.

The New York Times later reported that Inch told Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein he was tired of the administra­tion flouting “department­al norms.”

Florida state Sen. Jeff Brandes, a longtime advocate for criminal-justice reform, said Inch’s departure is a “huge loss for the state, the correction­s officers, those incarcerat­ed, and their loved ones.”

“He is one of the hardest working, knowledgea­ble, and most honorable people I have ever worked with,” Brandes said. “Godspeed general.”

Dixon will earn

$175,000 a year, according to the governor’s office.

DEPARTMENT OF ELDER AFFAIRS

As the secretary of the Department of Elder Affairs, Branham will be charged with overseeing initiative­s aimed at improving the lives of the state’s rapidly growing senior-citizen population.

Those services are given mostly through locally run programs such as Programs of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE).

The department has 407 staffers and had a budget this year of more than

$446 million. Branham will earn $165,000 a year.

This is not the first time Branham, 50, of Jacksonvil­le Beach, has been appointed to a position by DeSantis. In 2019, she was picked to lead the Alzheimer’s Disease Advisory Committee.

As the former vice president of public policy for the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n, Branham had a history of advocating for patients suffering from that disease.

In June, when a controvers­ial new Alzheimer’s drug was provisiona­lly approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, Branham and her associatio­n were among its most vocal supporters. She called it a “game changing, celebrator­y victory” that the drug, aducanumab, was approved. Some others questioned the drug’s efficacy and cost.

DEPARTMENT OF JUVENILE JUSTICE

As the secretary of the Juvenile Justice Department, Hall will oversee 21 juvenile-justice centers and education, prevention and mental and substancea­buse services for youths.

Since 2019, Hall has been in the Florida Department of Education and served as senior chancellor, a position in which he oversaw the division of K-12 public schools, the Florida College System, the Office of Safe Schools and the Office of Early Learning, and other divisions in the agency.

Hall, 48, will earn an annual salary of $174,000, according to the governor’s office.

 ?? CHRIS O'MEARA AP | Nov. 18, 2021 ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a statement Friday: ‘In Florida, we are working toward a brighter future for generation­s to come — there is no doubt that these are the best people to bring on to our team with that goal in mind.’
CHRIS O'MEARA AP | Nov. 18, 2021 Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a statement Friday: ‘In Florida, we are working toward a brighter future for generation­s to come — there is no doubt that these are the best people to bring on to our team with that goal in mind.’

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