Orlando Sentinel

Lawmaker becomes state’s chief informatio­n officer

- By Steve Contorno Steve Contorno is the political editor of the Tampa Bay Times.

State Rep. James Grant, an architect of Florida’s controvers­ial Amendment 4 law, is leaving the Legislatur­e to take a job as the state’s chief informatio­n officer.

Grant now steps into a role that he was personally involved in shaping. A bill passed this year, sponsored by Grant, rearranged the office and its responsibi­lities. But it also changed the qualificat­ions, eliminatin­g a requiremen­t that the state chief informatio­n officer “must be a proven, effective administra­tor who must have at least 10 years of executive-level experience in the public or private sector.”

The bill, which became law, now says the officer must have at least five years of experience “in the developmen­t of informatio­n system strategic planning and developmen­t or informatio­n technology policy, and, preferably, have leadership-level experience in the design, developmen­t, and deployment of interopera­ble software and data solutions.”

According to his LinkedIn profile, Grant has been the “Chief Strategy Officer” at ReViable Surgical since March.

“Anyone who thinks I created a job for myself can’t read policy and is just throwing out cheap politics shots,” Grant said. “Instead of running a data center, the CIO now has to make sure data moves across agencies, and he sets the table for cyber security reform.”

Grant ended his reelection bid for House District 64 “effective immediatel­y,” according to a letter he sent to Secretary of State Laurel Lee obtained by the Tampa Bay Times. Grant was slated in November to face a lone opponent for the Tampa Bayarea seat: Democrat and teacher Jessica Harrington.

Grant’s departure from the Legislatur­e leaves a vacancy in the race for District 64. No other candidate filed to run in the Republican primary against Grant by the deadline. Per state law, the executive committee members of the Republican Party in the affected counties — Pinellas and Hillsborou­gh — will decide who will fill the vacancy.

Jim Waurishuk, chairman of the Hillsborou­gh County Republican Party, said in a text he was aware of Grant’s resignatio­n but that he didn’t, as of yet, have any candidates to replace him.

Grant, a Tampa Republican, is the son of longtime state lawmaker John A. Grant Jr., who spent 20 years in Tallahasse­e in the 1980s and ’90s.

The younger Grant was first elected to the Legislatur­e in 2010 and he served until 2014, when his reelection victory was vacated by a judge who ruled that another candidate was erroneousl­y removed from the ballot. The seat briefly sat vacant for months, leaving residents without representa­tion during that year’s legislativ­e session, until Grant won a special election in 2015.

Grant gained prominence recently as an author of SB 7066, the bill that implemente­d Amendment 4, the 2018 constituti­onal amendment approved by voters that restored the voting rights of nonviolent felons who served their time. Under Grant’s bill, felons must pay all fines, fees and restitutio­n before they earn back the right to vote, an interpreta­tion of the amendment that significan­tly cracked down how many people would benefit.

Opponents of Grant’s bill have sued, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit will hear arguments on Tuesday.

 ?? STEVE CANNON/AP ?? Rep. James Grant, R-Tampa, an architect of Florida’s controvers­ial Amendment 4 law, is now the state’s chief informatio­n officer.
STEVE CANNON/AP Rep. James Grant, R-Tampa, an architect of Florida’s controvers­ial Amendment 4 law, is now the state’s chief informatio­n officer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States