San Diego Union-Tribune

KELLY MARTINEZ TO BE NEXT UNDERSHERI­FF

She will be the first female second in command in county

- BY DAVID HERNANDEZ

When Kelly Martinez began her career with the San Diego County Sheriff ’s Department as a deputy in 1985, female deputies and their male counterpar­ts were not always viewed as equally capable of the job.

Martinez and other female deputies got the same assignment out of the academy: the women’s Las Colinas Detention Facility in Santee. A year later, Martinez was among the first female deputies assigned to a men’s jail. She would work as a deputy for 22 years before rising through the ranks to assistant chief.

Now she is poised to make history again. On Friday, the 36-year veteran of the force will become the first woman to serve as the department’s undersheri­ff, the second in command.

“It’s exciting, I think, for the women in our department, but also the women in the region,” she said in an interview.

Martinez will replace Mike Barnett, who will retire after 29 years with the department.

“Kelly brings to the position exceptiona­l work ethic and commitment to the mission of the department,” Sheriff Bill Gore said in a statement. “I am confident her wealth of experience and passion for community outreach will keep San Diego the safest urban county in the nation.”

One of three assistant sheriffs, Martinez oversees the Law Enforcemen­t Serv

ices Bureau, which includes patrol, traffic, crime lab and criminal intelligen­ce operations. As undersheri­ff, Martinez will manage the dayto-day operations of the department, which has a $978 million budget and about 4,400 employees.

The department provides law enforcemen­t services to nearly 1 million county residents across some 4,500 square miles, including nine cities, each of which don’t operate their own police department. The department also runs a network of jails and a crime laboratory, and provides security at seven county court facilities.

Martinez will step into her new role as the department faces various challenges, including a spike in homicides and criticism over the deaths of inmates in county jails. She said that while the department faces challenges, it has a “highqualit­y workforce that is up for those challenges.”

Her top priorities include curbing a spike in gun violence and substance abuse, as well as preventing the deaths of inmates. She said additional medical and mental health care staff, approved tentativel­y by the county Board of Supervisor­s, will help improve the care of inmates.

“We take our responsibi­lity to keep people who are in our custody safe and that is utmost as a priority,” she said.

As she looked forward to the future, she also looked back. She said the department has come a long way in many respects, including better treatment of women on the force and advancemen­ts in the technology deputies use, such as bodyworn cameras.

“What’s changed is that now women are given the same opportunit­ies as men, and there is equality in the workplace that didn’t exist when I started,” she said. “That didn’t happen overnight. Many talented, smart, profession­al women came before me and paved the way for those of us who were given opportunit­ies because they proved themselves.”

Chula Vista police Chief Roxana Kennedy, who also serves as the president of the San Diego County Police Chiefs’ and Sheriff ’s Associatio­n, said law enforcemen­t still is a “male dominated environmen­t,” and Martinez’s new rank is “huge” for women in the profession.

“It’s really important for women to see other women in this type of leadership role, and Kelly is exceptiona­l,” Kennedy said.

While Martinez’s early experience in the county jails shaped her, one of her most rewarding experience­s was her time as a lieutenant at the Valley Center substation. It marked the first time she was in a “true commanding role,” she said. The substation serves communitie­s in the rural area, including the La Jolla, Pala, Pauma, Rincon and San Pasqual Indian Reservatio­ns.

“I developed an enormous respect for the tribes during that time and a fascinatio­n for (the 1953 federal statute) Public Law 280 and the complexity and intermingl­ing of the roles of state, federal and tribal law enforcemen­t,” she said.

She also learned from the community of farmers in the area.

“I was incredibly impressed by the ingenuity and strength of our farmers, particular­ly in the area of crime prevention,” she said.

All of her experience­s on the job, she said, shaped the way she works with people.

“I believe in leading with kindness, fairness, collaborat­ion and integrity,” she said.

A sheriff’s spokesman said Martinez’s new salary was not yet worked out. Barnett was paid just under $270,000 in base salary in 2019, according to the latest data available in Transparen­t California’s online database of public salaries. Martinez was paid a base salary of about $229,000 in 2019.

Martinez is not the only woman to rise to a higher leadership role in the county. On Tuesday, the county announced that Natalia Bravo will be the new chief of staff for Chief Administra­tive Officer Helen Robbins-Meyer.

Bravo will replace Andrew Strong, who will serve as director of the county’s new Office of Equity and Racial Justice.

Bravo has worked for the county for eight years in different positions, including staff officer and project manager for the chief administra­tive officer. She has helped develop labor policies and revive the Human Relations Commission. Prior to her time with the county, she worked for Mexico’s Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare as chief of staff.

“With our region working to tackle some of the most urgent issues that have no borders, her understand­ing of these current and future issues will be invaluable to all of us,” Robbins-Meyer said in a statement.

A federal judge on Tuesday ruled that California can for the first time enforce its tough net neutrality law, clearing the way for the state to ban Internet providers from slowing down or blocking access to websites and applicatio­ns that don’t pay for premium service.

Former Gov. Jerry Brown signed the bill in 2018, making California the first state to pass a net neutrality law. Open Internet advocates hoped the law would spur Congress and other states to follow suit. The Trump administra­tion quickly sued to block the law, which prevented it from taking effect for years while the case was tied up in court.

The Biden administra­tion dropped that lawsuit earlier this

month. But in a separate lawsuit, the telecom industry asked a federal judge to keep blocking the law. On Tuesday, U.S. District Court Judge John A. Mendez denied their request, allowing California to begin enforcing the law.

California state Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco and the author of the law, called the ruling “a huge victory for open access to the Internet, our democracy and our economy.”

“The Internet is at the heart of modern life. We all should be able to decide for ourselves where we go on the Internet and how we access informatio­n,“Wiener said. “We cannot allow big corporatio­ns to make those decisions for us.”

In a joint statement, multiple telecom industry associatio­ns said they will review the judge’s decision “before deciding on next steps.” They urged Congress to set netneutral­ity rules for the country rather than relying on states to come up with regulation­s on their

own.

“A state-by-state approach to Internet regulation will confuse consumers and deter innovation, just as the importance of broadband for all has never been more apparent,“read the statement from the Cellular Telecommun­ications and Internet Associatio­n, ACA Connects, the National Cable and Telecommun­ications Associatio­n and USTelecom.

California’s law was spurred by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission’s 2017 decision to repeal net-neutrality rules that applied nationwide. The telecom industry fought hard against the bill, arguing it would discourage companies from investing in faster Internet speeds.

But advocates say without the rules, it would make it easy for Internet providers to favor their own services by making it harder for customers to access their competitor­s’ websites and apps.

The law seeks to ban Internet providers from slowing down customers’ data streams based on the content they are viewing. It also bars providers from speeding up access to websites willing to pay extra for special treatment.

“The ability of an Internet service provider to block, slow down or speed up content based on a user’s ability to pay for service degrades the very idea of a competitiv­e marketplac­e and the open transfer of informatio­n at the core of our increasing­ly digital and connected world,” California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said.

 ??  ?? Kelly Martinez
Kelly Martinez
 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP ?? California Sen. Scott Wiener wrote the net neutrality law.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP California Sen. Scott Wiener wrote the net neutrality law.

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