Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dillaha named Arkansas’ new health director

Department’s chief of staff, Mallory, given Cabinet post

- ANDY DAVIS AND STEPHEN SIMPSON

Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Thursday announced the appointmen­ts of two people who will replace outgoing Arkansas Health Secretary Jose Romero.

Dr. Jennifer Dillaha, the state Department of Health’s chief medical officer, will become the department’s director, while Renee Mallory, the department’s chief of staff, will be interim health secretary.

The secretary is a Cabinet-level official who reports to the governor. The department director reports to the secretary.

Romero, who held both titles, announced last month that he was stepping down this week for a job with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

His last day on the job at the Health Department is today.

The appointmen­ts marked the first time the secretary and director jobs have been assigned to two different people since the secretary position was creat

ed as part of a reorganiza­tion of state government in 2019.

Health Department spokeswoma­n Meg Mirivel said in an email Mallory will “oversee policy and operations,” while Dillaha “will be in charge of medical, clinical, and epidemiolo­gical considerat­ions and report to the Secretary.”

“The responsibi­lity of each position matches the technical expertise of each individual,” Hutchinson said in a statement to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

“With the necessary growth of [the Health Department] and public health I needed someone with a broad background for Interim Secretary of Health.

“Ms. Mallory began working for the Arkansas Department of Health 33 years ago and has been integral as a leader in several programs that have benefited the state. She has invaluable experience serving the state and will be a great fit as interim Secretary of Health.”

Dillaha, meanwhile, “has played a significan­t role in guiding the state through the last two years of the pandemic,” Hutchinson said.

“She has shown her dedication to Arkansas, and I have full confidence that she will continue to lead the state in improved health outcomes with the same dedication.”

The term-limited Republican governor said the interim nature of Mallory’s appointmen­t is because he’ll be leaving office in January.

“With the limited amount of time remaining in my administra­tion I wanted to leave the responsibi­lity of appointing a Secretary of Health to the next administra­tion,” he said.

Hutchinson spokeswoma­n Shealyn Sowers said avoiding a potential Senate confirmati­on hearing on a permanent appointmen­t, such as the one held last year on Romero’s, “wasn’t even a considerat­ion” in not naming a new permanent secretary.

“We’re not guaranteed a special session, so the first Senate confirmati­on hearing wouldn’t even be until January [during the regular 2023 Legislativ­e session] anyway,” Sowers said.

2019 LAW

Under the 2019 reorganiza­tion law, the health secretary can employ a Health Department director and “delegate his or her functions, powers, and duties to the director or to other various units or personnel of the Department of Health as he or she shall deem desirable and necessary for the effective and efficient operation of the department.”

Dr. Nate Smith, the state’s first health secretary, had been department director when the reorganiza­tion took effect.

He held both titles until he left the department in 2020 for a job with the CDC.

Dillaha said her understand­ing is that the health secretary appoints the director “in consultati­on with the governor.”

She said the Health Department director is over the “public health science part of things,” while the secretary is more involved with administra­tion.

“I think it plays to the strengths of both Renee Mallory and myself,” Dillaha said.

“Renee is a superb administra­tor, and my forte is in public health science and addressing the public heath issues of the state.”

In a brief “emergency” meeting, held via video conference on Thursday, the state Board of Health, which makes health-related regulation­s enforced by the Health Department, unanimousl­y nominated Dillaha for the director’s job and passed a resolution in support of Mallory’s appointmen­t.

Dillaha and Mallory will officially start their new jobs on Sunday, Mirivel said.

Senate President Pro Tempore Jimmy Hickey, R-Texarkana, said he spoke to Hutchinson about the decision to name an interim health secretary and thought it was prudent.

“His term is, of course, on the last leg right here, and with a new administra­tion coming in, I think this was the appropriat­e move,” he said.

Hickey also said he believes the appointmen­t of Dillaha was a good decision.

“She will have the knowledge of what aspects need to be addressed on the health side,” he said. “I think that is a good fit.”

Rep. Jack Ladyman, R-Jonesboro and chairman of the House Committee on Public Health, Welfare and Labor, said he didn’t know Mallory that well, but he believes Dillaha will do a good job.

“She has worked closely with the committee during the pandemic and I look forward to continue working with her in a new role,” he said.

He said he looks forward to working with Mallory and maintainin­g the excellent work the Health Department has done during the pandemic.

In April 2021, complaints from lawmakers unhappy with Romero’s handling of the pandemic led to the Senate Rules Committee’s first confirmati­on hearing on a gubernator­ial appointmen­t in decades.

The committee voted 7-3 to forward the confirmati­on to the full Senate, which then approved it in a 25-8 vote.

Sen. Trent Garner, an El Dorado Republican and member of the Rules Committee who voted against the confirmati­on, said he wasn’t familiar with Mallory but was well aware of Dillaha, who he believes was working hand-inhand with Romero in implementi­ng “draconian” measures during the pandemic.

If he’s able to go through the confirmati­on process, he said he will put a strict microscope on the qualificat­ions of the Health Department’s leadership.

“I will ask tough and pointed questions on how she would lead in case of a similar pandemic,” said Garner, who is not running for reelection this year.

“It’s not a bias or anything. I will ask her fair and pointed questions. We can’t have a repeat of some of the anti-business covid policies that were put in place.”

PREVIOUS ROLES

Dillaha, 66, a physician with training in internal medicine, infectious diseases and geriatric medicine, has been employed by the Health Department since 2001.

She was named chief medical officer in August 2021, adding to her roles as medical director for immunizati­ons and outbreak response.

Before that, she had been state epidemiolo­gist since March 2020.

Her other department posts have included director of the Center for Health Advancemen­t from August 2005 to June 2010 and the director’s special adviser for strategic initiative­s from June 2010 to April 2013.

Mallory, a 58-year-old registered nurse, started with the department as a nurse surveyor for Health Facility Services in 1988.

She was deputy director for public health programs from 2018 until she was named chief of staff in June.

She has served as a designee of the health secretary on the Tobacco Settlement Commission and State and Public School Life and Health Insurance Board, which was dissolved under a state law passed last year.

The Health Department, which has local health units around the state, has 2,030 employees in regular positions and an additional 69 “extra help” employees, Mirivel said.

The department’s budget for the fiscal year that ends June 30 is $674 million, almost half of which is “time-limited federal funding specifical­ly for covid-19 related efforts,” she said.

As Health Department director, Dillaha’s salary will increase 10%, to $230,249, Mirivel said.

Mallory’s salary will increase 15%, to $186,221.

Romero’s annual salary was $273,779.

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, which employed Romero as an assistant professor of pediatrics, paid the salary and was then reimbursed by other entities, UAMS spokeswoma­n Leslie Taylor has said.

She said 80% of Romero’s time was contracted to the Health Department, 10.5% was contracted to Arkansas Children’s Hospital and 9.5% was contracted to the Conway Human Developmen­t Center.

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