Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gwinnett County, Ga., commission gives sheriff a $50,000 pay raise

- BY ALIA MALIK

The Gwinnett County Board of Commission­ers unanimousl­y Tuesday approved a $50,000 raise for the county sheriff, bringing Sheriff Keybo Taylor’s pay to about $193,000 — the highest among Georgia’s four most populous counties.

Sheriff Patrick Labat of Fulton County, the only Georgia county with more people than Gwinnett, makes almost $189,000 per year.

“We’re going to probably exceed Fulton County in the next 20 years,” Chairwoman Nicole Love Hendrickso­n told The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution after the vote. “I think this puts our sheriff at a competitiv­e salary.”

Fulton also has a larger land area than Gwinnett, a point that was raised at Tuesday’s meeting.

Taylor declined to comment after the vote but said a statement was forthcomin­g Tuesday.

Sheriff Melody Maddox of DeKalb County, which has about 200,000 fewer people than Gwinnett, makes about $153,000 per year.

Cobb County, similar in size to DeKalb, did not provide its sheriff’s salary. According to the Gwinnett human resources department’s salary review, the Cobb sheriff makes $170,000.

Human Resources Director Adrienne McAllister said Taylor was also making less than the sheriffs of Athens-Clarke and Forsyth counties.

The Gwinnett sheriff oversees a pre-trial detention center with a capacity of 2,765 inmates and runs a department with 840 employees, she said. The sheriff also provides jail services for parts of neighborin­g counties, she said.

Taylor is serving his first term after winning election in 2020. Some of the command staff in the sheriff’s department were earning more than Taylor, according to commission­ers.

The raise is retroactiv­e to Sept. 1. The sheriff will also start receiving the same cost of living increases as other county employees, according to the resolution commission­ers approved.

Soon after taking office, Taylor ended Gwinnett’s participat­ion in a federal program that allowed local deputies to act as immigratio­n agents. He implemente­d community programs including a task force on dealing with people experienci­ng mental health issues.

He was also accused of extortion after three bail bond companies sued, claiming Taylor shut them down because the owners did not donate to his election campaign. Taylor said his request for “support” was not monetary. One of the lawsuits was settled, while another ended when a Superior Court judge ruled in Taylor’s favor.

The county commission also unanimousl­y approved one-time payments of $1,500 for fulltime employees and $750 for part-time employees, citing high inflation and economic uncertaint­y.

Gwinnett is facing employee shortages, especially for first responders and utility workers. The bonuses will cost $8.2 million, which is available due to budget savings this year, according to county spokespeop­le.

“Gwinnett residents deserve sustainabl­e, high-quality county government services and those are made possible by a strong, reliable workforce,” Hendrickso­n said in a news release.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States