Miami Herald

First (and only) woman to run Miami-Dade’s government retires

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com

The late-night call came as a surprise, offering Alina Tejeda Hudak the biggest promotion she could hope for in a steady climb as a county administra­tor in Miami-Dade County government. She assumed it would quickly end her career.

On the other end of the line around 11 p.m. on March 15, 2011 was Carlos Alvarez, the county’s mayor for only 96 more hours before he had to leave office after being overwhelmi­ngly recalled in an election that evening. Alvarez’s ouster would have left County Manager George Burgess in charge, except Burgess had resigned in the wake of the recall, too.

Alvarez wanted to install Hudak as manager before he surrendere­d power, leaving her to run the government until the county held new elections for mayor. She thought there was a good chance the next mayor would show her the door too after her role as the new face of county government’s status quo, following a hand-off from the deeply unpopular Alvarez.

“I knew full well that it could be the end,” Hudak said in a recent interview, ahead of her retirement Wednesday as Mayor Carlos Gimenez’s senior deputy and a 35-year employee of Miami-Dade. “I know it sounds Pollyanna, but I felt this tremendous responsibi­lity to do it. I spent so much of my career here. I didn’t want the community to think this government was in crisis.”

Hudak did accept, becoming the first woman to serve as county manager. With no mayor in office, she took on the ceremonial duties of that office, too — most notably, her signature appeared on each of the paychecks the county issues every two weeks for a workforce of more than 25,000 people. She also happened to be the county’s last manager. The office formally went away in 2012 under a charter amendment voters had approved two years earlier as part of a move to make the mayor the county’s top administra­tor.

The 59-year-old departed county government Wednesday to a capacity crowd in the County Commission chambers.

Hudak leaves Miami-Dade government as a $285,000a-year deputy mayor, one of four in the Gimenez administra­tion and an original pick by the new mayor to help him navigate the county through a budget crisis. The Gimenez job offer extended Hudak’s career with her first employer. She started as a management trainee in 1984 when county government was still housed in the civil courthouse on Flagler Street. She took the job after turning down a slot in the federal recruitmen­t program so prestigiou­s that the University of Miami threw a party to celebrate her acceptance after graduating from the school’s masters program for public administra­tion.

Hudak preferred to stay close to home, and quickly moved with county government to its current headquarte­rs in the 29-floor Stephen P. Clark Center. The tower is named after one of the four mayors she’s worked for at Miami-Dade. All but one year of her tenure was spent at the top, in the mayor’s suite on the 29th Floor. The one exception was her largest setback: a demotion from assistant county manager in 1996 to run the General Services Administra­tion for nearly two years in the late 1990s.

“I was devastated,” Hudak recalled. She was about eight months into a difficult pregnancy when the news came. Weeks later, she was in her bed after giving birth to daughter Kristina, signing terminatio­n papers for an employee under investigat­ion for an alleged bribery scheme. In the wake of the scandal, Hudak was still recovering from giving birth when she made a tour of the county fleets under her supervisio­n. “I went to every shop. I was this big and swollen and went to every fleet operation. I made sure they knew they had a director that cared about them.”

Her tenure in county government is long enough that she has commemorat­ive coins issued for the opening of Metrorail stations after the system debuted in 1984. She’s been called out for every county weather emergency since Andrew, including severe storms in the mid-1990s that forced her to leave the bedside of her dying father. She sees relics of her career in every commute, including a street off U.S. 1 named for a slain police officer whose death prompted a late-night call to Hudak, who then realized she knew the officer from high school.

“We’re losing an institutio­n,” County Commission Chairwoman Audrey Edmonson said Wednesday.

Aside from her stint at General Services, she’s served as an assistant county manager or a deputy mayor since 1993.

Hudak’s most recent portfolio included some of Gimenez’s most problemati­c areas, including the underfunde­d transit system and a bookkeepin­g mishap in lighting and security districts that ended with the county sending out hefty bills in 2015 to reconcile accounts. She also presided over Miami-Dade’s successful response to the Zika crisis and the speedy completion of the 2018 recount of statewide races, when the county’s Elections Department emerged as a star in the wake of bungled counts in Broward and Palm Beach.

“She was vital in making sure I had the county resources I needed,” said Christina White, the MiamiDade elections supervisor who reported to Hudak and now reports to Moon.

People who worked with Hudak describe her as a hands-on administra­tor whose stone-faced demeanor at commission meetings obscures a tough taskmaster.

“Behind that sweet smile is a killer,” Gimenez said during Hudak’s standing-roomonly retirement event. He was referring to Hudak’s role as the primary administra­tor overseeing the county’s response to the 2016 Zika outbreak. While Miami-Dade was faulted for not being ready to war with mosquitoes as Zika spread earlier that year, the county moved aggressive­ly once the disease struck.

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