Miami Herald

New Miami-Dade housing department boss has experience in public and private sectors

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

An executive with a Miami developer of apartment buildings will take over Miami-Dade County’s housing department, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava announced Friday, capping a brief search after she parted ways with the former director last month.

Alex Ballina, who oversaw public housing maintenanc­e, operations and leasing for the county before leaving for the private sector 11 years ago, takes over for Michael Liu, a former federal housing official who came to Miami-Dade in 2014.

In selecting Ballina as director of Public Housing and Community Developmen­t, Levine Cava picked an executive who in the past worked for both the county and Miami Beach’s housing arms.

Clarence Brown, the

department veteran serving as acting director, will become deputy director under Ballina, according to a memo Levine Cava released Friday morning.

Ballina is currently director of government­al affairs at Resia, an apartment developer and operator with a focus on workforce rents. That’s a

market where a couple would earn up to $110,000 a year in Miami-Dade, according to federal guidelines.

Ballina said Resia doesn’t receive government dollars but typically needs zoning changes to build its apartments.

Resia projects include Resia Biscayne Drive near

Homestead and Resia Oak Enclave in Miami Gardens. Rents start between

$1,800 and $1,900, according to online listings.

“I believe housing is a right,” he said during a brief interview Friday. “And dignity is a must in public housing.”

Ballina is returning to a department he left in 2012. Public Housing and Community Developmen­t has a budget of nearly $900 million, and both manages federally funded public housing complexes and oversees the county’s efforts subsidizin­g developers of affordable housing.

Levine Cava asked for Liu’s resignatio­n last month, with insiders citing a break between the the Democratic mayor and the housing chief appointed under her Republican predecesso­r, Carlos Gimenez.

At Resia, Ballina’s post as the company’s in-house lobbyist kept the 48-yearold involved in some county matters. He was one of the developmen­t executives who helped craft a signature Levine Cava program for the apartment industry.

Miami-Dade this year budgeted $10 million in subsidies for landlords who agree to keep rents at workforce levels. While approved in September, the program hasn’t launched yet. It’s not known if Resia will apply for any of the $2,000 yearly grants. Ballina said he would recuse himself from any issue involving Resia.

Born in South Miami, Ballina grew up in the Miami area. After the shake-up brought on by the 2006 publicatio­n of the Miami Herald series “House of Lies” exposé of the county’s housing agency, Ballina joined as public housing director, putting him in charge of maintenanc­e and upkeep for housing complexes.

 ?? P. PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Alex Ballina, who most recently worked for Resia, stands in front of the Resia Oak Enclave complex in Miami Gardens.
P. PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Alex Ballina, who most recently worked for Resia, stands in front of the Resia Oak Enclave complex in Miami Gardens.

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