The Fayetteville Observer

North Carolina’s top elevator official says he’ll no longer include his portrait in every elevator

- ASSOCIATED PRESS ALLEN G. BREED/AP

RALEIGH – After slapping their mug inside every elevator in the state, an elected North Carolina regulator will go back to being faceless.

Labor Commission­er Josh Dobson’s face stares at many elevator riders in the state, following a predecesso­r who started the practice in the mid-2000s of placing her photo on inspection certificat­es. But he recently put an end to elevating the image of people in his position.

Dobson told WRAL-TV on Monday he authorized removing the photo to make space for a new sentence on the elevator safety forms that mark each inspection. Over time, the new forms will make their way into elevators statewide as new inspection­s are completed.

Dobson said he never really embraced the photo op, which made people focus more on him instead of the Department of Labor employees who served under him. He said he wants to focus “on them and the hard work they do,” the TV station reported.

Predecesso­r Cherie Berry – a Republican

like Dobson – pioneered the elevator inspection certificat­e photo, likely helping her at election time for nearly two decades. It earned her the moniker “elevator lady” and “elevator queen,” spurring a social media handle parody and even a song.

Berry, who served as commission­er through 2020, said she thinks it’s a mistake to phase out the photos.

“The public loved it,” Berry told WRAL. “We did it because we wanted people to know there’s an actual person, they could put a face to government. But it kind of grew into a thing.”

She said nobody complained about the portraits except her political opponents.

Dobson isn’t seeking reelection as commission­er next year. A few people have already gotten into the race, including Republican­s Luke Farley and state Rep. Jon Hardister.

Farley said removing the photo will mean citizens will know less about who runs state government. He’s endorsed by Berry.

“It’s a tradition that I think people expect to be continued,” he said.

Hardister said Monday he’d have to think about whether he’d return a photo to the certificat­ion form. He’s endorsed by Dobson.

WRAL reported in September that nearly 5,000 elevators, escalators and lifts were past due for annual safety inspection­s. Dobson attributed the delays to rapid growth in North Carolina and the challenge of keeping inspector positions filled.

The new sentence added to the form updated earlier this year makes clear that certificat­ions don’t expire and stay “in effect until the next periodic inspection.”

 ?? ?? A photo of North Carolina Labor Commission­er Cherie Berry is displayed on an elevator inspection certificat­e, April 2, 2019, in Raleigh. More elevator riders in North Carolina soon won't see the state labor commission­er staring back at them. Commission­er Josh Dobson had followed longtime predecesso­r Berry's practice of inscribing his photo onto elevator inspection certificat­es, but he said Monday that his photo is being eliminated to make way for a recently redesigned form.
A photo of North Carolina Labor Commission­er Cherie Berry is displayed on an elevator inspection certificat­e, April 2, 2019, in Raleigh. More elevator riders in North Carolina soon won't see the state labor commission­er staring back at them. Commission­er Josh Dobson had followed longtime predecesso­r Berry's practice of inscribing his photo onto elevator inspection certificat­es, but he said Monday that his photo is being eliminated to make way for a recently redesigned form.

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