Government of Miami-Dade County explained

The government of Miami-Dade County is defined and authorized under the Constitution of Florida, Florida law, and the Home Rule Charter of Miami-Dade County.[1]

Since its formation in 1957, Miami-Dade County, Florida has had a two-tier system of government. Under this system, Miami-Dade comprises a large unincorporated area and 34 incorporated areas or municipalities. Each municipality has its own government and provides such city-type services as police and zoning protection.

Overview

Of the county's 2,751,796 total residents (as of 2017),[2] approximately 44% live in unincorporated areas, the majority of which are heavily urbanized. These residents are part of the Unincorporated Municipal Services Area (UMSA). For these residents, the County fills the role of both lower- and upper-tier government, the County Commission acting as their lower-tier municipal representative body. Residents within UMSA pay an UMSA tax, equivalent to a city tax, which is used to provide County residents with equivalent city services (police, fire, zoning, water and sewer, etc.). Residents of incorporated areas do not pay UMSA tax.

Organization

An Executive Mayor and the Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners (BCC) govern the County. The County's main administrative offices are located in the Stephen P. Clark Center (SPCC) at 111 NW 1ST Street in downtown Miami.

Mayor

See also: List of Mayors of Miami-Dade County, Florida.

Board of County Commissioners

The Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners is the governing body of unincorporated Miami-Dade County and has broad regional powers to establish policies for Miami-Dade County services. The government provides major metropolitan services countywide and city-type services for residents of unincorporated areas.

One County Commissioner is elected from each of Miami-Dade County's 13 districts to serve a four-year term. Residents choose only from among candidates running in the district in which they live. Commissioners are chosen in non-partisan, single-district elections and can serve two four-year staggered terms, with elections scheduled every two years. The Commissioners elect a Chairperson, and the Chairperson appoints the members, chairperson and vice chairperson of all standing committees.[3]

In November 2012, the Miami-Dade County Term Limit Amendment was approved, modifying the County charter to establish term limits of two consecutive four-year terms.[4]

These were the incoming board members as of December 7, 2022:[5]

DistrictCommissionerFirst ElectedNotes
1st Oliver Gilbert2020
2nd Marleine Bastien2022
3rd Keon Hardemon 2020
4th Micky Steinberg2022
5th Eileen Higgins2018
6th Kevin M. Cabrera2022
7th Raquel Regalado2020
8th Danielle Cohen Higgins2022 2020 *appointed*
9th Kionne McGhee2020
10th Anthony Rodriguez2022
11th Roberto Gonzalez2022 *appointed*
12th Juan Carlos Bermudez2022
13th René García2020
Chair Oliver Gilbert2022
Vice Chair Anthony Rodriguez2022

Departments

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.miamidade.gov/charter/library/charter.pdf
  2. Web site: U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Miami-Dade County, Florida; Florida . Census.gov . January 3, 2019.
  3. Web site: About Board of County Commissioners . 2024-07-02 . www.miamidade.gov . en.
  4. Web site: July 11, 2018 . Governance - Miami-Dade County . https://web.archive.org/web/20170624162208/http://www.miamidade.gov/commission/governance.asp . 2017-06-24 . January 3, 2019 . Miamidade.gov.
  5. Web site: Divisions appear in Miami-Dade Commission leadership vote . December 6, 2022 .
  6. Web site: About Parks - Miami-Dade County . Miamidade.gov . January 3, 2019.