She didn’t even make the initial list of finalists, but now Janet Dougherty will soon become only the third executive director of the Hillsborough County Environmental Protection Commission (EPC).
The 53-year-old Hillsborough County native comes with 25 years of experience in local and state environmental policy and business management, and she wasn’t even on the short list recommended by the EPC’s selection committee last month.
But the door opened up for her after Scott Emery, the EPC wetland enforcement manager had to drop out of the running for personal reasons. That prompted Commissioner Victor Crist to request that someone with business experience be added to the list, though that angered some members of the initial selection committee who had gone through the process of reviewing the accomplishments of the 41 applicants, and found Dougherty unworthy of final consideration.
Her inclusion to the list led to a furious round of lobbying of the commissioners by business interests, as first reported by Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times this past weekend. Dougherty ran for the County Commission District 4 Republican nomination this past summer, but was defeated by Stacy White. She raised more than $33,000 from those in the development or real estate industries, prompting speculation by some about how fair she could be in making decisions at the EPC.
After conducting one-on-one job interviews with the four candidates before them, the board voted 5-2 to have her succeed Rick Garrity, who is retiring after leading the agency for the past 15 years. Ironically, one of the two votes in opposition came from Commissioner Crist (Kevin Beckner was the other dissenting vote).
Crist said he came into the meeting thinking that his two leading candidates were Doughtery and Rick Tschantz, who has been EPC’s general counsel the past 15 years. But his favorite was Mary Yeargan, director of district management for the Southwest District of the state Department of Environmental Protection.
But alas, no one else on the board felt that way about Yeargan, though Commissioner Stacy White said he could have voted for either her or Dougherty.
The fourth candidate in the mix was Robert Musser, an environmental projects manager for Port Everglades in Broward County.
All four candidates seemed steeped in experience for the job, and county commissioners lavished praised on all of them.
However, it quickly became apparent that Dougherty was a consensus choice.
Although Beckner said his top pick was Tschantz, he also said initially that he was “stuck” between him and Dougherty.
Al Higginbotham stressed that he hadn’t made up his mind before Thursday’s vote, but said that while Musser was impressive, Dougherty had answered all of his questions sufficiently, and thus he would support her.
Sandy Murman said that her opinion hadn’t changed at all, as she was always a Dougherty supporter. “This is an opportunity to make a statement,” she said. “I think the new leader should have a lot of passion for the environment and listen to all sides with a really open mind that can collaborate and make decisions firmly and objectively”
One supposed demerit for Dougherty was that she didn’t posses a science degree, but Commissioner Ken Hagan said that he didn’t think that was crucial, saying that the candidate need not be a “career bureaucrat or have a technical degree to be a successful executive director.”
Dougherty said she was “very humbled and honored ” by the decision. She said her number one mandate is to protect natural resources in Hillsborough County, and vowed to make the board proud for selecting her.
On June 18, the board, acting as the EPC, will vote on the terms of Dougherty’s contract.
Photo via Bob Baggett Photography.