Beach cop to head PTC Police Dept.?

Sun, 03/09/2008 - 8:23pm
By: Cal Beverly

The man who may be named Peachtree City’s top cop later this month has spent all but two years of his 29-year career policing a southeast Florida beach community whose yearly influx of nesting sea turtles nearly outnumbers the year-round residents.

Halifax C. “Skip” Clark II, currently chief of the 15-member Juno Beach Police Department, is the only applicant remaining for the Peachtree City Council to consider March 20 for the vacant chief’s slot.

Three other candidates pulled out when the city was asked by The Citizen to name the contenders to replace Chief James Murray, who retired under pressure last November.

That leaves the small-town chief as the leading — indeed, the only — candidate to be considered by the council this month.

If selected, Clark would be stepping up from a department whose yearly budget is $2.2 million to an organization with 65 full-time employees and a budget of $6.44 million.

Clark began as a patrol officer in a nearby beach community in 1978 and moved to the Juno Beach department two years later. He rose through the ranks, becoming chief in 2000.

Clark has been making $112,247 a year, and the average pay of an officer under his command is $48,880.

Juno Beach is one of 38 towns and cities in Palm Beach County on the southeast coast of Florida. The county is known as Florida’s golf capital, and the area is called the Gold Coast.

The town — and that’s how it’s described on its own website — has a permanent population of 3,644 residents who live in more than 2,500 multi-family, motel and trailer units, but only 378 single-family homes.

Of the town’s permanent residents, more than seven out of 10 are over age 45, the median age being 60.1. Only about 12 percent of the town’s residents are under age 24.

Upwards of 7,500 seasonal visitors swell the beach town’s population beginning in May.

Peachtree City, on the other hand, at more than 37,000 population, is nearly four times the size of the beach community at its largest, is home to a significant number of children and teenagers, and boasts one of the most active youth recreation programs in the state for cities of comparable size.

Compared to Peachtree City’s 24 square miles patrolled by local police, Juno Beach is a little under one-twelfth the size — a “compact residential community” of 2.1 square miles, according to Chief Clark’s description of his town.

Nearly 43 percent of Chief Clark’s town is county park land or environmentally sensitive areas.

The town is known as one of the magnet destinations for endangered sea turtles, who nest by the thousands along the Atlantic coast. According to the town’s website, “The town’s coastline is one of the highest density nesting areas for sea turtles in the world, with more than 1,000 nestings per mile” along the town’s 2.3 miles of ocean beaches.

Clark has overseen the national accreditation of his department. One of Peachtree City’s criteria in searching for Chief Murray’s replacement was to retain the local department’s national accreditation.

In his application for the Peachtree City job, Clark said, “I have a passion for law enforcement excellence and a leadership style that encourages and rewards creativity and innovation. I am committed to leading an agency that makes the most of its resources through team-building, community policing, and problem solving. You will find that I am a dedicated professional with a strong work ethic, the utmost integrity, and a commitment to building partnerships with residents, businesses and other town departments and employees.”

Clark has also served as president of the Florida Police Chiefs Association. Chief Clark has a bachelor’s degree from Barry University in Professional Studies and a master’s degree from Nova Southeastern University.

He lives in nearby Palm Beach Gardens with his wife Diane. They have four daughters. Clark is described as an avid woodworker and “enjoys coaching [his daughter] in softball.”

Juno Beach shares one other item with Peachtree City: Both had their beginnings as planned communities under the ownership of Bessemer Properties, Inc. The Florida community beat Peachtree City to incorporated status by six years: Juno Beach became a town in 1953, while Peachtree City got its city papers in 1959, nearly 50 years ago.

Currently, Maj. Mike Dupree is acting chief, since Murray’s retirement in early January. When Murray became chief in 1989, he says he found a broken organization.

“In 1989, when I first arrived in Peachtree City, the department was understaffed, underpaid, ill-equipped, limited in basic technology, and barely struggling to survive. After a period of self-assessment and re-organization the department’s staff came together, established a mission, and identified strategic goals and objectives that would help build the organization’s future,” Murray wrote in a yearly report in 2006.

Murray tangled with new City Manager Bernard McMullen in the past few years over budget issues and department emphases.

The ongoing differences were intensified after McMullen’s arrest by Murray’s officers at a concert at a city venue in June 2006. McMullen was charged with DUI on a golf cart. He later pled guilty, got a day in jail, an $800 fine and 40 hours of community service.

A little more than one year later at a November meeting during which armed sheriff’s deputies were present for a portion of the meeting, McMullen confronted Murray with evidence of Internet sex chats on Murray’s city-owned computer, a violation of city policy but not illegal.

Murray subsequently resigned and retired to his second home in North Carolina.

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Submitted by PTC_factchecker on Mon, 03/10/2008 - 7:54pm.

...man, make me go to your competition to get the rest of the story! Bad newsman...

“However, per O.C.G.A. § 50-18-72(a)(7), the city allowed candidates to decline being considered further for the position rather than have their documents released. The other three candidates exercised this option."

Robert W. Morgan's picture
Submitted by Robert W. Morgan on Mon, 03/10/2008 - 5:35am.

Are you reporting the news or making the news? Please explain this part of your story ----

"Three other candidates pulled out when the city was asked by The Citizen to name the contenders....."

That sounds fishy to me. Almost as if the other 3 wanted to interview confidentially and their cover was blown.

What possible reason does The Citizen/Cal have to do that? Does The Citizen's first amendment right to sell newspapers override PTC's right to get the best police chief?

Are you going to dig further and report the names of the other 3?


Submitted by sageadvice on Mon, 03/10/2008 - 8:32am.

If Cal can request the names legally, then he should!
We all need to know who is being considered.
Keeps em straight.

Obviously the contenders didn't want their present job known.
There is no legitimate reason for that. After all this is not a corporation, it is a tax paid job.

Submitted by CI5835 on Mon, 03/10/2008 - 12:34am.

Unlike a BEACHCLUB, wink wink, Police Departments have employees not members. Cal, your self-deprecating writing style truly has reached a new low. Keep up the great work!

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