Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Miami Dade County Employees Making 100K to 450K - Time for Immediate Layoffs or Pink Slips!

Miami Dade County Employees Making 100K to 450K - Time for Immediate Layoffs or Pink Slips!

Miami Dade County has over 28,000 employees with a little over 3000 employees making over $100,000.00 each year, and over 75 making over $200,000.00 each year. I assure you the County will be able to get by with the remaining 25,000 employees if we lay-off these fat cats, I am certain of this.

We can save a few billion dollars immediately by laying-off these 3000 County Employees, and we take the funds saved and reduce property taxes by 20%, and help the people of Miami Dade get through these financial tough times.

This 2010 list is of the Miami Dade County Employees Making Over 100K up to 450K.

Time for immediate lay-offs or pink slips for these 3000 employees.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Candidate wants ballot redone

The Miami Herald

Candidate wants ballot redone

A candidate for Miami-Dade court clerk is asking a judge to order new ballots for the November election, arguing his name was wrongly listed fourth on the ballot instead of third or first. Darrin McGillis, one of three challengers to longtime incumbent Harvey Ruvin, said he was given incorrect information by county election workers when he filed for office.

They originally told him candidates would be listed alphabetically, he said, which would place him before Ruvin, Alfredo ''Al'' Perez and Julio Valido. Nonpartisan county races, such as mayor and county commissioner, are listed in alphabetical order. The clerk race, however, is partisan; Ruvin won a Democratic primary in August, and no Republicans ran for the seat.

On advice from state elections officials, then-Miami-Dade elections chief Lester Sola decided to follow the same rule used for other partisan races. That would have placed major-party candidates first, then listed those without party affiliations in the order they qualified. McGillis and Valido were at the elections office at the same time. McGillis said he paid and filed his paperwork first, but the time stamp on Valido's paperwork is 37 minutes earlier.

MiamiHerald.com
Posted on Fri, Sep. 19, 2008
BY MATTHEW I. PINZUR

Friday, April 30, 2010

NBC TV South Florida - Darrin McGillis with Rick Scott, Alex Sink, Bill McCollum on the race for Governor



Candidate for Governor Darrin McGillis on NBC TV South Florida with Rick Scott, Alex Sink and Bill McCollum.
http://www.mcgillis4governor.com/

In the NBC News clip Darrin is quoted as being in support of legalizing marijuana (personal use amounts). This is true, except that Darrin replaces the current law with a five ($5,000) thousand dollar fine versus being arrested, charged and convicted of a criminal offense.

This will only apply to personal use amounts, and any person caught with amounts that are not personal use amounts will face Felony arrest and conviction.

The goal is to take the resources of professional Law Enforcement away from what is a minor criminal offense and fine those caught with personal use amounts $5,000 - we can use the money collected to put more Law Enforcement officers on the streets to combat the very serious illegal drug distribution problem we have in Florida.

Make no mistake Darrin is for stiff prison terms for any person selling any amount of drugs to minors and persons under 21 years of age, including the sale of marijuana. If you sell drugs to kids in Florida you will go to jail for a very long time under a McGillis administration.

It's time for commonsense laws and to help get our Law Enforcement professionals properly funded. We must declare a War on Illegal Drugs in the State of Florida.

Political advertisement paid for and approved by Darrin E. McGillis, Democrat for Governor of the State of Florida Post Office Box 56-6091, Miami, Florida 33256-6091. Contributions or gifts to the Campaign of Darrin E. McGillis are not tax deductible. Contributions are limited to $500 per person or corporate entity.