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Government of Miami
View on WikipediaThis article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2009) |

The government of the city of Miami, Florida, is organized under the City Charter, which provides for a mayor-commissioner form of city government.
Organization
[edit]City Commission and Mayor
[edit]
The mayor of Miami, currently Francis Suarez, is the city's executive and is directly elected; the mayor appoints a city manager to act as Miami's chief administrative officer.
Five city commissioners are also elected from single-member districts of which they are residents. City commissioners also must be qualified voters. The City Commission holds regular meetings in Miami City Hall, located at 3500 Pan American Drive in the neighborhood of Coconut Grove. The Commission has the power to pass ordinances, adopt regulations, and exercise other powers. All city commission offices and that of the mayor are nonpartisan.[citation needed]
- Miguel Angel Gabela - Commissioner, district 1
- Damián Pardo - Commissioner, district 2
- Joe Carollo - Commissioner, district 3
- Ralph "Rafael" Rosado - Commissioner, district 4
- Christine King - Commissioner, district 5
Police Department
[edit]The Miami Police Department (MPD), often referred to as the City of Miami Police, is the main police department of Miami. Their jurisdiction lies within the actual city limits of Miami, but have mutual aid agreements with neighboring police departments. Art Acevedo is the chief of police. City of Miami police are distinguishable from their Miami-Dade counterparts by their blue uniforms and blue-and-white patrol vehicles.
Water and Sewer Department
[edit]Water and sewer service in Miami is maintained by the Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department.
Other
[edit]- Art Noriega - City Manager
- Victoria Mendez - City Attorney
- Todd B. Hannon - City Clerk
Federal and state representation
[edit]The United States Postal Service operates post offices in the city of Miami. The Miami Main Post Office, located at 2200 NW 72nd Avenue, is located outside of the city limits in unincorporated Miami-Dade County, adjacent to Miami International Airport.[1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Post Office Location - MIAMI." United States Postal Service. Retrieved on May 5, 2009.
Bibliography
[edit]- Public Administration Service (1954), Government of Metropolitan Miami, Public administration service, Chicago. Publications; no. 117, Chicago – via HathiTrust
{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
- Milan J. Dluhy and Howard A. Frank (2002). Miami Fiscal Crisis: Can a Poor City Regain Prosperity?. Praeger.
External links
[edit]Government of Miami
View on GrokipediaThe mayor, currently Francis X. Suarez since 2017, appoints the city manager—who directs over 5,000 employees and a $1.788 billion operating budget—with commission confirmation, while the commission approves ordinances, budgets, and zoning amid responsibilities for public safety, infrastructure, and economic development in a 36-square-mile jurisdiction serving about 442,000 residents as a global trade and tourism hub.[2][3] This framework, rooted in 1921 charter provisions and amended periodically, emphasizes mayoral leadership but has enabled notable pro-growth initiatives, such as tech and cryptocurrency incentives under Suarez, alongside persistent challenges including federal probes into official misconduct and recent state audits revealing wasteful spending patterns like duplicated contracts and untracked funds exceeding millions.[4][5] Miami's governance has historically exhibited high corruption indices, with over 100 police officers investigated in past decades and recurring arrests of commissioners for bribery and fraud, contributing to public distrust despite economic booms driven by international investment.[6] As of October 2025, Suarez faces term limits, with a mayoral election scheduled for November 4 amid candidate scrutiny of fiscal mismanagement flagged by Florida's Department of Government Efficiency.[7][8]