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Carlos Alvarez (mayor)

Carlos Álvarez
6th Mayor of Miami-Dade County
In office
November 6, 2004 – March 11, 2011
Preceded by Alex Penelas
Succeeded by Carlos A. Giménez
Personal details
Born c. 1952 (age 64–65)
Havana, Cuba
Political party Republican
Children 3
Alma mater Florida International University (B.B.A.)
Profession Police officer, politician

Carlos Álvarez (born c. 1952) is a Cuban American politician, and the former mayor of Miami-Dade County. He was first elected mayor in 2004, and re-elected in 2008. His mayoralty ended in March 2011 after a recall election. In both mayoral elections, he listed his party as "No Party Preference", but an article in The Christian Science Monitor described him as a member of the Republican Party.

Carlos Álvarez was born in Cuba around 1952. When he was eight years old, his family emigrated to Miami, Florida. Alvarez earned his B.B.A. from Florida International University in 1974. He completed training at the Senior Management Institute for Police and graduated from the FBI National Academy, 145th Session in June 1986.

In 1976, Álvarez joined the Miami-Dade Police Department. He was promoted through the ranks and, in 1997, became director of the MDPD. He served as director from 1997 to 2004. His tenure as director was called "relatively free of trouble, at least by local standards" by the Miami New Times, although in 2004 a group of policemen who served in the department described his management style as marked by "favoritism and retaliation".

Carlos Álvarez ran for mayor in the 2004 Miami-Dade mayoral election, and defeated his opponent Jimmy L. Morales. He became Miami-Dade County's sixth mayor, replacing Alex Penelas. In 2007, Alvarez successfully launched a referendum to give the mayoralty more power, giving him direct control of the county's bureaucracy.

He was re-elected as county mayor on August 26, 2008, for his second term. In 2009, Alvarez led a successful effort to spend hundreds of millions of dollars of the city's money to build a new baseball field for the local team the Florida Marlins. In August 2009, The Miami Herald revealed that Alvarez had recently given pay raises to close aides, including his chief of staff Dennis Morales, whose new salary was over $200,000 a year. In September 2010, Alvarez pushed for a 12% increase in the property tax rate.


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