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 Joe Morgan is one of three candidates running for Mayor of Valparaiso in the March 10 election. A retired Army artillery and civil affairs officer, former Okaloosa County teacher, real estate professional, and longtime volunteer firefighter/EMT, Morgan says his campaign is built on better communication, aggressive pursuit of grants, and more citizen involvement in city decisions.
 

In this interview, Morgan discusses Valparaiso’s aging infrastructure, grant opportunities the city is at risk of losing, and how he’d approach the fire department’s future, including potential regional partnerships and volunteer integration. He also explains his position on the city’s high millage rate, ideas for carefully expanding the commercial tax base through mixed-use and professional offices, and how to turn the controversial Synovus building purchase into an asset by leasing premium office space to help cover the city’s low‑interest loan.

Valparaiso Mayor Candidate Interview: Joe Morgan

Joe Morgan is one of three candidates running for Mayor of Valparaiso in the March 10 election. A retired Army artillery and civil affairs officer, Morgan spent his military career learning how to manage complex projects, coordinate with governments and NGOs, and secure grant funding for infrastructure in war-torn and underserved areas. He’s worked alongside organizations like the World Bank and World Health Organization to fund wells, agricultural programs, and local improvements.

After the Army, Morgan taught science in Okaloosa County schools in Niceville and at Ruckel Middle School. He has also worked in local real estate, where he says he learned that while numbers matter, people ultimately choose communities based on how they feel about them.

Service and volunteerism are recurring themes in his biography: he has been an EMTvolunteer firefighter, youth sports supporter, and currently serves as Junior Warden at his church, overseeing maintenance and facilities. He also participates in Soldiers on the Water with the Emerald Coast Board of Realtors.

Morgan says one of his core priorities as a candidate is better communication with residents and more transparency and engagement from city hall.

We’ve also interviewed candidate Chris Wasdin. You can watch or read a summary of that interview here. 

Patrick Palmer, the third candidate in this race, declined an interview. 

Why is Joe Morgan running for mayor?

Morgan says he’s running because Valparaiso’s infrastructure is aging and the city has failed to aggressively pursue and manage grants over many years.

He notes that:

  • The city has about 21 projects on its list but has not sufficiently prioritized, designed, or made them “shovel ready”—a prerequisite for most grant funding.
  • Valparaiso is in year five of a TDC grant program, with more than $400,000 essentially “banked.” If the city doesn’t move quickly, it could lose about $100,000 this year as funds roll back unused.

“You don’t just go up and get money,” Morgan argues. “You have to have well thought-out, well-designed, and prioritized projects, and you need citizen input before you start paving roads or reshaping neighborhoods.”


How does he view Valparaiso’s high tax rate?

Valparaiso has one of the higher millage rates in Okaloosa County, and Morgan doesn’t downplay that. He clarifies that the city is third behind Crestview and tiny Cinco Bayou, but says the simple comparison misses key context:

  • Average incomes differ widely: roughly $108,000 in Niceville, $65,000 in Crestview, and about $90,000 in Valparaiso.
  • Home values in Valparaiso are generally lower than in Niceville, meaning the city must charge somewhat higher millage to provide equivalent per-capita services.

Still, Morgan says he’s not content to shrug at the tax burden. He notes that property taxes have risen for years and says that if elected, he would take a hard look at the budget to find savings in the city-funded portion of services.

He also distinguishes between:

  • The general fund, which covers police, fire, administration, and other services and is funded in large part by ad valorem taxes.
  • Enterprise funds (water, sewer, sanitation, streets), which are self-supporting through user fees and make up about half the city’s overall budget.

What is his plan for the fire department?

Asked whether Valparaiso should keep its own fire department or seek economies of scale by rejoining Niceville or forming a broader fire district, Morgan says he will look at all options, but stresses the city has some “breathing room” thanks to a current one‑year contract.

Right now, he says, about $1.1 million per year runs the fire operation, including:

  • The station building, fuel, maintenance, and equipment.
  • Staffing for three shifts, with eight full-time and four part-time firefighters, allowing three firefighters per truck per shift.
  • About $120,000 per year for a chief provided by Niceville under an interlocal agreement.

Morgan concedes that chief’s pay “seems really high,” but points to potential hidden savings: shared training, stronger mutual-aid relationships, and more professional leadership after past problems with cheaper hires.

He also wants to explore:

  • Re-establishing Valparaiso as a combination department (career and volunteer firefighters) to open up new funding opportunities, such as grants for a dedicated emergency vehicle.
  • Whether a regional fire district—like the model in Destin—could deliver real economies of scale without sacrificing the response times that require a station in or near Valparaiso.

What does he think about commercial growth and development?

With the city heavily residential and reliant on homesteaded property taxes, Morgan is cautious about assuming that more commercial development alone will fix revenue issues.

He points out that commercial property is taxed at essentially the same rate as residential; the main difference is the homestead exemption of about $50,000 for homeowners, which is relatively small in percentage terms on higher‑value properties.

Morgan says the city faces two constraints:

  • Limited space to expand purely commercial districts.
  • Residents’ desire not to see Valparaiso become another overbuilt commercial strip.

His preferred strategy is to expand mixed-use and professional office uses in and around existing business corridors: think doctors, lawyers, engineers, and title companies operating out of house-like buildings. That, he says, modestly broadens the tax base while preserving neighborhood character.


What is his closing message to voters?

Morgan says he plans to spend the days before the election knocking on doors and talking to residents, not hosting big rallies.

He asks voters to choose a mayor who will:

  • Treat the job as more than part-time,
  • Be detail‑oriented and hands‑on, effectively acting as a city administrator, and
  • Restore Valparaiso’s tradition as a vibrant, involved community where citizens feel heard rather than blocked by inaction.

“I want an involved community that is aware and able to participate in our governance,” he says. “That’s what Valparaiso was when I moved here, and that’s what I want to help rebuild.”

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