Saturday, April 25, 2026 72°F · Partly Cloudy
The Flightline
Latest
Aerial dusk rendering of the proposed Hard Rock hotel and Rhythm Lofts tower at Community Maritime Park, Pensacola
Editorial
A Hard Rock Hotel on Pensacola's Waterfront Is Worth Building. Not at $58 Million in Public Money.
Dawson Company wants to put a Reverb by Hard Rock and a 15-story apartment tower on a downtown parcel that has sat empty for 14 years. The city was right to reject the developer's tax rebate request last week. Here's what a defensible deal would look like.
American Magic Saildrone Spectre
Maritime
American Magic and Saildrone Unveil Pensacola-Built Unmanned Navy Warship at Port
April 16, 2026
2026 Pensacola Mayor's Race
Politics
Five Candidates Have Filed for the 2026 Pensacola Mayor's Race. Here's Where the Field Stands.
April 13, 2026
American Magic Saildrone Spectre
Maritime
American Magic and Saildrone Unveil Pensacola-Built Unmanned Navy Warship at Port
2026 Pensacola Mayor's Race
Politics
Five Candidates Have Filed for the 2026 Pensacola Mayor's Race. Here's Where the Field Stands.
Government
Escambia Commission and Clerk Childers Clash Over Funding Championship Basketball Team
The county's top elected officials are at odds over whether public dollars can pay to send Escambia's state champion girls basketball team to a national event. Small line item. Much larger subtext.
Palafox Street
Development
Warrington's Damaged Hotel Gets a Second Look From New Owners
An Escambia commission vote is pending on a redevelopment proposal for a Sally-damaged hotel that has sat vacant since 2020. Documents outlining the proposal are before the board.
Downtown Pensacola
✦ Let the Sunshine In
In the Sunshine: What Escambia's Elected Officials Actually Earn
All 41 elected and appointed officials — confirmed salaries, sources, and analysis. Florida's transparency law was championed by a Pensacola native. We're using it.
Pensacola
Development
Fricker Center Renovation Breaks Ground This Quarter — Reopens June 2027
The city awarded a contract to Green-Simmons on March 26. Nearly $10 million in grant funding will turn the Fricker Resource Center into a neighborhood hub with a career lab, senior center and healthcare access.
Fricker Resource Center
Alert
Escambia County Warns of Fake Planning and Zoning Emails Demanding Payment
Fraudulent emails posing as Escambia County planning staff are targeting property owners, demanding payment to approve variance applications. The county says don't pay, don't click.
Escambia County
Blue Angels
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✦ Let the Sunshine In Full dashboard & search →
$251K
Sheriff's Office
FY2025-26
$104.7K
Co. Commissioner
FY2025-26
$67.5K
Escambia median
household income
$134K
Mayor salary
set 2022

Aerial Pensacola
Infrastructure
$108 Million Later: What LOST IV Built for Pensacola
The decade-long sales tax program wrapped in 2025. Here's where the money went and what comes next.

Palafox Street
Traffic
Barrancas Avenue Lanes Reduce Starting Monday — Here's What to Know
L Street to I Street drops to two lanes beginning April 6. Plan a detour.

Maritime Park
Santa Rosa
Gulf Breeze Soccer Complex: Costs Climbing, Questions Growing
Santa Rosa County asked for a contractor update on progress and costs. The numbers aren't settled.

Fricker Resource Center
Community
Fricker Center Gets $10M Overhaul — Breaks Ground Q2, Reopens June 2027
City Council awarded the contract March 26. Career lab, senior center, healthcare access and stormwater upgrades planned.

Road work Pensacola
Traffic
Two Road Closures Hit Pensacola and Escambia This Week — What to Know
Main Street at Barrancas is detoured starting April 6. North Green Street closes April 7 for sewer work through June.


Military
Flight Line Access Restored at Naval Aviation Museum After Brief Hold
Public viewing access to the flight line — one of the best free Blue Angels practice spots in the country — was temporarily suspended before being restored March 31.
NAS Pensacola
Military
NAS Pensacola Family Housing Wait Times Are Back Up. The Base Blames Contractor Delays.
Average wait for on-base housing is back above six months for E-5 and below. A shortage that looked like it was easing has reversed, and families are stuck absorbing off-base costs in a tightening rental market.
NAS Housing
Blue Angels
Blue Angels Full 2026 Air Show Schedule Released — Pensacola Practice Season Begins in April
The team released its full 2026 show schedule this week. Local practice runs at Sherman Field start later this month, weather permitting. Best public viewing spots and what to know.
Blue Angels Schedule

Sports
Blue Wahoos Complete Ballpark Upgrades Before Home Opener
The Pensacola Blue Wahoos finished a round of upgrades at Community Maritime Park ahead of their 2026 Double-A season opener. Still one of the best minor league parks in the country.
Blue Wahoos Stadium
College Sports
UWF Track and Field Posts Best Regional Finish in Program History Heading Into D-I Transition Year
Three UWF athletes qualified for regionals this week in events spanning sprints and field. The timing matters: the program carries this momentum directly into its Division I transition in the fall.
UWF Track
Soccer
Pensacola FC Opens Its Spring Season Saturday at Ashton Brosnaham
The club kicks off its USL League One campaign at home this weekend. Attendance has grown every year since the 2019 launch. The roster is the deepest it's been.
Pensacola FC

"Pensacola has spent years talking about becoming a destination city. UWF just forced the issue."
Division I Is a Bet on the City, Not Just the University
The move to Division I isn't about football or scholarship money. It's about whether Pensacola is serious about competing for the next generation.
"Nine million dollars is not an abstraction. That's firefighters. That's code enforcement. That's roads."
The Property Tax Plan Is a State Power Grab Dressed Up as Voter Relief
Tallahassee is pitching a measure that would gut local budgets. Mayor Reeves is right to sound the alarm.
"How we pick the person who runs our schools says everything about how much we trust our own judgment."
The Superintendent Question Deserves More Than a Ballot Checkbox
In August, Escambia voters weigh in on whether to elect or appoint the school superintendent. It's worth thinking through carefully.

Tonight
Apr 3
Bay Center Concert
Fantasia & Anthony Hamilton at Pensacola Bay Center
8PM · Bay Center · Tickets available
This Weekend
Apr 4
Maritime Park
Egga-Wahooza Family Egg Hunt at Maritime Park
11AM · Community Maritime Park · Free
Every Tuesday
Apr 7 →
Pensacola Beach
Bands on the Beach — 2026 Season Opener
Gulfside Pavilion, Pensacola Beach · Free
April 11
Gabriel Iglesias
Downtown event
Gabriel Iglesias: The 1976 Tour
Sat Apr 11 · Doors 7PM · Show 8PM · Tickets on sale
Crawfish Festival
Food & Culture
Pensacola Crawfish Festival Returns April 24 Downtown
Fiesta Pensacola's annual crawfish boil is back — live entertainment, vendors and enough crawfish to close the street.

Pensacola Beach
Gulf Coast Tradition
Flora-Bama Mullet Toss: The Gulf Coast's Stranger, Better Tradition
Every April, people line up on the state line to throw dead fish into Alabama. It works. Here's why you should go.

Bay Center Concert
Comedy
Jim Gaffigan Comes to the Bay Center April 16
The touring comedian brings his current run to Pensacola. Bay Center spring lineup has been quietly excellent.

Coverage
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✦ Let the Sunshine In

In the Sunshine: What Escambia County and Pensacola's Elected Officials Actually Earn

Florida law says every government salary is public record. This database covers elected and appointed officials only — the 41 people chosen or named to govern Escambia County and the City of Pensacola, from city council members to the sheriff. For the full employee roster, use the database links below.

By The Flightline Staff · April 2026 · Part of the Let the Sunshine In

Escambia median HH income
$67,500
U.S. Census ACS 2024
Pensacola city median HH
$74,212
U.S. Census ACS 2024
City workforce pay rank
21st pct.
Before 2024 pay reform
Metro avg hourly wage
$27.13
vs $32.66 national avg · BLS OEWS May 2024
This index covers the 41 elected and appointed officials in City of Pensacola, Escambia County, ECSD, ECUA, and state offices serving this district. For all ~10,000 county and city employees, use the full databases below.
Sheriff Mayor Commissioner City Council Teacher Deputy Sheriff Clerk Firefighter School Board
Annual salary — Escambia County & City of Pensacola
Pensacola MSA mean annual wages by occupation — BLS OEWS May 2024 · vs. county median HH income $67,500
Dashed = Escambia median household income ($67,500)
Escambia / Pensacola vs. Alachua County (comparable FL county, ~295k pop) · EDR FY2025-26 formula
Comparison county: Alachua (Gainesville area, ~295k pop, same Group IV formula bracket). FL teacher minimum per FL DOE statewide floor. Mayor has no state formula — excluded from comparison. Source: EDR finsal25.pdf Oct. 2025.
City of Pensacola Escambia County Boards / other

Sources: FL Office of Economic & Demographic Research, Salaries of Elected County Constitutional Officers and School District Officials for Fiscal Year 2025-26 (EDR finsal25.pdf, Oct. 2025) · FL General Appropriations Act Ch. 2025-198, s.8 (State Attorneys, Public Defenders, Judges) · U.S. BLS OEWS Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent MSA, May 2024 · U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 · ECPS/EEA salary agreement, Board vote March 18, 2025 (WEAR-TV, WKRG) · City of Pensacola Ordinance (mayor salary), July 28, 2022 · City Charter amendment (council salary formula), effective after 2024 election (WUWF, Nov. 2025)

Position & source year
PositionSalaryYr
City of Pensacola
Mayor$134,000FY2025-26
City Council member (×9)$38,204FY2025-26
Escambia County — FL EDR FY2025-26 · Ch. 145 F.S.
Sheriff's Office$251,114FY2025-26
Tax Collector$210,938FY2025-26
School Superintendent$210,938FY2025-26
Clerk of Circuit Court$182,644FY2025-26
Property Appraiser$182,644FY2025-26
Supervisor of Elections$182,644FY2025-26
County Commissioner (×5)$104,696FY2025-26
Boards & Authorities
School Board member (×5)$50,299FY2025-26
ECUA Board member (×5)$50,299FY2025-26
State of Florida · FL Appropriations Act, eff. July 1, 2025
State Attorney (1st Circuit)$223,318FY2025-26
Public Defender (1st Circuit)$223,318FY2025-26
Circuit Court Judge$200,836FY2025-26
County Court Judge$174,000FY2025-26
State Senator (District 1)$29,697FY2025-26
State Representative (×2)$29,697FY2025-26
ECSD — teacher salaries · EEA/ECPS agreement
Min. starting teacher$48,300FY2024-25
School Board member (×5)$50,299FY2025-26
BLS OEWS · Pensacola MSA · May 2024 · mean annual
Registered nurse$88,730May 2024
Police & sheriff officer (mean)$66,470May 2024
Elementary teacher (mean)$58,460May 2024
Firefighter (mean)$56,180May 2024
All workers — mean hourly$27.13/hrMay 2024
All elected officer figures computed from FL EDR Ch. 145 formula (FY2025-26 factors: Annual Factor 1.0286, CAF 4.2580) — source: EDR finsal25.pdf, October 2025. Mayor per City Ordinance July 28, 2022. Council per charter formula eff. after 2024 election. Teacher minimum per ECPS/EEA Board-approved agreement March 18, 2025. State officials per FL General Appropriations Act, eff. July 1, 2025. Worker wage data from U.S. BLS OEWS, Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent MSA, May 2024. All government salaries are public record under Florida law.
Search Escambia wage database ↗ Florida state salary database ↗

The room fills up. Commissioners take their seats, the gavel drops, and decisions get made — on your tax dollars, your roads, your schools, your water. Most people in those chairs earn far less than you probably think. Some earn more than most Pensacolans ever will. And for years, nobody put it all in one place.

Florida has one of the country's strongest government transparency laws. Salaries of government employees are public record at every level — county, municipal, state, school board, utility authority. That's the law. What the law doesn't do is make those numbers easy to find, easy to understand, or easy to compare.

The numbers on the ground

Start with what the average Pensacolian earns. The median household income in Pensacola was $74,212 in 2024, per the Census Bureau's American Community Survey. Across Escambia County as a whole — including communities north of downtown — the median was $67,500. The metro area's average hourly wage was $27.13 in May 2024, compared to a national average of $32.66 per the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That gap — roughly $11,000 per year — is the backdrop for every public salary conversation in this county.

Now look at what the county's elected and appointed leadership earns. The county administrator is appointed, not elected, and their salary is set by contract rather than state formula — the position is not included in the EDR schedule. The sheriff earns $251,114 in FY2025-26 under the Florida EDR formula. The property appraiser earns $182,644. The supervisor of elections, $182,644. County commissioners earn $104,696 each. Those salaries don't come from local negotiation — they come from Tallahassee, set by a population-based formula in Florida Statutes Chapter 145 that the Legislature has used since the 1970s.

The mayor's office is a separate story. City Council voted in July 2022 to raise the mayor's salary from $100,000 to $134,000 — a position that had been frozen since 2010 through a decade of inflation, population growth, and rising expectations. Mayor D.C. Reeves currently earns that figure. City Council members earned $13,998 for years, until a 2024 charter amendment tied their pay to the same formula used for school board members. For FY2025-26, the council salary is $38,204 — a 44 percent increase, confirmed by a November 2025 report from Rick's Blog citing the charter formula.

The workforce problem nobody advertised

The mayor's office itself put the front-line problem plainly. A salary study commissioned before the 2024 pay reform found the city ranked in the 21st percentile among municipalities in the Southeast. Mayor Reeves said it directly at the time: "If you were to compare under that logic of 100 municipalities, 79 pay better than we do." The reform cost more than $5 million, phased in over three years, with 75 percent of the investment going to employees earning less than $60,000 per year.

That's the piece the headline numbers miss. The sheriff earns $251,114 — that's a management salary for running a law enforcement agency with hundreds of deputies. County commissioners earn $104,696 for a part-time elected position. Those figures are set by state formula and not negotiable at the local level. But the front-line workers — corrections officers, enforcement officers, maintenance crews, librarians — are on a completely different pay schedule. The county's own official wage database at myescambia.com shows the range; the BLS Pensacola MSA data puts the broader context around it. Police and sheriff patrol officers in the metro averaged $66,470 annually in May 2024. Firefighters averaged $56,180. Elementary teachers averaged $58,460 — higher than the minimum starting salary of $48,300, reflecting years of experience, but still below what comparable metro areas pay.

How Pensacola compares to the rest of Florida

The BLS OEWS data for the Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent MSA shows the local economy paying less than the national average across almost every occupation. The mean hourly wage for all workers here was $27.13 in May 2024, compared to $32.66 nationally — a gap of roughly $11,400 per year. That puts pressure on every government employer in the county competing against private-sector wages for the same talent pool.

Teachers in Escambia start at $48,300 per the 2024-25 agreement ratified by the school board in March 2025. The mean annual salary for elementary school teachers in the metro was $58,460 according to BLS May 2024 — meaning most experienced teachers earn above the minimum, but the floor is low enough that entry-level educators remain below the county median household income. For a workforce of more than 7,000 district employees, that starting point matters for recruiting.

Transparency as a floor, not a ceiling

Florida's Sunshine Law guarantees the right to ask. Escambia County has a searchable salary database at myescambia.com. The state maintains its own at salaries.myflorida.com. But the state database doesn't include municipal or county employees — it covers state agency employees only. Local governments post their own data in their own formats, with their own levels of accessibility. Some post it prominently. Others require a formal public records request.

Board members present a particular opacity problem. The ECUA board, the school board, the airport authority, the Community Redevelopment Authority — dozens of appointed and elected officials touching public money sit on bodies whose compensation is rarely examined collectively. Most board pay is modest. Some is nominal. But the point isn't the amount: it's the principle. Anyone drawing public funds for public duties should be findable in one search, not scattered across a dozen agency websites in different fiscal year formats.

The honest case for paying more

If Pensacola wants qualified candidates for mayor — people with executive experience, the ability to turn down private-sector offers — $134,000 for the job of running a city with an airport, a port, a maritime park, 800 employees, and roughly $500 million in annual budget authority is arguably still not enough. The Jacksonville chief administrative officer recently earned more than $330,000. That's a different scale, but it illustrates the range of what Florida cities pay for comparable executive function.

The same logic applies at every level. Paying a county sheriff $251,114 to run a law enforcement agency with hundreds of deputies is defensible. Paying elected commissioners $104,696 for what is formally a part-time position is a separate policy question worth asking. Florida's transparency infrastructure is better than most states. What it doesn't provide is context, comparison, or a single front door. The databases linked below are that front door. The data has always been public. It just hasn't been assembled this way before.

Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS, Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent MSA, May 2024 (bls.gov) · U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 five-year estimates · FL Office of Economic and Demographic Research, Salaries of Elected County Constitutional Officers and School District Officials for FY2025-26, finsal25.pdf, October 2025 (edr.state.fl.us) · FL General Appropriations Act, Ch. 2025-198, s.8 (State Attorneys, Public Defenders, Judges, eff. July 1, 2025) · ECPS/EEA/ESP salary agreement, Board vote March 18, 2025 — WEAR-TV Feb. 4, 2025; WKRG Feb. 4, 2025 · City of Pensacola Ordinance (mayor salary), July 28, 2022 — WUWF Nov. 11, 2025 confirms current · City Charter amendment (council formula), eff. after 2024 election.

Our index above covers named elected officials. For the full workforce — all county employees, city employees, teachers — use these official sources. All are free, searchable by name.

🏛️ Escambia County BCC
Official county wage database. Browse by name, department, or year. Most current source for BCC employees.
myescambia.com employee wages ↗ BCC employees · FY2018–present
🌴 Florida Has a Right to Know
Official FL state database. State Attorneys, Public Defenders, Judges, state agency staff. Refreshed weekly.
salaries.myflorida.com ↗ State of Florida employees only
📊 GovSalaries — County (1,494 employees)
Named employee records for Escambia BCC. Use the search box on their page.
GovSalaries — Escambia County ↗ 2023 payroll data
📊 GovSalaries — City (836 employees)
City of Pensacola employee records. Use the search box on their page.
GovSalaries — City of Pensacola ↗ 2023 payroll data
📊 GovSalaries — ECSD (6,998 employees)
School district teachers, staff, administrators. Use the search box on their page.
GovSalaries — School District ↗ 2024 payroll data
📂 OpenPayrolls — Historical (2015–2022)
Historical BCC payroll records. Use to track salary changes over time.
OpenPayrolls — Escambia County ↗ 5,808 records · BCC only
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