Two high-level JEA leaders who were living and working out of state have decided to leave the city-owned utility after it adopted a new policy requiring supervisors to spend at least one day a week in the Jacksonville office.
JEA spokesperson Karen McAllister said this week that Helen Materazzi and Stefanie Monroe were no longer with the utility. Materazzi served as JEA’s vice president of people and culture, and Monroe was director of enterprise analytics. Materazzi lives in New Jersey and Monroe in Oklahoma.
McAllister said 20 JEA employees were living out of state when the policy was adopted. All but three were “individual contributors,” meaning no one reported to them. Of the three, one opted to take another role in a nonsupervisory capacity.
Read the rest of this story at the Jacksonville Daily Record, a Jacksonville Today news partner.