COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Gov. Mark Sanford's chief of staff
leaves in five days, but the governor says he may have to run his office
without a top deputy for a while and resort to a "team approach" until he
hires someone.
A governor's chief of staff has a tough job: running the staff, keeping
the governor abreast of developments and trying to put policies into
practice.
Fred Carter, a former Budget and Control Board director and former
chief of staff for then-Gov. Carroll Campbell, is eager to get back to his
job as president of Francis Marion University.
"Five days and five minutes," Carter said as he left a lengthy state
Budget and Control Board meeting Wednesday.
Carter has been on leave from the university since Sanford took office.
He's continued to draw his college pay of $136,000, but took no salary
from the governor's office.
Sanford said the search for a replacement has been "an intriguing
process. ... Fred Carter is irreplaceable. He has an astounding level of
institutional memory."
The "challenge has been to try and find somebody who has some degree or
breadth of experience in state government, somebody who believes in where
the administration is coming from and somebody who can do this," Sanford
said.
Some have been interested up to the point where they discussed the job
with their wives, Sanford said. "But ultimately when they take it back to
their bride, the bride says 'I didn't sign on for this,'" Sanford said.
Some from the business world have been thrown by the pay cut, he said.
"It's been a very, very tough position to fill. We're not there yet,"
Sanford said.
When Carter leaves, "it may be for the time being we run this on a ...
team approach," Sanford said.
A leading role in that approach would go to Beaufort lawyer Tom Davis,
Sanford said. Davis worked in Sanford's campaign last year and joined the
governor's staff in August as a senior policy adviser.
First lady Jenny Sanford has been involved in the search and has taken
on some administrative duties in the governor's office as the search for
Carter's replacement progresses. She's regularly seen in the halls outside
her husband's office.
Sanford said he plans to take the time to find the right person for the
job. "I'm not going to pick somebody just to pick somebody."