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Sarasota's assistant county administrator resigns amid stormwater management fallout

Sarasota County Assistant Administrator Mark Cunningham
Florida City & County Management Association
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Mark Cunningham, who has worked 13 years for Sarasota County government, is resigning effective the end of this month.

Mark Cunningham becomes the highest-ranking official to step down in the wake of revelations about widespread failures in the county's stormwater system. County officials did not disclose the reason for his leaving.

Sarasota Assistant County Administrator Mark Cunningham resigned on Wednesday, becoming the highest-ranking official to step down in the wake of revelations about widespread failures in the county's stormwater management system.

County officials did not disclose the reason for Cunningham's resignation but said in an emailed statement that County Administrator Jonathan Lewis had accepted it.

"After 13 years of employment with Sarasota County Government, Cunningham will step down from his role on July 31," the statement said. "County administration is reviewing the hiring process moving forward."

Cunningham could not be reached for comment.

His departure, effective at the end of the month, follows mounting public scrutiny sparked by a joint investigation from the Florida Trident and Suncoast Searchlight, which found the county ignored repeated warnings, failed to maintain key flood-control infrastructure and allowed critical staff vacancies to go unfilled — all contributing to catastrophic flooding during the 2024 storm season.

The investigation also uncovered that longstanding infrastructure like Phillippi Creek had been neglected for decades, essential flood protocols were disregarded or forgotten and millions in stormwater assessment funds were left unused or diverted — despite clear recommendations from a county-funded consultant report intended to reform the system.

Sarasota County Administrator Jonathan Lewis during the 30-minute press conference Monday, June 30, 2025.
Derek Gilliam/Suncoast Searchlight /
Sarasota County Administrator Jonathan Lewis during the 30-minute press conference Monday, June 30, 2025.

Cunningham, 60, recently was reassigned by Lewis to oversee stormwater operations alongside Public Works director Spencer Anderson, who reports directly to Cunningham. Together, Cunningham and Anderson were the top officials overseeing stormwater operations during the period when many of the failures occurred.

The resignation also comes just days after the Sarasota County Commission voted to create a standalone stormwater department that will report directly to the county administrator — part of a broader restructuring effort following public outcry. Ben Quartermaine, a former county stormwater engineering and operations manager, was hired to lead the new department and will start next month.

This isn't the first time Cunningham considered leaving the county. He was a finalist for the Pasco County administrator job in 2017— an opportunity that arose around the same time Sarasota County announced it would hire then-North Port City Manager Jonathan Lewis to fill its top administrative post.

Cunningham has served as assistant county administrator since 2012 and brings more than 30 years of experience in city and county government. Before coming to Sarasota, he held senior planning and development roles as executive director of planning and development in Denton, Texas; Polk County; and several counties in Maryland, as well as Jacksonville, North Carolina, according to his county biography.

A former U.S. Marine, Cunningham served eight years as a combat engineer, including deployments during Operations Desert Storm and Desert Shield, his bio says. He holds a master's degree in public administration with a focus in urban management from the University of Baltimore and a bachelor's degree in public policy analysis from Sojourner Douglass College.

The departure marks a significant moment in the county's evolving stormwater response and follows months of resident frustration and calls for accountability focusing on Lewis and Anderson, but not Cunningham.

Michael Barfield is an investigative reporter for the Florida Trident.

Florida Trident is partnering with Suncoast Searchlight to examine the challenges facing Florida as it grapples with hurricanes, sea level rise and climate change. This story is part of that statewide effort. Learn more at floridatrident.org and suncoastsearchlight.org
Copyright 2025 WGCU

Michael Barfield/Florida Center for Governmental Accountability
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