Former City Council President Scott Wilson receives inaugural JU Shircliff Courage Award

Named after Jacksonville University supporter and philanthropist Robert Shircliff, the award recognizes someone who demonstrated courage in service to Northeast Florida.


  • By Max Marbut
  • | 6:15 p.m. April 5, 2023
  • | 5 Free Articles Remaining!
Former City Council President Scott Wilson was awarded the Jacksonville University Public Policy Institute Shircliff Courage Award.
Former City Council President Scott Wilson was awarded the Jacksonville University Public Policy Institute Shircliff Courage Award.
  • Government
  • Share

The Jacksonville University Public Policy Institute presented former City Council President Scott Wilson with its inaugural Shircliff Courage Award in recognition of his role in launching the Council investigation into the proposed JEA sale and bonus plan in 2019.

The Shircliff Courage in the Community Award recognizes the importance of courage in transformational leadership and serving Jacksonville and North Florida. It honors an individual who puts community ahead of self in pursuit of public good.

Wilson accepted the award at a ceremony April 5. 

“I am honored and humbled to receive the inaugural Shircliff Courage in the Community Award. Mr. Shircliff was an extraordinary individual who shared his passion for Jacksonville by giving to and supporting others,” Wilson said in a March 30 news release.

As Council president, Wilson called for an end to discussions surrounding a sale of the public utility and launched the Council’s Special Investigatory Committee on JEA Matters. 

The committee investigated the attempt to privatize JEA and provide a bonus plan of potentially more than a billion dollars.

“The investigation into the proposed JEA sale and bonus plan, made possible by Scott Wilson’s leadership and courage, utilized outside counsel, put witnesses under oath, and issued a historic 132-page report,” said Rick Mullaney, Shircliff executive director of the Jacksonville University Public Policy Institute, in the release.

“The investigation and report provided rare transparency and accountability in the JEA scheme and assisted a federal investigation that subsequently indicted the JEA CEO and CFO,” he said.

“His courage, in putting community before self in one of the biggest proposed financial transactions in our city’s history, makes Scott a worthy recipient of the inaugural Shircliff Courage in the Community Award.”

Wilson served on the Jacksonville City Council from 2015 to 2020 as the District 4 representative. He served as Council president from 2019 to 2020. 

He worked as an executive Council assistant for District 4 representative for eight years before winning the seat in 2015. 

Wilson now works for Jacksonville-based Total Military Management, where he assists military families move throughout the country.

“As then-City Council President, Scott Wilson stood up against significant political pressure when he appointed and supported the Council’s special committee to investigate the City’s purposefully opaque and ultimately unsuccessful effort to sell JEA,” said Stephen Busey, chairman of Smith, Hulsey & Busey and counsel to the Council Special Investigatory Committee.

“But for Scott’s courage and unsung tenacity, the true story behind the City’s failed and fraudulent scheme may have never been told.”

Former JU board of trustees member and philanthropist Robert Shircliff had a close relationship with JU for nearly half a century. He was a founding member of the Public Policy Institute Advisory Board. 

His belief in integrity, courage and stewardship was instrumental in establishing the institute’s culture and driving its success, the release said.

Shircliff and his wife, Carol, were supporters of JU. Their name can be found on campus at the Shircliff Hall at the Village Apartments, the Shircliff Conference Room and Carol Shircliff Healing Gardens in the Brooks Rehabilitation Center of Healthcare Sciences and Shircliff Circle annual giving society.

 

×

Special Offer: $5 for 2 Months!

Your free article limit has been reached this month.
Subscribe now for unlimited digital access to our award-winning business news.