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The Plot to Smear Bradley Vinson

Escambia County

When county officials decided Bradley Vinson wouldn’t get the library director’s job, they didn’t just pass her over—they set out to destroy her reputation.

The text messages and emails tell the story. Before the votes were cast and after, Commissioner Ashlee Hofberger and her allies inside county government traded claims about Bradley Vinson that weren’t true—that she bombed her interview, that she took off her shoes, that she had zero management experience.


Vinson Didn’t “Bomb” Her Interview

Bradley Vinson, currently the media services coordinator for the Escambia County School District, was the library board‘s preferred choice over the candidate hired by County Administrator Wes Moreno.

Commissioner Ashlee Hofberger’s former aide, Melanie Luna, texted the commissioner that County Administrator Moreno had told her Vinson had “bombed (the interview) completely.”

On Feb. 20, the county administration and the WFPL Board of Governance had long-form interviews with the four finalists: Christal Bell-Rivera, Chris Hare, Michael Jenkins and Vinson.


The Interview

Vinson cited more than two decades in library work—from a high school volunteer position in North Carolina to Florida State University’s Strozier Library to circulation, cataloging and children’s services at the Escambia County Public Library. She later served as a school librarian and moved into her current district-level role. Vinson also served on the Library Board of Governance from 2019 to 2023.

Hofberger Doubles Down on Vinson

In her radio interview with Jeff Bergosh, Hofberger attacked Vinson, saying, “I will say, after this vote, I’m doubling down on my stance. Not only am I thankful she didn’t get the job with the county, but I’m a bit appalled that she’s still employed with the school system.”

Vinson addressed book challenges in her interview. She described the school district review process she helped manage as empowering community committees—drawing one member from each school board member’s volunteer pool, plus a media specialist, teacher and administrator—to evaluate challenged titles and recommend age-appropriate placement rather than outright removal. Parents could authorize younger students to access materials moved to higher collections through an interlibrary loan form.

Other Interview Questions

On staff retention, she said she would establish anonymous employee surveys with follow-up action plans, create space for staff to develop and lead new programming, and connect employees with community service opportunities to reinforce their role as “the helpers.”

On budget experience, Vinson said her largest direct responsibility is the school district’s textbook procurement—approximately $11.2 million this year—coordinated across more than 50 schools, multiple departments and the procurement office. Her financial priority framework begins with protecting community access: keeping libraries open the same hours before considering cuts to collections, equipment or courier services. Note: The entire WFPL system budget is only $12.3 million.

On emerging risks, Vinson identified three: funding instability, AI-generated misinformation in published books, and censorship. She praised Escambia County’s MSTU library funding structure as more stable than what many Florida counties face. On AI content, she said vendors should be expected to certify whether nonfiction titles are the product of genuine research or generated text. On censorship, she called for transparent public processes when materials are challenged and easy mechanisms for parents to authorize access to restricted titles.

On the potential for conflicting direction from the Board of County Commissioners and the Library Board of Governance, Vinson said she would first consult the county administrator for perspective, then engage individual board members before attempting to mediate a resolution.

Her answers were honest, candid and sincere.

Read the transcript –  2026-11-24Bradley Vinson Full Interview


The “Zero Managerial Experience” Lie

When citizens began protesting the Moreno’s decision to hire a less qualified candidate, Luna texted Hofberger what Human Resources Director Nikki Powell had told her: “Nikki came by and said Bradley has ZERO managerial experience.”

On March 3, Commissioner Steve Stroberger didn’t ask Assistant County Administrator Debbie Bowers if Vinson took off her shoes. He wanted to know, “Is this the woman that came to the interview in sandals?”

Managerial Experience Documented in Her Application

In her job application, Vinson reported her managerial experience. She described her job as the school district’s coordinator of media services: “Provided district-level leadership for all school libraries by supporting media personnel at 50+ schools, coordinating instructional materials adoption, developing policies and procedures, and managing book challenges while ensuring equitable access for students system-wide.”  See 2026-1121-JobApplication5687766295 (2)

What Vinson Said During the Interview

Bowers attended the Feb. 20 interviews. See february-20-special-meeting-minutes.

In her interview, Vinson described that as the media services coordinator for the Escambia County School District, she oversees school librarians across 50-plus schools. Her challenge is managing a largely dispersed staff that she can’t easily convene. She restructured her weekly and biweekly meetings for librarians into more open office hours on her calendar to allow the librarians to convene for 15 or 30 minutes via Google Meet.

Clearly, Vinson was a manager with district-wide responsibilities and much more than an elementary school librarian. Bowers knew this, as did HR Director Nikki Powell. We don’t know if Moreno ever read Vinson’s application or listened to the Feb. 20 interview.


Why This Matters

Government hiring processes carry an implicit promise:

Bradley Vinson submitted her application. She sat for the interview. She answered 14 questions honestly and in detail. She described her management philosophy, budget experience and vision for the library system. The Library Board heard her and chose her.

And the Board of County Commissioners, except for Commissioner Mike Kohler, appears to be okay with it.

 


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