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Hallandale Beach Blog

Entering Broward County, Florida.
Trust me when I tell you, this is NOT the Land of Lincoln. Above, sign on north-bound U.S.-1/South Federal Highway, at the Broward County-Miami-Dade County line, with, left-to-right, Gulfstream Park Race Track & Casino in center, Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa, and The Beach Club.
Hallandale Beach, FL; January 2007 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

A common-sense public policy overview offering a critical perspective on current events, economics, government, politics & culture of South Florida, in particular, the cities of
Hallandale Beach and Hollywood, and sometimes Aventura.

The antics and activities of the rest of the Sunshine State are also covered at my other blog, South Beach Hoosier, www.SouthBeachHoosier.blogspot.com, where I also ruminate on national and international subjects, the interplay of politics and media, and public policy, as well as the past and current South Florida sports scene with the Dolphins, the Marlins, the Baltimore Orioles, the University of Miami Hurricanes, and the Indiana University Hoosiers.
But if it's particularly germane or amusing, I post it here, too.
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Entering Broward County, May 8, 2008

Entering Broward County, May 8, 2008
Entering Broward County, 2008. Gulfstream Park Race Track in center, and over on State Road A1A, the Diplomat Residences and Westin Diplomat Resort and Spa in Hollywood, and the three towers of The Beach Club in HB. May 8, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Two years later...in January, 2009 the view has changed.

Two years later...in January, 2009 the view has changed.
Entering Broward County, 2009. Due to road and sidewalk construction on U.S.-1 for future Village at Gulfstream retail project, FDOT moved sign one block north, hence different angle. Looking northeast from north-bound U.S.-1/South Federal Highway towards Gulfstream Park Racing & Casino, and the construction zone for Village of Gulfstream, with the Diplomat Residences, the Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa and The Beach Club condo towers in the distance on State Road A1A. January 2, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier.
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Hallandale Beach Blog is where I try to inject or superimpose a degree of accountability, transparency and insight onto local Broward County government and public policy issues, which I feel is sorely lacking in local media now. On this blog, I concentrate my energy, enthusiasm, anger and laser-like attention on the coastal cities of Aventura, Hollywood and Hallandale Beach.

If you lived in this part of South Florida, you'd ALREADY be stuck in stultifying traffic, paying higher-than-necessary taxes and continually musing about the chronic lack of accountability among not only elected govt. officials, but also of city, county and state employees as well. Collectively, with a few rare exceptions, they couldn't be farther from the sort of strong results-oriented, eager work-ethic mentality that local residents deserve and expect.

This is particularly true in the town I live in, the City of Hallandale Beach, just north of Aventura and south of Hollywood. There, the "Perfect Storm" of years of apathy, incompetency and cronyism are all too readily apparent.
Sadly for its residents, HB is where even easily-solved, quality-of-life problems are left to fester for YEARS on end, because of myopia, lack of common sense and ineffective supervisory management. It's a city with lots of potential because of its terrific location, yet its citizens have become numb to its outrages and screw-ups after years of the worst kind of mismanagement and lack of foresight. On a daily basis, they wake up and see the same old problems that have never being adequately resolved by the city in a logical and responsible fashion, merely kicked -once again- further down the road.

I used to ask myself, not always rhetorically, "Where are all the enterprising young reporters who want to show that through their own hard work and enterprise, what REAL investigative reporting can produce?" Hearing no response, I decided to start a blog that could do some of these things, taking the p.o.v. of a reasonable but skeptical person seeing the situation for the first time, and wanting questions answered in a honest and logical way that citizens have the right to expect.

Hallandale Beach Blog intends to be a catalyst for positive change.

If there's one constant gripe in South Florida, regardless of your age, race, nationality or political persuasion, it's about the fundamental lack of PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY here among Florida's state, regional and local govt./agency officials. Hallandale Beach Blog aims to be a small step towards regaining some of that needed accountability, whether it's thru simple public scrutiny, or requires a degree of follow-up investigation and public exposure of incompetency, cronyism or simple negligence -South Florida's usual governing style.

"And David put his hand in the bag and took out a stone and slung it. And it struck the Philistine on the head and he fell to the ground. Amen."- Preacher Purl encouraging the underdog Hickory High basketball team before the state title game against heavily-favored South Bend Central in 1986's Hoosiers http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091217/

Audio of pregame speech:
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Hallandale Beach Water Tower, looking east from State Road A1A/South Ocean Drive

Hallandale Beach Water Tower, looking east from State Road A1A/South Ocean Drive
Hallandale Beach Water Tower, looking east from State Road A1A/South Ocean Drive; May 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Blog Archive

Old HBB elements are now at www.hallandale-beach-blog.blogspot.com

Some elements formerly seen at Hallandale Beach Blog, such as photos, graphics and videos have been moved into cold storage.
Visit them or see what you've missed at: http://hallandale-beach-blog.blogspot.com/
My Photo
Hallandale Beach, Florida, United States
View my complete profile

Hallandale Beach Blog

Hallandale Beach Blog
South Beach Hoosier/Hallandale Beach Blog's crimson-colored Indiana University ballcap. If you see someone at a South Florida public policy discussion/govt. meeting wearing this IU cap, scribbling notes furiously, and, shaking his head in disbelief, don't be afraid to come over and say hello or pitch story ideas. Photo by South Beach Hoosier. Move your mouse over the cap for a message from IU head basketball coach Tom Crean.

Looking south towards The Beach Club and the Hallandale Beach Water Tower on A1A from the beach, near the Hollywood cityline, May 2, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Hallandale Beach Water Tower on A1A/South Ocean Drive

Hallandale Beach Water Tower on A1A/South Ocean Drive
Located below the Hallandale Beach Water Tower on A1A/South Ocean Drive, on the south side (right) is the "Community Center" that HB City Hall, thru their gross incompetency, has made impossible for HB citizen taxpayers to use now for 116 weeks and counting as of Nov. 10, 2009. And where's the American flag on the Fourth of July weekend? Missing in action as it has been for months! July 3, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier

"Why do they need that in the Broward County charter?"

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"Laws and Constitutions go for nothing where the general sentiment is corrupt."
-New York Times, September 22, 1851

"Why do they need that in the Broward County charter?"
-Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper at April 2, 2008 HB City Commission meeting, in discussing possible inclusion of Broward County Charter Review Commission's proposal for Ethics Commission to deal with Broward County Commission, on November 2008 ballot.

Six YEARS after the county's voters overwhelmingly passed an amendment to the County charter requiring its adoption, the Broward County Commission had yet to live up to its legal
responsibility. That's why!
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Corruption Isn't Unique to South Florida, It's the Level of the Stupidity That Is

Corruption Isn't Unique to South Florida, It's the Level of the Stupidity That Is

"[Chicago Mayor] William Hale Thompson was defeated Tuesday after a campaign which he alone made disgraceful. The election was an ejection, a dirty job, but Chicago has washed itself and put on clean clothes. Thompson recognized the [Chicago] Tribune as his chief enemy. The Tribune was glad to earn that opinion. It certainly tried to do so. It has taken the fight to him on every occasion during the long and depraved course of his administration. It is unpleasant business to eject a skunk, but someone has to do it.
For Chicago, Thompson has meant filth, corruption, obscenity, idiocy and bankruptcy. He has given the city an international reputation for moronic buffoonery, barbaric crime, triumphant hoodlumism, unchecked graft and a dejected citizenship. He nearly ruined the property and completely destroyed the pride of the city. He made Chicago a byword for the collapse of American civilization. In his attempt to continue this he excelled himself as a liar and defamer of character. He’s out.
He is not only out, but dishonored. He is deserted by his friends. He is permanently marked by the evidences of his character and conduct. His health is impaired by his ways of life and he leaves office and goes from the city the most discredited man who ever held place in it."

-Excerpts from April 1931 Chicago Tribune editorial following Republican "Big Bill" Thompson's loss to his Democratic rival Anton Cermak. A friend of organized crime during the Al Capone era, Thompson was the last Republican elected mayor of Chicago. But less than two years later, Mayor Cermak was shot while shaking hands with President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt at Miami's Bayfront Park. He died from gunshot wounds to his lungs three weeks later.

See
http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/3686.html

Political Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Lies of Mayor Joy Cooper and City Manager Mike Good

Political Actions Speak Louder Than Words: Lies of Mayor Joy Cooper and City Manager Mike Good
March 3, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier, just days before the Air Supply concert on the beach, as Hallandale Beach DPW employees try to make the area "appear" to be well-maintained -when in reality, it's not- and thus fool HB taxpayers and visitors alike. This building underneath the city's iconic Water Tower, just steps from both the Atlantic Ocean and State Road A1A, was turned over to the City of Hallandale Beach on August 3rd, 2007, and yet STILL remains OFF-LIMITS to everyday HB citizens, taxpayers and residents, the true "owners" of the building, TWO YEARS later. There has STILL not been a single public open forum held by the city to gauge how citizens want to utilize it best. Instead, the building remains a veritable clubhouse for the cronies and pals of HB City Hall's elected officials and employees. And need I ask YET again, where's the American flag on the city flagpole next to the fountain? Once again, HB City Hall shows their gross incompetency by being unable to manage something as simple as keeping a flag flying. Pathetic!!!

The City of Hallandale Beach subsidizes one-sided propaganda thru $50k grant to FAUX newspaper

The City of Hallandale Beach subsidizes one-sided propaganda thru $50k grant to FAUX newspaper
Above, the document that memorializes the fact that the City of Hallandale Beach subsidizes one-sided propaganda thru $50k grant to FAUX newspaper. Click on photo above to see my post about that. And yes, that is the same FREE fake newspaper that gives Mayor Joy Cooper a "column" to extoll her particular brand of ill-informed nonsense and half-truths without fear that a Letter to the Editor will EVER appear that directly refutes and corrects her serial mis-statements. The Sun-Times not only DOESN'T run them, they DON'T print ANYTHING the slightest bit critical of Hallandale Beach City Hall, Mayor Cooper or City Manager Mike Good and his high-paid staff. Just so you know, as of just a few months ago, HB's city manager and staff made more in salaries than the Hollywood City Manager's Office, despite the City of Hollywood being well over THREE TIMES larger in both size and population. Guess who'd never ever mention that salient fact?

The faux newspaper that serves as propaganda arm to Hallandale Beach City Hall

The faux newspaper that serves as propaganda arm to Hallandale Beach City Hall
The faux newspaper that serves as the propaganda arm to Hallandale Beach City Hall and the Joy Cooper & Mike Good Regime, the South Florida Sun-Times. This particular vending machine is located but two feet away from one of the emergency fire exits of The Flashback Diner on U.S.-1/South Federal Highway, across from Gulfstream Park. In a normal, well-run city, they'd be removed to another place on the property. But in Hallandale Beach, a trio of vending machines can be placed right next to an emergency exit in a building one block from HB City Hall, and nobody there EVER notices the self-evident violation! They are deaf, dumb and blind to everything around them. November 8, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Twenty years after the Fall of the Berlin Wall, Hallandale Beach, Florida still needs glasnost!

November 5th, 2009 Update re South Florida Sun-Times, above.

At yesterday morning's Hallandale Beach City Commission meeting, I heard the new official Hallandale Beach City Hall stalling tactic regarding the actual citizens and taxpayers of this city being able to see the documents regarding City Manager Mike Good's decision to give $50,000 in city CRA money as a grant to the faux newspaper called the South Florida Sun-Times, above.

Mayor Joy Cooper
was practically gloating Wednesday when she foolishly said that she thinks that the particular documents are "proprietary" and can't be shared with public!

Can she really be that arrogant and anti-democratic in public, he said rhetorically.
Can she really think that she can trump the State of Florida Constitution and the protected rights that Florida citizens enjoy under our
Sunshine Laws, forever, and that there won't be legal and political consequences for her personally and the city?

To answer my own question, yes, Joy Cooper is indeed that arrogant, that anti-democratic and that egotistical.

Proprietary?
Sure, because in the current economy of the year 2009, actual for-profit companies want to model their own behavior on an inferior product like the faux newspaper, the
Sun-Times, that doesn't actually generate a profit, has a very poor reputation and that rather than accurately reflect the news of the community in its pages, exists as a propaganda arm of Hallandale Beach City Hall and the mayor and city manager who give it money, just like the Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce.

Twenty years after the Fall of the Berlin Wall, Hallandale Beach, Florida still needs glasnost!



Hallandale Beach's iconic beachball-colored Water Tower on State Road A1A/South Ocean Drive, looking west from the beach. September 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

The Beach Club

The Beach Club
Looking SE at The Beach Club from the Hollywood side of State Road A1A. May 12, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Trump Hollywood, Westin Diplomat, Crowne Resort

Trump Hollywood, Westin Diplomat, Crowne Resort
Looking NE towards Hollywood on State Road A1A from the 2500 block of East Hallandale Beach Blvd./State Road 858 just before crossing the Intracoastal Bridge: (l-r) Trump Hollywood, Diplomat Residences, the Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa, the Crowne Plaza Hollywood Beach. March 25, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier
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Hallandale Beach in The Miami Herald over 25 years ago
"For years people living in and out of its condo-walled sector east of U.S. 1 have wondered what to do about the city of Hallandale. In the 19th Century the condo giants would have served as ideal fortresses. From top floors of the towers, enemy ships could be readily spotted and blown out of the Atlantic. Oceanfront dwellers could have been protected from the west by the Hallandale Beach Boulevard drawbridge and moat called the Intracoastal Waterway. But this is the 20th Century..."

-Miami Herald Broward Columnist Bill Braucher's first paragraph from July 24, 1983.
To which Hallandale Beach Blog can only say, Bulls-eye!
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The South Florida I Grew Up In
Excerpted from Joan Didion's Miami, 1987, Simon & Schuster: In the continuing opera still called, even by Cubans who have now lived the largest part of their lives in this country, el exilo, the exile, meetings at private homes in Miami Beach are seen to have consequences. The actions of individuals are seen to affect events directly. Revolutions and counter-revolutions are framed in the private sector, and the state security apparatus exists exclusively to be enlisted by one or another private player. That this particular political style, indigenous to the Caribbean and to Central America, has now been naturalized in the United States is one reason why, on the flat coastal swamps of South Florida, where the palmettos once blew over the detritus of a dozen failed booms and the hotels were boarded up six months a year, there has evolved since the early New Year's morning in 1959 when Fulgencio Batista flew for the last time out of Havana a settlement of considerable interest, not exactly an American city as American cities have until recently been understood but a tropical capital: long on rumor, short on memory, overbuilt on the chimera of runaway money and referring not to New York or Boston or Los Angeles or Atlanta but to Caracas and Mexico, to Havana and to Bogota and to Paris and Madrid. Of American cities Miami has since 1959 connected only to Washington, which is the peculiarity of both places, and increasingly the warp...

"The general wildness, the eternal labyrinths of waters and marshes, interlocked and apparently neverending; the whole surrounded by interminable swamps... Here I am then in the Floridas, thought I," John James Audobon wrote to the editor of The Monthly American Journal of Geology and Natural Science during the course of an 1831 foray in the territory then still called the Floridas. The place came first, and to touch down there is to begin to understand why at least six administrations now have found South Florida so fecund a colony. I never passed through security for a flight to Miami without experiencing a certain weightlessness, the heightened wariness of having left the developed world for a more fluid atmosphere, one in which the native distrust of extreme possibilities that tended to ground the temperate United States in an obeisance to democratic institutions seemed rooted, if at all, only shallowly. At the gate for such flights the preferred language was already Spanish. Delays were explained by weather in Panama. The very names of the scheduled destinations suggested a world in which many evangelical inclinations had historically been accommodated, many yearnings toward empire indulged...

In this mood Miami seemed not a city at all but a tale, a romance of the tropics, a kind of waking dream in which any possibility could and would be accomodated...
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A fish rots from the head down, and so does local government in Broward County, FL

A fish rots from the head down, and so does local government in Broward County, FL
This sign on U.S.-1 and S.E. 5th Street, across from Gulfstream Park Racing and Casino, lets you know that you're just feet away from the HB City Hall and Police Department. It's a government that gives every impression of holding itself apart and above from the citizens it's supposed to serve. The crazy thing is, they really don't think they have to follow the laws that govern everyone else in the state of Florida and the U.S., whether of logic and reason, contracts, or, more to the point for this blog, the Florida Statutes on Sunshine Laws and Public Records. City employees in Hallandale Beach routinely refuse to answer reasonable questions posed to them by residents, and often berate you for even having the nerve to ask! One of the other things that's quite shocking is the blatant disregard by the HB Police Dept. and Fire Dept. for basic safety rules. Common sense rules of behavior that are in place in every other American town, no matter how small or obscure. City employees -and friends of theirs- routinely park "their cars" directly in front of the building's east entrance, often for hours at a time. That's right, I said for HOURS at a time. While in every other town you'd find a clearly posted sign saying simply: "No Parking, Fire Zone, Cars Will be Towed," in HB, there are NO signs at all. I have personally observed parked HB city vehicles there that have prevented the HB Fire & Rescue vehicles from getting as close as necessary to the building. I've personally spoken to the individual members of Fire & Rescue after such incidents, and they were positively indignant that they are forced to put up with this sort of thing in the Year 2008. Oh, and one last thing. The lights that are supposed to illuminate this sign in front of HB City Hall HAVEN'T worked in over FOUR YEARS, either. Just like their cousin down the block on U.S.-1 at the city border with Aventura. I've told this to dozens of HB city officials, including the Mayor, City Manager, his staff, the Police Chief, a Police Captain, et al. None of them have done a thing, which is why as late as October 24. 2008, the sign was STILL dark at night! Four-and-a-half-years of nothing but darkness! Sundown, March 3, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Change Hallandale Beach

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Change Hallandale Beach
New fact-based, constantly-updated website by Hallandale Beach activist Michael Butler that goes directly after the longtime cronyism and incompetency at Hallandale Beach City Hall with cold hard facts, figures, graphs, charts and videos.
The kind of evidence that Mayor Joy Cooper, City Manager Mike Good and the Rubber Stamp Crew -i.e. City Commissioners William Julian, Dotty Ross and Anthony A. Sanders- can't refute with any of their serial mis-statements, exaggerations or half-truths from the dais.
The very ones which are never acknowledged by their paid flacks over at the South Florida Sun-Times, whom the city gave $50,000 to last year for what many HB citizens believe was a thinly-disguised effort to keep the REAL news about their continual screw-ups and ethical mis-adventures out.

See the evidence for yourself and see what's REALLY going on here. http://www.changehallandale.com

Balance Sheet Online

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Balance Sheet Online
Public interest, community affairs website on government and public policy in
Hollywood (FL),
Broward County and environs, led by co-editors Sara Case & Laurie Schecter.
It's my kind of public forum: Identifies areas of concern, proposes sensible solutions,
but takes no prisoners among elected officials, lobbyists or the chattering class!
http://www.balancesheetonline.com/

City of Hollywood City Hall

City of Hollywood City Hall
An early morning shot of the east side of Hollywood City Hall the morning of the Johnson Street Redevelopment RFP Evaluation Committee meeting, where presentations were heard; October 14, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier. For more info on what's going on with this important project, see http://www.hollywoodfl.org/html/JohnsonStBeachRFP.htm

Blue Dog Democrat Coalition

Blue Dog Democrat Coalition
Click on the Blue Dog Democrat Coalition icon to go to the website full of compelling, fact-filled arguments against all the bad public policy prescriptions now flying around Washington, D.C. The BDC advocates fiscal responsibility, with an emphasis on cost-saving and bipartisan common sense. Not surprisingly, given that approach, the only member from Florida is Allen Boyd from North Florida.

My slice of the political universe -map of Florida’s 17th Congressional District

My slice of the political universe -map of Florida’s 17th Congressional District From http://www.govtrack.us/ "We help you keep tabs on the U.S. Congress. This is the independent, nonpartisan website that started the "civic hacking" movement around the United States Congress."

Broken Latin in Hallandale Beach, FL -Seaoats

Broken Latin in Hallandale Beach, FL -Seaoats
This descriptive nature sign on Hallandale Beach's North Beach, regarding a supposedly protected environment, complete with Latin genus, is a particularly telling example of the kind of terribly myopic and non-existent mgmt. the beach has received for years from the City of Hallandale Beach, Broward County and the State of Florida. This sign for seaoats has been broken since at least October of 2003. Even more galling, the area immediately around the seaoats has pile after pile of hundreds of old cigarettes dumped willy-nilly around it. The day this photo was taken, the garbage below the sign and in adjoining areas had been there for WEEKS! Original photo here was taken January 2007; this one taken May 11, 2008; photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Close-up of Broken Latin

Close-up of Broken Latin
The Seaoats sign that's been broken since at least Oct. 2003 at Hallandale Beach's north beach, not far from the lone lifeguard stand. In late June of 2008, due to years of neglect and apathy by the State of Florida, Broward County and the City of Hallandale Beach, the sign was blown off and landed fifty feet away, where yours truly noticed it under a beer can. Now there are ZERO signs like this on Hallandale Beach's North Beach. Your government in action! May 16, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Hallandale Beach, City of Choice

Hallandale Beach, City of Choice
The sign that greets northbound drivers on U.S.-1/South Federal Hwy. as they leave the City of Aventura and Miami-Dade County in the rear window. Unfortunately, it's the perfect metaphor for the City of Hallandale Beach and its elected officials and employees: short-sighted and lacking in common sense. This sign is placed so far west on the median strip -and practically BEHIND a palm tree- that drivers can't actually read it even if they wanted to. In any case, because of the longtime gross incompetency and negligence of the city, the spotlights that are supposed to illuminate the sign at night HAVEN'T worked since about mid-January of 2004. Which is to say, yes, LONGER than the U.S.'s involvement in WW II. Welcome to the City of Hallandale Beach! Begin heavy traffic, chronic red tape and mis-adventures in government! Hallandale Beach, FL; Original photo here was taken January 2007; this one taken May 8, 2008; photo by South Beach Hoosier. Rather incredibly, it's still this way as of January 28th, 2009. January 2009 Postscript: the three palm trees that had been in front of it on the median are gone, so now you can REALLY notice that it DOESN'T work! February 2009 Postscript: In order to make room for a left-turning lane at S.E. 5th Street into The Village of Gulfstream, the invisible sign has finally been removed. Buh-bye!!!

Welcome to City of Aventura, FL

Welcome to City of Aventura, FL
Meanwhile, less than one block south of the HB sign on U.S.-1, and six blocks south of the Hallandale Beach City Hall, lies this internally-illuminated City of Aventura sign that greets south-bound travellers every night on U.S.-1/Biscayne Blvd., leaving Hallandale Beach. In over five years, I have NEVER seen this sign not working properly. That's how you help to create a positive first impression for visitors. Compare and contrast that approach to the VERY NEGATIVE one conveyed by the north-bound HB sign! May 11, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

City of Aventura banners on N.E. 213th St., south of Gulfstream Park

City of Aventura banners on N.E. 213th St., south of Gulfstream Park
City of Aventura banners on N.E. 213th Street, just south of Gulfstream Park and the Village at Gulfstream. August 8, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Old Gulfstream Park Race Track directional sign in the Ojus neighborhood of NMB.

Old Gulfstream Park Race Track directional sign in the Ojus neighborhood of NMB.
This old weather-beaten and fading Gulfstream Park sign is located on W. Dixie Highway & N.E. 186th Street in North Miami Beach -next to Via Brasil and its life-size window display of Ronaldo- over three miles south of the race track. (It's also across the street from where I get my hair cut.) This one sign has steered lots of visitors towards Gulfstream Park over the years, but my question today isn't why it hasn't it been replaced by a new sign by the geniuses at MAGNA, but rather, why is it that in the year 2009, there is NOT a single directional sign anywhere in the entire city of Hallandale Beach indicating where HB's own City Hall is located -across the street from Gulfstream? Or any sign for the HB Police Dept. HQ? Or the HB Fire/Rescue HQ? Or the HB Cultural Center? If that simple example doesn't tell you how backward, incompetent and poorly-managed the City of Hallandale Beach is, I really don't know what will. So this old sign soldiers on while the City of HB snoozes and reminds everyone why it's such a laughing-stock. September 24, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

The Lawton Chiles Trail

The Lawton Chiles Trail
Sign on south-bound U.S.-1 at Broward County/Miami-Dade countyline. Lawton Chiles was a great and humble man, blessed with an optimistic spirit, a tireless work-ethic and unquestioned integrity, whom I first met and campaigned with in 1976 during his first Senate re-election battle. We talked as we walked up to one NMB house after another -not too far from the county Carter-Mondale HQ in NMB I worked at- greeting lots of surprised voters, as we took turns ringing doorbells, all under the watchful eye of a film crew from Channel 7/WSVN. Over the years, before and after I moved to the D.C. area from South Florida, I was fortunate enough to talk to him from time to time and get the benefit of his advice and wisdom, as well as enjoy the warm hospitality of The Florida House, across from The Supreme Court, the brilliant idea of his wonderful wife, Rhea, with whom he worked to make it a reality. For more info, see http://floridaembassy.com/ June 22, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Then-Florida Senate Minority Leader Steve Geller mocking the DNC

Then-Florida State Senator Steve Geller, the Senate Minority Leader at the time, mocking the Democratic National Committee's threats to strip the state of convention delegates if it insisted on moving-up the state's Presidential primary date. The DNC kept their promise, yet Geller claims to bear no responsibility for it. Typical Geller!

Lynda Carter: Brains, Wit and Beauty!

Lynda Carter: Brains, Wit and Beauty!
Lynda Carter: Brains, Wit and Beauty! Hallandale Beach DESPERATELY needs a Lynda Carter-like Wonder Woman to fight crime, cronyism and corruption at HB City Hall and throughout South Florida. (Or FBI Special Agent Dana Scully!) You Can't Beat the Original!

Fort Lauderdale Native and FSU Grad Tiffany Fallon as Wonder Woman

Fort Lauderdale Native and FSU Grad Tiffany Fallon as Wonder Woman
Tiffany Fallon is married to Joe Don Rooney of the Grammy Award-winning country group Rascal Flatts. Playboy February 2008. Click on photo to go to Tiffany's MySpace page.
John Steed and Emma Peel - Two more people I desperately need to engage in helping us clean-up South Florida... with a little wit and panache, to boot.
Diana Rigg -only woman good enough to marry James Bond!-is where I first developed my fondness for women from Albion, especially those who seemed like they could work for MI6.
The seamless transition from Mrs. Peel to Tara King

NBC's 1970's Sunday Night Mystery Movie

And finally, helping out with the investigation of criminality, corruption and cronyism in South Florida government, the whole utility crew from NBC's 1970's Sunday Night Mystery Movie. This clever and stylish opening remains one of the all-time best!

In the Heart of a Great Country, Beats the Soul of Hoosier Nation

In the Heart of a Great Country, Beats the Soul of Hoosier Nation
"In the Heart of a Great Country, Beats the Soul of Hoosier Nation." -South Beach Hoosier, 2007. Click on map of Hoosier Nation for a surprise visitor!

The NCAA Championship Banners

The NCAA Championship Banners
Assembly Hall, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. I was there in 1981 for NCAA Title #4 vs. North Carolina. Click on photo to go to IU Basketball homepage.

The Big Ten Network

The Big Ten Network
The BigTenNetwork -My lifeline to the normalcy of the American Midwest, college sports and the Hoosiers. Click on logo to go to BTN website.

Sebastian the Ibis, the U-M mascot

Sebastian the Ibis, the U-M mascot
Like U-M fans everywhere, Sebastian the Ibis, the U-M mascot, hasn't had much to cheer about lately. Click on Sebastian for photo gallery of The Orange Bowl

Paige Maxwell of Ohio State is one of the faces and future of Women's Soccer in the U.S.

Paige Maxwell of Ohio State is one of the faces and future of Women's Soccer in the U.S.

London 2012 Olympics and blog sites

Official London 2012 Olympics website:
http://www.london2012.com/index.php

Official London 2012 Olympics blog site:
http://www.london2012.com/blog/index.php

London 2012 Olympic site webcams - LIVE 24/7/365

London 2012 Olympic site webcams - LIVE 24/7/365

http://www.london2012.com/plans/olympic-park/webcams/index.php

Jóhanna Guðrún Jónsdóttir, a.k.a. Yohanna. Her talent is transcendent!

Per my very enthusiastic and positive May 22nd blog post about singer Jóhanna Guðrún Jónsdóttir, a.k.a. Yohanna. Since first hearing her sing Is It True back on February 15th, at Söngvakeppni sjónvarpsins 2009, earning the right to represent Iceland at the 2009 Eurovison Song Contest in Moscow in May -where she placed 2nd- I've listened to every one of her songs, all genres, watched all of her videos. She's never less than flat-out amazing! Her enormous talent could hardly be more obvious!

Yohanna TV advert for Quaker Oats Scandinvia's Havre Fras cereal

Yohanna TV ad for Quaker Oats Scandinvia's Havre Fras - "Hollustan fylgir per allan daggin!" Jóhanna Guðrún Jónsdóttir http://www.youtube.com/yohannamusic

Yohanna YouTube Channel is Great!

Yohanna YouTube Channel is Great!
Jóhanna Guðrún Jónsdóttir -Click on photo!

Yohanna on MySpace - JÓHANNA GUÐRÚN JÓNSDÓTTIR IS FANTASTIC!

Yohanna on MySpace - JÓHANNA GUÐRÚN JÓNSDÓTTIR IS FANTASTIC!

Yohanna on Myspace

Jóhanna Guðrún Jónsdóttir -Click on photo!

Blake Lively and Leighton Meester of Gossip Girl, Rolling Stone 1075, March 2009.

Blake Lively and Leighton Meester of Gossip Girl, Rolling Stone 1075, March 2009.
You scream, I scream, we all scream for... Gossip Girl. Photo by Terry Richardson. Click on the photo to read the article and see more photos.

Blake Lively -A Smile That Can Fill Up a TV Screen

Blake Lively -A Smile That Can Fill Up a TV Screen
South Beach Hoosier screenshot of Gossip Girl star Blake Lively on CBS-TV's Late Show with David Letterman, March 24th, 2009. To be honest, I didn't plan on this shot looking like this, but am very happy with the result. Talent, charm, looks and moxie are going to keep her around for a LONG TIME.

David Patrick Columbia's New York Social Diary

David Patrick Columbia\
David Patrick Columbia provides your eyes and ears on what's really going on in Manhattan's busy social and philanthropic world, with consistently fabulous photos and discerning, nuanced insight you won't find elsewhere. Click on the logo to see for yourself.

Adina Fohlin's TV advert for Apoliva. “APOLIVA –FÖR SVENSKA ÖRHÅLLANDEN.

Swedish supermodel Adina Fohlin's supposedly controversial TV advert for Apoliva. “APOLIVA –FÖR SVENSKA ÖRHÅLLANDEN. (For Swedish conditions). I think it's sublime.

Molly Sandén on myspace.com

Molly Sandén on myspace.com
Molly Sandén -Click on the phot and hear her sing Fånga en sommar, from TV4's Nyhetsmorgon, July 5th, 2009. Excellent quality!

Esmée Denters YouTube Channel

Esmée Denters YouTube Channel
Esmée Denters YouTube Channel -She's the real deal! Click on her photo and you'll see the talent for yourself. Personally, I much prefer Esmée singing melodic pop songs to R&B, but maybe that's just me. In any case, this Dutch Treat has got the pipes to be around for a very long time.

Esmée's August 12th showcase in LA

Esmée Denters -Video of Esmée's August 12th showcase in LA that got lots of great PR from invited music critics and industry pros.

What is Kaupthinking? Advert från den nu förstatligade isländska banken

Those who've read the many fine NYT articles on the financial crisis in Iceland, or Michael Lewis' piece in April's Vanity Fair, will appreciate the message this TV advert is trying to convey. What is Kaupthinking? Michael Lewis article in Vanity Fair on isländska banken at: http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2009/04/iceland200904

Sveriges TV (SVT) takes two looks at the pythons in the Everglades and says, "Nej tak!"

Sveriges TV (SVT) takes two looks at the pythons in the Everglades and says, "Nej tak!" Krafttag mot ovalkamna ormar. Pytonjakt i Everglades. http://svtplay.se/

Slate - Buy One Anyway

How to Save Newspapers As the hand-wringing about the fate of newspapers continues, Slate V and producer Scott Blaszak imagine a new approach: straight charity.

Malcolm Gladwell: What if Newspapers Had Just Been Invented?

Malcolm Gladwell: What if Newspapers Had Just Been Invented?

Still the best newspaper film ever made!

Still the best newspaper film ever made!
Still the best newspaper film ever made! His Girl Friday (1940) starring Cary Grant & Rosalind Russell, directed by Howard Hawks. Click the photo to see original theater trailer.

Red Eye: Ink-stained Stimulus? Bailout for newspapers? Pinch the NY Times correspondent opines.

Red Eye: Ink-stained Stimulus? Bailout for newspapers? Pinch the NY Times correspondent opines.

Pinch & Me

"Pinch & Me" featuring the antics of regular Fox News Channel "Red Eye" guest Pinch, the droll New York Times correspondent who laughs at you, not with you. http://activitypit.ning.com

The Bad and The Beautiful

The Bad and The Beautiful
South Beach Hoosier's All-Time Favorite Film: The Bad and The Beautiful - Unscrupulous movie producer Kirk Douglas uses everyone around him in his climb to the top of Hollywood in Vincente Minnelli's powerful classic. DVD for sale at http://turnerclassic.moviesunlimited.com/product.asp?sku=D31316 Click photo to see original trailer!

New Danish noir film, "Headhunter," starring Lars Mikkelsen, directed by Rumle Hammerich

New Danish noir film, "Headhunter," starring Lars Mikkelsen, directed by Rumle Hammerich

Rachel Weisz as the philosopher Hypatia in Alejandro Amenábar's Agora

Rachel Weisz as the philosopher Hypatia in Agora, directed by Alejandro Amenábar, http://www.agorathemovie.com

"The Girl Who Played With Fire" (Flickan som lekte med elden)

The follow-up to "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" (Män som hatar kvinnor) is "The Girl Who Played With Fire" (Flickan som lekte med elden) starring Noomi Rapace, Michael Nyqvist and Lena Endre, directed by Daniel Alfredson. http://www.sf.se/

The Girlfriend Experience, Starring Sasha Grey, directed by Steven Soderbergh

The Girlfriend Experience, Starring Sasha Grey, directed by Steven Soderbergh See also: http://www.girlfriendexp.com/ and http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/starsandstories/6607812/Sasha-Grey-interview-for-The-Girlfriend-Experience.html

Daily Variety widget

The Hollywood Reporter widget

New York Times Media & Advertising headlines

New York Times Media & Advertising headlines

Telegraph News, Business and Sport Widget

Miami Social, Beach Day, Season 1, Episode 2: Sorah and Katrina head out to surf for the day.

Miami Social, Beach Day, Season 1, Episode 2: Sorah and Katrina head out to surf for the day. Posted: 7/22/2009 from hulu.com

Jessica Alba, she of the famous perfect waist-to-hip ratio

Jessica Alba, she of the famous perfect waist-to-hip ratio

Daryl Hall and Plain White T's jam on Hey There Delilah

Daryl Hall and Plain White T's jam on Hey There Delilah

What all the fuss is about: Pixie Lott - Mama Do (Uh Oh, Uh Oh)

What all the fuss is about -Pixie Lott. The Interscope singer's debut album, Turn It Up drops today, September 14th. Listen to her very first song that immediately went to the top of the British charts in June, Mama Do (Uh Oh, Uh Oh). http://www.pixielott.com/site/

Pixie Lott - Boys And Girls, out only a week and already Number One in U.K.

Pixie Lott - Boys And Girls. Out only a week, already #1 in U.K. http://www.pixielott.com/site/

Pixie Lott - I Want You Back (Live) on BBC's Totally Saturdays (with Graham Norton)

Pixie Lott - I Want You Back (Live) on BBC's Totally Saturdays (with Graham Norton) http://www.youtube.com/user/pixieofficial

Pixie Lott - When Love Takes Over Cover - BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge - HQ

Pixie Lott - When Love Takes Over Cover - BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge, November 20, 2009 - HQ

Leighton Meester -Somebody to Love -Featuring Robin Thicke

Leighton Meester -Somebody to Love -Featuring Robin Thicke

Yohanna - Is It True (LIVE) from TV4's "Sommarkrysset," August 1, 2009

Yohanna - Is It True (LIVE) from TV4's "Sommarkrysset," performed August 1st at Gröna Lund in Stockholm. Jóhanna Guðrún Jónsdóttir. Hennes enorma talang kunde knappast vara mer uppenbar! http://www.youtube.com/yohannamusic

The Beatles -If I Fell (LIVE) at the 1964 Indiana State Fair

The Beatles -If I Fell (LIVE) at the 1964 Indiana State Fair

The Beatles - If I Fell -BBC Studios, Bush House, London, 1964

The Beatles - If I Fell -BBC Studios, Bush House, London, 1964. Compare the Indiana State Fair performance to two months earlier at Bush House for filming of "A Hard Days Night", a fabulous film that STILL amazes me every time I see it! Classic! There's no substitute for perfect harmony and melody!

Chia Obama TV Commercial

Chia Obama TV Commercial Cha-cha Chia!

"Real World DC": The Trailer, Debuts December 30th

"Real World DC": The Trailer. Debuts on MTV on Dec. 30th.

George Will on Marco Rubio: "Absolutely, He Will Win"

Excerpt from November 1, 2009 broadcast of ABC News This Week with George Stephanopolous. George Will on Marco Rubio: "Absolutely, He Will Win"

BBC's Katty Kay profile of Marco Rubio, November 4, 2009

BBC's Katty Kay profile of Marco Rubio, November 4, 2009

Sayfie Review's Power Play with Ron Sachs, Episode 35, November 13th, 2009, Part 1

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SFS-S's Broward Politics blog: No coolers at April's Air Lauderdale Beach Fest in Fort Lauderdale

South Florida Sun-Sentinel's Broward Politics blog: No coolers at next April's Air Lauderdale Beach Fest in Fort Lauderdale. See my post on this at: http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/politics-ice-coolers-and-fighter-jets.html

No tea for me, I prefer Kendall Coffey!

No tea for me, I prefer Kendall Coffey! South Florida attorney and former U.S. Attorney Kendall Coffey gave the news media a tour of the law offices Scott Rothstein shares with his partners. Rothstein has been accused of massive fraud, involving hundreds of millions of dollars. See http://www.browardpalmbeach.com/search/?keywords=%22Scott+Rothstein%22&x=25&y=13 By Carlton Smith, WFSL/Sun-Sentinel

America's new sweetheart undercover super-sleuth is back with more news about ACORN.

America\
Yes, Miami's Hannah Giles is back! Along with James O'Keefe, America's nerdiest pimp who still 'keeps it real.' This screenshot I snapped is of Hannah from the Miami studio of Fox News, appearing on Sean Hannity's Fox News TV show on November 16, 2009, with news about the Andrew Breitbart 'Big Government' crew's newest videotapes from the West Coast. Click on photo to see video of the appearance. See also http://biggovernment.com/

Fabulous! Deconstructing fame and film industry thru the prism of actress who personifies sexy

Fabulous! Deconstructing fame and film industry thru the prism of actress who personifies sexy
Fabulous! Deconstructing fame and the film industry thru the prism of an actress who personifies sexy. The Self-Manufacture of Megan Fox by Lynn Hirshberg, How America's leading starlet made herself up for the multimedia age, New York Times, November 11, 2009; photo by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin for The New York Times; Click on the photo to read the article and see more photos and a video interview.

The rain in Cumbria

The rain in Cumbria
The rain in Cumbria - Headline and photos tell the tale: Nov. 21, 2009 Times of London - "Once every 1,000 years rain falls like this." Click photo for latest updates on the terrible toll this has taken on the people of Cumbria.

Old HBB elements are now at www.hallandale-beach-blog.blogspot.com

Some elements formerly seen at Hallandale Beach Blog, such as photos, graphics and videos have been moved into cold storage.
Visit them or see what you've missed at: http://hallandale-beach-blog.blogspot.com/

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Monday, January 26, 2009

Bullet-proof newspapers, the Good Cop/Bad Cop/Young Cop Conundrum;Third World Transit

FYI: Once again today, Blogger's editing software is screwing-up my blog and creating all sorts of headaches for me, leading to a jagged and uneven presentation in drafts as well as the final edits below.
Sometimes, it's almost as if someone else is editing my blog, as from moment to moment, the size and fonts on my screen seem to change from what I want to something else entirely.
So far, the only way I've found to minimize the problem is to make everything BOLD, which I usually hate in other blogs, but which for some reason, mitigates the problem slightly. 
________________
Per the attached bits of flotsam and jetsam, first the slightly amusing then onto the more-than-bewildering.  
First, per the story below, which the Chicago Tribune's headline says it all:
14-year-old boy impersonates cop, police say, Teen goes on traffic patrol wearing real police uniform, but is unarmed, authorities say.

The troubling aspect of this story is that this 14-year old kid in Chicago shows more depth of understanding, energy and moxie than Hallandale Beach's current Police Chief Thomas Magill,
who, in my opinion, based on all the known facts, at bottom, ought to be in prison now for what court juries have already found to be true about himhe used city funds and resources to attempt to
frame, prosecute and imprison innocent people, who just happened to be HB cops.

(Yet Magill's past tenure and future have never been publicly addressed by the Hallandale Beach City Commission since this was published a year ago.  In other parts of the U.S., that dogged refusal to deal forthrightly with consequences, with no punishment for Magill, would be news, but not here, apparently.)

Perhaps we can arrange to have James L. Harris, that guy who last year wanted to be a Miami-Dade bus driver so badly that he actually took a county bus, receiving compliments along South Beach for his courtesy while driving, before he was finally caught and arrested, and have him assigned as this 14-year old Kid Cop's personal chauffeur.
Part of a youth movement to get rid of all the 'dead wood' in Hallandale Beach, of which there is so much. 
TIMBER!!!!

Failing that, can we at least borrow the kid from Chicago and have him patrol the beach area in Hallandale Beach, since for years, Magill's Police Dept. has consistently shown ZERO interest in actually patrolling the public beach once in a while,
even on busy weekends, as is pretty customary in most water-side cities, to put beach-goers minds at ease.

Maybe give him a police radio, a clipboard, and a whistle on weekends so the beleaguered contractor lifeguards don't have to continue to do everything, esp. when the beach is really crowded?
As you might imagine, the reader comments on this story from Chicagoland are enthusiastic and supportive -of the kid!
That sound you just heard was the sound of the Chicago 2016 Olympic bid losing even more air...

So, onto the more serious matter at hand.
See if you can readily connect the following in your head like I did yesterday:

a.) Mayor Carlos Alvarez defending the Miami Mega-Plan in general and the Port Tunnel element in particular, over two broadcast segments yesterday with Michael Putney on TWISF, This Week in South Florida;

b.) the painfully naive and formulaic Herald Letter to the Editor on page 3L yesterday titled Public-works plan worth the money, written by an FIU prof named Alex Lichtenstein, which sounded like it was really straight from the PR desk of the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce.

c.) The Herald's own Action Line column of yesterday on page 5B, complete with photo,
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/action-line/story/869684.html titled After two years of promises, escalator still not running, on the sad case of the Park West Metromover, which seems to be a typical Miami combination of Twilight Zone and Banana Republic.

I can only imagine how many times that the letter writer, Matthew Gissen, must've thought about that letter of his in his mind, as he passed it, week-after-week, month-after-month.

Apparently, in the rather oblivious world of Prof. Lichtenstein, basic repairs and upkeep are neither sexy nor necessary.
Sounds to me like he actually needs to get out-and-about and see what's really going on around here, perhaps even have a "scared straight" intervention, so he can get his bearings and see that unlike Chicago, Miami is not exactly the city of "Big Shoulders.

To me, the most devastating thing of all was this passage in the Action Line response: "...work on the escalator has been completed and that the safety inspection should be finished by the end of February."

Should be? Really? After being broken for two years, does it really take a month to "inspect" something that's supposedly been fixed?
And if it does, or it's not actually fixed, finally, how many other projects are those particular engineers or contractors "fixing" elsewhere?

The official response here only raises more troubling questions.

Now maybe I'm wrong, since I was only coming back down here from Washington at the holidays when the William 
Lehman Causeway was being built in North Miami Beach/Aventura -just down the road from me now- but did it even take two whole years to build the bridge over the Intercoastal, linking A1A to Biscayne Boulevard?

And yet it's taking that long to "fix" a transit escalator? 

Those are the folks that Mayor Alvarez wants us to have faith in?
The ones that yesterday, on the air with Michael, he kept claiming 'really weren't government' when Michael earnestly but continually reminded him of the decidedly notorious track record of South Florida government construction projects,
Mega or otherwise?

As I mentioned in an email about two weeks ago, the small square in front of the entrance to The National Archives that I entered and walked past hundreds of times during the 15 years I lived and worked up there, already has our future written there.
It has a variation of Shakespeare's line from The Tempest"The past is prologue."

This statue, depicting

If I were making a documentary film on the possible consequences of the so-called Miami Mega-Plan, feeling as I do now, I'd call it "The Curious Case of Caveat Emptor."

Sadly, the past will continue to be prologue in South Florida as long as we have the same general cast of characters, who continually fight transparency, accountability and common sense, of which the case of the broken escalator is but a small window into that upside-down world.
_________________

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-teen-cop-26-jan26,0,6467334.story

Chicago Tribune

14-year-old boy impersonates cop, police say

Teen goes on traffic patrol wearing real police uniform, but is unarmed, authorities say

By Angela Rozas, Jeremy Gorner and Azam Ahmed

Tribune reporters

January 26, 2009

Chicago police arrested a 14-year-old boy for allegedly impersonating one of their own Saturday.


The boy, who has been charged as a juvenile for impersonating an officer, walked into the Grand Crossing District station, 7040 S. Cottage Grove Ave., dressed in a Chicago police uniform, police spokeswoman Monique Bond said. The boy, who reported for duty about 1:30 p.m., partnered with another police officer for about five hours.

The boy identified himself as an officer from another district but was detailed for the day to Grand Crossing and also was savvy enough to sign out a police radio and a ticket book, according to a source. The source also said the boy went on traffic stops with the officer he went on the street with.

Bond said the boy "did not write tickets" and said there was "no information to indicate that he [was] ever behind the wheel."

At an afternoon news conference, police said the boy had no interaction with the public.

After his tour was over, a ranking officer became suspicious of the boy. Police said the officer discovered the teen was not a real police officer when he couldn't produce any credentials. The boy was wearing police-issued pants, shirt, vest, sweater and skull cap, police said. 

He was missing his police star, but that was not discovered until after he returned from traffic patrol. Police said the 14-year-old's partner on the traffic assignment did not recognize the boy was underage.

The source said the boy had an empty holster and a 
newspaper in place of a ballistic vest in his vest carrier.

Police described the boy as a former "police explorer," which means he was part of a community program run through the Police Department's Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy (CAPS) that allows youths to interact with Chicago police officers. He was part of the explorer program in 2008 in the Englewood District.

"The boy was not armed, and the matter is under investigation with Internal Affairs," Bond said.

Bond also said that how the boy acquired the police uniform was under investigation. Police officers need to present identification while acquiring their uniforms, police said.

The boy "has identified an egregious breach in security," Deputy Supt. of Patrol Dan Dugan said.

The boy, whom authorities did not identify since he's a juvenile, is scheduled to appear in Juvenile Court at 10 a.m. Monday.

Reader comments at: http://www.topix.net/forum/source/chicago-tribune/TFMSRHVJVSIGH7BOC

-----------------------------------------

Tomorrow the 27th will mark one year since John Holland wrote this compelling Sun-Sentinel piece, which is still THE only media this story has received.

South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Hallandale Beach to pay to settle one of two former police officers' lawsuits
By John Holland
January 27, 2008
 
Hallandale Beach commissioners have agreed to pay more than $100,000 to settle a lawsuit alleging Police Chief Thomas Magill falsified evidence, a city board held an illegal meeting and detectives persuaded a felon to lie under oath about a fellow officer.
 
Mayor Joe Cooper and attorney Alberto Milian, who represents former Hallandale Beach Police Officer Talous Cirilo, confirmed the city's settlement with Cirilo but would not comment further, citing a confidentiality agreement. However, Cooper said the payment was more than $100,000, including attorney fees.
 
'I'd love to talk about this and tell people what happened, but unfortunately I can't,' Cooper said.
 
Magill referred questions to City Attorney David Jove, who could not be reached for comment.
 
The settlement comes less than two months after Cirilo filed two lawsuits against the city, alleging wrongdoing in the department and City Hall. Hallandale officials fired Cirilo, alleging excessive use of force, even though a jury acquitted him on battery charges.
 
Cooper said the secrecy is warranted because a separate lawsuit, filed in federal court by former acting Police Sgt. Mary Hagopian, has not been settled. She promised to speak about the settlement at a later date 'if I'm allowed to.'
 
Magill and City Manager Mike Good fired the officers two years ago after prosecutors charged them with misdemeanor battery on prisoner Michael Brack. Early on April 1, 2005, Brack beat his brother as they fought in a moving car, then attacked officers who tried to intervene, according to arrest records and police reports.
 
Months after the arrest, a civilian employee said Cirilo choked and used a Taser device excessively on Brack.
 
More than a year later, the State Attorney's Office charged Cirilo with three misdemeanor battery counts. Hagopian was charged with a misdemeanor for using the stun gun on Brack as he struggled with officers in a jail holding area.
 
Defense lawyers said Magill orchestrated the charges as part of a vendetta against Hagopian and to show his bosses at City Hall he was a disciplinarian. Testimony at trial showed police employees mishandled two key pieces of evidence - a video surveillance tape and software from the Taser - distorting the confrontation between the officers and Brack, defense lawyers argued.
 
Prosecutors tried the officers separately, but jurors reached the same conclusion, acquitting them after about 15 minutes of deliberation.
 
After the acquittals, the officers tried to get their jobs back, but Magill and city officials refused.
 
In one of the lawsuits, Milian accused the city civil service board of holding an illegal meeting outside City Hall on Oct. 9, 2007, one week before a scheduled hearing on the reinstatement.

Florida law mandates that all meetings be advertised and prohibits public officials from meeting out of the public eye or discussing cases with each other. At least six board members met and discussed the meeting in a 'knowing violation' of the law, according to the lawsuit.
 
Good, the city manager, could not be reached for comment.
 
Hagopian, a 15-year veteran, and Cirilo, on the force for five years, hired different lawyers and filed in different jurisdictions but made the same argument: Magill pressured his internal affairs officers and detectives to manipulate evidence and coerce false statements out of Brack so he could fire the officers and enhance his image as a reformer.
 
Magill used public money to have officers track down Brack on a Louisiana oil barge, where he ended up after leaving Broward County and forfeiting his bail, both lawsuits assert.
The State Attorney's office dropped all the assault charges against Brack, including the attack on his brother, then used him to testify against the officers.
 
The chief temporarily assigned several officers to internal affairs without any training, for the sole purpose of building a false case against the officers, Hagopian's lawyer Rhea Grossman said in court papers.
 
Magill sparked criminal charges against Hagopian 'by preparing directly or at his direction police reports containing false or misleading information,' Grossman wrote. Both lawsuits contend Magill elicited false testimony and compiled misleading evidence that he took directly to prosecutors.
 
U.S. District Judge William J. Zloch tossed out four counts last month, saying they belong in state court. He refused to dismiss two others, including one alleging Magill presented false information to prosecutors so Hagopian would be arrested. Zloch also let stand a charge that the city had a policy of not training internal affairs officers that, Hagopian argued, 'encourages fabricated evidence for the sole purpose of allowing the whims of its police chief to terminate employees.'
 
Milian said last week that the jury's quick acquittals proved the charges were bogus.

"This case was an abomination from the very beginning, and good officers were hurt," Milian said. "It could ultimately have a chilling effect on officers who want to protect themselves and their colleagues but are afraid because they could get in the same type of situation." 
---------------------------------------------------------- 
As you read the article below, tell me this isn't proof that the past is, indeed, prologue!

South Florida Sun-Sentinel
FALSE ARREST VICTIM ON GUARD BUT SAYS HE BEARS NO GRUDGES
May 1, 2000
By Tanya Weinberg Staff Writer

Henry Perez won't go anywhere without his identification. 
Not because he thinks he might get a ticket. Not because he thinks he might not be allowed into a bar. 

Because he knows that without identification, police could throw him in jail for another person's crime. He knows he could lose his job and a week of his life before his captors figure out they have the wrong man. 

The odd thing is, when Perez suffered those consequences four years ago, he did have his identification. Hallandale Beach Police arrested the then-17-year-old on his way to school because he had the same name as a teenager wanted for grand theft in Miami-Dade County. 

His driver's license showed he was two years older than Henry Perez the suspect. He kept telling the officer he had the wrong man, to check and he would see. 

"He didn't want to listen," said a soft-spoken Perez on a recent evening before starting his workout at Contenders Boxing Gym in Hollywood. 

For one week of fear and frustration, it seemed nobody would listen. Not the police, not the jail guards, not counselors who asked Perez to fill out surveys on drug use but offered little guidance. Not even a judge. He ordered Perez sent to Miami-Dade County without letting him speak. 

When Perez's lawyer convinced another judge they had the wrong Henry Perez, it took the jail another day and a half to release him. 

The state last year settled Perez's lawsuit against the juvenile justice system for $75,000. But for four years, the city of Hallandale Beach did not apologize, did not acknowledge the mistake, did not make amends. But now it will. 

The city attorney told commissioners two weeks ago that they should stop the appeals process and settle Perez's civil lawsuit for the $100,000 a jury awarded last year. This after Perez's lawyer offered to settle for $19,000. 

"They told us to go fly a kite," said Miami attorney Scott Jay Feder. 

Perez said he plans to save the settlement money. 

"I'm just happy to be done with it," said Perez, who focuses on his budding professional career as a lightweight boxer with a 5-0 record and works days as a customer service representative at Ramada Plaza Resorts in Fort Lauderdale. 
He is surprised his case prevailed. 

"I thought because I was going against the police station there was no way," he said as he wound yellow hand wraps around his knuckles. "I thought because I was young, they wouldn't take my word for it." 

And the judge and jury might not have, Feder said, if the evidence hadn't shown that the arresting officer lied at trial. 

Arrested before 9 a.m., Perez said he was not allowed to call his mother until he was taken to jail late that night. Officer Timothy Donahue testified that in the morning he contacted Perez's mother, Gloria Frances, and told her to bring her son's identification. 

According to Donahue's testimony, Frances said she noticed that Perez had left his wallet at home but she could not bring it in, so officers detained Perez. But the official log of Perez's belongings at the time police booked him showed that he had his identification with him. 

Donahue resigned as a Hallandale Beach officer in October 1998 and currently is a Davie police officer. 

Perez's case is not the only high-profile blunder the Hallandale Beach Police Department has made recently. 

A police SWAT team a year ago surprised a couple by bursting into their apartment and searching them for drugs and guns. The couple, New York horse trainers who say they now avoid South Florida, are suing Hallandale Beach after police admitted to raiding the wrong home. 

Perez and his family just moved from Hollywood to North Miami, and although he is 21, he always tries to call to let his mother know where he is and whether he'll be late to spare her the feeling of panic in his absence. 

Perez said he doesn't focus on the past, on how his pleas to check his fingerprints went unheeded, or about the days and nights in jail when he avoided the frequent fights or slept shivering after someone stole his pillow and blanket. 

Other things Perez doesn't dwell on: that he had to stand up his girlfriend the day of his arrest -- Valentine's Day -- that the nursing home where he worked wouldn't take him back although he explained the arrest was a mistake, that he wouldn't leave the house for several weeks after, afraid of another false arrest, and that he had to make up the time in summer school. 

Perez said he has no grudges against police officers. He does try to stay out of Hallandale Beach, though. 

"When I see a Hallandale officer, I might get a little worried," he said with a shy smile. Then, patting at his thighs, he added: "I just check and see if I have my ID." 

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Hollywood CRC meeting on Term Limits is Monday

Since I was just mentioning the Hollywood Charter Review Committee, for the record, the next meeting of the full Hollywood CRC is Thursday February 12th, at a room TBD at Hollywood City Hall.
I'll let you know the specifics as the date draws nearer. 

Another important issue, that of term limits, will be the subject of a Hollywood CRC subcommittee meeting on Monday at 3 p.m. in Room 215 at Hollywood City Hall, 2600 Hollywood Blvd.  


My mayor went to the Inaugural but all I got was the bill and her imperious attitude!

Within the past two weeks, almost regardless of where I've gone in Broward County, the one subject that people who know me seem most keen on asking me about is my opinion on the much-discussed South Florida Sun-Sentinel series by Jennifer Gollan, on the questionable spending and ethical habits of elected pols in Broward and Palm Beach Counties.
In Hollywood, Fort Lauderdale, or closer to home, among fellow Hallandale Beach citizens who are interested in seeing a LOT more tangible reform and accountability at Hallandale Beach City Hall.

Whether in phone conversations or thru email, I've tried to highlight for them some of the more arrogant, high-horse comments and actions by tone-deaf Hallandale Beach mayor Joy Cooper, which seem particularly off-the-charts, even for her.
She definitely has the Marie Antoinette gene.

In that email, as well as here, I've also included the links to reader comments, where both Sun-Sentinel travel expense stories have received much more attention than usual for storiesof that sort, generating lots of comments full of venom and anger, as well as mentions of alleged similar past ethical incidents by some in the community.
This has the advantage of making them both humorous and insightful, and well-worth reading, though there is the usual daily nut quotient found there on the Topix.com forums you have to wade through.

In an email that I sent out last Tuesday to some of these friends and interested parties, with copies of the articles below, I also put my prediction abilities to the test.
I placed the over-and-under for Mayor Cooper bringing up her inaugural trip to Washington at 7 minutes at Wednesday's Hallandale Beach City Commission meeting.

Well, she surpassed herself, bring it up, without any prompting, in just under 45 seconds of convening the meeting, which started thirteen minutes late.

According to someone I trust who actually had the steely patience and quiet resolve to actually watch/tape the afternoon and evening commission meetings via the city's so-called cable access channel -meetings which I attended for only about 40 minutes total that day due to other pressing errands- Mayor Cooper mentioned her trip to Washington 4-5 times over the course of the city's meetings.

And yet she's the one who's constantly complaining about the length of the public meetings that she's responsible for facilitating, frequently objecting to other's comments with her all-too-audible passive aggressive sighs that fill the room up with her disapproval.

The public meetings she runs largely without following Robert's Rules of Order.
Honestly, how many other South Florida cities do things that way, do you suppose?

Good question -why don't you ask her that the next time you see her?

The reason for my interest that particular day was the scheduled agenda included some crazy proposed rule changes that she thinks would ensure better time management at public City Commission meetings, from her narrow p.o.v., but what I and many others think more clearly could be called anti-democratic moves to consolidate the power she thinks she has.

This, despite the fact that her position of mayor is largely a ceremonial one in a city like Hallandale Beach's with a City Manager form of government, something the city's charter makes clear.
Not that she lets the facts get in the way.

She's the one responsible for proposing what I and others deem to be anti-democratic rules that her pals and cronies at the Broward and Florida League of Cities -her most loyal and ardent fan base- would never enact in their own cities without first having a full-and-open public hearing on the issue, with plenty of advanced notice, so that citizens, residents and business owners could appear in person and speak as they feel compelled to, either for it or against it.
After all, it's their elected public officials, not her's.

But not Joy Cooper, former head of the Broward League of Cities, whose first duty is to the interests of municipal officials, not citizens or taxpayers.

Nope, Joy Cooper and City Manager Mike Good and his staff decided that the best way to make her job easier at public meetings was to prevent the public officials actually elected by the city's voters from speaking longer, and more frequently than she and her pals wanted.
A simple visit to any city commission meeting here makes that point self-evident, over and over.

That effort, for now, seems to have been put off for another day, but the sentiments behind the move are clearly nefarious, self-serving and NOT at all what citizens of this city want: more power for her at our expense.



My comments about Thursday's Miami Herald editorial on the subject of travel expenses are right below it.
---------------------------------------------
South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Broward County officials are traveling on your dime

Conventions are only miles from home, but South Florida officials bill taxpayers for luxury hotels and chauffeured rides

By Jennifer Gollan
January 11, 2009

Although the national mayors convention was only 34 miles from his home, Lauderhill Mayor Richard Kaplan decided it would be too difficult to commute. So he billed taxpayers $995 to stay five nights in June at the four-star InterContinental Miami hotel.

"I would have to get up at 3 or 4 in the morning to miss the rush-hour traffic," Kaplan said. "It gets to be very time-consuming."
Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper also attended that convention. Instead of making the 20-mile trip, she charged taxpayers $796 for four nights at the hotel.

Pembroke Pines Mayor Frank Ortis, with a commute of 25 miles, billed taxpayers $889.48 for four nights.

When asked about it six months later, Ortis said "it doesn't make any sense to stay overnight in Miami," and reimbursed the city for his hotel bill.

Indeed, while not expressly prohibited under their formal policies, Pembroke Pines, Hallandale Beach and Lauderhill generally bar employees from staying overnight in Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties. Cooper, however, declined to repay the city for her stay, saying it was a business-related expense.

"I am not there fluffing my own feathers," she said. "Rather than dragging through traffic it was just easier to stay overnight. ... Why would I reimburse the city for part of my job?"

Sun Sentinel review of expense records filed by taxing district board members and elected officials representing Broward County and its 31 municipalities since January 2007 also found charges for some spouses and children to attend conference functions. 

Taxpayers also footed the bill for chauffeured rides to the airport, in some cases paying almost double what it would have cost had the officials driven themselves and parked at the airport's most expensive lot. Such expenses are small in relation to the city budgets. 

But they add up and raise questions, especially amid a recession that has governments cutting spending and public services.

 "Local officials are obligated to avoid abusing or exploiting opportunities for self-indulgence on the public dime," said Anthony Alfieri, director of the Center for Ethics and Public Service at the University of Miami School of Law. 

"That means engaging in cost-saving conduct, such as commuting rather than incurring hotel bills" for local meetings. Some officials disagree,saying the sums in question are small, and perks of the job. For example, five Central Broward Water Control District officials billed taxpayers $380 so their spouses and children could join them at two parties in Key West and Key Largo during two conferences in 2007 and 2008. 

Commissioners and staff also spent $538.11 so they, their spouses and children — a total party of 10 — could dine at a restaurant in Key West on July 12, 2007. 

District Board Chairman Cris Fardelmann said he didn't see why he should cover his wife's expense. "I definitely don't think there's any abuse here," said Fardelmann, who is paid $4,800 per year to maintain secondary canals in six cities. "I'm not going to leave [my wife] sitting in the hotel room while we go to dinner. I do not make a lot of money at this job, and having your spouse along makes it much more possible to go." 

The district does not have a formal policy prohibiting commissioners from billing taxpayers for expenses incurred by their spouses and children. State law allows local governments to set their own travel polices and decide who can travel on public business. 

"State law seems to authorize travel by someone beyond the elected official or officer, but trying to define exactly who fits within that other category is where the cities must make their own decision," said Eric Hartwell, assistant general counsel for the Florida League of Cities.

Reader comments at: 
http://www.topix.net/forum/source/south-florida-sun-sentinel/TLROFVBS7O5HMDFDE
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South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Palm Beach County officals billing taxpayers for luxury hotels and chauffeured rides
Conventions are only miles from home, but officials bill taxpayers for luxury hotels and chauffeured rides.
By Jennifer Golla
January 11, 2009

It was only an 80-minute drive each way, but Palm Beach County Commission Chairman Jeff Koons said it was crucial that he and three other commissioners stay at the Doral Golf Resort & Spa for a statewide conference in June.


"I know people might think it's not good to send a group, but it was a very good investment," Koons said, adding that they weren't there for the spa and other amenities. "People expect us to be knowledgeable, and that's the purpose of these trips."

Koons and commissioners Addie Greene, Karen Marcus and former commissioner Mary McCarty billed taxpayers a total of $1,350.70 to stay at the four-star resort during the Florida Association of Counties conference.


McCarty stayed one night for $130.

Marcus and Greene billed taxpayers $390 each for three nights. Koons' three-night stay cost a bit more, $440.70, because he paid the hotel bill and tax before being reimbursed by the county, missing out on tax exemptions granted when a government pays bills directly.


Because each commissioner serves on the association's board, Koons said it would have been impractical to send one commissioner to represent the others. Further, Koons said he and the other commissioners didn't discuss any county matters as required under the Sunshine law, which bars two or more officials on the same board from talking about pending public business outside a publicly noticed meeting.

Sun Sentinel review of expense records filed by South Florida elected officials and taxing district board members since January 2007 also found taxpayers footing the bill for hotels as close as 20 miles away. In other cases, they paid for spouses and children to attend and dine at conference functions.

Such expenses are small in relation to the city budgets. But they add up and raise questions, especially amid a recession that has governments cutting spending and public services.

"Local officials are obligated to avoid abusing or exploiting opportunities for self indulgence on the public dime," said Anthony Alfieri, director of the Center for Ethics and Public Service at the University of Miami School of Law. "That means engaging in cost-saving conduct such as commuting rather than incurring hotel bills" for local meetings.

Some officials disagree,
saying the sums in question are small, and perks of the job.


When the Florida League of Cities held an awards banquet in Orlando in November 2007, Delray Beach
sent Mayor Rita Ellis and Vice Mayor Woodie McDuffie, Commissioner Fred Fetzer and former commissioner Brenda Montague.

McDuffie and Montague stayed overnight at the Hyatt Regency Orlando International Airport Hotel, costing taxpayers a total of $286. Ellis and Fetzer went for the day only.

The overnight stay in Orlando was not unreasonable given the distance. But did Delray need to send four elected officials as well as the city manager? "Our city was nominated for the Florida City of Excellence award," Fetzer said. "It was quite an honor for the city, and the Florida League of Cities asked us to have as many representatives there as we could. We felt it was an important enough event for the city that we wanted to be well represented."

McDuffie said he also participated in meetings on pending legislation on tax reform.

"The sole purpose of the meeting was not the awards banquet," said McDuffie, noting that, at the time, he sat on the league's Fiscal Stewardship Council. His council meeting ran from 10 a.m. to noon on Nov. 8 and the conference ended about noon on Nov. 9, just before the awards banquet.

Taxpayers also paid $1,641.96 for Fetzer, McDuffie and Montague to stay two nights at the Liaison Capitol Hill Hotel in Washington, D.C., April 30-May 2, 2008. They were there for the so-called Washington Fly In, where local elected leaders meet with lawmakers in Washington.

Sending three commissioners made sense, McDuffie said, because they split up, which afforded them more time for meetings.

"One person can't cover every legislator in the time that we're up there," McDuffie said.

But Fetzer said he had a "very productive" trip when he traveled alone to Washington on the same trip in 2006 [the trip has traditionally taken place every other year]. He returned to share the highlights of his trip with the commission, which he said "sparked some interest," from other commissioners to join him in 2008.

Delray commissioners last fall decided to forgo out-of-state travel this fiscal year.

While they don't tend to travel in groups, other officials in South Florida cities and taxing districts have billed taxpayers for travel closer to home, and other questionable expenses.

Although the national mayors convention was only 34 miles from his home, Lauderhill Mayor Richard Kaplan decided it would be too difficult to commute. So he billed taxpayers $995 to stay five nights in June at the four-star InterContinental Miami hotel.

"I would have to get up at 3 or 4 in the morning to miss the rush-hour traffic," said Kaplan. "It gets to be very time consuming."

Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper also attended that convention. Instead of making the 20-mile trip, she charged taxpayers $796 for four nights at the hotel. And Pembroke Pines Mayor Frank Ortis, with a commute of 25 miles, billed taxpayers $889.48 for four nights. When asked about it six months later, Ortis said "it doesn't make any sense to stay overnight in Miami," and reimbursed the city for his hotel bill. Indeed, while not expressly prohibited under their formal policies, Pembroke Pines, Hallandale Beach and Lauderhill generally bar employees from staying overnight in Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade counties.

Cooper, however, declined to repay the city for her stay, saying it was a business-related expense.

"I am not there fluffing my own feathers," she said. "Rather than dragging through traffic it was just easier to stay overnight ... Why would I reimburse the city for part of my job?"


Some officials charged taxpayers so their spouses and children could attend conference functions. For example, five Central Broward Water Control District officials billed taxpayers $380 so their spouses and children could join them at two parties in Key West and Key Largo during two conferences in 2007 and 2008. Commissioners and staff also spent $538.11 so they, their spouses and children — a total party of 10 — could dine at a restaurant in Key West on July 12, 2007.

"I definitely don't think there's any abuse here," said District Board Chairman Cris Fardelmann, who is paid $4,800 per year to maintain secondary canals in six cities. "I'm not going to leave [my wife] sitting in the hotel room while we go to dinner. I do not make a lot of money at this job, and having your spouse along makes it much more possible to go."

District policy does not prohibit officials from billing taxpayers for expenses for their spouses and children.

State law allows local governments to set their own travel polices and decide who can travel on public business.

"State law seems to authorize travel by someone beyond the elected official or officer, but trying to define exactly who fits within that other category is where the cities must make their own decision," said Eric Hartwell, assistant general counsel for the Florida League of Cities.

Reader comments at: 

--------------------------

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Corruption in Broward, Palm Beach counties: Same behavior, different results

By Michael Mayo, News Columnist

January 11, 2009


Earlier this decade, Broward County Commissioner Diana Wasserman-Rubin voted on grants to Southwest Ranches that directly benefited her husband. She was fined by the state ethics commission, has not faced criminal charges and remains in office.

In Palm Beach County, commissioner Mary McCarty voted on bond deals that benefited her husband's firm. She resigned last week, indicating she will soon plead guilty to a federal charge of honest services fraud. In her resignation letter, McCarty called her bond votes "criminal acts" and wrote that she expected to serve "a significant term of incarceration."

Similar behavior. Far different results.

Confused?

"It's not simply bewildering from a civics standpoint," said Anthony Alfieri, director of the University of Miami Center for Ethics and Public Service. "It's also corrosive to the public; it undermines their faith in government."

Best I can tell, the big difference between the two cases — and for that matter, Broward and Palm Beach County politics — is federal scrutiny.

The FBI and U.S. Attorney's Office have spent the last few years digging to our north, and they've unturned enough unsavory business to topple three county commissioners and two West Palm Beach city commissioners. All four convicted officials have gone to federal prison.

Makes you wonder what would happen if the feds fixed a keen eye here.

"There's a number of people who fit into the behavioral pattern of the McCartys [in Broward]," said County Commissioner John Rodstrom. "The problem is there's a big difference between state and federal law, and elected officials haven't been well trained on the federal law."

Thanks to Florida's weak corruption laws and long tradition of almost anything goes, some public servants think day is night and wrong is right.

Or as McCarty wrote in her letter, "I allowed myself to interpret ethics codes and statutory responsibilities in the light most favorable to the outcome I desired."

That seems to be a common malady among local politicians.

In Broward, commissioner Josephus Eggelletion once voted on a county contract involving a trash company while he was a paid lobbyist for the company. Commissioner Ilene Lieberman uses one name when she's sitting on the dais and another (Ilene Michelson) when she has appeared before other elected bodies as an attorney. Lieberman, Wasserman-Rubin and commissioner Stacy Ritter have husbands who do (or have done) legal, grant-writing and lobbying work involving local municipalities and the county.

Wasserman-Rubin's 2003 votes on the Southwest Ranches grants, which helped her husband get a raise and a $15,000 bonus, are being investigated by the Broward State Attorney. "Our office is still looking at it," spokesman Ron Ishoy said.

Wasserman-Rubin said she didn't know her votes would benefit her husband, who no longer writes grants for the town. She said she has not spoken to state or federal investigators.

"I've learned a lesson, and I'm trying to move forward," she said Saturday. "It would be a concern to me if they go backwards and go over things that the ethics commission has already gone over. My family has suffered enough."

If the feds were digging here, or if these commissioners served in Palm Beach County, would they find themselves in trouble?

Alfieri, a law professor, said: "Because of Florida's history of under-regulation and neglect in ethics, state and local systems are replete with conflicts of interest. The culture is dominated by self-dealing and self-enrichment."

Part of the blame belongs to politicians who should know better. As in, if you vote or push for something and you or a family member has a stake in the outcome, you probably shouldn't be voting or pushing for it.

And part of the blame belongs to the Legislature, which needs to bring state corruption statutes in line with stricter federal law.

As it stands, Florida law has huge wiggle room when it comes to public corruption. State prosecutors must prove "corrupt intent" to get criminal convictions for official misconduct. That's a high bar to clear.

And state ethics law is laughably vague and toothless. Ethics violations are not necessarily crimes and punishment is usually a token fine, capped at $10,000 per offense.

Once the Feds take aim, it's a different story. The broad "honest services fraud" provision and a host of tax and mail laws can snag politicians who thought they were doing no wrong. Things that might have been brushed off by state investigators or settled with a fine can bring lengthy prison terms.

So far, federal investigators have focused on Palm Beach County, with the exception of former Broward Sheriff Ken Jenne, who pleaded guilty to federal mail and tax charges after a lengthy probe.

You have to wonder if Broward's day is coming.

Michael Mayo's column runs Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday.


________________


South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Some, but not all, Broward County officials embarrassed by travel expense review 
Sun Sentinel report spurs some cities to review policies

By Jennifer Gollan

January 18, 2009


Officials in Lauderhill, Pembroke Pines and Tamarac said they are considering stricter limits on travel, after a Sun Sentinel review found some elected officials billed taxpayers for stays at nearby hotels and for their families to attend conference functions.

While travel expenses account for a relatively small part of municipal budgets, their cumulative cost raises questions of propriety.

"At a time when staff are being laid off and programs are being cut, it is incumbent upon all of us to do all we can to minimize the expense to taxpayers," said Pembroke Pines Commissioner Angelo Castillo.

In Lauderhill, where Mayor Richard Kaplan billed taxpayers $995 in June for five nights at the InterContinental Miami hotel, commissioners on Jan. 26 will consider nearly halving their travel budget to $35,188, down from $66,100.

"I'm in favor of reducing the budget to whatever level is necessary," Kaplan said.

Along with trimming overtime costs and shedding up to 10 vacant positions, the travel cut is intended to plug a $1.4 million budget hole.

Tamarac also may impose more stringent travel restrictions, with spending cuts and comprehensive reforms.

For her part, Mayor Beth Flansbaum-Talabisco said she is now having her husband drive her to the airport instead of hiring a chauffeur. She spent $584.46 on eight chauffeured rides of about 16 miles each to or from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport since January 2007. The same trips would have cost about $336 by taxi, or if she had driven herself, about $280.21.

"I can save the city some money," she said. "As an issue, travel will be looked at, not because anything has been done incorrectly, but because we are being fiscally responsible."

Pembroke Pines also likely will review commission travel expenses, Castillo said.

He stopped short of suggesting a ban on overnights in local hotels, such as Pembroke Pines Mayor Frank Ortis's four-night stay at the InterContinental Miami that cost taxpayers $889.48. Ortis reimbursed the city when questioned by the 
Sun Sentinel.

In Margate, Commissioner Pam Donovan said she expects her fellow commissioners to show more restraint. Both David McLean and Joseph Varsallone stayed extraneous nights in hotels.

"I don't think they'll do that again," said Donovan. "They saw that it didn't look good."

Neither McLean or Varsallone could be reached for comment despite two messages each at their offices.

However, officials in some cities and taxing districts brushed off any notion of reform.

"We're not in the same category as city employees," said Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper, who charged taxpayers $796 for a four-night stay at the InterContinental Miami in June. "We are already extremely frugal on our travel. I don't perceive us changing it."

Neither will Coral Springs Commissioner Claudette Bruck, whose 13 chauffeured rides to or from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport cost $908. Bruck could have driven herself and parked for $400, or caught taxis for $717.

Still, Bruck stood her ground: "The city probably is about as tight on that as they can be."

Central Broward Water Control District Director Mike Crowley also dismissed policy reforms or cuts as unnecessary. Five district officials billed taxpayers $380 to register their spouses and children for two conferences in Key West and Key Largo. Commissioners and staff also rang up a tab for $538.11 dining with their spouses and children — a party of 10 — at a Key West restaurant.

"I have no intention of reimbursing [the district]," Crowley said.


In particular, I'd like to draw your attention to comment #40  -one of you I'd like to think!- who included this URL link in their comments, http://www.mayorjoycooper.com/ and the one from someone, #90, who identified themself as Retired Hallandale Cop, who wrote:
"We're not in the same category as city employees," said Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper, who charged taxpayers $796 for a four-night stay at the InterContinental Miami in June. "We are already extremely frugal on our travel. I don't perceive us changing it."

She's right that she's not in the same category: When I took in-service training a few before my retirement, I had to add three hours to my work day, for travel time, because the city refsed to pay the hotel tab when the course was being held. What a hypocrite for a city official she is.
__________________________

Miami Herald
Editorial
January 22, 2009
 

Costly overnights can be wasteful

OUR OPINION: Broward County officials' expensive hotel stays a mistake

In ordinary times a mayor's hotel bill for $995 for attending a national convention wouldn't raise eyebrows at City Hall. But these aren't ordinary times. A deepening recession is forcing cities to tighten their belts during a long period of low revenue.

Mayors of some Broward cities should have considered this when booking Miami hotel rooms to attend the U.S. Conference of Mayors convention in Miami last June.

Budget cuts coming

In a review of expense records filed by Broward taxing-district board members and elected officials, the Sun Sentinel found that Lauderhill Mayor Richard Kaplan didn't want to make the daily commute from central Broward to downtown Miami, figuring rush-hour traffic would keep him from getting to events on time. So he took a room at the four-star InterContinental Hotel for a total cost of $995.

For the same reason Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper and Pembroke Pines Mayor Frank Ortis billed their cities' taxpayers $796 and $889.48 respectively for Miami hotel stays.

Knowing that their cities are facing budget cuts, the notion that the mayors rejected driving 20 or 30 miles in favor of costly overnights in Miami is troubling. Usually when such meetings are held in South Florida, local public officials drive to them. Gas prices were higher in June, but the cost of driving wouldn't have been as high as those hotel tabs. The mayors could even have commuted by Tri-Rail and Metrorail to the convention.

Next time, the mayors should be more sensitive to economic conditions when deciding how to attend a locally held convention.

Family expenses

The newspaper also found charges to taxpayers for officials' spouses and families at out-of-town events. For example, five Central Broward Water Control District officials billed taxpayers $380 for their spouses' and childrens' stays at two conferences in Key West and Key largo in 2007 and '08.

While bringing along the family at taxpayer expense to official functions may seem a justifiable perk for officials with modest salaries, the practice should be adopted or rejected as official policy by governing bodies only after a hearing during which the taxpaying public can weigh in on how to spend its money.

Reader comments at: http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/editorials/story/866494.html?mi_pluck_action=comment_submitted&commentSort=TimeStampAsc
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I was up in Hollywood on Wednesday afternoon for their Charter Review Committee's Ethics subcommittee
meeting at Hollywood City Hall, and it was impressive being among such smart, articulate and well-meaning people trying to make their city better. 
Perhaps because they were able to make their points without constantly being interrupted by someone trying to minimize their legitimate concerns or limit their time to express themselves like, well, a well-traveled pol like Joy Cooper

While I was there, I heard Hollywood's City Clerk Patricia Cerny mention that the City of Hollywood doesn't pay for hotels in Miami-Dade, Broward or Palm Beach for city employees or elected officials. 

That's clearly a policy that ought to be in effect as well in a city like Hallandale Beach, which boasts on its own website that it is near everything in South Florida. 

Overview & Location

Hallandale Beach is conveniently located between Fort Lauderdale and Miami, next to Aventura with access to the Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood and Miami International airports, Port Everglades, Port of Miami, and I-95.


Apparently though, as the Sun-Sentinel articles make abundantly clear, NOT close enough for Joy Cooper, forever cursed with delusions of grandeur. 

Even with this economy, Mayor Cooper's found over $3,000 in the city budget for a new office for herself at City Hall, not that she needed a new one or that there was anything physically wrong with her current one.  She just wanted it.

That particular construction bill, a matter of public interest, is an issue that nobody in South Florida's media has heretofore reported on.
Shocker!

That includes costs for things like re-wiring the room, constructing three new windows which look out towards the lobby and window treatments...

Friday, January 23, 2009

re FEC corridor: 1/22/09 Miami SunPost: The Little Corridor That Could

The primary reason I'm bringing this article to your attention today is because these upcoming SFECC
Workshops throughout South Florida represent a second opportunity for South Florida's elected officials and community leaders, corporate and non-profit, to actually do the right thing, rather than simply talk about it after-the-fact.

An opportunity for them to do exactly what most didn't do during the previous workshops two years ago: actually show-up in person and listen.
And, if possible, for elected officials to actually go to a neighboring community hosting a meeting as well, if possible, so that talk of regional cooperation can actually be shown in a tangible, visible way rather than lip-service.

I also wanted to bring to your attention today a very troubling issue affecting the SFECC Workshops that has gotten neither the level of media attention it deserves, or the wide-spread criticism it's justly earned.

Once again, the Village of Miami Shores is hosting an FDOT public meeting, this time, on February 12th as part of the second round of SFECC workshops.

Where does the Village of Miami Shores get the nerve to host an FDOT-sponsored SFECC Workshop, when two years ago, it sent a city hall representative to the meeting I attended in Aventura on Oct. 11, 2006 to say that Miami Shores did NOT want a station.  Period!

In fact, I was less than a foot away from the man who said it, Tom Benton