Showing posts with label Carli Teproff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carli Teproff. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Geography as destiny and column-inches in the South Florida news world of 2010

Geography as destiny and column-inches in the South Florida news world of 2010.
Or, say, did you see WHERE..
But when it happened here, South Florida newspapers completely ignored it
.

The following is a corrected version of an email I sent
on Friday July 2nd to Douglas C. Lyons , the senior editorial writer and columnist at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Edward Schumacher-Matos, the Ombudsman of the Miami Herald, with a cc to the Herald's Executive Editor Anders Gylenhaal, and bccs to dozens of concerned residents throughout Broward County, including state, county and municipal elected officials and public policy activists.
(See http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/opinion/columnists/sfla-opinion-lyons,0,2553034.columnist
)

----

Oh, say did you see... these charter school stories in the newspaper, yet curiously, there was never anything about
Ben Gamla losing in HB, despite all of former congressman Peter Deutsch's verbal threats against us. Actually, I mean to say did you see WHERE...

The first of three stories is from Thursday, Carli Teproff's thorough follow-up to her May 7th story. She continues to be one of the most-accurate and fair-minded reporters at the Herald.

But tell me, why is it that when former congressman Peter Deutsch and his Ben Gamla group were met with firm resistance from Hallandale Beach citizens who opposed his zealous efforts to shoe-horn a high school into a single-family residential neighborhood, months after Deutsch first threatened them and their city officials at a public meeting in Hallandale Beach, saying quite emphatically that there was "nothing" that they or anyone else could do to prevent him from getting what he wanted, there was nothing about it in either the Herald or Sun-Sentinel?

(Deutsch's first application to the city of HB was for 200 students, but then we were told that was just a "mistake," he was really only going to have 500, yet Broward County Schools says that he can have nearly 900 anyway.
Seriously, after reading Teproff's recent story, does Peter Deutsch honestly seem like the sort of person who will not fight for every single student he can get when he's sees competitor Somerset ready to go to war and sue the City of Coral Gables?


Ben Gamla in HB would've brought in well over $2 million a year for him and his partners, before costs, but then when you force kids to eat outside for lunch, as Deutsch personally reminded everyone he would, in fact, do, when others thought that was just a joke, well, it was hard not to see this enterprise more as a license to print money, with HB as the physical warehouse, than as a sincere effort to help improve the quality and options for
Hallandale Beach students and parents.who are literally desperate to have a quality school for ALL Hallandale Beach students and residents to be proud of.

Deutsch wasn't interested in the latter, though, just the former, and continually employed
his petulant bully card. Having seen him and his over-the-top bullying ego in action in person many times, yes, we know EXACTLY what he will do!)

As for the Herald and Sun-Sentinel completely ignoring the community successfully rallying to defeat this well-known bully, or the the city's staff recommending rejection because he and his team, despite all their bluster, failed to meet the legal requirements for the zoning variance he sought,
over-and-over, and his subsequently pulling of the application... what exactly?

Again, NOTHING in print or in any of your newspaper's blogs.
Not a crumb.
It's like it never actually happened at all.

We all know that actual meaningful news happens even when your company consciously chooses to ignore it, but if you think that your ignoring it does you any favors in the future with the residents of this community, far from it.
But we get it, though.

If a tree falls in HB, the question of whether it really make a sound is moot since it's in HB, right?
But if that same tree were to fall in Pine Crest, South Beach or near Brickell, stop the presses!

Mr. Schumacher-Matos, the Herald's recent track record is quite clear that your editorial team fervently believe that Coral Gables is, inherently, VERY IMPORTANT, while Hallandale Beach and Broward County and what happens to its citizen taxpayers is, inherently, insignificant, and, at best, an annoyance, which I guess is why a Herald reporter has attended exactly one HB City Commission meeting since June of 2008, despite everything that has happened here in the interim, almost all of which has been very. very bad for its beleaguered citizen taxpayers.

And I suppose that also explains why your newspaper completely ignored the successful citizens fight against the Diplomat LAC proposal that may well turn out to be the poster child for Amendment 4 in the weeks leading up to November's election, even while giving coverage to an addition to an apt. complex in Kendall.

I perfectly understand why the affected Kendall community is upset, I really do, but why a news story on the front page of Sunday's local section about 92 units and NOT one about a development of four or five 25-30 story condo towers, a project so large that the Broward County Commission had to vote on it -twice?

Despite protest, Kendall tower OK'd
The Kendall Community Council approved a new apartment building west of the
Palmetto Expressway -- to the dismay of some residents.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/27/1702951/despite-protest-kendall-tower.html

http://eyeonmiami.blogspot.com/2010/06/downtown-kendall-plan-and-residents.html


Okay, point taken.
Actions and words, or rather the lack of them, could hardly make this point any more clear.

My fellow concerned HB and Broward residents will know better in the future than to think
that the actual news value of any particular story is based on what's actually happening (or might) and other germane news parameters, not just where it happens.
No, as The Who correctly pointed out, "we won't be fooled again."

I will be happy to post any response you make in the future.

-------
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/07/01/1709646/charter-school-firm-sues-city.html
Posted on Thursday, 07.01.10
CORAL GABLES

Charter-school firm sues Coral Gables

A dispute between Coral Gables and a charter-school company is headed to court.

By Carli Teproff


A charter-school company sued the city of Coral Gables on Wednesday, demanding that the city approve a new 675-student school in a residential neighborhood.

Somerset Inc., a nonprofit firm that runs charter schools in Miami-Dade and Broward, wants to open a K-8 school on the campus of University Baptist Church, off Segovia Street near the Coral Gables library.

But the site isn't zoned for a full-size school, and the city has only granted approval for 110 students -- the same number as had attended a previously approved preschool on the church grounds.

Now Somerset wants a judge to declare that the school doesn't require city zoning approval. Somerset cites a state law saying that a church can house a charter school ``under their preexisting zoning and land use designations.''

The company says this law trumps city zoning rules, and cites a 2008 Sarasota Circuit Court ruling to that effect.

Somerset wants a Miami-Dade Circuit judge to order Coral Gables to allow the school.

Marcos D. Jiménez, a lawyer for Somerset, said Wednesday that his client had done everything it is supposed to do.

``We have come to a point where we need to invoke the protection of the state statute,'' he said. ``We think it is clear and on point.''

Somerset Academy has until July 26 to show the Miami-Dade school district that it has received city approval for a charter school at the church, 624 Anastasia Ave. The School Board approved the application in November 2008, but the petition did not specify a particular site.

Charter schools charge no tuition and receive taxpayer money to operate, but are run by someone other than the county school board.

`QUALITY OF LIFE'

City Attorney Elizabeth Hernandez said she was still reviewing the complaint Wednesday evening. She said the city is trying to look out for residents' interests.

``We are going to take all the appropriate action to preserve the quality of life including that of single family residential areas,'' Hernandez said.

She added that the city simply wants Somerset to follow the same procedures as everyone else for getting a zoning change.

Neighbors have complained that a charter school would bring too much traffic to a residential street -- an issue that normally would come up when the city commission considers a zoning change.

`SURPRISED'

Tucker Gibbs, who represents The Biltmore Neighborhood Association -- a group formed to fight the school -- said Friday he was ``somewhat surprised they filed a lawsuit.''

``They requested the certificate of use for 110 students,'' he said. ``They got what they supposedly wanted. So why are they suing the city?''

Jiménez called getting the certificate of use for 110 students ``a first step.''

``We can not operate without the larger number of students,'' he said. ``It's not feasible.''

----------
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/28/1704044_new-miami-beach-charter-school.html
Posted on Monday, 06.28.10

MIAMI BEACH

New Miami Beach charter school offers classes in Hebrew

Parents interested in having their children learn Hebrew as part of their schooling attended an open house Sunday for the new Ben Gamla Charter School set to open in August.

By Paradise Afshar

For the upcoming school year Johany Preston is considering an alternative option to a traditional public school for her three boys.

She is flirting with the idea of sending them to the brand new Ben Gamla Charter School in Miami Beach, which when it opens in August will offer a combination English and Hebrew curriculum, only the third school of its kind in South Florida.

``The location and the Hebrew were the main draws,'' said Preston, 44, of North Miami, who was among two dozens parents on Sunday attending an open house at the school at 1211 Marseille Dr. It will welcome students from kindergarten through fifth grade.

Admission to the school is free and open to students residing in the Miami-Dade school district. There is a $100 refundable book deposit.

Preston, who is Jewish, said she feels that the language component is important ``because it's a part of the Jewish culture.''

The Miami Beach campus is the second for the school named after an Israelite high priest -- Yehoshua ben Gamla -- known in the Talmud for his campaign to establish yeshivas throughout Judea.

The school's language curriculum has not been without controversy. When the first Ben Gamla school opened in Hollywood in 2007, the Broward County School Board briefly ordered the charter school suspend its Hebrew classes because the language has too close of a tie to Judaism, raising concerns that the connection could result in a nonsecular school.

Nathan Katz, a religious studies professor at Florida International University, was asked by the school board to review the lesson plans to ensure it was secular and the school was allowed to offer Hebrew classes. Katz said it is within the school's constitutional rights to teach the culture that comes with the language, and that the curriculum doesn't include any religious practice.

``It's like a magnet school where you may have a choice of language like French or German,'' said Katz, who attended Sunday's open house.

Heather Rubin, a first grade teacher, said Ben Gamla students are held to the same Florida public school standards. The majority of the curriculum is taught in English.

``I don't speak Hebrew,'' Rubin said, adding that another teacher comes into the class to teach students the language. ``But I do think it's great to have to learn a second language. It's amazing to see the kids who come here who speak a second language at home, come here and learn a third language.''

But the main goal of the school is to provide a comforting learning environment, she said. Principal Ari Haddad describes the school as a hybrid between public and private schools. Haddad said the new school is being well-received.

``So far everyone has been great. I had one of the neighbors come to me today and say, `You will do great things here,' and I think we will.'' he said.

Currently, there are 930 students enrolled in the Ben Gamla Charter School in Hollywood. The new Miami Beach campus is expected to add 190 new students.

For more information about the Ben Gamla Charter School, call 305-469-9331.

----------

http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/05/07/1618532/charter-school-proposed-at-gables.html
Posted on Fri, May. 07, 2010

Charter school proposed at Coral Gables church meets resistance from city

BY CARLI TEPROFF
The Miami Herald

University Baptist Church in Coral Gables, pictured here on Thursday, May 6, 2010, is trying to gain approval to open a charter school on their current grounds that would serve over 600 students beginning in August of this year and has met opposition from neighbors that surround the church in the mainly residential neighborhood. Allison Diaz /

Academica, the company hoping to open a charter school at University Baptist Church, pictured here, went before the Coral Gables Development Review Committee on Friday. (Miami Herald file photo)

For Academica to open a charter school with more than 600 students at University Baptist Church, it will have to address parking, traffic and zoning concerns, Coral Gables' Development Review Committee said Friday.

Members of the city's police, fire, building and zoning, architecture, public works and parking departments queried Academica on a wide of range of issues pertaining to the proposed school at the church, 624 Anastasia Ave.

Company officials have said the pre-K through eighth grade school would open in August, although the city maintains the school needs to secure city approval before opening.

Friday's meeting was the first gathering before a city board. The company has maintained it can open the school at the church without city approval because of a state charter school law. In July, the Miami-Dade School Board approved Academica's application to open a school, dubbed Somerset Academy, although no location was specified.

City Attorney Elizabeth Hernandez has said in order to open up a school with more than 110 students -- which is what the property is zoned for -- the city would have to approve zoning and land use changes.

A group of residents who live nearby have formed a neighborhood association to prevent the charter school from opening with more than 110 students.

Attorney Tucker Gibbs, who is representing the group, said the main concern is the added traffic on the residential streets.

``The DRC brought to light a lot of issues that surround the proposal,'' Gibbs said after the meeting. ``The land use does not allow a school there.''

Academia officials have said they're aware of the neighbors' concerns and will try to work with them.

``The school certainly wants to be a good neighbor,'' said Rolando Llanes, the project's architect.

On Friday the city's Development Review Committee -- which is made up of representatives from each department -- went through the committee's concerns before a standing-room only crowd.

Among the concerns raised Friday:

The number of students. The charter calls for 675 students; the company has said the proposed school can accommodate 735 students.

The committee said the company needs to clarify the exact number of students who will attend the school.

Coral Gables Police Sgt. Jesse Medina cited added traffic at dismissal time.

Llanes said the plan was to have three dismissal times, 30 minutes apart, to help ease traffic. He noted a maximum of 31 cars could be in the pick-up and drop-off lanes.

``The responsibility will be on the parents,'' Llanes said.

Parking. Currently, there are 93 spaces used by the church and its preschool, whose enrollment is capped at 110 students and 18 staff members, as per a 1977 commission mandate.

``One of my main concerns is parking,'' said Sebrina Brown, the city's currency administrator.

The architectural firm working with Academia -- Civica Architects -- said there was ample parking. In a packet submitted to the city, the firm said 58 spaces would be required for a 735-student school. It based that calculation on a state school code requiring one space per staff and one visitor space for every 100 students. That is the minimum parking requirement.

Using that methodology, the firm said it needed 58 spaces, 35 more than UBC now has with its 93 parking spaces.

``We have surplus of parking,'' Llanes said.

Jeanne Ann Rigl, who lives close to the church, came to Friday's meeting to speak to the committee.

While the committee meeting was open to the public, community members could not speak because it was not an open forum.

``We were disappointed no one could speak,'' Rigl said.

The company said it will work with the DRC.

Meanwhile, more than 900 parents have written letters of interest to the school, school officials said, and a parent board has been formed. The company operates several other charter schools in South Florida under the name of Somerset Academy.

Gina Delarosa, who lives in the Gables and has two sons, said she came to the meeting to hear more about the school. She said the city would benefit from a charter school.

``I feel like it's going to be a long process,'' she said.

Coral Gables City Hall, 405 Biltmore Way, 33134

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Thursday night's Ben Gamla Charter info meeting with Peter Deutsch was even more absurd than you'd imagine it could be

Thursday night was a bad case of Apathetic African-American Syndrome in Hallandale Beach.
While concerned neighbors in a Northeast Hallandale Beach neighborhood fought for better and more-inclusive schools that reflected the genuine diversity of HB on Thursday night, away from their single-family neighborhood, HB's African-Americans stayed home in droves and watched TV or were otherwise engaged.


After HB Commissioner Anthony Sanders left the Hallandale Jewish Center at 6:48 p.m., wearing his Hallandale High Chargers t-shirt, there was not another African-American face in the large room for the rest of the evening, another 85 minutes or so.

Zero participation at a meeting about schools in Hallandale Beach!


I'lm planning on having some photos and video of Thursday night's one-sided
Ben Gamla Hebrew Charter School information meeting up on my blog and YouTube page on Sunday.

Here are the dates re Ben Gamla that we need to be concerned with.

First, the HB Planning & Zoning Advisory Board on Wednesday May 26th at 1:30 p.m. in the Commission Chambers.

Personally, I think we'd all be better off having it in the HB Cultural Center since I don't think there will be enough seats for everyone in the Chambers once Peter Deutsch and his rather obnoxious acolytes from throughout Broward County descend on HB.

I then expect that the application will go before the HB City Commission the following Wednesday on June 2nd and then two weeks later on June 16th.

In his public comments that came towards the end of the meeting, after nearly 65%.of the crowd had already left, rather than at the very beginning as it should have, Assistant HB City Manager Mark Antonio -the man who makes almost $200k a year in salary and benefits- stated that the City Commission would hear the application in "June or July."

Sure, well, except for the fact that the City Commission
DOESN'T meet in July, which he already knows, hence my educated guess on June.

On Monday I'll be making the first in a series of formal requests for pertinent documents to and from HB City Hall and Ben Gamla and Peter Deutsch, with my first request for docs that explain why the city allowed this required public meeting to be held in a religious facility, one that was positively sweltering on Thursday night, and which lacked any electrical fans.

People attending were cranky even before the meeting started because of how truly miserable the conditions were inside.


When Deutsch said that there were rules for the meeting that the city had agreed to that I've never seen before -rules that DIDN'T exist with other required developer meetings in the past, including the Diplomat's at the air-conditioned HB Cultural Center in October, with Debbie Orshefsky and Suzanne Friedman- a real murmur went up from the crowd.

Instead of being able to ask questions from your seat, with someone walking around with a microphone, you not only had to sign-in, but walk up to the front of the room.
Because Deutsch brought an electronic three-minute timer with him, he alone controlled the time and flow of the meeting, not someone from the city.

That rather predictably resulted in him letting many pro-Ben Gamla people speak for quite some time after the time limit, while being quick to yank the microphone back if you spoke against his multi-million dollar creation.


Oh, and since he controlled everything,
Peter Deutsch got to rebut any time he wanted to, which was constantly, with no time limit.

Naturally, he also consistently mis-characterized what many HB residents actually said.


And I guess I hardly need mention that because so many of the pro-Ben Gamla people at the meeting don't live anywhere near Hallandale Beach -or even necessarily in Broward- most didn't necessarily volunteer where they lived when they spoke, though some did.

Those that did mention that they lived elsewhere often made no bones about
NOT caring in the least what locals thought, saying that HB would just "have to live" with the influx of the 600-plus cars of parents coming into this single-family neighborhood, twice-a-day.

While you and I may think that it's important for a public school, whether Charter or not, to have a tangible connection to not only the neighborhood it's located in but to the actual students who live in the city, which here, is well-over 90% African-American, Peter Deutsch and his fan club don't.

They don't even pretend to care about the legitimate concerns of the local neighborhood, the city or the kids who live here, who, in my opinion, are currently poorly served by the Broward County School Board and our local member, Ann Murray, who was NOT present.

Not that Ann Murray being invisible in Hallandale Beach is exactly Breaking News, as regular readers here know well.


The Ben Gamla Mutual Admiration Society in attendance Thursday night really don't view those concerns as either important or legitimate, since they don't plan on having many -if any- of these Hallandale students as BGHCS students anyway.

And as was evidenced throughout the night, whenever this was brought up, boy, are the Ben Gamla Moms ever ultra-sensitive about that self-evident fact!

They were spoiling for a fight from the get-go, and frequently heckled HB residents who made clear this school is not a good fit in THAT location.

Deutsch and Co.
are smart and they've clearly done their research for their particular product.
They make no excuses for being about the bottom line.

They are much more interested in what Jewish parents living within a 20-mile radius of N.E. 8th Avenue think of sending their kids to this location, than they are with what the neighborhood thinks of them being located there, or even whether or not their insistence that their plan to actually have their students eat lunch outside, is the appropriate one, since many people find it hard to believe.
For them, it's all about efficiency.
Period.

Sorry, however good their students may do in school or on standardized tests -and nobody from the neighborhood challenged the central premise that the kids do well at the Hollywood location- for the Hallandale Beach location, their concern is solely about marketing, as I and many others have stated repeatedly since last year.

Because HB City Hall really caved-in big time on this meeting, and there was no presentation of basic facts or even a display of building renderings before it started, for people to look at, the meeting was as predictably and demonstrably bad as I expected when I showed-up, something echoed in comments to me by others who attended.


After it was all over, Hallandale Beach residents quite literally couldn't believe the gall of the whole effort.
First, the one to minimize the legitimate interests and concerns of the city, neighborhood and local HB students, and second, the extent to which the whole night seemed an effort by Peter Deutsch to keep existing Ben Gamla parents happy, so they'd have a high school to send their kids to, since many kids are 'aging out' of their facilities in Hollywood and Plantation.

Deutsch is under-the-gun to find a place for theses older kids to go, since it's clear from their own remarks that the Ben Gamla parents do not want to send their kids to Broward public schools, which they constantly disparaged throughout the meeting, with Hallandale's schools coming under a ton of withering put-downs.

One particularly indignant and voluble Ben Gamla father caused a stir amongst the crowd when he publicly stated that he'd much rather send his son to a Madrassa in Pakistan than to send him to a school in Hallandale Beach. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madrassas_in_Pakistan
Really.

I wonder if Comm. Anthony Sanders heard that particular remark.
I know for sure that Mayor Joy Cooper did.
In case you didn't already know, that's what they think of you and your city, folks.

Frankly, there's no logical reason to think that HB City Hall isn't already trying to "
fix" things here as they clearly did for the Diplomat LAC proposal.

To think otherwise would be to deny everything we
already know and have learned about the people involved in policy-making at HB City Hall, based on their own track record.

The people there have no qualms about lying to HB's citizen taxpayers or trying to prevent us from accessing public information we are already legally entitled to, and will do so again if they need to.

On that you can depend!


----------
My Wednesday email and blog post about Ben Gamla also linked to this Carli Teproff story in its first incarnation

Miami Herald
April 28, 2010
POSTPONED: Charter school meeting moved to May 7
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/28/1602750/postponed-charter-school-meeting.html

Carli is a very diligent reporter and was completely on top of the ethical nonsense at North Miami Beach City Hall last year.

I lived in the then-brand new apt. complex just south of NMB City Hall and the next door Victory Park Pool and Tennis Courts in third and fourth grade from 1969-'71, when going to Fulford Elementary.

Back when the Maryland Fried Chicken, Dobbs House and Kenin's Coin Shop were popular haunts of mine and my friends along N.E. 19th Avenue, and directly west of City Hall was a great family restaurant/diner that my family always seemed to be at whenever new episodes of The Brady Bunch or The Partridge Family TV shows came on Friday night.
Great Philly Cheese Steak sandwiches!

Miami Herald
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/05/07/1618532/charter-school-proposed-at-gables.html

Charter school proposed at Coral Gables church meets resistance from city

By Carli Teproff

May 7, 2010

Academica, the company hoping to open a charter school at University Baptist Church, pictured here, went before the Coral Gables Development Review Committee on Friday. (Miami Herald file photo)

For Academica to open a charter school with more than 600 students at University Baptist Church, it will have to address parking, traffic and zoning concerns, Coral Gables' Development Review Committee said Friday.

Members of the city's police, fire, building and zoning, architecture, public works and parking departments queried Academica on a wide of range of issues pertaining to the proposed school at the church, 624 Anastasia Ave.

Company officials have said the pre-K through eighth grade school would open in August, although the city maintains the school needs to secure city approval before opening.

Friday's meeting was the first gathering before a city board. The company has maintained it can open the school at the church without city approval because of a state charter school law. In July, the Miami-Dade School Board approved Academica's application to open a school, dubbed Somerset Academy, although no location was specified.

City Attorney Elizabeth Hernandez has said in order to open up a school with more than 110 students -- which is what the property is zoned for -- the city would have to approve zoning and land use changes.

A group of residents who live nearby have formed a neighborhood association to prevent the charter school from opening with more than 110 students.

Attorney Tucker Gibbs, who is representing the group, said the main concern is the added traffic on the residential streets.

``The DRC brought to light a lot of issues that surround the proposal,'' Gibbs said after the meeting. ``The land use does not allow a school there.''

Academia officials have said they're aware of the neighbors' concerns and will try to work with them.

``The school certainly wants to be a good neighbor,'' said Rolando Llanes, the project's architect.

On Friday the city's Development Review Committee -- which is made up of representatives from each department -- went through the committee's concerns before a standing-room only crowd.

Among the concerns raised Friday:

The number of students. The charter calls for 675 students; the company has said the proposed school can accommodate 735 students.

The committee said the company needs to clarify the exact number of students who will attend the school.

Coral Gables Police Sgt. Jesse Medina cited added traffic at dismissal time.

Llanes said the plan was to have three dismissal times, 30 minutes apart, to help ease traffic. He noted a maximum of 31 cars could be in the pick-up and drop-off lanes.

``The responsibility will be on the parents,'' Llanes said.

Parking. Currently, there are 93 spaces used by the church and its preschool, whose enrollment is capped at 110 students and 18 staff members, as per a 1977 commission mandate.

``One of my main concerns is parking,'' said Sebrina Brown, the city's currency administrator.

The architectural firm working with Academia -- Civica Architects -- said there was ample parking. In a packet submitted to the city, the firm said 58 spaces would be required for a 735-student school. It based that calculation on a state school code requiring one space per staff and one visitor space for every 100 students. That is the minimum parking requirement.

Using that methodology, the firm said it needed 58 spaces, 35 more than UBC now has with its 93 parking spaces.

``We have surplus of parking,'' Llanes said.

Jeanne Ann Rigl, who lives close to the church, came to Friday's meeting to speak to the committee.

While the committee meeting was open to the public, community members could not speak because it was not an open forum.

``We were disappointed no one could speak,'' Rigl said.

The company said it will work with the DRC.

Meanwhile, more than 900 parents have written letters of interest to the school, school officials said, and a parent board has been formed. The company operates several other charter schools in South Florida under the name of Somerset Academy.

Gina Delarosa, who lives in the Gables and has two sons, said she came to the meeting to hear more about the school. She said the city would benefit from a charter school.

``I feel like it's going to be a long process,'' she said.

Coral Gables City Hall, 405 Biltmore Way, 33134

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, the Miami Shores village manager.
Months earlier, he'd earlier written SFECC on March 2, 2006 with his comments recorded thusly in the public records: 
Mr. Benton expresses demands quiet zone for all 5 crossings, and is opposed to any type of 
elevated train service or metro-rail type service since it would impact quality of life, esthetics, 
and property value. Whatever the choice serious environmental mitigation should be implemented. 
The community will fight vigorously to protect current quality of life.

Prior to that Aventura meeting in the Fall of 2006, nor at any time since, The Village of Miami 
Shores has NEVER held a public referendum where its citizens could directly show their level of support for access to a commuter rail that would conveniently connect them to points north and south.  
Never.

The self-important poo-bahs in Miami Shores decided that issue themselves!

In the process, because Miami Shores is both small and located right on the FEC tracks, from N.E. 87 Street to 105th, Miami Shores officials effectively get a veto over tens of thousands 
of South Florida taxpayers who live near there, but not in the village itself, thereby 
disenfranchising those South Floridians who'd likely enjoy being able to take advantage of something common sense that should've existed here over thirty-five years agoa commuter train.

That pocket veto of theirs means that the closest prospective stations to those citizens are
near N.E. 79th Street or N.E. 125th Street.  Miami Shores thus creates the largest gap anywhere along the heavily-populated route in Miami-Dade or Broward County.
Now that's regional planning South Florida-style!

If any citizens, community activists or reporters actually go that meeting in Miami Shores on Feb. 12th, how about asking someone from that community to publicly explain why that little village 
gets a veto over tens of thousands of South Florida citizens and taxpayers.  
"On the record."

In the aftermath of the meeting I attended in Aventura, and the accurate reporting of the Miami 
Shores' position the following morning by Carli Teproff in the Miami Herald -whom I'd written in advance of the meeting- I wondered why the South Florida news media allowed the Village of Miami Shores to get away with this parochial (and frankly, racist) attitude 
that goes directly against regionalism in planning, theory and practice.

(Yes, racist, just like Georgetown NOT wanting the Washington Metro -WMATA- to have a station located there when they were first considering locations in the late '60's & early '70's.  Why do you suppose that is?
Now, having lived up there for 15 years, and having my African-American friends who were born/grew-up there explain it all to me, I can tell you that everyone up there now sees the folly of that bad decision, and wishes they could undo it.)

Where were the newspaper editorials or the stories on TV or radio asking for a reasonable explanation?  
Where exactly was the South Florida Regional Planning Council then?
Where was the FDOT Secretary, Stephanie Kopelouos?
Where was the Beacon Council or the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce?

They were all missing-in-action!
Sadly for South Florida taxpayers, transit enthusiasts and people in general who just want to be able to get around more quickly, that is seemingly the default position for Sec. Stephanie Kopelousos, whom I personally find unsuitable for her current position, based on what we've already seen so far.


To me and many other citizens around the state, Kopelousos is part of the problem, NOT part of any solution.

That sentiment was echoed by other citizens I spoke to at the SFECC Workshops I attended in Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood and Aventura in 2006.
Ppeople who actually took the time to show up, become educated about the particulars of the plan, and ask questions and share their thoughts and criticisms.
They also largely thought the South Florida media did their usual piss-poor job of publicizing the
meetings in advance.
This was matched by a commensurate piss-poor job of the media of actually attending them.

That's not unlike the poor turnout among citizens for the Broward County Transit Forum at the Convention Center in late 2006, which suffered greatly from having FAR TOO MANY city, county and state employees there as shock troops, and not nearly enough citizens taxpayers,
(The Miami Herald didn't mention the Forum until the Saturday before, on the third page of the State/Local section, two days before the event, and the Sun-Sentinel waited until the day of the event, albeit, on the front page. Too late!)

And who exactly was planning these SFECC meetings two years ago for FDOT?
You have a meeting planned in Aventura, one of the most intensively built-up areas in all of South Florida, a city that has busy Biscayne Blvd. as its very backbone, and yet you put up ZERO signs about the meeting at large intersections on Biscayne in advance of the meeting?
Don't put them up 7-10 days in advance so that more people actually know about it and can make plans to attend?

Trust me, I looked for those signs in advance and the day of the event as well.
They didn't exist.
Sorry, that's not on me, that's on you, FDOT.

Are these the same marketing geniuses who are responsible for my not receiving a single email about SFECC
for over a year, despite my being on their mailing list since 2006?
The same ones responsible for there being no original content of any kind on the SFECC website for almost a year, as many transit enthusiasts in South Florida would remind me when they saw me.
That's embarrassing and incompetent all at the same time!

So, given what I've written here, can anyone tell me why FDOT continues to hold so many meetings in Miami Shores at the Miami Shores Country Club, if the town DOESN'T want to be part of the larger community, and openly says so?
For instance, the Workshops last year for the awful 95 Express experiment?

When I saw the ads FDOT paid for in the Herald advertising the Workshop there, I foolishly assumed some reporter attending the workshop would actually ask someone from FDOT for an explanation.
What was I thinking?
Assuming a reporter would ask a good question?
Had I forgotten where I was? 

Well, I no longer harbor assumptions that just because someone down here shows up 
somewhere and calls themself a reporter, that they have actually done any kind of independent research prior to showing up -and neither should you.

Please learn from my mistake, and ask lots of questions publicly at these Workshops , since you simply can't rely on reporters to do that in South Florida anymore. 
Sad but true as I've lamented in this space many times before.


 BOCA RATON
DATE:Tuesday, January 27
LOCATION:Boca Raton Community Center
Royal Palm Room
ADDRESS:150 Crawford Blvd.
TIME:3:30 - 5:30 p.m. OR 6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE

 WEST PALM BEACH
DATE:Wednesday, February 4
LOCATION:The Raymond F. Kravis Center for the Performing Arts
Cohen Pavilion
ADDRESS:701 Okeechobee Blvd.
TIME:3:30 - 5:30 p.m. OR 6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE
 RIVIERA BEACH
DATE:Thursday, February 5
LOCATION:Riviera Beach City Hall
Council Chamber Room C202, Second Floor
ADDRESS:600 W. Blue Heron Blvd., #1
TIME:6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE
 MIAMI
DATE:Tuesday, February 10
LOCATION:Greater Bethel AME Church
Lower Auditorium
ADDRESS:245 NW 8th St.
TIME:3:30 - 5:30 p.m. OR 6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE
 DELRAY BEACH
DATE:Wednesday, February 11
LOCATION:Delray Beach City Hall
Council Commission Chamber
ADDRESS:100 NW 1st Ave.
TIME:6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE
 MIAMI SHORES
DATE:Thursday, February 12
LOCATION:Miami Shores Country Club
Ballroom
ADDRESS:10000 Biscayne Blvd.
TIME:6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE
 HOLLYWOOD
DATE:Tuesday, February 17
LOCATION:Hollywood Central Performing Arts Center
Auditorium & Café
ADDRESS:1770 Monroe St.
TIME:6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE
 POMPANO BEACH
DATE:Wednesday, February 18
LOCATION:E. Pat Larkins Community Center
Auditorium – West side
ADDRESS:520 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
TIME:6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE
 AVENTURA
DATE:Tuesday, February 24
LOCATION:Aventura Community Recreation Center
Classrooms 1A, 1B and 2
ADDRESS:3375 NE 188th St.
TIME:6 - 8 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE
 FORT LAUDERDALE
DATE:Wednesday, February 25
LOCATION:African American Research Library & Cultural Center
Auditorium & Michael Bienes Seminar Room #2
ADDRESS:2650 Sistrunk Blvd.
TIME:5 - 7 p.m.
DIRECTIONS:CLICK HERE

Despite my speaking about SFECC with Hallandale Beach City Manager Mike Good in early 2008 at a public town hall meeting, about having to attend meetings in Aventura and Hollywood because Hallandale Beach was asleep at the wheel and didn't think to be included -despite the fact that a commuter train here could revitalize the city quicker than anything else could, and with more tangible results sooner than any other place in Broward -and my publicly requesting that the city contact FDOT so that future workshops include Hallandale Beach, guess which city along the FEC tracks once again doesn't have a workshop?

Yes, Hallandale Beach, the city made famous by the film "A Railroad Runs Thru It

And 97 years ago today, the first train arrived in Key West, marking the completion of the Florida East Coast Railway.

*Reminder: South Florida Regional Transportation Summit is Saturday Feb. 21st in Fort Lauderdale.
__________________________________________
The Little Corridor That Could

Miami Commissioner Echoes Plea for Corridor Restoration
By Jackson Tonti
http://www.miamisunpost.com/archives/2009/01-22/012209newsmiami.htm
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Also see my July 31st, 2008 blog post titled DOT Sec. Mary Peters in Miami on Friday  http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/dot-sec-mary-peters-in-miami-on-friday.html
Related: http://www.sfeccstudy.com/
Miami Shores Country Club, 10000 Biscayne Blvd., Miami Shores, FL 33138