Showing posts with label City of Hallandale Beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label City of Hallandale Beach. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 6, 2022

What exactly is the Broward Planning Council up to now regarding ending a means of public engagement on issues of great public importance?

What is the reason that #Broward Co. Comm. is "exploring" removing
public's ability to participate + engage w/Broward Planning Council over a county
phone line? How is this a positive thing for residents/public? At 6:02 mark on video of July Broward Planning Council meeting.
https://vimeo.com/showcase/7896825?video=733993207


Today I'm sharing some news with you that I believe is both important AND interesting, which is not always the case. no?

This news is something that I first discovered by accident a few weeks ago while researching another City of Hollywood and Broward County public policy story I'm working on, the details of which will be posted here in the coming weeks for your careful perusal and consideration.

(I mentioned this news publicly for the first time last week on my popular Twitter feed, @hbbtruth. Obviously, I'm always looking for new people like you to begin Following me there on Twitter to keep up with things going on below-the radar and behind-the-scenes that I find out about or want to share before they appear here on my blog in a much-longer format.)

So, right now, for today at least, I'm NOT going to call the cavalry, point fingers, go off on a tangent, or otherwise make allegations that I can not substantiate.
Instead, I'm merely going to point you towards a very revealing Broward government-prepared video that I believe you should take a look at for yourself, where you are free to come to your own conclusions about what it might mean for the public and stakeholders' ability to communicate with government representatives, and make their voices heard on important issues of public concern involving tens of thousands of people, not to mention, their Quality of Life.

From what I have been able to gather, it looks like the professional staff of the Broward Planning Council -headquartered in the Broward County govt. bldg. on Andrews Avenue that also houses the elected Broward County Commission- and perhaps some members of the County Commission are VERY interested in pulling the plug on one of the ways that the general public can communicate with the 20 appointed members of the Broward Planning Council, who are largely elected officials from the thirty-something cities making up Broward County. As we know from experience, there are different rules for real estate developers and their army of lawyers, architects, planners and related helper minions.
 
As many of you longtime readers of this blog know, this appointed group is one that I have spoken to in the past involving very important development issues in Hallandale Beach that were being crammed down the throats of HB residents, taxpayers and stakeholders by the HB City Commission at HB City Hall. It being Hallandale Beach, this was often/usually done with only the mere pretense of public accountability, transparency or fairness that residents could have expected..

 

Shocker! This was done under the same HB mayor who is now ruling the roost there, Joy Cooper, who, somehow, got the great luck to have been given perhaps the dumbest jury in Broward County history a few years ago, who seem to have ignored a mountain of evidence and instead acquit her of multiple criminal charges, after she'd been arrested after being recorded repeatedly trying to get election campaign donations/payoffs from undercover FBI agents posing as real estate developers, in exchange for her help with votes on the dais involving development in the city.

 

As of now, barring any hurricanes in the interim, the next scheduled meeting of the Broward Planning Council is Wednesday September 22nd at 10:00 am in the Broward County Commission chambers. If I get any word, official explanation or not, for what's going on with the plug perhaps being pulled on citizens but not real estate developers, I'll post my update here!

Dave 

Thursday, February 17, 2022

#HollywoodFL and #HallandaleBeach City Commissions seem completely oblivious to a looming education crisis this Fall as several Broward Schools there could be merged, "overhauled," or closed due to a steady decline in student enrollment

#HollywoodFL and #HallandaleBeach City Commissions seem completely oblivious to a looming education crisis this Fall as several Broward Schools there could be merged, "overhauled," or closed due to steady decline in student enrollment


So, a propos this December 12th Sun Sentinel news article and the subsequent failure by the South Florida news media to follow-up and actually provide the public and parents some hard data that was broken down in a way that they could easily wrap their heads around.... I submit the following for your consideration, keeping in mind that 
Hollywood Central Elementary, McNicol Middle School and Hallandale High School are on that prospective hit list.

Something that area realtors can NOT be crazy about talking about to prospective buyers, who would prefer that their kids can walk to a good, quality school.


HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog  @hbbtruth
To @nathalie_lynch
Since #Broward #SchoolBoard is considering closing some #schools this Fall bec of low enrollment -w/several in #HollywoodFL- have you personally seen info re # of students that've gone "missing," by either district or zip code? Or is specific data "Top Secret"?

Nathalie Lynch-Walsh  @nathalie_lynch
I don't think they can just close schools this fall. They might wait till after elections to announce plans to close schools . . .

HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog  @hbbtruth
Perhaps, but my Q is re the data. #SoFL media seems to be in no hurry to report it, even while they DO mention names in print, inc. Hollywood Central Elementary, McNicol Middle + Hallandale High. Reasonable to see SE Broward + realtors looking at problem.
@beamfurr  @MarieWoodsonFL


Nathalie Lynch-Walsh  @nathalie_lynch
Here's the link to Demographics. People can look up enrollment numbers . . .
Link above is https://www.browardschools.com/Page/34033


South Florida Sun Sentinel

School Board debating closing some schools - Campuses with low enrollment could be merged, overhauled as soon as fall 2022.
Scott Travis, South Florida Sun Sentinel
December 12, 2021

A student exodus has left Broward County schools with a lot of extra seats, and now School Board members say it's time to consider closing, merging or overhauling half-empty campuses.

The district has lost 51,000 students over the past 15 years, due to the rise of charter schools, concerns about academics and safety and more recently issues related to COVID-19, according to surveys. Now 30% of district schools have enrollment that's low enough to be considered problematic under district guidelines.

Read the rest of the story at:




Tuesday, January 12, 2021

The continuing problems of Broward County's Animal Shelter clearly shows that the Broward County Commission and Administration can not or will not solve what needs to be fixed. Quite rightly, Hallandale Beach Comm. Michele Lazarow, a longtime animal advocate, wants to know: “They had all summer to do this -why are they waiting until January?" Another case for Broward having an elected countywide Mayor who is held accountable for results.

The continuing problems of Broward County's Animal Shelter clearly shows that the Broward County Commission and Administration can not or will not solve what needs to be fixed. 

Quite rightly, Hallandale Beach Comm. Michele Lazarow, a longtime animal advocate,  wants to know: “They had all summer to do this -why are they waiting until January?" 

To me, this story shows the true cost to Broward residents in the chronic lack of personal accountability and positive results in Broward County by not having one person in the county who is an elected countywide Mayor who is accountable to everyone, and who can set an agenda that will last for more than one year. 

Instead, Broward residents must suffer with unaccountable and unelected jokers who are called mayor, like Steve Geller.

More of my comments below this account of what I tweeted out Tuesday afternoon.


I've included the text from the germane tweets in case you can't make out all the information

HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog @hbbtruth


1/ .@Susannah_Bryan 
Animals left in dark for hrs = just 1 of problems @ #Broward #AnimalShelter. “This is not news to those of us who have been saying this for years” - animal advocate + #HallandaleBeach Comm. @MLVegan. “What are they going to do now...”

Animals left in the dark for hours — that’s just one of the problems at Broward’s animal shelter.
Yet another scathing audit has uncovered a slew of problems at Broward County’s troubled animal shelter, lambasted by activists for years over allegations of neglect and incompetence that they say...
https://t.co/g7sWj39eYS?amp=1



2/ MT @Susannah_Bryan 
#Broward animal advocate Ana Campos worries abt animals being subjected to barrage of construction noise. “That is terrifying to an animal. It’s going to sound like a war zone... They’re going to bite and bark and freak out.”
Broward animal shelter will close for six months. The closure will make it easier for construction crews to fix problems with the shelter’s ventilation system. Shelter animals will remain in the building during construction.
https://t.co/BGBBAYlxfO?amp=1





3/ MT @Susannah_Bryan 
#Broward animal advocate + #HallandaleBeach Comm. @MLVegan has been on the line for 2 hours (since 10 am) waiting to comment @browardinfo mtg. re #Broward #AnimalShelter audit. When it was her turn to speak, commissioners were told she was not on the line.

4/ MT @Susannah_Bryan
After being passed over while waiting to speak re #Broward #AnimalShelter audit mtg., animal advocate/#HallandaleBeach Comm. @MLVegan texted Comm. @beamfurr to let him know. Now they’re trying to reconnect to her. Instead, they've got another speaker!




5/ MT @Susannah_Bryan 
“We are angry and tired,” #HallandaleBeach Comm. @MLVegan tells @browardinfo, referring to years of #animal advocates railing abt problems at county-run #AnimalShelter.
Says #Broward County administration + Commission to blame for problems.


6/ MT @Susannah_Bryan
Fact checking #Broward #AnimalShelter costs: @Michaeludine says it takes in 1,400 animals a year, spends $5,700 on each. Not true, says #animal advocate/#HallandaleBeach Comm. @MLVegan. Shelter takes in closer to 14,000 animals per year, spends $570 apiece.




@CBSMiami @nbc6 @wsvn @WPLGLocal10 @caitielee0917
7/ There really shld NOT be so much confusion re numbers and costs appearing in an... audit.
MT @Susannah_Bryan
Page 67 of #Broward #AnimalShelter audit: The shelter impounds approx. 14,000 live animals each year.

@CBSMiami @nbc6 @wsvn @WPLGLocal10 @caitielee0917 @Buddynevins @Florida_Bulldog @Susannah_Bryan
8/ This story shows true cost to #Broward residents in lack of accountability/results by NOT having elected countywide Mayor. Instead, unaccountable/unelected joker #SteveGeller.

@CBSMiami @nbc6 @wsvn @WPLGLocal10 @caitielee0917 @Buddynevins @Florida_Bulldog @Susannah_Bryan
9/ Perfectly reasonable question re #Broward #AnimalShelter: “They had all summer to do this -why are they waiting until January? - #animal advocate/#HallandaleBeach Comm. @MLVegan

This is one of those times where I don;t have to use all kinds of adjectives in my post to describe
what is going on, because it is completely self-evident to anyone who wants to open their eyes and look at where the problems are.

The Broward County Commission and its highly-paid staff is VERY, VERY lucky that this agenda item on the audit of the Broward County Animal Shelter took place during a pandemic, because if this had been a normal meeting where interested parties  could show up and speak under Public Comments, there would have been dozens and dozens more people who would've present at at the County HQ on Andrews Avenue to speak in-person.
And I would have been one of them.

Even worse, that meeting would have been chock full of kids with signs and their angry middle-class Moms, and that would have been the worst possible optics for these nine elected officials, who spend so much time reassuring us that they have excellent people in place to deal with and manage things.
No, what we know from experience is that they have staff that is highly-paid.

Their competency and tin-eared reactions has been the problem.
That's clearly been the case in many areas of public policy -including the battle for allowing Uber into the county- and now we know that problem extends to many other parts of Broward's bureaucracy, and we know with a high degree of certainty that one of those areas is something as non-controversial as the proper care and treatment of animals.

You don't need me to tell you that Broward residents and taxpayers deserve so much better than this from our elected officials.
You know it in your gut!

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">More half-assed &#39;results&#39; fm feckless <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Broward?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Broward</a> Comm. as animals suffer @ its <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/AnimalShelter?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#AnimalShelter</a>. <br>Another case for an elected countywide Mayor? <br>YES!<br><br>“They had all summer to do this -why are they waiting until Jan.?&quot; -🐶lover/<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/HallandaleBeach?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#HallandaleBeach</a> Comm. <a href="https://twitter.com/MLVegan?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@MLVegan</a><a href="https://t.co/ejJ2QGSCRw">https://t.co/ejJ2QGSCRw</a> <a href="https://t.co/62Z5A7Hcqw">pic.twitter.com/62Z5A7Hcqw</a></p>&mdash; HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) <a href="https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/status/1349427693255843841?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 13, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


Monday, October 26, 2020

Hallandale Beach's sleazy, unethical political campaigns seem to have the fingerprints of melodramatic Anabelle Lima-Taub or Police Unions or both. Yet again. Surprise! In Hallandale Beach, DON'T reward people who have not earned your trust and your faith like Anabelle Lima-Taub and Cynthia Cabrera. Reward someone who was there speaking out for your and your neighbors best interests for YEARS: Maggie Ivanovski

Above: Hallandale Beach City Hall, February 2020. © Hallandale Beach/Hollywood Blog, All Rights Reserved

Updated October 27th, 2020 9:00 p.m.

Hallandale Beach's sleazy, unethical political campaigns seem to have the fingerprints of melodramatic Anabelle Lima-Taub or Police Unions or both. 

Yet again. Surprise! 

In Hallandale Beach, DON'T reward people who have not earned your trust and your faith like Anabelle Lima-Taub and Cynthia Cabrera. Reward someone who was there speaking out for your and your neighbors best interests for YEARS: Maggie Ivanovski

Since we last spoke... a LOT of things have been happening. Unfortunately, most of them were happening below-the-radar, and the people involved, including those behind a fake website, do NOT want you to know the truth about what they're doing. 

It just never ends, does it?

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

Monday October 26th, 2020


I'm writing this morning to share with you all some very useful context about some very disconcerting news I was recently made aware of about what's been going on for weeks below-the-radar in our slice of the world in SE Broward among the political and business class. 

People who care very much about who has control and power at Hallandale Beach City Hall after the election on November 3rd, one week from tomorrow, and care not a whit about you, your family and your community's best long-term interests.

Which is why I'm making you aware of it today when there's still time to do something about it, instead of complaining about it after the election.
Then it's too late!

Instead of linking to the following news article as I would usually do on the blog since I started it in January of 2007, because it is SO important AND 99% of you would never have heard of it or read it anywhere else, I'm going to post it here in its entirety, including links, so that you can fully appreciate the forces at work under-the-radar in Hallandale Beach and environs who want to have power and control at Hallandale Beach City Hall.
You know, where you the citizen, the public, are supposed to be the most important person in the pyramid.

My comments follow the article, which features Hallandale Beach as the worst example in the state of Florida for a very unpopular trend.
Imagine that!

If indviduals or a group know that they can just pay a small fine after-the-fact, violating state election laws, what's to force them to follow state laws on disclosure?
Nothing! 
They will consider it a small price to pay to get the results THEY want.

https://www.bradenton.com/news/politics-government/election/article246660838.html


ELECTIONS

That annoying barrage of political texts? It’s only going to get worse, Florida

By Linda Robertson

OCTOBER 23, 2020 10:25 AM
text4.jpg
Texts like this one encouraging Floridians to vote by mail are among the 1 billion expected to be sent by political campaigns before Election Day on Nov. 3As election season reaches a crescendo, campaign ads aren’t just hanging from your doorknob, filling up your mailbox, cluttering your inbox, interrupting your favorite TV shows and beckoning from billboards. Politicians are capitalizing on an increasingly popular way to win your vote by inundating your cell phone with text messages.

More than a billion texts will be sent in support of Florida, statewide and national campaigns by Nov. 3, say candidates and their consultants. Like it or not, they’ve found texting to be an effective, efficient method for using personal data to engage directly with voters who spend half their waking hours on their mobile phones.

Because privacy is as quaint as the telephone booth, and voters’ cell numbers have been bought, sold, shared and rented out many times over, a candidate or volunteer or software company that is running a texting operation can greet recipients by first name in hopes of creating a rapport much harder to achieve ringing doorbells or broadcasting advertisements.


Cell phone users, hard-wired to at least glance at texts, also are more like to open them for a range of reasons, said Kevin Munger, assistant professor of political science and social media analytics at Penn State.

“People are resigned to getting spam calls and not listening or blocking them,” Munger said. “But their annoyance tolerance is higher for something they perceive as more important than a commercial pitch for a credit card or, say, selling Coke over Pepsi compared to Trump over Biden.”

Multiple times a day voters see texts soliciting donations, touting or bashing candidates, asking survey questions, coordinating campaign workers or encouraging them to cast their ballots:

“Hi John, it’s Israel with MoveOn. Politico reports that a ‘green tsunami’ -- a wave of donations from Democrats like us -- could flip control of the Senate! A Joe Biden presidency AND Democratic Senate are now within reach. Can you chip in $15 to help flip the Senate?”

“Looting. Rioting. Burning Cities. These are the realities of a Biden America. See this future for yourself & ensure it’s not ours.”

“Hi, it’s Michael from Vote From Home 2020. If you live at [insert your address] voting files suggest that you may not have requested a vote-by-mail ballot yet. If you change your mind you can still vote in person, so keep your options open by requesting a ballot.”


“Hey there John, I’m Diana with FL Research. We have a brief survey for Miami-Dade & we want to hear from you.”

The texts aim to tread a fine line between motivating and irritating voters. They come with one big advantage: People who delete emails without opening them or don’t answer calls from suspicious numbers can’t avoid texts. It’s an intrusion that also can backfire, strategists say.

“Voters have grown quite sick of texts. It’s another invasion of their privacy and their first reaction is often, ‘How did you get my number?’” said Evan Ross, president of the Aventura public affairs communications firm ,Public Communicators Group. He is running three Political Action Committees and advising 10 clients this election cycle, and they’ve sent a total of 100,000 texts. But those pings even get under his skin.

”I was in line for early voting when I received a text for the fourth time asking if I was committed to Biden and Harris,” he said. “I responded by telling the sender they need better data. They can’t be barraging people with repetitive texts and annoying them.”

The hope, Ross said, is a productive exchange, a conversation. Ideally, voter and candidate learn about one another.

“You’re able to make that crucial ask, ‘Can I count on your vote?’” he said. “A text can be so much more valuable than sending a mass mailer or knocking on a door when nobody’s home. But when a text is deleted out of frustration you’ve missed that connection.”

A COVID-19 BOOM

Texting has been especially useful since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. Ross knows a candidate in a condo-dense district who could not do the traditional door-to-door canvassing or host bagel breakfasts in meeting rooms. She switched to texting as her outreach solution.

The percentage of people who reply varies depending on how well an audience is targeted, but a 10-15 percent response rate is good, according to Ross and Nathaniel Lubin, co-founder of Survey 160, a software company that provides text-based polling and research services.

“At a time when people increasingly don’t answer their phones, SMS [Short Message Service texts of 160 characters or less] is an attractive way for analytics groups and pollsters to get meaningful data quickly and at scale,” said Lubin, who worked on Barack Obama’s campaigns in 2008 and 2012 when texting began to take off. “We typically do get higher response rates than other methods, especially for surveys. Texting is easier for respondents in that they get to choose when and how to respond, rather than needing to be available at the exact moment required by other channels.”

Ross saw a response Thursday that captured many voters’ feelings of text fatigue: “Who do I need to vote out of office to STOP these text messages? [With an emoji of a crying frowny face.]”

Though its use has exploded, texting remains largely unregulated by election and communications laws, allowing both savvy strategists and unsophisticated campaign managers to spread misinformation anonymously. Voters can receive a text and have no idea who is behind it. Disclaimers identifying who paid for the text messages are not required because there is too little space within the standard 160-character limit to fit that extra verbiage.

Lack of oversight and transparency has spawned some outrageous attack texts.

In the midst of another wild and nasty campaign season in Hallandale Beach, a text stating “Urgent Election Information” went out that appeared to be sent by incumbent commission candidate Michele Lazarow. It linked to a “Michele Lazarow For Commissioner?” website that disparaged and insulted Lazarow with bizarre headlines like “Breaks the Law and Incites Violence” and “Celebrates the Life of the ‘prophet’ Mohammed, an Oppressor of Women” and “Michele’s Dirty Relationship with Evan Ross.”

The mystery disclaimer at the bottom of the home page says: “I’m a concerned citizen of Hallandale Beach, and I have free speech guaranteed by the 1st amendment of the U.S. Constitution. I love Hallandale Beach, and I’m tired of Michele Lazarow allowing by [SIC] beloved city to look trashy!! Don’t vote for Michele please. Thank you!!!”

The deliberate misrepresentation and unaccountability for funding of the ad makes it illegal, but Lazarow’s attempts to trace the origin were fruitless. No one, including Commissioner Anabelle Lima-Taub, who is running for re-election in another district, or Mayor Joy Cooper — who have tangled with Lazarow in the past — has taken responsibility. Lazarow’s opponent, Dmitry Yakubovich, denied any involvement, saying “The politics have been very dirty in Hallandale over the past few elections. I’m not in favor of this. There’s no place for it in Hallandale.”

Lazarow and her advisor and friend Ross said they were “disgusted” by the deceptive message. The number that sent the text has been flagged by consumers complaining of robocalls and scams.

“The people who want to corrupt our city have proven they will break the law as they work to get me out of their way,” she said. “It’s clear these corrupting forces want Anabelle Lima-Taub, Joy Cooper and anyone other than me on the commission. I trust the residents of Hallandale Beach to see through the lies. I trust law enforcement to investigate and prosecute the criminals.”

“That’s the dark side,” said Ross, who created online and TV counterattack ads against Lima-Taub and Cooper with paid-for disclaimers from his Good Government PAC. “People can hide more easily on texts. In the cases of fraud, we need prosecutors to subpoena records and track the digital trail, but often law enforcement views these acts as political shenanigans that are not hurting anybody.”

LEGAL LOOPHOLES

The texting flood has grown as campaigns exploit a loophole in the Telephone Consumer Protection Act that was designed to control robocalls. Peer-to-peer texting allows a sender to send messages to recipients without their consent if they are sent one at a time. New tech companies with apps like Hustle, GetThru, RumbleUp and Opn Sesame have sprung up to generate millions of texts. Less laborious mass texting is allowed if recipients gave permission to be texted. Voters can usually stop receiving them by replying “stop” or “unsubscribe.”

“I identify 5,000 voters I want to reach legally through peer-to-peer texting,” Ross said. “I’d get carpal tunnel syndrome hitting send 5,000 times so I hire a vendor and pay a few cents per text for him to do the clicks. While robocalls were big 10-15 years ago, owning a landline is now like owning a typewriter. Texting is the booming industry. Campaigns are spending tens of millions of dollars on this platform.”

What does the future hold?

Ross predicts a trend toward expanded virtual communication for politicians. Campaign trails shrink when voters can tune in to town halls and rallies from home via Zoom. In-person hand-shaking and baby-kissing won’t disappear but candidates and constituents alike have learned during the pandemic how to reach people remotely.

“A local candidate could host Kamala Harris or Pete Buttigieg on the call because they don’t have to fly to Miami,” he said. “We’ve already seen higher citizen participation in city commission meetings on Zoom. Convenience and accessibility. Virtual platforms will increase engagement opportunities exponentially.”

Munger envisions a rise in campaign alliances with popular influencers.

“Influencer marketing has not yet fully penetrated the political scene,” he said. “That’s where all advertising is going these days. Eventually it will make texting seem as old-fashioned as calling people on their home phone.”

Miami Herald Staff Writer Nicholas Nehamas contributed to this report.


So in case you forgot who was on whose side in February of 2018, I'll remind you what I wrote at the time, and leave it to you to figure out now who regrets what they said and did, and who doesn't after things shook out the way they did.

Not that you would know this from any of the news articles or TV stories that have been written about the antics at Hallandale beach City Hall the past few years, but there are STILL lots of very negative reverberations still playing out in the city as a direct result of the embarrassing Rich Dally appointment/miscalculation.





Now I'm going to repeat some important points that I originally made two weeks ago in my blog post of October 12th, since there's no way of making them any more clearly.

If public honesty about who they are and they've done professionally in a job situation is the very least that we can expect from people who offer themselves up as prospective lected officials -and it is, the very least- what can be said about Vaping lobbyist Cynthia Cabrera, who claims publicly to be a longtime HB resident, but who, unlike Maggie, has been largely invisible and unconcerned when VERY BAD things were ROUTINELY happening in Hallandale Beach the past ten years. 
Where was she?

That Cabrera is neither as personally experienced or as well-informed as Maggie about the specific issues that have plagued and dominated what's happened at Hallandale Beach City Hall and the city more broadly for years is clear, since when Maggie attended meetings, EVERY Commissioner and staffer from the City Manager's office knew exactly who she was, and noticed her the moment she walked into the Commission Chambers.

THAT reaction is what happens when you have personally been actively engaged in improving the climate there, just as I have been, and show up ALL THE TIME, open your mouth and push back hard against self-evident bad ideas and unethical behavior.

Cynthia Cabrera has claimed on her website and to the news media and to Hallandale Beach voters to be a longtime Hallandale Beach resident, but the truth of the matter is that you can't find anyone in town who can honestly say that Cabrera has been even one-tenth as involved, reliable, or as public in her concerns as Maggie has been FOR YEARS in defending and articulating the best interests of the average HB resident and Small Business owner at HB City Hall.
The reason that nobody can say that Carbrera was even one-tenth as involved publicly is the simplest reason of all -Cabrera was invisible.

What kind of qualification for elective office is Cabrera's longtime apathy? 
Cabrera's innumerable campaign signs around Hallandale Beach can't make up for that harsh reality. When she lived here, she was a no-show.

Again, for all of Cynthia Cabrera's talk of being a longtime HB resident, HER very own LinkedIn profile lists her as having lived and worked in the Washington, D.C. area for at least three years from 2013-2016. 
You don't have to take my word, see for yourself:
Exactly!

Does she think we'd just take her word for it?

To make matters worse, Cynthia Cabrera does herself no favors by being so free in accepting large campaign dollars from real estate developers, as her campaign disclosures make quite clear.
Given Hallandale Beach's unique location and demographics within Broward County, real estate developers will always be viewed here somewhat more skeptically by many residents than they are elsewhere.
People who quite naturally want to protect their personal investment and Quality of Life.


So that said, it makes you wonder why nobody in the local South Florida news media, especially the South Florida Sun Sentinel, ever bothered to ask these hard questions about Cabrera.
Or, to ask her the most obvious question of all: Why was she SO invisible on matters of important local concern when she ACTUALLY was living here daily?

When you review the facts as they are, not as Cabrera would have you believe they are, you don't need me to tell you that you deserve a whole lot better quialified person represnting you on the HB City Commission than a disinterested woman like Cynthia Cabrera. 

My friend Maggie is in this race to win it, and then do the hard work that comes next.

Like us, Maggie is fully committed to reforming the city and bringing it kicking and screaming into the 21st Century when it comes to increasing the level of public scrutiny, public oversight, and civic engagement, and ensuring that a meaningful degree of financial accountability is always present.
In short, injecting the proper amount of common sense and skepticism to absurd proposals and bad public policy ideas that should never be approved.

In Hallandale Beach, DON'T reward people who have not earned your trust and your faith like Anabelle Lima-Taub and Cynthia Cabrera, reward someone who was there speaking out for your and your neighbors best interests for YEARS:
Maggie Ivanovski.
 
Do what's best for you and your family and the community at large, and reward Maggie's many years of very hard work and civic engagement over so many years to make Hallandale Beach better for both its residents and Small Business owners, and NOT people who have never been there for you, your family and neighborhood in Hallandale Beach.

To me, as someone who actually was at all of those meetings for years and speaking out for you as well, Maggie is more than deserving of your highest endorsement in this race: your VOTE to make Hallandale Beach's government better, more efficient, and more accountable to the people who live there.




Above: My friend Maggie Ivanovski, the Seat 3 candidate with the MOST experience in battling the bad ideas and impractical ordinances that have been coming out of Hallandale Beach City Hall like clockwork for the past 15 years. 

The city will positively change for the better the moment she and her genuine
EXPERIENCE are representing you and reforming it from the inside, and making the City Commission much more relevant and accountable. 
But Maggie needs YOUR vote in order to make that a reality!

Even now Maggie can use your help, so if you are interested, please contact her today via her cell phone number, (954) 646-2573, or via her campaign email:
m.ivanovski2020@hotmail.com

Updated on October 26th, 2020 at 4:15 p.m. 

Since I posted this blog post earlier today, we've publicly heard from one of the Usual Suspects of Hallandale Beach government and public policy, and one of the persons cited in the Linda Robertson article, Democratic lobbyist Evan Ross, the guy who for YEARS has tried to personally insinuate himself -worm his way- into HB issues.

As it happens, he's also the same irritating guy who for many years has held court by sitting in the last row of the HB Commission Chambers near the back door, often sitting in the seats (w/electrical outlets) RESERVED for city staff, and of key importance here, a longtime friend and confidante AND campaign fundraiser for Comm. Michele Lazarow.
In short, not an objective source for any kind of information about the city and its citizens and their desires for elected officials who keep people like him at arms-length.

Surprise! He's also one of the Lazarow-affiliated persons trying to foist political cipher and Vaping lobbyist Cynthia Cabrera onto the City Commission, Seat 3.

I include that back-and-forth on Twitter here now for your amusement and education.
Ross' contemptible sense of entitlement and contempt for voters is readily apparent, no?
"It’s a two person race. The only candidates with any chance of winning are Lima-Taub and Cabrera. Encouraging people to vote for anyone other than Cabrera just helps give the bigot on the commission four more years to embarrass Hallandale Beach."
You know, it's almost as if Evan Ross thinks that he gets more say so than you do in deciding who gets to sit in the HB City Commission seats on the dais.

In case you can't quite make this text out, it reads:

Me: #HallandaleBeach's sleazy pol. campaigns seem to have fingerprints of melodramatic Lima-Taub or Police Unions or both. Surprise!
DON'T reward ppl who've NOT earned yr trust like Lima-Taub + Cabrera. Vote for a better HB via #MaggieIvanovski. hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2020/10/hallan

Evan Ross: It’s a two person race. The only candidates with any chance of winning are Lima-Taub and Cabrera. Encouraging people to vote for anyone other than Cabrera just helps give the bigot on the commission four more years to embarrass Hallandale Beach.

Me: #FactsMatter: Lima-Taub has alienated most of the ppl who gave a cipher like her the benefit of the doubt in 2016 bec of HER own personal melodrama. Activists know
has REAL EXPERIENCE: 10x's institutional knowledge of HB's issues/history as longtime no-show
😴
Cabrera.


And speaking of running anonymous and defamatory attack blogs, as Linda Robertson does in her article, Evan Ross has some experience in that department, too. Hmmm...

Cowardly Lobbyist Evan Ross gets smacked down at the Eleventh Judicial Circuit
BY STEPHANIE KIENZLE  
MARCH 11, 2019


Dave