Showing posts with label Diplomat Country Club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diplomat Country Club. Show all posts

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Salient facts and tough questions re tonight's community meeting in Hallandale Beach about the latest development proposal -gambit?- about the Diplomat Hotel & Country Club, part of the Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa in Hollywood. What is allowed under current zoning and what is allowed under the requested new zoning?

Salient facts and tough questions re tonight's community meeting  in Hallandale Beach about the latest development proposal -gambit?- about the Diplomat Hotel & Country Club, part of the Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa in Hollywood. What is allowed under current zoning and what is allowed under the requested new zoning?

Below is a slightly-longer and corrected version of a quick email I wrote and dispatched yesterday afternoon to about 300 people throughout South Florida, including news media, regarding tonight's important 6 pm meeting in Hallandale Beach, behind City Hall.
There's much more in this issue than a quick first look would reveal.











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

October 14, 2015

For the record, since many of you receiving this email today were not living in the area at the time, in all the many years since the previous ill-considered Diplomat Hotel & County Club's 5-6 super-sized condo towers project was rejected by the Broward County Commission, 
project that I and many of you actively fought against from the very 
beginning, on the facts, because it was so self-evidently over-the-top and INCOMPATIBLE for the residential NE neighborhood it would have been shoehorned into, did the owners and management of the Diplomat EVER once do the most-obvious things they could have (and should have already) been doing to actually improve that property's bottom line and help the local economy - advertise and market it like they really meant it -in interesting and compelling ways that would draw new customers.

That rejected development project would have negatively affected not just the Quality of Life of area residents in general, but if approved, had also placed MANY HB homeowners in almost-permanent shadows as a result of the proposed Diplomat condo towers, built but feet away from their living room and bedroom windows.

For reasons known only to the Diplomat, despite all the resources in the world they had access to, the Diplomat consciously chose to NOT do the small common sense things for the golf course they needed to do to be successful in a competitive marketplace like South Florida, especially when their golf course is widely said by experienced golfers to be both TOO EXPENSIVE and NOT very challenging or FUN to play to boot, compared to other less-expensive golf courses in South Florida.

But instead of improving the actual product and learning how to effectively market their property, they seemed content to rely on word-of-mouth from prior hotel guests, many of whom, of course, were often staying/playing at their company's expense, NOT via their own wallet/purse.
Guests who no longer visit it or play because of their concern about a perceived slip in the golf course's basic quality, value and the level of CUSTOMER SERVICE.

Over-and-over at myriad public meetings in Hallandale Beach and in Ft. Lauderdale, I made the point to public officials, the public and the the press that the Diplomat's owners and management cries that they desperately needed the multiple super-size condo towers built on residential neighborhood streets to make enough money, had yet to show they were willing to do even the most basic things that any norma business would have to do to be successful.

Public meetings which, as I would later reveal via email to many of you and on my blog, included "comments" from individuals who were paid by HB City Hall with city tax dollars, all of whom consistently hectored genuinely concerned Hallandale Beach and Hollywood residents who were against or agnostic about the proposal on the one hand, and on the other hand -SURPRISE- spoke in favor of the Diplomat's position, all without EVER publicly disclosing their $$$ relationship to the City that favored it.

Many of you even know two of them: Patricia Genetti, the duplicitous head of the Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce, and, the City's former paid "spy," Joe Kessel.
And no, despite many in the local news media's words to me at the time that they would definitely follow up and publicly ask how these two people receiving tax dollars from HB City Hall for trying to influence policy were able to go before public bodies throughout Broward -as well as HB- without publicly disclosing (as legally required) that they were there as paid representatives of the City, none did. :-(

Before the final County meetings that eventually sealed their losing fate -and in all the YEARS since then!- the Diplomat's owners and management have never so much as arranged to have erected even ONE simple directional sign for their Golf Course/Resort property to let visitors know where they are and how to get there.

That's why you DON'T see any Diplomat Golf Course directional signs near I-95, on U.S.-1, State Road A1A or Hallandale Beach Blvd., while you DO see MANY such simple directional signs on those streets and all over town, even for relatively small and modest-sized churches.

Instead of showing some smarts, initiative and moxie for a change, and listening to HB residents and their own guests, the Diplomat wallowed in either self-pity or apathy, the Diplomat refused/refuses to do even the simplest thing to show that they are serious about making that property successful, something that nobody in the area is against, including me?

Why? Because then as now, the Diplomat team's whole pretext for asking for zoning variances and building is fatally and horribly flawed, especially as long as they refuse to face reality about their product and the public's perception of it.
Then as now, they continue to rely upon and posit things that are simply NOT in evidence, and eagerly misconstrue the reality of facts that are so in abundance to anyone who simply walks or drives around the area and opens their eyes.

The fact is, not once in all the many public meetings where I spoke and laid out the true facts, did the Diplomat or its representatives ever answer or rebut my simple questions that deserved an honest answer.


Not ONCE at all those meetings did the Diplomat answer the question of why they were adamantly REFUSING to do the very things that they were ALREADY legally entitled to do on that property in terms of building and improving upon it, without anyone's approval.
Things that nobody in town was publicly opposed to.


Despite having seen the questions coming so many times before, the Diplomat never tried to answer the questions publicly, low-hanging fruit in the larger scheme of things.

Honestly, shouldn't answering those sort of simple questions be the very minimum that the public should expect the Diplomat and its well-connected and well-paid team to be able to answer logically, especially when they ask the City to CHANGE zoning so that THEY can materially benefit, with the public likely to suffer in the process, unless some cooler and smarter heads prevail?


Isn't asking why the Diplomat Hotel & Golf Course's management have NOT properly marketed their golf course and resort in the past, and NOT tried to do anything to 

IMPROVE it, and build what they already legally could build there, be the starting point for questions for the Diplomat team from HB City Commissioners? 
Yes. That's the bare minimum!


Any commissioner who's afraid to ask those questions and consider what that means about the Diplomat and its vision doesn't deserve to be on the dais.

Below are two useful tools to use to help get better informed.
The first tool is the latest article from the Florida Bulldog about this very issue:

Hallandale Beach skyline to change with massive Diplomat expansion
By William Gjebre, FloridaBulldog.org
A proposal for a massive, four-tower project in Hallandale Beach featuring three hotels, 938 rooms and a 250-unit high-rise condominium under the Diplomat brand will be officially unveiled to nearby residents at a meeting Thursday in the city’s Cultural Center....


Article at: http://www.floridabulldog.org/2015/10/hallandale-beach-skyline-to-change-with-massive-diplomat-expansion/

The second tool is an informative and to-the-point email I received earlier today from my good friend and fellow civic activist, Csaba "Chuck" Kulin, about the Diplomat's proposal and tomorrow night's
important meeting.

I strongly urge you to read both -AND the attachment!- and think about the facts on the ground we can see with our very own eyes. 

But think long and hard, too, about what sort of area you want this part of SE Broward to be in the near-future, when we already have the unfortunate distinction of having some of the most gridlocked, F-rated roads in the entire state of Florida. Make plans NOW to attend tomorow's meeting -and bring a neighbor or two!


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Csaba Kulin
Date: Tue, 13 Oct 2015 23:51:43 -0700
Subject: Diplomat Project Details
To: Undisclosed Recipients

Dear HB Resident,

There is going to be a very important meeting this Thursday at 6:00 P.M. Hallandale Beach Community Center about the Diplomat Hotel and Country Club development. You will hear a presentation by the developer’s attorney telling you why it is a good project and how it will improve your quality of life.

I included the current zoning of the golf course, permitted uses, standards of a golf course and accessory uses. Accessory uses are limited to 15% of the golf course and buildings may not be higher than 100 feet. Read the details bellow.

The developer is asking the City to rezone the total property to “PDD planned development district”. The purpose and intent of the PDD planned development district is to provide an optional zoning
procedure to permit site design flexibility and greater land use intensity and density. That is the way the developer hopes to build a 20, 24 and 30 story condo-hotel.

On the 5 acre land (behind City National Bank) the developer is allowed to build a 30 story office building (no residential units). If the City does not rezone the property and gift 250 “residential flex
units” to the developer it may be an office building providing hundreds of new jobs.

Please read the “Current Zoning” and “Requested Zoning” below to be better informed.

Chuck Kulin
President
Fairways North, Inc.

----

Below is an email I received from Csaba Thursday morning:



Hallandale Beach Residents;
The Notice of Community Meeting about the Diplomat under “The applications Involve” said the following:
  • Applying the Planned Development Overlay Zoning District to the total property.
  • Rezoning a 5 acre portion of the property to CCB District.
This is the first time I saw any mention of REZONING the Diplomat Golf Course. Up to this time I believed that the Diplomat requested some variances to the current zoning. This is a major change in my opinion.
I hope the Ms. Orshefsky will answer all the question bellow but in case she will not we need to ask it ourselves.
We need a clear picture of what is allowed under current zoning and what is allowed under the requested new zoning.Here are a few questions we need to get answers to:
  • What is the current zoning of the total property?
  • What are the current permitted uses in the total property?
  • What are the current accessory use limitations of the total property?
  • What are the permitted uses in a Planned Development Overlay Zoning District?
  • What are the permitted uses in a CCB District?
Each of us may have only a few minutes to speak so please feel free to ask any of the questions not yet asked or NOT answered clearly.


Chuck Kulin

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Csaba Kulin & I re Monday's so-called Traffic Workshop at Hallandale Beach City Hall: What questions you should be asking yourself -as well as asking the people who are supposed to be representing you on the dais- even while HB City Hall and the Diplomat Hotel's lawyers and lobbyists obfuscate, and try to ignore the self-evident 'Elephant in the room' - the longstanding lack of adequate #OpenSpace in Hallandale Beach

Csaba Kulin & I re Monday's so-called Traffic Workshop at Hallandale Beach City Hall: What questions you should be asking yourself -as well as asking the people who are supposed to be representing you on the dais- even while HB City Hall and the Diplomat Hotel's lawyers and lobbyists obfuscate, and try to ignore the self-evident 'Elephant in the room' - the longstanding lack of adequate #OpenSpace in Hallandale Beach



I screwed-up.
My intention last week was to post these series of emails over the weekend so that as many concerned people as possible would know the germane facts before Monday morning's meeting at Hallandale Beach City Hall, 
But I failed to get it up in time. :-(

In any case, despite my being late to getting these facts in front of you, the facts are still the facts, and you'd be well-advised to learn them because we know from history that you certainly can't rely on honesty from the duplicitous folks at HB City Hall.
People who have a long and well-documented history of intentionally attempting to mislead area residents and Small Business owners thru mis-statements of facts, half-truths and false narratives.

Since I first mailed this out Sunday afternoon to lots of concerned people in Hallandale Beach, next-door Hollywood and around the the rest of Broward County, I've edited it slightly for better context and to add some Google Maps to give more perspective to the exact nature of the problems we have here.
#Density

-----
Sunday May 17th, 2015
5:30 p.m.

re Monday's 9 AM Traffic Workshop at Hallandale Beach City Hall: What you ought to know about it and be asking yourself -and asking the people who claim to represent you at HB City Hall but have done such a poor job of doing so.

Monday morning represents a Golden Opportunity to change the public dynamic in Hallandale Beach, where for so many years residents and Small Business owners have taken it on the chin on one important public policy issue after another.

That is, it's a Golden Opportunity IF you take proper advantage of the chance to make yourself heard on the continuing problems of both a lack of honest discussion about Traffic Gridlock and Open Space in Hallandale Beach, and the associated problem of the powers-that-be at City Hall failing to be both properly responsive and savvy about adequately resolving those problems for YEARS.

Which is why so many of us in SE Broward cringe when we have to travel around the area, and know, in advance, precisely how bad the level of traffic gridlock will be, esp. if we are going from State Road A1A to I-95 or vice-versa.

After all, just a few years ago, then-Broward County Commissioner Diana Wasserman-Rubin, who at the time represented the western-most part of HB and areas west of there out towards Miramar, admitted publicly at a Broward County Commission meeting that due to the awful traffic gridlock here, she personally avoided NE HB and Hallandale Beach Blvd. at all costs, regardless of the time of year.


And THAT particular County Commission meeting was about development in the same exact area of NE HB as what the Diplomat has in mind now, off of Hallandale Beach Blvd.
Hallandale Beach Blvd. is always the nexus of any traffic gridlock discussion in this city s because the reality is that most of the city's population and wealth is centered east of U.S.-1 -towards the beach and the Intracoastal Waterway- and Hallandale Beach Blvd., owing to issues involving nature (water), geography, development and past zoning decisions, is THE ONLY STREET that connects the eastern part of the city to the west, where I-95 is located. 

It's also important to recall that the HB City Commission had the chance to purchase -for a song!- the empty waterfront property on the Intracoasal Waterway & NE 26th Avenue where Manero's restaurant used to be located, and where The Beachwalk condominium next to the Intracoastal bridge is now located.
Yes, that sweet bit of Open Space in NE HB could have been the first actual city park on the water in a city with the name Beach in it!
But under the myopic leadership of Mayor Joy Cooper and then-City Manager Mark A. Antonio, that opportunity was completely lost.

Why? Good question.
Antonio, Cooper and the City Commission have NEVER properly explained to the city's residents why they were SO SLOW on the draw when that opportunity presented itself -as I wrote about at the time- and allowed The Related Group to swoop-in after so many years of that property being both under-used and an eyesore to the community.
AND the city could have purchased it for such a LOW PRICE!


That waterfront property could have been one the crown jewels of the city for every resident to enjoy, regardless of where they live in the city.

Similarly, let's not forget about other germane facts regarding the endemic traffic problems here that have NEVER been publicly and adequately addressed by the principals involved.


Mayor Cooper and Comm. William 'Bill" Julian have NEVER publicly explained why they voted to allow Gulfstream Park Race Track -with so many acres to choose from- to construct their three employee dorms in the EXACT place where Hibiscus Steet could have logically been extended east from very busy US-1 to the area behind the always-busy Publix on 14th Avenue.




June 22, 2008 photo of Hibiscus Street looking east from U.S.-1. This street only goes one block because of Gulfstream's dorms.



June 13, 2008,




May 12, 2008, Hibiscus, i.e the future SE 2nd Street?

The expansion of that road at any point in the past would have allowed Golden Isles residents and everyone else in HB living and working east of 14th Avenue -.i.e. most of the city's populationto get to HB City Hall and Aventura and points south on U.S.-1 WITHOUT requiring them to actually get on Hallandale Beach Blvd. and deal with that traffic

Where was their logic and reason?
That wasn't merely a dreadful public policy decision, it's one that was made worse because the people making it were never forced to answer for it by South Florida's news media, including the Sun-Sentinel.

Let's not kid ourselves, things in Hallandale Beach didn't get the way they did overnight.
And things won't get IMMEDIATELY better overnight if pro-reform people are finally elected to the City Commission next year, but it'd clearly be an important step in the right direction towards getting the city properly refocused and at a point where it ought to be NOW -but ISN'T.

Things got the way they did here over time and by the people in charge at HB City Hall consistently taking residents for granted and NOT being up to the jobs they were elected to, forever failing to provide the proper level of official oversight and scrutiny demanded of such a job. 

The very thing I wrote about in my last few posts, so that very troubling trend continues even now...

What follows is a chronological account of facts re tomorrow morning's meeting and what you ought to know about it.

I know that for some of you, people who have been receiving my emails and or reading my blog for years, this is somewhat familiar territory, albeit with new facts worth considering before you show up or watch the meeting online.

But for others, people new to the chronic dysfunction and myopic public policy that best characterize what has actually taken place in this city for many years, this may well be the first time you've had
access to pertinent facts about an important aspect of the city's Quality of Life.
Facts that I believe effectively counter-act and destroy the conscious mis-truths and lies that have been routinely spread and repeated by HB City Hall for many, many years, even as the media ignored it. (To everyone's detriment, including their own.)

And in case you forgot or never knew, cold hard facts and figures like the ones below are like Kryptonite to the elected officials and bureaucrats at Hallandale Beach City Hall.
They become largely distracted and powerless to respond -honestly.
So, if you bring them up, expect the elected folks on the dais and the highly-paid bureaucrats next to them to quickly try to refute the facts with distractions and old-fashioned obfuscation, mis-statement
of facts and lies.
And if necessary, personal attacks against those telling the truth. 

Just saying... I've been there.

Still this chance to speak truth to power before so many HB residents leave for the summer, is one that those of you who want this city to be better must embrace.
That's especially true for those of you who live on the beach and who have quite correctly complained for so many years about the countless missed opportunities by HB City Hall to do right be everyone, but especially to you and your neighbors.
Fot you, this is your opportunity to change the dynamic and make them know that just because you live over on the beach, you are indeed hip to what they are attempting to pull off here.

Missed opportunities like the powers-that-be at HB City Hall foolishly keeping the taxpayer-owned, perfectly-placed North Beach Center -just steps from the Atlantic Ocean- a place that properly ought to be a beautiful crown jewel for the community that we can honestly brag about, CLOSED to the public for years at a time.
AFTER it was already closed for years due to City Hall's very own incompetence at attempting to repair it, at great cost to everyone as I wrote so many times on the blog with dozens and dozens of contemporaneous photos to tell the godawful tale, and plenty in follow-up posts.

Yes, for those of you who are fortunate enough to live on the beach, Monday morning represents your chance to publicly discuss with facts, reason and any remaining anger, the "wind tunnel" effects you and your neighbors have to deal with all the time because of the conscious Zoning choices that have been made re development along the beach among campaign contributors of Mayor Cooper and Commissioner Sanders.
Do not not miss the chance to publicly say to city officials what you have been telling me in-person, via phone and via email for years and years.

Dave
Twitter: @hbbtruth, https://twitter.com/hbbtruth
https://twitter.com/hbbtruth/with_replies
http://www.hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/
http://www.youtube.com/user/HallandaleBeachBlog



-----
Monday May 12, 2015

Dear Csaba:

Besides the City of Hallandale Beach's announced May 18th workshop, are you currently aware of any other tentative meetings re The Diplomat's future development plans, or, of any any HB/Hollywood 
citizen's effort to keep the proper level of scrutiny on them to help ensure that they do NOT attempt to gain some goodies from the always-pliant HB City Commission?
That is, goodies that are more than they are now legally entitled to have and build?

I ask because as of 3:15 p.m. this afternoon, the city's own website has NOTHING on its landing page about that workshop next Monday -surprise!
In fact, despite how much it has been discussed over the years here as a way that developers fudge on their applications, the only reference on the city's website this afternoon to "hotel-condo" is a link to a
HB P&Z meeting.
That is, a HB P&Z meeting from... 2012!
Again, surprise, surprise!
http://hallandalebeachfl.gov/Search/Results?searchPhrase=hotel-condo&page=1&perPage=10

Perhaps I'm missing something, but so far, in none of the recent media pieces I've read about The Diplomat -and the associated "hotel condo" controversy- have I seen a single reporter actually ask a Diplomat rep some simple questions that ought to have been asked and ANSWERED by now.
Actually, that should be should have been ANSWERED years ago to the HB public's satisfaction.

For instance:
1.) Why has The Diplomat failed for YEARS to actually DO what they were already legally allowed to do within that property in the way of genuine improvements? That's something that you and I consistently encouraged them to do years ago, since making that place more successful is in everyone's interest.
But they have failed to do so.

2.) When is The Diplomat going to improve their unpopular golf course, which according to everyone I know and have spoken to, who are both knowledgeable about golf in general and that golf course in particular, since the general consensus is that it is NOT very interesting or challenging, and charges FAR TOO MUCH for a round of golf for the level of course it actually is?

3.) Why has The Diplomat failed all these YEARS to actually advertise their golf course properly? Say, with actual advertising like other courses in South Florida, or, at a minimum, apply with the city for some directional signs that consumers and drivers can see?
Why does The Diplomat fail to do the small things that HB churches seem able to do with helpful signage?

You'll recall how much fun I had a few years ago at the Broward County Commission meeting on The Diplomat's request to build those unwelcome, unsightly and incompatible condo towers in NE HB, by simply asking these very simple questions to the representatives of the Diplomatthe County Commission and the public during my three minutes of public comment.
Last time I checked -today- The Diplomat and their army of highly-paid lawyers, lobbyists and publicists STILL haven't adequately answered those simple questions to the public's satisfaction.

Dave

"Hallandale Beach plans to host a workshop May 18 at 9 a.m. to discuss traffic that will come with forthcoming development projects."

South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Hallandale Beach ditches hotel moratorium
By Susannah Bryan, Sun Sentinel
May 8, 2015 7:39 PM
Hallandale Beach

A moratorium on hotel permits was quickly shown the door this week
after developers warned it would doom economic growth throughout the
city.

It might have been one of the shortest moratoriums in city history,
lasting only a few weeks.

At the commission's request, City Manager Renee Miller declared a
moratorium April 16 to give staff time to research the impact of
hotel-condo developments on nearby neighborhoods.


Read the rest of the article at

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-hotel-moratorium-hallandale-20150508-story.html


----
*NB: References below in Csaba's email to 'Debbie O" below refers to land development attorney Debbie Orshefsky, who for most Hallandale Beach and Hollywood residents and Small Business owners, has become the public face for most of the most-controversial projects in our part of 

SE Broward for the past 12 years.

To the best of my knowledge -and my amazing memory- Mayor Cooper has voted against approving only ONE Debbie Orshefsky development project in the past 12 years.


That was Hallandale Square, the Taubman project proposed for the SE corner of US-1 and HBB that never happened, and, which as I wrote and complained about at the time, including to germane city officials, soon became the home of lots of debris, flotsam and homeless people, as the developer at the time completely failed to properly maintain the property, and made it a de facto poster child for the laughingstock the city had become with its bad public policy and lack of oversight, accountability and follow-through. 
Right where everyone driving thru the city could see it.
But not the folks at HB City Hall!
---------
Re: Broward's Open Space requirement and the curious manuevers in
Hallandale Beach by City Hall and the Diplomat Hotel

Thursday, May 14, 2015 at 4:18 PM

To: Csaba Kulin

Excellent analysis, Csaba!

Unless I hear from you by Noon Friday, I will incorporate your spot-on comments into my email and blog post tomorrow afternoon, which I hope will serve as a useful warning shot to everyone in HB and environs to be on guard for precisely the sort of confidence game you mentioned the city is attempting to pull off before the public is the wiser.

I only wish that I had access to some of the Broward primary source material on Open Space that I had last year -now stored in a plastic tote at my sister's place in Pembroke Pines- which I used to bring to Keith London's monthly meetings when he first started them many years ago.

Back when Keith routinely used that old, huge and unwieldy map of HB and shocked so many first-time visitors when he told them that curious bit of info about the city being allowed to count waterways as Open Space for purposes of the city meeting standards.

Keith's testimony to some Broward group about that issue years ago -Broward Planning Council?-before he was first elected, was the first time I ever heard of him.
I found the info on Google and agreed that what HB was doing then was fraudulent in spirit, even if keeping with the letter of the law.

Dave
----

On 5/14/15, Csaba Kulin wrote:

David,

Let me just give you a couple of points.

The City Manager on her own announced a six months moratorium on
“condo-hotel” projects. Immediately Miss O. and other developers
started lobbying and the City Commission reversed the moratorium 3 to
2. Comm. London and Lazarow voted no. Clarity of the rules and traffic
was the main argument to keep the moratorium.
To calm the opposition, the Mayor agreed to have a “meeting” to talk
about “traffic” on the 18th. Waste of time. We always talk about
traffic, weather, sea water rise and flooding but we never do anything
about it. An insult to the intelligence of the residents.

*THIS IS A LOT MORE IMPORTANT TODAY!*
*PARKS AND OPEN SPACE LEVEL OF SERVICE (LOS)*
Item 14D on the May 20, 2015 Agenda (Parks & Open Space LOS) may 

be the most important single item with respect to the future of our City.
If this opportunity is missed all the other discussions of future development,
“synergy” and “economic engine” is fruitless.

*ANALYSIS FROM THE CITY’S BACKUP.*

*Broward County Land Use Plan requires all municipalities to provide a
minimum of 3 acres of parks for every 1,000 existing and projected
permanent population.  Policy 1.1.2 of the City of Hallandale Beach
Recreation and Open Space Element also requires 3 acres per 1,000
existing and projected permanent population as mandated by the
County.*

*In 2011, Broward County Planning Council (BCPC) created an Open Space Task
Force to research the use of water bodies by municipalities to meet
the municipal parks LOS requirements of 3 acres per 1,000 population.*

*At that same time (2011) the City audited its inventory and the
methodology used to calculate it.  As a result of that analysis, the
inventory was reduced by approximately 62 acres. That portion of
school property which is not open space suitable for recreation was
removed, as was 90% of the acreage from city-maintained
waterways that are not accessible to the general public. A credit of
0.71 acre remains in the inventory for water bodies which are public
but are accessible only by residents that live adjacent to them.*

*Substantial research and analysis on this issue was performed by the
County Task Force.  Their work resulted in amendments to the Broward
County Land Use Plan as adopted by the Broward County Commission in
2013.  The amendments did not affect the cities’ use of water body
acreage in their existing inventory to be counted as community parks
acreage.  Any open space added to an inventory subsequent to the
adoption of the changes must adhere to them.*

*The following is a summary of the referenced amendments: *

1.  *Water body acreage added to community parks acreage inventory may
count no more than 10% of such additional acreage unless managed by a
governmental agency for recreation or environmental purpose.*
2. *Required the County to publish municipalities’ parks inventory.
Municipalities should also publish on their website their parks
inventory.*
3. *Parks and open space acreage was to be accessible to the public on
a regular basis.*
4. *Conspicuous signage of access to the park be posted.*
5. *A water body with safe public access from another bordering
municipality could be counted as community park.*
6. *Deleted the provision allowing 50% credit for private golf courses
deed- restricted for open space. (private refers to golf courses which
are not open to the public)*
7. *Acreage deed- restricted or designated “Conservation” on the Land
Use Map could count as park acreage.*
8. *Required municipalities to provide an up-to-date inventory and
documentation of sites used to meet the 3 acres per 1,000 existing
population for Plan Amendments which result in an increase demand
for“community parks.”*

*The City’s current parks and open space acreage requirement, based on
its existing population, is 111.34 acres. The acreage required based
on the City’s build-out population is 145.59 acres. The City currently
has 200 acres in its Parks and Open Space Inventory (Exhibit 1) of
which 65 acres are land and 135 are water bodies. The Inventory is in
compliance with the City and Broward County Land Use Plans.
**(Note: How did the City come to this conclusion? See No. 1.) *

*END OF BACKUP FROM CITY*

*THESE ARE THE NUMBERS:*
*The Rule is “3 acres of Open Space Acreage per 1,000 population”.
(Note: Not waterways).
The population is 37,113 according to the 2010 Census.
(Note: approximately 60,000 during the “season”).
The “Build out Population” is 48,493.*

*Hallandale Beach is required to have 145.49 acres of “Open Space
Acreage”. (Note: 48.483 times 3 acres).
Hallandale Beach has 55.63 acres of Public Parks. Hallandale Beach has
9.90 acres of Public School Property.
Hallandale Beach has 134.6 acres of Public Waterways.
(Note: 13.46 acres is 10%).*

*Hallandale Beach counts 200.13 acres of Public Parks and Open Space.
(Note: 55.63 + 9.9 + 134.6 acres).*

*IN MY OPINION: Hallandale Beach should count 78.99 acres of Public
Parks and Open Space. (Note: 55.63 + 9.9 + 13.46). Hallandale Beach
needs an additional 66.5 acres of “Public Parks and Open Space
Acreage”.*

*WHAT IS YOUR OPINION?*

*I'd love to find out what the “penalty” is for any City not being in
compliance with the “Open Space Acreage Rule”? *

Chuck Kulin