Showing posts with label Equity One. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equity One. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Thursday's 6 pm meeting is time for Hollywood residents to make sure that prospective Hollywood City Manager candidates are 'scared straight' by the reality of the city's situation

Now that the holidays are over and the decorations have been stored away, it looks like it's finally time for the concerned residents of Hollywood to turn out and see if prospective Hollywood City Manager candidates can be 'scared straight' by the reality of the bad situation the city's elected leaders have put city taxpayers in.
More after the email I received Wednesday morning from the City of Hollywood.

-----
From: <NotifyMe@hollywoodfl.org>
Date: Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 10:57 AM
Subject: 01-04-12 City Manager Candidates Interview This Week

City of HollywoodFlorida
Office of the City Manager



NEWS RELEASE                                     FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                                                                                          
January 4, 2012

Contact:  Raelin Storey
                 Public Affairs and Marketing Director
Phone:     954.921.3098
Cell:         954.812.0975          Fax:     954.921.3314
E-mail:     rstorey@hollywoodfl.org

City Manager Candidates to Interview with Commissioners
and meet with Residents
Six Finalists in Hollywood January 5-6, 2012

HollywoodFL - The six candidates for the position of Hollywood City Manager will be in Hollywood on Thursday, December 5 and Friday, December 6 as part of the recruitment process.  At a Special City Commission Meeting on December 13, 2011 the search firm conducting the City Manager recruitment process, Affion Public, presented the City Commission with six candidates for the position.  A total of 60 resumes were received and Affion Public conducted several rounds of interviews including background screening before arriving at the top six candidates.  The candidates are:

David Andrews - Assistant Town Manager/Finance Director, Town of Paradise ValleyAZ
Jim Chisholm - City Manager, City of Daytona BeachFL
Robert Frank - City Manager, City of OcoeeFL
Doug Hewett - Assistant City Manager, City of FayettevilleNC
Horace McHugh - Assistant City Manager, City of Oakland ParkFL
Frank Ragan - Former City Manager, City of McKinneyTX

Information on all six candidates is available on the City's website, www.hollywoodfl.org under "Hot Information."  On Thursday, January 5, 2012, a meet and greet with the public is scheduled from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Art and Culture Center of Hollywood, 1650 Harrison Street.  There will be a Special City Commission Meeting in the Commission Chamber of Hollywood City Hall where the Commission will interview each of the six candidates on Friday, January 6 beginning at 2:00 p.m.  City Hall is located at 2600 Hollywood Boulevard.  This meeting is open to the public and will be broadcast on Hollywood Community Television (Comcast Channel 78 and AT&T Uverse) and streamed live on the City's website, www.hollywoodfl.org.

For media inquiries, contact Raelin Storey, Public Affairs and Marketing Director at 954.921.3098.


# # #



Once upon a time I might've said that it was hard to believe that this is the first time that the City of Hollywood was sending this particular information out, but over the past two years, sending something important out one day -or even a few hours- before a public event took place, a common occurance for years here in Hallandale Beach, has become "the new normal" in Hollywood, with crummy results and lower public attendance to match those feeble efforts.


Other than The Balance Sheet blog of Sara Case and Laurie Schecter
http://balancesheetblog.wordpress.com/2012/01/02/city-manager-finalists-here/
there's been absolutely ZERO info about the Hollywood City Manager meetings distributed anywhere around Hollywood, esp. where the public congregates, a point that was proven to me all over again a few days ago while I spoke to a manager at the Publix at Young Circle.


January 2, 2012 photo by South Beach Hoosier
(Earlier in the afternoon, after a visit to Hollywood Beach with my sister visiting from the Mid-Atlantic, I discovered from a reliable source that the Young Circle Shopping Center's landlord, Equity One, with two empty storefronts on either side of the news stand I often frequent -the only place to buy the Daily Business Review- quite preposterously, wants $9K and $11k a month for the spaces.
No wonder they've been empty since July!)


The Publix manager hadn't heard anything about the City Manager meetings, and while I realize that that is not the only supermarket in the city, it does have a certain significance because of its location.
He'd never heard from the City, the CRA, the Chamber of Commerce...


They're all asleep at the wheel.


It was yet another instance, like so many over the past few years I'm personally familiar with, wherein the business community of Hollywood was finding out something important at the-last-minute.
And again, how do you NOT have something posted at or near that Publix or at the Arts Park, one block away from where Thursday's meet-and-greet will take place.


Sounds familiar, right, but not just because it sounds like it's straight out of the Hallandale Beach City Hallplaybook.


It's just like Hollywood's embarrassing and unsatisfactory outreach effort a few years ago to tell the public about the Bernard Zyscovich meetings being held re the new Downtown Hollywood Master Plan.
You could find nothing about it anywhere in Downtown Hollywood.


I know because I walked east on Hollywood Blvd. from Dixie Highway to the east side of Young Circle and never found a single notice or flier about the Zyscovich meetings on any window, bulletin board or kiosk.


It makes you wonder wonder what the proper function of a Chamber of Commerce is if it's not to disseminate info to the local business community?


But then as many of you have previously discussed with me before, that role, at least in this part of South Florida, seems to be more one of acting as a cheerleader for whoever is at City Hall, and NOT as a fair and judicial representative of lots of Mom & Pop stores and restaurants that are just barely scraping by in this economy, and who are paying their annual dues.


That's how they've done it here in Hallandale Beach for years since I moved back here from the Washington, D.C. area, where the head of the organization had no qualms about speaking at public meetings in favor of bad ideas championed by the mayor and city commission -the Diplomat LAC- and slamming HB citizens who opposed it.


All her bombast WITHOUT ever mentioning in her comments that all the HB citizens in the room were paying part of HER salary.
And tell me, when was that vote of all the HB CoC members in 2009 on the plan that got approved days before Christmas?
Exactly.


If all goes as planned, I expect to be at the 6 p.m. Thursday meeting mentioned above, with questions and facts ready in case there's an opportunity to inform the prospective new City Manager what he's got to look forward to, since all the candidates are men.


A good place to start is to ask them if they have a rough idea of how many empty storefronts there are within four blocks of where the meeting is taking place at the Art & Culture Center of Hollywood, 1650 Harrison Street, because many have been empty for YEARS.


Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Wednesday's Hollywood CRA mtg. features Chip Abele's Block 55 LLC/1740 Polk Street project -inc. the new Publix- getting units from RAC for hotel

Above, looking west at Hollywood City Hall. November 1, 2011 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Chip Abele's Block 55 LLC/1740 Polk Street project -including a new Publix- looks to be getting an additional 25 units from the RAC for a hotel component.
Wednesday's 10 a.m. Special/Joint Hollywood City Commission/CRA meeting features the return of our old controversial friend, Block 55, who has been the subject of so many posts here, and LONG meetings at Hollywood City Hall for yours truly the past few years.
Like actually running out of memory cards and rechargeable batteries after well over two hours of video-recording LONG.

And, of course, the city will likely be pulling the financial plug on the Holocaust Documentation Center.

I had planned on being at this meeting but won't be able to attend after all.

Here's the two agenda items for Block 55:

Proposed modifications will result in the following thresholds:
397 residential units
104 hotel rooms (52 residential units)
15,000 sq ft (approx.) ground floor retail/office
46,031 sq ft (approx.) regional grocery chain (Publix)
941 car parking garage including grocery chain

Proposed building height are as follows:
Publix- 24’ (2 stories)
Parking garage- 94’ (8 stories)
Hotel- 114’ (10 stories)
Residential buildings range from - 224’ (22 stories) to 266’ (25 stories)

Looking northwest on Tyler Street -north of the Publix. At left is the two condo towers comprising Hollywood's former #1 condo-mania case study, The Radius, off of U.S.-1 -with Starbucks on the ground floor. On the right is the much-older Town House Apt. complex and the advertising billboard on the Abele property, both of which which will be knocked down. November 1, 2011 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

A much closer view of the shot above looking northwest from Tyler Street. November 1, 2011 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Even closer, peeking over the fence, looking northwest from Tyler Street. November 1, 2011 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Looking due north over the fence towards Polk Street. November 1, 2011 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Looking northeast over the fence on Tyler, with the Hollywood Beach Country Club & Golf Resort two blocks north in the distance. November 1, 2011 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Looking due south on Tyler Street towards Equity One's Young Circle Shopping Center retail complex, which includes a Publix, Walgreens, Subways and a news stand among other things. (The latter being where I used to buy the Daily Business Review.) November 1, 2011 photo by South Beach Hoosier.

Looking northeast from the south side of Tyler Street towards N. 17th Street. November 1, 2011 photo by South Beach Hoosier.


The Street View on Google Maps looking northwest from the intersection of Tyler Street and N. 17th Street, Hollywood, FL.

The regular Hollywood City Commission meeting is at 1 p.m.

FYI: In case you have had this problem in the past, too, I was at Hollywood City Hall Tuesday afternoon and happened to have the chance to talk to City Clerk Patricia Cerny about some problems this past summer with the online agendas and video archives NOT activating unless you use Internet Explorer -a problem I've previously mentioned here at the blog- which she didn't know anything about but has promised she'd investigate.

It's not unlike the problem the Broward County Commission used to have a few years ago with streaming of their meetings.
You could only do it using Internet Explorer, but there wasn't anything on the website saying so. Now you can watch them at home or work using other browsers.