Showing posts with label Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce. Show all posts

Friday, June 8, 2012

Coming here Saturday: Initial thoughts regarding The Related Group's Power Point presentation to the Hallandale Beach City Commission re The Beachwalk project, and selected comments of the public and the City Commission. Also, that long-promised blog post -yes finally!- publicly calling-out tiresome PR shill Carole Pumpian, crony capitalism mercenary. She couldn't care less about HB residents' Quality-of-Life.

Coming here Saturday: Initial thoughts regarding The Related Group's Power Point presentation to the Hallandale Beach City Commission re The Beachwalk project, and selected comments of the public and the City Commission. Also, that long-promised blog post -yes finally!- publicly calling-out tiresome PR shill Carole Pumpian, crony capitalism mercenary. She couldn't care less about HB residents' Quality-of-Life.
Which, of course, makes her not unlike many -if not most- of the other business geniuses on the "Board of Directors" at the cliquish Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce, who in no way actually represent the needs or desires of the majority of Hallandale Beach's residents or business owners, but who, for obvious reasons, are at great pains to hide that fact to the extent possible, lest companies, developers and business groups interested in the city realize that there's no real point in talking to them because they are, in effect, a circular firing squad.
And even worse, a circular firing squad that talks largely amongst themselves, with no genuine support in the community at large after all their years of trying to put their personal and own business interests over the entire community.


With an election in less than five months for three of the five seats on the Hallandale Beach City Commission, and with three identifiably pro-transparency, pro-financial accountability candidates running in November who have seen for themselves over the years what the ardently -dare I say zealous- pro-Joy Cooper, pro-Rubber Stamp Crew Chamber of Commerce honchos have repeatedly said and done to put their own personal business interests over the entire community, me, my intuition tells me that karma is going to be a real bitch.


Yes, the very same Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce group who had a president in the past five years who, at an event at HB City Hall, not only didn't know, but didn't believe me when I said that the city had a municipal swimming pool less than four blocks from City Hall. 
But this being poorly-run Hallandale Beach, of course, there wasn't then -and still isn't- a directional sign located on busy U.S.-1/S. Federal Highway for the swimming pool!


Yes, Related Group, that's the caliber of well-informed geniuses at the Chamber you're using to try to ram this project through, though to be honest, it's more like they're using you.
Don't count your chickens before they are hatched.



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Saturday, February 11, 2012

Hallandale Beach residents are eager to speak at Tuesday night's Resident Forum re Mayor Cooper's myopic State of the City speech, and the troubling role of the cliquish, pro-Cooper HB Chamber of Commerce that taxpayers are forced to subsidize

Above, looking west from Hallandale Beach City Hall towards the Hallandale Beach Cultural Community Center, i.e. "the Cultural Center," right before I went inside and voted in the 2012 Florida GOP primary. January 31, 2012 photo by South Beach Hoosier.
Hallandale Beach residents are eager to speak at Tuesday night's Resident Forum re Mayor Cooper's myopic State of the City speech, and the troubling role of the cliquish, pro-Cooper HB Chamber of Commerce that taxpayers are forced to subsidize

Just over a week ago, I and many other concerned residents and business owners in the greater Hallandale Beach area received an email from my friend and Hallandale Beach City Commissioner, Keith London, reminding us of his upcoming Resident Forum meeting on Tuesday night at 6 p.m. in the HB Cultural Center.


Comm. London also reminded us as well of his longstanding opposition to the taxpayers of this small community being forced to fund the Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce.


That's the group that I and many other concerned and well-informed residents here believe is a particularly standoff-ish and cliquish retinue of ardently pro-development, pro-Joy Cooper, pro-HB City Hall partisans who operate in what can charitably be called a moral 'vacuum,' though it may more accurately be called an 'alternative universe.'


In fact, it's in large part because the HB CoC operates in ways that are DIFFERENT than how most city CoCs in the United States manage and comport themselves, as well as how they are funded -and the particular civic activities the HB CoC consciously choose NOT to perform, roles performed by many if not most CoCs in this country- that best explains why so many people in this area DON'T want to join them.


Well-meaning HB citizens and business owners who truly see things as they are, and NOT how the mayor and city hall pretends they are, folks who simply want city govt. costs contained and not continue to balloon, DON'T wish to be tainted by any association with myopic believers in crony capitalism at its worst.


I say that because some of the people who lead the group here, like realtor Joe Kessel, are well-known for not only their parochial and self-serving nature, but equally known for their willingness to try to take advantage of their position within the community to become part of ownership groups that seek HB CRA loans for ill-conceived ideas that local banks won't touch -and for good reason
Again, exactly what Joe Kessel did.


And Kessel did this WHILE already receiving money from the city as a top secret 'consultant' -what I called 'spying'- in a stealthy arrangement that the HB City Commission and the public was intentionally kept in the dark about, but which Mayor Joy Cooper knew all about.
http://blogs.browardpalmbeach.com/pulp/2010/04/hallandale_mayor_cooper_kessel_contract.php
http://www.browardpalmbeach.com/related/to/Joe+Kessel/


No, the HB CoC doesn't act like the CoC group in next-door Hollywood does, nor like most CoCs in the country that are largely self-sustaining thru not only the membership dues they collect, but also thru activities they conduct throughout the year, whether fairs, festivals and other special events for which there's a small charge for the public to attend, or for businesses to participate, as well as general sponsorship arrangements.


Unfortunately for taxpayers, because most of the concerned people paying close attention to what happens in Hallandale Beach already recognize these self-evident facts, the Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce, like the city's faux newspaper, the South Florida Sun Times, both currently exist as little more than one-party propaganda organs for HB mayor Joy Cooper and her Rubber Stamp Crew, and poorly-functioning PR organs at that.


In the very near future, I'll be posting something else here about the strange role of the HB CoC, and its new president, Carole Pumpian, a woman who has consistently worked AGAINST the long-term best-interests of Hallandale Beach residents 
And for the record, Pumpian doesn't live in Hallandale Beach, either.

I've excerpted Comm. London's email below to give you the pertinent info, but first read
this:
http://www.local10.com/news/blogs/bob-norman/Mayor-No-charge-for-speech/-/3223354/8578562/-/a3y74x/-/index.html


-----


From: Keith London 
To: klondon@hallandalebeachfl.gov 
Sent: Wednesday, February 1, 2012 8:16 AM
Subject: Your Tax Dollars ($20) at Work Mayor Joy Cooper State of the City Address - Reported by Local 10.com


Everyone,


...Let’s remember this is the same Chamber of Commerce that receives $40,000 - $50,000 every year of your tax dollars from the City of Hallandale Beach in addition to free rent and utilities.


In lieu of paying $20 for information that should be relayed to the residents for free, please attend my FREE “Resident Forum” held the second or third Tuesday of every month at the City of Hallandale Beach Cultural Center .  Free refreshments are offered. 


The items of discussion pertain to current pending issues or anything a resident may want to discuss.  I include significant information and documents to elaborate the points and I always listen to what the residents and taxpayers are saying about the state of Hallandale Beach .
I hope to see you and friend at the next meeting on February 14, 2012 from 6:00 – 8:00 PM to discuss “OUR” city.


Regards,
Keith


Keith S. London
City Commissioner, Hallandale Beach


954-457-1320 Office
954-494-3182 Cellular

From: BFoglia
Sent: Thursday, January 26, 2012 07:55 PM
To: joycooper@aol.com
Subject: RE: Mayor Joy Cooper State of the City Address 
Is this a joke? We have to PAY to listen to your Annual State of the City Address? Shouldn't that speech be given in a public forum? This speech is for ALL the people in your community - The City - , not an elite 'lunch crowd' between 12 & 2. This notice has to be a hoax on Hallandale residents.
Barbara Foglia,
a resident.

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.


Thursday, December 9, 2010

City-sponsored 'Fashion Row' meeting tonight at 6 p.m. at Dekka in Hallandale Beach

The City of Hallandale Beach is hosting a 'Fashion Row' meeting tonight at 6 p.m. at Dekka, 139 N.E. 1st Avenue, Hallandale Beach.
It's long overdue!

To me and many other concerned residents of this southeast Broward County city, it sounds exactly like something that... well, in another city, would've already been taking place at least once a year since the Fashion Row idea started, whenever that was while I was working up in Washington, D.C.

My reason for mentioning this now, at this rather late date, is that I just recently found out about it on Tuesday night, and I want as many articulate and impassioned people as possible to make plans to show-up and demand some accountability, since the red-tape overkill and lack of clarity by Code Compliance at Hallandale Beach City Hall is literally killing businesses and jobs here.


It's something that lots of people in town are talking about more and more openly and frequently in restaurants and other meeting places, and many believe that City Hall has been guilty of being too blase about this simmering dis-satisfaction.
Well, now it's all in the open.

I don't currently own a business here in town but in talking to friends and trusted activists in HB who do, it's clear that there are far too many nonsensical sections of the code compliance manual in this city that rather than serve some self-evident public safety or building safety aspect that everyone would support, actually serve to frustrate small business owners who want to improve their property and become more competitive.
And stand out!

Their ability to survive is in question, and un-necessary permit costs and fines are the very thing that will cause them to either move or close-up shop, and there are too few big-picture minded business owners in HB as it is, we can't lose the ones we have.

Just to give you some sense of the dis-connect, as I've mentioned in this space previously, as of today, there are a couple of dozen Fashion Row directional signs still standing, but STILL ZERO of the HB Chamber of Commerce, which you can't find unless you go to City Hall, park your car in the parking lot and walk past their entrance opposite the breezeway from City Hall.
Another genius marketing move -NOT!

Echoing comments I've made here and at City Commission meetings, there's nothing about the location of the CoC anywhere in the city, not even right out front on U.S-1 despite the tens of thousands of taxpayer dollars that have flowed their way, averaging about $50,000 a year, with very little to show for it in the way of tangible results.


I wonder if their Patricia Genneti will have the nerve to show her smug face at the meeting and, ironically, face the music?

I suspect she will be a no-show, even though she is exactly the sort of character who needs to be held to account.


I can hardly wait 'til I hear the questions about the rampant and rapidly-expanding graffiti problem and the city's invisible effort to combat it, not only near the businesses along the F.E.C. railroad tracks and Hallandale Beach Blvd., but all down U.S.-1/Federal Highway, where it is on nearly single every light and traffic pole and bus shelter on U.S.-1 all the way down to Aventura Hospital, just as it was early last year on the east side before
The Village at Gulfstream Park opened.

"HGS" positively owns U.S.-1!


I've been taking photos of the problem for years and the fact that the
Nick's restaurant parking lot sign on 1st Avenue is completely covered with 'tags' is embarrassing in the extreme.

I'll post some of them here in the next few days when I can lay them out in a way that gives more context to you readers so it'll be clear why this news is so very troublesome.

It often seems that these sorts of Quality-of-Life issues are ignored and forgotten almost as soon as HB City Hall hears about them, as that's been my experince over the past seven years, even when I've connected-the-dots to City Hall officials in excruciating detail.
At City Hall!

Tonight's meeting should be pretty fiery and I plan on being there.



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http://maps.google.com/maps?q=139+N.E.+1st+Avenue,+Hallandale+Beach&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=139+NE+1st+Ave,+Hallandale+Beach,+Broward,+Florida+33009&gl=us&ei=4BABTc7KMIKClAeNkaDnCA&oi=geocode_result&ved=0CBMQ8gEwAA&z=16

Monday, April 7, 2008

Update on "Car Accident Scene That Refuses to Disappear!"

April 7th update of "The Car Accident Scene That Refuses to Disappear!"

There's still no communication coming my way from the offices of William M. Brant, the new City of Hallandale Beach Director of DPW/Utilities & Engineering, whom I spoke to in person five weeks ago about a number of critical issues facing his agency, but a walk down Hallandale Beach Boulevard early Thursday evening did reveal that most of the larger debris has been cleaned up. Of course, that could simply be a result of the construction work being done nearby.

The broken window glass and weathered police tape I referred to in my post the other day are a different story altogether. They remain very much present, as a walk by there yesterday afternoon quickly revealed.

Also still present at the scene was the aforementioned liquor bottle that may have had a thing or two to do with a car (possibly) decapitating a tree on the busiest street in the city.
A block from the Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce.
From four months ago.


Looking west from 1180 E. Hallandale Beach Boulevard, late in the afternoon.
Safety barricades -sans working lights- lying down on the job -large orange safety cone, too! Late March 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

An analogy does sort of come readily to mind, doesn't it?


Same address at sunset on April 3, 2008
Photo by South Beach Hoosier

Early last Thursday evening, on the way back from Publix, I picked up the small liquor bottle nearby that I'd seen on the ground at the scene for so many months, and placed it on the tree stump -in center, above- so you'd know that I wasn't embellishing here in my description. (There's no need to, the reality is scary enough.)

But quite clearly, I came by the scene a little too late in the day for the lighting conditions to be worthwhile for a good photo.

Of course, if the street lights actually came on when they ought to, and were adequate to the task along that part of HBB, it might've been a little different.

But then the longstanding and horrific street light situation in Hallandale Beach is a whole 'nother conversation altogether, and one I've spoken about at length in prior postings.

The subject of adequate street lighting in the city was one of the last straws that caused me to finally start this blog, after thinking about it for quite some time, and being pestered about it by friends.

Prior Hallandale Beach Blog posts on bad street lighting give much more context than this post and include:

January 22, 2008
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2008/01/illusion-of-safety-in-hb-is-not-same.html

January 19, 2008
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2008/01/hallandalebeachblog-time-machine-august.html

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Snapshot of Life in Dysfunctional Hallandale Beach: The Car Accident Scene That Refuses to Disappear!

Looking west from 1180 E. Hallandale Beach Boulevard;
March 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Here at this site, within spitting distance of the Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce, just
beneath weathered yellow police tape and two barricades without working lights(!), lies an
egregious example of Hallandale Beach's bureaucratic red tape and chronic malfeasance that Hallandale Beach Blog has railed against -and brought to your attention- for well over a year now.

Four months since a car accident took place there, there's still plenty of broken window glass and bits of automobile plastic and molding there on the ground for all to see.
In fact, the last time South Beach Hooiser was there, just a few hours ago, there was still a bottle of alcohol lying there, amidst the broken glass near the shrubs.
Hmmm... perhaps one of the contributing factors to the accident in the first place, you think?

Seeing something like this day after day, week after week, month after month, it's hard to shake the notion that the City of Hallandale Beach is perfectly intent on ignoring this scene, because the alternative is to admit that they really can't run the city competently, efficiently and with a modicum of class.
And that perhaps the idea that large portions of the city government should become privitized, with some accountability and transparency built into the system.

Just over one month ago, following a very impressive and fact-filled overview of the current South Florida water situation, and its effect on Hallandale Beach, during the day-long City Commission forum at the Cultural Center, I took a microphone in hand and publicly congratulated new DPW Director William M. Brant in his first public appearance.
Later, I spoke to him in person and told him that I wished him luck, because he had perhaps the worst job in the city, since so many people in the community believe with conviction that DPW is, in fact, the single worst and MOST chronically under-performing dept. in the city, which isn't bragging.
Services that residents have a right to expect and be done properly and efficiently.

I gave him a head's-up of 3-4 very specific issues/sites he needed to look into right away, and then handed him my business card, complete with website info, emails and phone numbers.
I looked him in the eye and specifically told him that if he had any questions, to please contact me, because I wanted him to succeed. But that he should know that I had a handful of photos posted on the blog of those very problems his dept. is tasked with.
Plus lots of other ones I've never run.

A few hours later, in the afternoon portion of the proceedings, after I took the microphone at the forum and spoke with some specificity about some other issues in the city, including some that touched on DPW's consistently poor performance, City Manager Mike Good got up on the other side of the room and grabbed the other microphone, which he, Mayor Cooper, and the four Commissioners had used to ask questions of staff or presenters, or respond to resident questions.
He nodded his head and then publicly directed Mr. Brant, now in the back of the room, to follow-up with me on my complaints and contact me.

Later, as I was starting to leave the room -having put in my eight hours!- the city manager approached me before I got to the door.
I told him that I needed to leave but that I'd already given Mr. Brant all my contact information, and looked forward to hearing from him.
A month later, nothing's happened.
No phone calls, no emails.

Much like the car accident scene above, which, ignominiously for the city, featured a large piece of a car fender or bumper right on a busy Hallandale Beach sidewalk for four months -and which was only removed last week- nothing has happened.
Meet the new boss -same as the old boss.

Hallandale Beach Blog previously discussed the issue of the car accident scene on Hallandale Beach Boulevard in a February 3rd posting:

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Illusion of safety in HB is not the same thing as real safety!; Red Light Cameras not only example of technology that City of Hallandale Beach is using poorly

My comments are below the story. 
________________________________________ 
 South Florida Sun-Sentinel 
Security cameras may be required at late-night businesses in Hallandale 
By Thomas Monnay January 10, 2008 
 HALLANDALE BEACH 

Late-night establishments soon may be required to have surveillance cameras both inside and outside to help deter and solve crimes. The proposal, discussed by city commissioners on Wednesday, would affect 24-hour businesses and those with permits to operate after 2 a.m. It is scheduled for a formal public hearing on Jan. 22. Vice Mayor Bill Julian said cameras could have helped police determine who shot and killed Broward Sheriff's Office Sgt. Chris Reyka in August in the parking lot of a 24-hour Walgreens in Pompano Beach. "If there were cameras outside the Walgreens, wouldn't they catch the picture of the person who killed the deputy?" Julian said. "We have the technology. We should use it to give an edge to police." Mayor Joy Cooper called security cameras "a strong tool" against crime. Commissioners Dorothy Ross and Fran Schiller also support the proposal. But Commissioner Keith London was opposed, saying businesses could hire security guards and the city has police to protect residents. "I am almost never for cameras," he said. "If I have to surrender my freedom for safety, then I don't believe in being safe." Julian said most of the city's gas stations, convenience stores and the city's two racetracks already have cameras. City Manager Mike Good said police would work with business owners to determine whether they need cameras. He said those with financial hardship would be allowed to file an appeal, and the city might help them financially. "I happen to support this very much," Good said. The proposal coincides with the city's plan for a $374,371 digital camera system to monitor its municipal complex, fire station, water plant, beach parking garage and park and recreation facilities. 
 Thomas Monnay can be reached at tmonnay@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7924. 
 _________________________________________________ 

Generally speaking, I wouldn't comment here on my blog about what someone else has written on one of these Sun-Sentinel reader comment forums, or any media forum for that matter. The reason is a simple one. My experience in looking at reader's comments on newspaper sites is that, more often than not, they're either incredibly inspid, off-topic or mean-spirited snarky just for the sake of being mean-spirited and snarky.

(As opposed to informative yet humorously snarky!) In short, seldom enlightening. While perhaps amusing when recounting the exact context in a car with your friends, otherwise just like a case of hitting low-hanging fruit with an ICBM, otherwise, and therefore just a waste of time. More the sort of thing some mean-spirited office drone does on his computer while on a lunch-break, killing time in between bites of a sandwich, so very pleased with himself and the pseudonym he's chosen. But I did want to specifically bring to your attention comment #12, written by someone who seems to be a William Julian supporter, to help illustrate the small minds a person of his particular qualifications needs to get re-elected in a city the size of a postage stamp. A city which many informed people think would be much better off having someone else in that seat, someone who doesn't suffer such comic bouts of grandeur, witness last year's illegal pay raise grab in the dark that he led, wherein he famously compared himself to a corporate executive. Or, if you prefer, his continued bad judgment by forcing himself into murky ethical situations that reasonably bright high school-age kids with common sense could've resolved. Not that Julian's the only one on the city commission who's like a dead battery, once useful but now merely ballast. One of the truest of all cliches in sports is "addition by subtraction." Used in this context, Hallandale Beach Blog believes the people of Hallandale Beach, and the city's future as a whole, would greatly benefit from William Julian's exit from the city commission. Let him get that executive job he feels is currently being denied him. 

  Here's the comment exactly as it appears on the Sun-Sentinel's website, as of today at 1p.m.: 
Golden Isles Resident AOL 
Thursday Jan 10 
Thank you Commissioner Bill Julian for taking the lead in protecting you city's residents. 
What does Commissioner London fear? Maybe something the voters should know about? 
The truth will come out. We are watching you K.L. 

Frankly, it's exactly the kind of feeble and shrill spewing of venom that you'd expect from a Julian supporter, given the ones I've spoken to over the years. While sometimes semi-pleasant, they fundamentally mistake his length of time in town as effectiveness. 
One clearly has nothing to do with the other. As it happens, that low opinion is very much what TV and print reporters who've covered the city have told me they think of when they think of Julian, to the extent that they think of him at all -which is rarely
The Sun-Sentinel reader comment then is a snapshot in time of the kind of person who's currently supportive of a William Julian, yet to my mind, the sort of people who clearly are part of the problem, not part of the solution
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My thoughts on the story itself: I don't know how I can make this any clearer -the illusion of safety is not the same thing as actual safety. Once again, almost too predictably for words, the powers-that-be in the City of Hallandale Beach have reached for the safety blanket of illusion, rather than opening their eyes and taking a serious look at the manifest safety problems in the city. And doing something serious about it. THAT is something which has greatly troubled me since I returned to the area from the Washington, D.C. area, and is one of the principal reasons that I started this particular blog in the first place. It's a large part of what keeps me motivated to continue doing it. The city's longstanding and almost cowardly refusal to confront what's directly in front of it, like a person afraid of their own image in a mirror, because it doesn't match the illusion they've created in their mind, is the worst possible kind of governance, given the changing dynamics and demographics of the city now. A great example of this is the scarecrow police squad car left at the beach near the perfectly dreadful Beachside Cafe, a William Julian hangout. No police are EVER actually over there, which the city-contracted lifeguards are the first to point out to you, if you merely ask them. Or the frequent bach goers that I've come to recognize from my hundreds of trips over there on weekends, to read the papers, listen to ballgames and write down some thoughts. It's worse than an ostrich with its head in the sand -it's an ostrich which has done that same move by rote so often that it can't physically get its head out of the sand. That's the City of Hallandale Beach today. Public safety is a matter which should rightly concern anyone living in the city -or near it, like Hollywood or Aventura- who has two eyes that work, and who can clearly see what the city looks like for themself. Anyone who knows me or who has made any kind of serious effort to read more than a handful of my posts here, knows exactly what I consider to be the leading bête noires in any public safety discussion of the City of Hallandale Beach. Ones which are both longstanding and entirely self-evident on any night, especially on U.S.-1, A1A or Hallandale Beach Blvd., yet which are paradoxically among the easiest to actually resolve. These include but are not limited to: 1.) The very poorly maintained condition of streetlights and illuminated street signs. This includes, among others, those right next to HB's own City Hall and Police Dept. HQ, which have been out for well over two years! For over two years, Mayor Joy Cooper, the four members of the HB City Commission and City Manager Mike Good -and his staff- have driven right past those signs every time they leave City Hall chambers following an evening meeting. But still they never see what's right in front of them, less than a bloc away from their own office. 2.) the universally piss-poor condition of public parking lots along Hallandale Beach Blvd. in the city NOT owned by R.K. To cite but the most obvious examples from a long list: a.) the front sidewalk entrance lights and parking lot lights of the Premier Building, which has a gym that lots of people attend at night. (It's also a building where everyone loves to park in the No Parking Fire Lane in front and the 15 Minute Parking Zones set aside for deliveries, too.) These are the same geniuses who after Hurricane Wilma knocked out and broke their plastic identification sign in front of their property, placed the remaining parts of it and all the many downed palm fronds, on the sidewalk in front of an adjoining bus shelter, rather than disposing of them properly. Somehow, yet again, HB's Code Compliance office was blind to this though it could hardly have been more obvious, since they were there for months. (This is not unlike the way the city's Code Compliance turned a blind eye last year to the William Julian campaign sign and wooden support stand that stayed up for so long on north-bound U.S.-1, alongside the east-side sidewalk near the bus shelter on S.E. 9th Street. If I can find it, I have a photo of that sign and support a number of weeks after the election, which I'll post here in the future for illumination. Perhaps I should see if it's still there!) Later, someone from the building placed the large jagged plastic pieces behind sidewalk shrubs, thinking that, somehow, they'd magically take care of themself. They didn't! Just how bad is the street lighting situation along that street, the busiest in the city? Well, consider that a few months ago, having made some mental notes about it after months of noticing it on my walks to and from the beach, I took some photos of the area near the Hallandale Beach Chamber of Commerce. As I write this, the two street lights closest to it have been out for well over 6-8 months, if not longer. If not for the bank across the street having parking lot lights, it'd be a black hole. Even the small auxiliary building lights on the CoC bldg., next to their front door, as well as some of the adjoining offices, were out for months at a time. *I'll leave 'till another time the larger discussion I've had for months in my head -and with lots of concerned Hallandale Beach citizens- on the perfectly preposterous reality that there are currently no directional signs of any kind on U.S.-1, A1A or even on their 0wn street, Hallandale Beach Blvd., directing visitors/residents to the Chamber of Commerce, as would be common sense and practice in even the smallest of hick towns, much less, in a smart and tourist-oriented town like Charlottesville, VA. That's a wonderful city I've been to numerous times, because of all the great historical sites there, as well as UVA, and the annual Virginia Film Festival. Regardless of how you get there, it's virtually impossible to miss the plethora of signs directing you to their Chamber of Commerce/Tourist Office, where people are super-friendly, engaging and accommodating, and have updated information to dispense. Encore performance? It's possible that for the first time since early 2004, when I took a microphone in hand at the HB City Hall chambers and spent about 5-10 minutes absolutely ripping FDOT, their contractors, the mayor, the city manager, the city commission and the city as a whole, for utterly failing to give HB's citizens anything like what they were entitled to -and had already paid for- regarding the U.S.-1 road construction project, that I'll be taking a microphone in hand at meeting tonight to point out the obvious about the cameras. It wouldn't be necessary, though, if the HB city employees we're already paying were doing their job better, which includes the HB Police Department and their camera-loving police chief. The evidence that they're doing a poor job is all around the city, especially alongside the main roads and at over the public beach. At that 2004 meeting, I criticized everyone on the dais and in the front rows of the chamber for the self-congratulatory nature of the public meeting, rather than seriously addressing the numerous self-evident shortcomings and failures of the project, many of which could be seen just steps away from city hall, as I said at the time. Even on the night of that public meeting, there were still lots of streets in the city with large volumes of gravel and rocks on streets that were supposedly finished, including right in front of city hall itself, on the street between it and the U.S. Post Office, S.E. 5th Street. A street that was missing a STOP sign as it hits U.S.-1!!! And let's not forget all the missing bicycle lane signs and the painted "Bike Lane" in the lanes themself, and the... Next time you're at the Hallandale Beach City Hall complex at night, look up at the parking lot light closest to the security camera, pointing northeast towards U.S.-1. The one that's been out for weeks!!! The security camera that doesn't have a posted sign nearby, as required by law? Yes, that one, just like the signage situation at the Publix on HBB, which I've spoken to their manager about many times. (We'll soon see how Publix HQ in Lakeland feels about the apathy in following the law.) Those camera were put in right before their liquor store opened for obvious reasons. Less obvious is why RK and Publix can't or won''t comply with the law Signs must be posted. It's not optional. How long have the cameras at HB City Hall been up without the required posted warning signs? Why don't you ask the city manager, Mike Good, next time you see him, since he's in favor of expanding the concept. Should someone who can't manage their own affairs really being telling others what to do? I think not.