Showing posts with label Hollywood CRA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hollywood CRA. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Hide-and-Seek? The City of #HollywoodFL's many longstanding problems with the RAC and the city + CRA websites, most notably, "missing" public information that ought to be easy to find for EVERYONE, and why so much the public wants remains hidden or nonexistent. After three-plus years of the city playing games with the public and using #COVID19 as an excuse to thwart the public's desire to full engage on important issues, it's clear that much of the info is "missing NOT by accident, but rather by design to keep citizens in the dark and at a disadvantage to real estate developer lawyers and consultants.

Hide-and-Seek? The City of #HollywoodFL's many longstanding problems with the RAC and the city + CRA websites, most notably, "missing" public information that ought to be easy to find for EVERYONE, and why so much the public wants remains hidden or nonexistent.

After three-plus years of the city playing games with the public and using #COVID19 as an excuse to thwart the public's desire to full engage on important issues, it's clear that much of the info is "missing NOT by accident, but rather by design to keep citizens in the dark and at a disadvantage to real estate developer lawyers and consultants.



Below, at bottom, are excerpts from an email that I sent recently to my trusted and well-informed friend and fellow Hollywood civic activist, Patty Antrican, the North Central Hollywood Civic Association president. Above it are some of the subjects we spoke about, the city's RAC -Regional Activity Center- and the city's website's effectiveness, or lack of it. 🙁

https://www.facebook.com/NorthCentralHollywood/

(The North Central Hollywood Civic Association spans the area north from Hollywood Blvd. to Sheridan Street, and from from I-95 to Dixie Highway/21st Avenue. The association spans two Hollywood City Commission districts 2 and 3, Linda Hill Anderson and Traci Callari. It meets the 4th Tuesday of the month at 7 pm at Fred Lippman Center, 2030 Polk Street.)

Patty and I had a nice long talk Thursday about several issues percolating in Hollywood and environs that have concerned people's attention and which threaten to put their anger into overdrive.

As always when I talk to Patty, I keep in mind her initial public comments about where she stood on the issue of development and redevelopment in the city when speaking to the association's members at her first meeting as president a few years ago, after longtime association president AND Hollywood Council of Civic Association (HCCA) president Cliff Germano had moved out-of-town:
“We must stay in touch and work together. We are not anti-development.  We want to have a vibrant, moving city, but we have to be careful.” 

Be careful! 😉


This was what I tweeted re the city's website and their recent example of not posting public information in time to be legal



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Dear Patty:


Thanks again for sending me the URL for Hollywood RAC map, below, after our interesting 
and wide-ranging phone call this afternoon, after you looked for it online at the city's website for a good 10-15 minutes. In a sense, you memorialized our longstanding, shared POV that it should be MUCH EASIER to find considering the way that seemingly everyone at Hollywood City Hall and the CRA lauds the RAC as some sort of amazing tool.

Yet despite its apparent super-powers, the RAC map is NOT on the City of Hollywood's
main website, as you said and as this search I performed later shows, and as we discussed today:

And honestly, why hasn't the city updated the 5-6 year-old information on it so it is accurate for 2023? That's embarrassing for the CRA and everyone involved.

Like we have both said many times in public at civic association meetings and amongst 
ourselves, the city's website continues to be a genuine problem, yet the denizens of City Hall 
still want the public to believe that everything's fine, despite all the extant evidence to the 
contrary, and the many emails I have received over the years from frustrated TV and print reporters asking me for info they can NOT seem to find on the city's website.

Because the reporters don't know -as you and I do- that the city deletes lots of very useful public information because they have not yet figured out a way to archive it online.
Like the contact log of developers, lobbyists and others who meet the mayor, the city commission or the city's bureaucrats. Is the website slightly better than it used to be, yes, 
but that's relative to what the reasonable expectations of the public are NOW.

This larger issue of the city website's completeness, accuracy and timeliness -or rather 
the lack of same- is something I wrote about last year but never posted to my blog, or the 
Hollywood Residents - Speaks Up Facebook page that we're both active on. 
The very useful site which I finally joined last year after hearing you urge me to do so for many years when I steadfastly refused to join Facebook.

The city website's relative completeness, accuracy and timeliness suffers in comparison to what the Hollywood CRA website has, but is not without its own share of problems.

In the end, I never posted it largely because there were simply TOO MANY examples of the city + CRA websites failing to have info they should have, or that its employees claim it has, after you alert them to it, despite how self-evident that's not the case.

The city's badly-bungled University Station P3 effort that I was at from the initial secretive 
Evaluation Comm. meetings until the bitter end, is perhaps the best example of that.

Where's the dedicated page about that on the city's website that informs residents 
and interested parties what's happened so far, besides the lawsuit that caused a judge
to order the city to reboot the process, what was approved, and what if any upcoming 
deadlines or benchmarks are approaching? MIA!

Cathy Swanson-Rivenbark's decision as Asst. City Manager to create a dedicated,
information-filled web page on the city's website re Johnson Street/Margaritaville was 
one of the best decisions at City Hall of the past 15 years.
So why has it not been replicated on other P3 or large projects in the city that 
involve lots of info, plans and renderings that are constantly being updated and 
refined?

Simple. Lack of will.

Perhaps new City Manager George Keller will be more open to constructive criticism 
and useful suggestions for making public information more accessible.

Dave



Regional Activity Center

City of Hollywood Regional Activity Center

The Regional Activity Center (RAC) is generally located East of I-95 and West of 17th 
Avenue with Sheridan Street as the northern boundary and Pembroke Road as the 
southern boundary. The RAC covers an area of over 1,450 acres that includes Downtown 
Hollywood and the key commercial and residential corridors of Federal Highway, Dixie 
Highway and a portion of Hollywood Boulevard.

















The Regional Activity Center is a high-intensity, high-density multi-use area that encourages 
attractive and functional mixed living, working, shopping, education and recreational activities.


Demographics and Key Data Points about the Regional Activity Center

15 Minute Drive Time


The Regional Activity Center, located east of I-95 and encompassing Downtown, is within 
close proximity of Fort Lauderdale and Miami. A 15 minute drive demonstrates that it is the 
center of a growing and thriving metropolitan region. 
Download a copy of the RAC Drive Time Analysis.


Group of People Icon
150,430
Population
House Icon
2.41
Average 
Household Size
Median Age
43.3
Median Age
Education
No High School Diploma
12%
No High
School Diploma
Graduation Cap Icon
28%
High School
Graduate
Graduation Cap Icon30%
Some College
Graduation Cap Icon30%
Bachelor's/
Grad/Prof Degree
Business
Building Icon10,579
Total Businesses
Person Icon85,986
Total Employees
Employment
Unemployment Numbers5.5%
Unemployment
Rate
White Collar Icon65%
White Collar
Blue Collar Icon21%
Blue Collar
Services Icon14%
Services
Income
Household Income Icon
$55,390
Median Household
Income
Person Income Icon
$32,931
Per Capita
Income
Piggy Bank Icon$87,013
Median Net
Worth
 Regional Activity Center
2016 Estimated Population331,031
2021 Population Forecast352,590
2016 Estimated Households137,007
2021 Household Forecast145,311
2016 Average Household Income$64,917
2016 Median Household Income$44,536
2016 Workplace Establishments21,405
2016 Workplace Employees195,432
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Esri Forecast for 2016 and 2021; Infogroup 

Regional Activity Center Zoning


In order to create a vibrant, high-intensity, high-density multi-use area, the regulatory 
framework of the Regional Activity Center was recently updated. The new zoning 
encourages high quality and functional mixed living, working, shopping, education 
and recreational activities. Staff completed the proposed zoning changes in early 2016 
and they were adopted by the City Commission in later that year. You can download 
a copy of the RAC Zoning Regulations and associated maps below. For additional 
information, please contact our office or the Division of Planning at 954.921.3471.

RAC Zoning Regulations
RAC Maps

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Thursday, February 20, 2020

#HollywoodFL civic activists and Historic Preservation advocates are on the warpath. Feel betrayed by Hollywood officials after the 95-year old Great Southern Hotel is demolished without any public notice. To many Hollywood residents, city's decision seems awfully "convenient," given the widespread dissatisfaction with developer and the glacial pace of construction on Block 40



Once Upon a Time... 

I attended last Tuesday afternoon's City of Hollywood Historic Preservation Board meeting at Hollywood City Hall at 3:00 pm, walking into the Commission Chambers a minute or two after it started because I had looked -in vain- out in the lobby for a written copy of the agenda to peruse.
I had so many things on my mind that I had left the house for the meeting before checking the city's website to see if that pertinent info was there.

I say that because with no agenda available in the lobby, I and most of the public in the room got completely blindsided when, after some long and heated discussions about some proposed changes  to two city residential properties -including a beautiful house on N. Southlake Drive that last sold for $12.5 million- the dumbfounding news that was spoken aloud sometime after 4:15 pm about the demolition that very morning of the historic Great Southern Hotel, in the city's historic Downtown area, located on Block 40, directly across the street from the west side of Young Circle.
A building constructed in 1924 during Hollywood's infancy.

And, a building that I have personally taken DOZENS of photos of over the past 16 years since I returned to South Florida from Washington, D.C. to look after my late Dad, following his quadruple heart operation.

And then later, following his Stroke in 2010. 😔😔

What little that was left of the actual Great Southern Hotel, the facades that were supposed to be incorporated into real estate developer Charles R. "Chip" Abele's project, were demolished specifically at the urging of City of Hollywood Chief Building Dept. head Dean Decker because of his and his Dept's "safety" concerns.
Yes, when you say "safety," you'd be surprised what usual procedures. protocols, and seats of power and responsibility seemingly don't apply.

Maybe you'd even be surprised to find out that, as was stated obliquely at the Hollywood Historic Preservation Board meeting, the city's Building Dept., if they use the magic words "public safety," seemingly has the unfettered power to do things that even the elected Hollywood City Commission can not legally countermand.
Like the Building Dept.'s demolition order, something that other stakeholders in the city can not contest or at least take to court because the whole reason things were done the way they were Tuesday was to prevent interest groups from finding out and getting involved in a legal fashion.



@SFBJRealEstate MT @Susannah_Bryan Landmark #HollywoodFL hotel built in 1924 was leveled today. Developer #ChipAbele says he cld not save it despite earlier promises to do so.
Here’s my last story on the plans to bring a new project to downtown ⁦@cohgovhttps://t.co/tjqPs7Lb2o

— HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog (@hbbtruth) February 11, 2020




Earlier in the day Decker had urged developer Chip Abele via a letter written earlier today to demolish it ASAP, and he explained his reasoning for the decision. 


My September 21st, 2016 blog post with info and context about Abele and his company getting approval from the Hollywood City Commission for his Block 40 project is here:

Hollywood developer Chip Abele's years-long effort to launch #YoungCircleCommons project in Downtown Hollywood, across from The ArtsPark, w/a #HiltonHotel, clears hurdle as Hollywood City Comm. unanimously approves requested changes
https://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2016/09/hollywood-developer-chip-abeles-years.html 

It's been a long road for Abele, often the subject of biting criticism by the public at myriad meetings held at Hollywood City Hall and at various civic association meetings throughout the city that I've personally attended, both before and after I left Hollywood for 9-10 months to travel in August of 2018
That would include the Civic Associations here in the city for Hollywood Lakes, Park East, Hollywood Hills, North Central, the Downtown, Parkside, Royal Poinciana one, to say nothing of the one known as United Neighbors. I go to 4 or 5 of these a month, though some conflict with one another.

Back in 2008 our friends over at the South Florida Business Journal were writing,
Great Southern Hotel developer plans to move ahead in Chapter 11
The redeveloper of Hollywood's Great Southern Hotel, which has stood up to hurricanes, rancorous litigation and the housing meltdown, says it will continue to pursue the project as it works through Chapter 11.
Coral Gables-based SFD@Hollywood LLC filed for Chapter 11 reorganization bankruptcy on Tuesday. The filing attorney was Thomas M. Messana of Fort Lauderdale-based Messana Weinstein & Stern, P.A.
In an e-mail Thursday, Messana said the filing followed a failure to resolve a dispute over the delivery of 25,000 square feet of retail space on the ground floor of the proposed building.
SFD will pursue strategic alternatives on the project, but still intends to develop Youngs Circle Commons, the e-mail said.
Charles R. "Chip" Abele signed the filing as managing member of the limited liability corporation. Other managing members listed in state records are Jose R. Boschetti and Maurice Cayon.
The project called for restoring portions of the Great Southern with 19 stories of mixed-used space that would include 239 condominiums, 25,000 square feet of retail and a parking garage.
Assets and liabilities are each listed as totaling between $1 million and $10 million. Unsecured creditors range anywhere from $89,797 due to Broward County for 2007 property taxes to a $42.46 charge owed to Miami-based 60-Minute Courier.
A 2007 suit was heard in the 4th District Court of Appeal, with Friends of the Great Southern claiming that the city of Hollywood had violated its own building code by approving the partial demolition of the Great Southern Hotel. Directors of Friends of the Great Southern were Richard Vest, William Young and Rene Tewksbury. The city prevailed in the suit.


Earlier in 2008, there was this news in the Sun-Sentinel re the eminenet domain lawsuit between the city and the Mach family that owned the property on the southwest corner of Harrison and S. 19th Avenue, that has looked like this for years



Eminent domain ruling reversed
Ihosvani Rodriguez Staff WriterSouth Florida Sun-Sentinel
March 27, 2008

A state appeals court has decided to support the city's controversial attempt to take a family's downtown property and use it for private development.

The Fourth District Court of Appeal ruled 3-0 to overturn a Broward judge's 2006 ruling that said the city cannot take the Mach family's business property and give it to a powerful developer, according to the decision released Wednesday.

The Mach family has owned the 2,900-square-foot building on Harrison Street since 1972. The building houses the family's hair salon and several other businesses.

The city's downtown Community Redevelopment Agency has been fighting since 2005 to use eminent domain to obtain the property and transfer it to developer Charles "Chip" Abele for a $100 million project, a 19-story condo and retail tower called Young Circle Commons.

"This is very disappointing, obviously," said family spokesman David Mach, "but there's a 99 percent probability we will be appealing."

The Machs could ask the appeals court to reconsider, or, try to take the case to the Florida Supreme Court.

The appeals court panel ruled that Broward Circuit Judge Ronald J. Rothschild should have deferred to the redevelopment agency's 2005 finding that the property is vital to downtown redevelopment plans. Instead, he ruled that testimony during a 2006 trial showed the city and Abele didn't need the building to complete the project.

Attorneys for the city argued the land would be used as part of a traffic flow plan that would enable the developer to preserve the facade of the 1920s-era Great Southern Hotel as part of the Young Circle Commons project.

Such historic preservation is an acceptable reason for government to take private property through the process of eminent domain, the appeals court said in its ruling.

The abandoned hotel, now owned by Abele, is immediately north of the Mach building on Harrison Street. Development planners said the only viable place to build an entrance to the tower's garage is on 19th Avenue. But that would require razing the hotel's western wall-or, building the entrance farther south, on Mach's property.

Appeals court Associate Judge Lisa Davidson, who voted with the majority, said the city should take no more than the 17 feet Abele said he needs for the 30-foot-wide garage entrance.

The Florida Legislature in 2006 prohibited cities from using eminent domain for private redevelopment. But the new law doesn't apply to the Mach case because the city had already started eminent domain proceedings.

The city promised Abele in 2004 that if the developer could not buy out the Machs, it would take the building via eminent domain. Under the agreement, the city will purchase the Mach property through eminent domain and Abele will reimburse the city.

Redevelopment director Neil Fritz said in a statement Wednesday that Hollywood intends to "live up" to the deal with Abele. If the "appeals court decision prevails, we would ultimately transfer the property to the developer to allow the project to be built."

Abele has said he once offered the Machs $1.2 million, but they refused. On Wednesday he acknowledged the housing market is in the doldrums, but said he still wants to move forward with his plans.

"The window of opportunity to build condos has been shut until the markets recover," said Abele, "but this doesn't mean the project won't be built some day."

Mach said Wednesday he is optimistic the city commission, which doubles as the redevelopment agency's board, will back off.

"I have some faith in the new Hollywood government that they will do the right thing and protect the rights of its citizens," he said.



Reminder: Abele and his company also did the 25-story Hollywood Circle condo and retail project on Block 55 that now includes the new-ish Publix Supermarket, The Circ Hotel and its various restauarants, plus ground floor retail on the block northeast of Young Circle.

City Attorney Douglas R. Gonzales also spoke at great length at the Historic Preservation Board meeting chaired by my friend, Hollywood Lakes Civic Association President Terry Cantrell, one of the most involved and best-connected person in the city.

To say the least, most of the asembled public did not quite believe what they were hearing, even if they already knew what had taken place hours before.

Frankly, if I'd known the subject of the Great Southern Hotel was going to come up, I'd have brought my camera tripod with me to film the whole discussion, as I have hundreds of times over the years in Hollywood and Hallandale Beach, and then placed the video here on the blog for you to draw your own conclusions, after reading my thoughts.

Why film it? 
Because those Hollywood Historic Preservation Board meetings are neither televised or recorded for the public to watch or review.

My own sense of things, based not only on what I observed during the meeting and immediately afterwards out in the lobby, when several people I know were very upfront and vocal with their criticisms of the city's decision, right to Decker's face, as well as what I've heard/received via emails and text messages is the following.
The smartest, most-involved, and most socially-adept #HollywoodFL civic activists I know and respect are... on the warpath against the city and its elected officials because they see this decision as a very personal betrayal. 
In an election year.

They are irate about this matter for many reasons but if I had to narrow it down to two, I'd say that it's because, to them, it seems more than a bit "convenient" that this 95-year old building has been demolished:

a.) on the same day that Hollywood city official contacted the owner, and, 
b.) on the very same day the city of Hollywood posted this information to the city's website:

Update on Block 40 Construction in Downtown Hollywood
https://hollywoodfl.org/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=728

Posted on: February 11, 2020

Update on Block 40 Construction in Downtown Hollywood

Block 40 update
In late January, as construction crews were performing work to brace the portions of the former Great Southern Hotel to be preserved, the crews and on-site engineers observed issues with the structural integrity of the building, and notified the City of these concerns. The City’s Building Division reviewed reports from four different engineers and field inspections. The preponderance of evidence found significant deterioration of the structure or structural parts making the building unsafe per section 116.2.1.2.2 of the Florida Building Code. Due to the determination that the historic north and west facades of the former hotel were unsafe and posed a significant threat to public safety, a modification of the existing demolition permit was issued this morning and demolition of the unsafe structure was completed earlier this afternoon.
The City consulted with an Engineering firm that inspected the building, interviewed on-site construction contractors, reviewed all prior engineering reports and conducted strength testing of the building’s structural components. The concrete masonry of the former hotel was found to be in disrepair with core drilling tests yielding compression rates of 1320 to 1580 PSI. For commercial structures, 3000 PSI is the minimum requirement. The level of deterioration necessitated immediate attention to address a severe life safety hazard. The perimeter of the construction site was secured to allow for the demolition of the remaining structure.
In 2012, the City of Hollywood approved plans for the redevelopment of the site of the former Great Southern Hotel at the southwest corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Young Circle. The redevelopment plan is for a 19-story, mixed-use development with 166 upscale residential units and a 103 room hotel along with a restaurant and approximately 9,793 SF of retail and office space. The approved plans preserved and incorporated the north and west facades of the former Great Southern Hotel, originally constructed in the 1920s, as well as some interior features.
The development team has informed the City that they are committed to reconstructing the historical elements previously planned to be preserved as shown in the approved designs. They have also worked to save elements from the original construction with the goal of incorporating them into the new building where feasible.




Great Southern Hotel, Hollywood, Florida 

Uploaded June 28, 2012 by Dan Watson YouTube Channel
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SJp2KTDPhT8&feature=youtu.be


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See also the rueful comments of my friend Lynn Smith, the President of the Downtown Parkside Royal Poinciana Civic Association, from whom I received the following excerpt of a letter last Friday.




Downtown Parkside Royal Poinciana Civic Association
P.O. Box 223697, 
Hollywood, FL 33022
https://www.facebook.com/DPRPCA/

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Dave
David B. Smith


Hallandale Beach/Hollywood Bloghttp://www.hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/