Showing posts with label WFOR-TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WFOR-TV. Show all posts

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Latest Poll Info from Rasmussen Reports on Govt. Spending Echoes South Florida Voters' Sentiment

Excerpts from an email that I sent out Friday to some of the
concerned citizens and elected officials of this city and region,
and the South Florida press.
-------------------------------------------
April 28, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Just received some very interesting info this morning
from Rasmussen Reports via their free daily updates,
something you might want to consider getting as well.

The article, below, on voter sentiment regarding govt.
spending was just released at 10:30 a.m. this morning,
and is exactly in line with everything I hear from public
policy types and politically-involved citizens at events
I attend throughout South Florida, yet other than with
the recent case with BSO, the Broward Sheriff's Office,
which has gotten a lot of media attention, where exactly
are the meaningful yet intelligent cuts in govt. spending
that you can point to that ought to have been forthcoming?

77% See Politicians Unwillingness to Cut Government
Spending as Bigger Problem Than Voter Resistance to
Tax Hikes


Where are the media reports showing examples of local govt.
getting smarter and slimmer thru technology, that were all
the rage just a few years ago?
The manana bureaucracy I encounter in South Florida on a
daily basis seems as dysfunctional and non-responsive as ever,
with our own city of Hallandale Beach being Ground Zero
for dysfunctional govt. for reasons that we all can recite.


April 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier


April 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Perfect example of govt. dysfunction: Last August
at the city's public budget meeting at HB City Hall, I specifically
challenged HB City Manager Mike Good and his staff to explain
the logic of the city persisting for years in using garbage cans
without lids at THE windiest place in the whole city
-the public beach.
(It's not like that last fact is 'Breaking News'.)

His response: lots of talk. no action, just like his
promise moments later to place blue recycling
bins on the beach itself.

The logical results are self-evident to anyone, above,
a photo from a Saturday last month around 3 p.m. or so.
Nine long months later, the city still uses the same exact
garbage receptacles, sans lids, which is part of why the
beach is SO dumpy and unattractive, and there are
still no blue recycling bins on the public beach,
where beach-goers actually are, to make encourage it,
not make it impossible.


Here in Hallandale Beach, fellow citizens and residents
appealing improperly-cited code violations from the
city still get a very rude, lethargic and combative response
from City Hall when availing themselves of their rights
under the state's Sunshine Laws to get public records
they need to successfully appeal.

Hallandale Beach police officers get approval to drive their
police cars even farther into the far western Broward suburbs
to get home -at Hallandale Beach taxpayer's expense.

Yet the public beach here that is so terribly maintained is
NEVER patrolled by these same HB police officers in ways
that are even remotely comparable to our neighbors,
especially on three-day holiday weekends like this one.

Everyone who ever goes to the beach knows this is true,
it's "common knowledge," but HB City Manager Mike
Good and Mayor Joy Cooper and their Rubber Stamp
Crew just shrug their shoulders, like they have no real power
to change that policy, or create a new positive dynamic.
That's just another reason why they are each so personally
contemptible -their sheer laziness and apathy.

April 28, 2009 photo by South Beach Hoosier
Above, hen coming home to roost in Hallandale Beach
about wasteful govt. spending and utter lack of competency?

The contractor lifeguards are literally overwhelmed on
these sorts of weekends, yet the HB Police will NEVER
be seen on or near the beach except in the case of an
actual emergency, despite how large the crowds will get,
the amount of illegal/underage drinking taking place
in public, etc.

I'll be there late Sunday morning before returning home
for the Indy 500 telecast and will record the scene with
some photos before I leave, which you'll see soon.
Prediction: it will be just like last year's Memorial Day
Weekend... and the year before that and the year before....

To me, it'll be very interesting to see whether or not
-or to what extent- South Florida pols and those
in Tallahassee are able to resist this popular citizen
sentiment that this Rasmussen Report pinpoints,
the one that for some citizens, found catharsis thru
the recent Tea Party movement that the Miami
Herald and Beth Reinhard ignored for months
while other media round the country covered it
like a real story.
And what effect, if any, that sentiment will have on
South Florida pols in the next 16 months before the
Nov. 2010 election.

Will they accept the new economic/spending paradigm,
or will some, like the tone-deaf Broward School Board
and its administrators, with their fatal obsession with
large pots of construction money and lobbyists' money
and largesse, for a dysfunctional system that is actually
losing students and their tax-paying parents in droves,
persist in their old parochial views, and keep calling this
a temporary hiccup, eager to go back to their prior
ruinous spending behavior?

Channel 4's Jim DeFede has some thoughts on
South Florida's bureaucracy and fixes his gaze south on
Miami-Dade County and the very unhelpful 311 "Help Line"
that M-D taxpayers are paying for, but being poorly-served
by:
DeFede: Why I Hate Miami-Dade 311

Have a safe Memorial Day holiday and remember what
and whom we honor this weekend!

Just as an FYI, my earliest ancestor who fought for this
country once marched from Alexandria, VA with
Capt. George Washington and other colonists as part
of General Braddock's long march to the French-controlled
Fort Duquesne in Pittsburgh.

Years later, under very different circumstances,
he served as a Revolutionary War spy for General
George Washington against the British Army
he'd once fought alongside.

After the war, for his brave efforts, he received
a large parcel of land north of Steubenville, Ohio
-where the first Federal Land Grant office
was later located- which is why my ancestors
were among the very first citizens of Ohio,
having crossed the Ohio River and relocated from Washington Township, PA, south of Pittsburgh, even before Ohio became a state in 1803.
-----------------------

For more info on recent developments with BSO
and their budget battles with the County Commission,
please see WFOR's Ted Scouten's report from Monday
Details Emerge About BSO Layoffs


and some other recent BSO stories at

Also take a look at these two Scott Wyman blog posts from
Friday's Sun-Sentinel Broward Politics blog:
County savings targeted in fight over budget deficit

Friday, September 5, 2008

re Comm. Keith London's sensible lawsuit against the City of Halandale Beach

Today for your consideration I have an excerpted copy of an email that I sent out earlier this afternoon to some people I know in Hallandale Beach and beyond who are greatly interested in the city's future and welfare.
And some of the better reporters and columnists in the state of Florida, not just locals.

To better appreciate what I've written, think back to what I mentioned last month to you all about Ingalls Park, a Hallandale Beach park which has a recycling facility on its northern border, which I used yesterday.
It's just one block south of Hallandale Beach Blvd., one of the three main thoroughfares in the 4.4 square mile city:
August 28th post, Turning lemons into lemonade the Hallandale Beach way: start submarine races...
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2008/08/turning-lemons-into-lemonade-hallandale.html
August 7th post, A New Low in HB? Yes! Condescending Deal Results in Sanders Selection as Interim Commissioner,
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2008/08/new-low-in-hb-yes-condescending-deal.html

So, when exactly is the public citywide meeting in Hallandale Beach about all the changes coming for the city's recycling program?
There is no meeting.

Sh-h-h-h!!!

Don't say that out loud -or else!

Meanwhile, Operation "Deep Sleep" continues apace.


Recyclables in trunk ready for a run to Ingalls Park,
Sept. 4, 2008; photo by South Beach Hoosier

Ingalls Park, 735 SW 1 Street, Hallandale Beach, FL 33009
August 31, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Ingalls Park, 735 SW 1 Street, Hallandale Beach, FL 33009
I've told you in past posts that for months the city's recycling dumpsters located here were missing lids. Then months later, once lids were installed, someone got the genius idea to place square holes in them. Here's the proof.
The lid is exactly as I found it, neatly framing the city sign within the hole,
August 31, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier


Hallandale Beach Commission Chambers moments before Pastor Anthony Sanders, in front row, was sworn in as a Commissioner.
Sept. 3rd, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier


A few minutes later, Comm. Anthony Sanders takes his seat on the dais.
Sept. 3rd, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Since each of you are among the small sub-set of civic-minded and savvy residents of Hallandale Beach who actually have an accurate sense of the behind-the-scenes context and mischief for many of City' Hall's self-serving moves and policies, I wanted to share some news that many of you probably haven't heard about yet.
While I'm the first to say that I don't know ALL the facts of this, I DO have an unusually good insight into the larger issues at play here because of some recent things I've personally observed.

It's an insight into the competing forces to shape Hallandale Beach's future, and the GREAT potential for harm if we allow the current 'status quo' crowd running things, to continue to thwart not only the spirit and letter of the law involving Florida's Sunshine Laws, but also continue to thwart the public's trust and sense of accountability, even when that proves embarrassing to HB City Hall.
Their first response to everything seems to always be protecting or covering-up, rather than a full public disclosure and dealing with the facts at hand.
The deplorable situation with HB Police Chief Thomas Magill is a perfect example.

As many of you know from past conversations with me at myriad city meetings and community events, even before I launched my blogs early last year, in order to be better informed, I had the good sense to have "Hallandale Beach" included among my Google Alerts, since I couldn't very well read everything myself.
This has sometimes proven to be a much more inspired idea than you can imagine, since I see something below the surface.
Such was the case Monday night, when I first learned thru a Google Alert of Comm. Keith London's sensible lawsuit against the City of Halandale Beach.

While I have not spoken to him specifically about the lawsuit, it's clear to me based on past actions and words that at least part of his effort is intended to better identify and carve out an area of permissible public discussion and accountability, so that as an elected official of this city, he can actually respond more intelligently to legitimate questions posed to him by city residents about matters of public interest, in this case, the city's never-ending lawsuit against Waste Management, than simply say, "I can't talk about it or recycling or..."

While he's legitimately precluded from discussing certain matters he's privy to, the idea that if he talks about recycling in general, or responds to resident complaints, like mine, about the city's poor management of the current system, is preposterous.
It's yet another troubling example of the usual pattern of over-reaction, panic and cover-up by Mayor Joy Cooper, City Manager Mike Good and City Attorney David Jove.

Depending on how things shake out with Hurricane Ike this weekend, I'll be writing more on this subject at HBB over the weekend but I did want you to have access to some information so that you know the basics.

Since many of you regularly attended Comm. London's Resident Forums before the summer break, I hardly need remind you how distracting it was for everyone in that small room, to have
Mayor Cooper continually insinuate herself into the proceedings by 'crashing' these get-togethers, which, after all, are intended so that HB residents can talk forthrightly and voluntarily about their concerns -to Comm. London and other interested citizens like us.

Especially since so many of those legitimate concerns relate to City Hall's generally unfriendly and un-cooperative approach to public participation and transparency, where common sense and vision are lacking even while shrillness and obfuscation are everywhere.

The fact that Mayor Cooper refuses to host this sort of event herself, though she could, but feels perfectly free to be the 'elephant in the room' at Comm. London's event, and to be so obvious about taking notes of who said what, is troubling on many levels.

More than anything, to me at least, this behavior reveals her well-known thin-skinned ego, continuing inability to take criticism, constructive or otherwise, and seriously consider another person's perspective, even when it's more-experienced or better-informed than hers.

The idea that Mayor Cooper can't stand the idea of Hallandale Beach residents actually meeting independently of her City Hall crowd, with her ability to limit people's comments to three minutes and interrupt/bully them, was brought home to me personally as many of you already know, by her
unsolicited post-midnight email to me two weeks ago.

As most of you know, I had expected to post my rejoinder to her email on my blog by now, but will have that up very soon for you to draw your own conclusions.
And I don't think you'll be disappointed.

That attitude of hers was present in spades at one Resident Forum in particular, when I brought up my own experience of seeing some self-evident problems with city recycling facilities, among other things, a complete absence of ANY directional signs near them, insufficient number of bins for a citywide facility... and the city's plan to get rid of the facility without any public discussion of the rationale or the alternatives.

As if one cue, Mayor Cooper immediately felt the need to play traffic cop and warn everyone to be careful, as if we didn't all know what she was really doing: trying to head off criticism by waving the lawsuit around like a bloody shirt, a tactic she's employed many times in the past.
As if the negligence and poor planning of the city -again!- was a topic that was permanently verboten.

You'd think that by now she'd have realized that one of the more obvious downsides to her constant efforts at self-promotion, a la Mara Giulianti, is that she now sees ANY criticism of the city as a criticism of her.

So, that said, here's the info below.

I don't suppose it went un-noticed by most of you that absolutely nothing involving Wednesday's HB City Commission meeting, including Pastor Sanders being sworn in, was deemed news worthy enough to be included in the Miami Herald on Thursday.
Didn't think so.

WFOR video re London's lawsuit and Sanders swearing-in
http://cbs4.com/video/?id= 61578@wfor.dayport.com
-------------------------------------------------
London v. City of Hallandale Beach
Plaintiff: Keith London

Defendant: City of Hallandale Beach

Case Number: 0:2008cv61393
Filed: August 29, 2008

Court: Florida Southern District Court

Office: Fort Lauderdale Office [ Court Info ]

County: Broward

Presiding Judge: Judge William J. Zloch

Nature of Suit: Other Statutes - Antitrust

Cause: 28:1331 Federal Question

Jurisdiction: Federal Question

Jury Demanded By: None
City's 'trash talk' ban leads to lawsuit
Published: Sept. 3, 2008 at 1:08 PM

HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla., Sept. 3 (UPI) -- A Florida city commissioner has filed a civil rights suit over a motion he claims goes too far in muzzling discussion about trash collection.

Hallandale Beach City Commissioner Keith London contends the motion passed by the commission in regards to another lawsuit is so vague that commission members could be hauled in front of the Florida Commission on ethics for simply raising the subject of recycling and trash collection.

"I don't even know if just talking to you about my own lawsuit will be used to say I am violating the (motion)," London told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

The motion was passed due to settlement talks in a lawsuit between the city and a trash disposal company over alleged overcharging.

The Sun-Sentinel said Wednesday that London said he believes there are other reasons for the motion, particularly the alleged intent to stifle his disagreements with fellow commission members.
----------------------------------------------------------
www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/broward/sfl-flbspeech0903sbsep03,0,1724913.story

South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Suit asks if trash talking can make you an outlaw
Commissioner sues city over his free speech rights
By Ihosvani Rodriguez
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
September 3, 2008

Hallandale Beach

A city commissioner has filed a civil rights suit against his own city claiming his colleagues are preventing him from talking trash — literally.

Commissioner Keith London's federal lawsuit attacks a motion passed in May that prohibits commission members from discussing anything related to a pending lawsuit between the city and Waste Management Inc.

That includes meetings about "waste management, garbage, trash, recycling and related issues," and violators could be reprimanded or brought before the Florida Commission on Ethics.

London claims the commission's mandate is so vague, he wonders if it allows him to discuss who in his household should put out the trash at night.

"I don't even know if just talking to you about my own lawsuit will be used to say I am violating the [motion]," London said Tuesday. He wants a judge to decide and for the city to pay his attorney's fees, nothing more.

City Attorney David Jove declined to comment Tuesday, saying he had not seen the suit London filed Friday.
Hallandale Beach is in talks with Waste Management to settle the 2002 suit that claims the company overcharged the city for dumping garbage into landfills instead of recycling and composting it.

Pushing for the motion in May, City Manager Michael Good complained that someone was leaking confidential information about the lawsuit negotiations.

London, often the lone dissenter on the commission, denied being the source of any leaks. He said the motion was designed to silence his constant opposition.

---------------------------------------------------
WFOR Channel 4 videos of "Hallandale"
-----------------------------------------
Truveo search video across the Web for "Hallandale"
Take special note of

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Democratic Party Super Delegate Steve Geller of FL on the not-too-bright Donkeys and their decision to move up the date of the 2008 Florida primary


Above, state Senator Steve Geller and Channel 4's Michael Williams outside of Hallandale Beach City Hall, May 7, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

State Senator Steve Geller, the erstwhile Florida Senate Minority Leader and Democratic Super-Delegate, representing the Oasis project, spoke to WFOR-TV's Michael Williams
following the Commission's approval on second hearing of his client's project on the 1100 block of East Hallandale Beach Blvd.

Zoning and Land Development by Hallandale Oasis Limited LLLP, located at 1100 East Hallandale Beach Boulevard, concerning the following:
-Applying the Planned Development Overlay District
-Application for a Conditional Use Permit to construct 250 Residential Units
-Application to Construct a Mixed Use Development and Build a Residential/Retail Building
-Resolution Assigning 250 Residential Flexibility Units.

Geller's comments on the DNC aired later that afternoon, the same day that state Rep. Dan Gelber of Miami Beach, also a Super Delegate, finally threw in the towel of neutrality and formally endorsed Sen. Barack Obama.

Among the other nuggets of news that Geller revealed that afternoon were that the FL Dems had three law firms working on getting their vote counted, and that the last DNC plan for a FL recount was a (laughable) proposal for 150 caucus sites throughout the states, which I think(?) Geller said would represent only 6% of FL pop.

I originally posted the above photo during a 40-minute lunch break of last Wednesday morning's Hallandale Beach City Commission meeting.

Once I raced home, eager to post a few shots before getting back for the meeting, I found out once again just how incompetent I was with the new digital camera my sister Jennifer recently gave me, witness the wrong date on the photo, which I'd neglected to set correctly when I put in new batteries.

When I initially came out of the city hall chambers and threw on my sunglasses, I was going to dash home, but when I spotted Sen. Geller getting ready to be interviewed, my nose-for-news gene kicked in, and I thought I'd snap about 6-8 real quick shots shots, figuring that at least one or two would turn out pretty well and I'd post it while home for lunch.
The best laid plans of mice and men, gang aft a-gley....

(South Beach Hoosier trivia: One of my favorite all-time films is the original 1939 Lewis Milestone-directed Of Mice and Men, starring Burgess Meredith and Lon Chaney, Jr., which I've only seen about thirty times. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0031742/

The opening scenes just grab you from the word go, and you are immediately caught up in the crazy drama of George and Lennie running to catch a moving train and stay one step ahead of the law, with Aaron Copland's great music just sweeping you up in case you stumble.
The scene of the two of them them pulling the train coach door shut, only to reveal the original line of Robert Burns poetic genius, from whence the title comes, is sheer magic!
In my opinion, it's one of the best and most-stylized film scenes ever shot.

Not that I didn't really enjoy the 1992 version with John Malkovich, Gary Sinise and charter blog favorite, Sherilyn Fenn, too.
I absolutely adore Sherilyn Fenn, who STILL makes me dizzy when I watch Chiller specifically to see her in Twin Peaks repeats, http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105046/)

As I watched the action, I could literally feel my lunch break ticking away, and because the friendly Channel 4 cameraman was right near me, I had to wait a bit until after he switched rolls before I could shoot this scene, since I didn't want get in his way or distract him.

Yet because it was SO sunny outside that afternoon, every time I got off the building breezeway, and tried a different angle, getting the three of them in the shot, the light and darkness contrast thru my viewfinder was blinding, so I just bided my time, and started taking mental notes.
Sadly as it turned out, this so-so effort was the mediocre best shot of the lot.

Among the things Geller revealed that I'd never heard or read elsewhere was that the FL Dems had three separate law firms working on their behalf to get their vote counted and/or have the 100% disqualification penalty lifted, and that the last DNC plan for a FL recount he'd seen was a (laughable) proposal for 150 sites throughout the state, which I think(?) Geller said would represent only about 6% of FL's population.

My comments on the hearing itself, where I spoke during the public participation segment on the topic of the City's employees longstanding and very unprofessional follow-up on matters previously discussed, will be posted here soon.
_________________________________________

www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/broward/sfl-flbbeacon0509sbmay09,0,4098003.story
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Hallandale OKs more downtown development
By Thomas Monnay
May 8, 2008
Another large retail/office/condo complex is coming to the new downtown, less than a mile from the $1 billion Village at Gulfstream Park, now under construction.


The City Commission this week approved the site plan for Hallandale Oasis, at 1100 E. Hallandale Beach Blvd. Beacon Investment Properties LLC., of Hallandale Beach, will tear down the office building on the 5.28-acre site and replace it with a four-story retail and office building, a five-story parking garage and a 26-story, 250-unit condominium.

Ariel Bentata, a Beacon managing partner, said his company chose Hallandale Beach because "there's a lot of demographic expansion."

The property is zoned commercial, but city commissioners gave Beacon permission to build the condos because it's in a district that allows a blend of commercial and residential development, Commissioner Keith London said. Bentata said Beacon will build the project's commercial component first. He said he couldn't give a specific timetable for the condos because of the housing downturn.

"We don't have a crystal ball," Bentata said. "We don't know how long it's going to take the housing market to recover."

London said Beacon has four years after completing the project's commercial phase to build the condos, or it will have to start the permission process over again.

But London said, "We're not worried. They have a lot of money invested into this project."

The project site is just east of Hallandale Square, an $85 million development planned for the southeast corner of Hallandale Beach Boulevard and Federal Highway.

The area includes the Gulfstream Park Racing & Casino property, where Forest City Enterprises is building its Village at Gulfstream Park, with 70 stores, 1,500 condos, a 500-room hotel, a 2,500-seat theater and dining facilities.

London said the company will pay a one-time, $2.97 million fee for water, sewer and traffic improvements. The $2.97 million will also cover the developer's required contribution to the city's affordable housing trust fund.

Vice Mayor Bill Julian said the project will incorporate water conservation features. Its wide sidewalks should help make the area pedestrian-friendly, he said.

"It's quite an upgrade to the area," Julian said. "It's something that we don't have now on that side of the boulevard."

Thomas Monnay can be reached at tmonnay@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7924.__________________________________
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/florida/sfl-flfgeller0501sbmay01,0,3905987.storySouth Florida Sun-Sentinel
Florida Sen. Steve Geller, D-Cooper City, leaving office after 20 years
By Linda Kleindienst
Tallahassee Bureau Chief
April 30, 2008

TALLAHASSEE
Steve Geller walked into the Legislature 20 years ago as a member of the "Broward Mafia," one of the Democrats from South Florida who controlled the state House and, in many ways, the future of Florida.


Now 49, he leaves the Capitol because of term limits and as a member of the minority party, outgunned in the Senate by Republicans who control 26 of 40 votes, but by most accounts at the peak of his power and performance.

The senator from Cooper City is one of the "Gang of Three" — along with Majority Leader Dan Webster and Budget Chairwoman Lisa Carlton, both Republicans — who decide which bills will make it to the Senate floor. It's a position of power that few Democrats enjoy in Tallahassee these days.

"It's kind of like you reach your pinnacle at 49 and it's all downhill from there," Geller said recently, as he sat in his cluttered Senate office, rows of certificates of appreciation covering his walls.

"What is that saying, better to be a 'has been' than a 'never was?'"

Among Geller's friends and sometime political allies are Webster, a social conservative from the opposite end of the political spectrum, and Republican Gov. Charlie Crist. Geller can even claim to be the first to have encouraged Crist to run for political office, when they were students together at Florida State University.

Colleagues and lobbyists call Geller talkative, egotistical, boisterous, over-confident, bright, softhearted and persistent."

He is so persistent in the things he believes in, but you can't get along up here without being persistent because people don't necessarily do what you want them to do," Webster said, adding that every day this spring Geller has pestered him with questions about boosting funding for Tri-Rail, South Florida's commuter rail line.

With his sometimes-rumpled allure, Geller is a wisecracking quotemeister with a gift for simplifying arcane subjects into easy-to-digest sound bites.

"It's a shame it's his last year," said Sen. Jim King, R-Jacksonville, a former Senate president.

"He's matured in the process and he's become a whole lot more statesman and a lot less oracle."

Geller, a lawyer, also has become an acknowledged specialist on insurance and gambling.

Founder and president of the National Council of Legislators from Gaming States, he has promoted expanded gambling in Florida, especially to benefit Broward County's dog and horse tracks, and in turn they have helped finance his re-election campaigns.

He's the only legislator in decades who has managed to get often-warring pari-mutuels to talk to each other.

Geller, who has won election to five House terms and three Senate terms, is used to being in the heat of the political battle, and has proven a tough opponent.

In 1990, although hospitalized with pneumonia, he made it to a Broward Legislative Delegation meeting in a wheelchair, with an oxygen tube, to help Ben Graber defeat Peter Deutsch in a race for vice chairman. "Let that be a lesson; you don't cross Steve Geller," said Sen. Dave Aronberg, D- Greenacres.

In the past two years Geller has been in the thick of the Legislature's thorniest issues, negotiating legislation aimed at cutting government spending, helping to write a constitutional amendment to make it easier for Floridians to take their property tax breaks along if they move and influencing a property insurance package to rein in premiums.

But ask him for his top accomplishment and he'll recall 1988. Shortly after his election that year, Christy Schafale, a 17-year-old Cooper City High School senior, died on a ride at the Broward County Fair. Geller's first bill called for tougher fair ride inspections. It passed.

"No one will ever know the exact number of children saved by that law," said Senate President Ken Pruitt, R-Port St. Lucie, as he presented Geller on Wednesday with a framed copy of that bill, the "Amusement Ride and Attraction Act."

"When somebody tells us, there oughta be a law, frequently, there's a law," Geller told a hushed chamber of his colleagues. "Being a legislator for 20 years means a lot to me. I think I helped a lot of people."

While he may be leaving the Capitol, Geller said he's not ready to quit politics. He promised his sons, Marc, 11, and Ben, 8, that he wouldn't run for any job that would keep him away from home for long.

So, next on his agenda: a race for the Broward County Commission in 2010.

"I'm not quite ready yet to be put out to pasture," he said.

Reader comments are at:
http://www.topix.net/forum/source/south-florida-sun-sentinel/TSOLK45GF18A7TDB8#comments

-----
Village Voice 
Runnin' Scared blog
How Howard Dean's Florida Ambiguity Helps Obama and Hurts Hillary
Posted by Wayne Barrett
May 2, 2008

My favorite excerpt:
...Dean clearly hopes that his evasions on this elemental question of fairness will be seen as a demonstration of his unwillingness to take sides between the warring camps within his own party. It is the opposite. In the absence of an unambiguous statement clarifying the limits of the DNC’s delegate ruling, he is siding with Obama, whose recent conflating press releases have argued that “without the rogue states”—Florida and Michigan—“Obama is still up by 500,000 votes.” Everyone involved understands that it is Obama who is benefiting from the media decision not to include Florida’s vote in the popular vote boxscore that runs across every American television screen, on virtually every news channel, everyday.

Of course, the endlessly repeated omission of this vote, and Dean’s abdication, is not just affecting the candidates. It’s doubling the pain for Florida Democrats—not only are they invisible in the delegate tabulations, which the courts have ruled is clearly within the powers of the national party, they are phantoms in the popular tally, a nullification unsupported by any legal authority...

Rest of post at:
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/archives/2008/05/how_howard_dean.php