Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Butterfield. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Butterfield. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Beach One Resort's Approval in Hollywood Provokes Wrath and Harsh Words at Hallandale Beach City Commission

Wanting to respond to what I witnessed firsthand on Wednesday afternoon in Hollywood, and then later that evening in Hallandale Beach, at their respective City Commission meetings, where the number-one topic was Hollywood and their unanimous 5-0 approval of the Beach One Resort project on A1A, I sent the following as an email to some folks in Hallandale Beach, Broward County and up in Tallahassee, who are concerned with what's going on here.

(And news media personalities and outlets throughout the state, who have already evinced to me a certain interest in the strange doings hereabouts.)

Especially since both the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and the Miami Herald utterly failed to connect the dots on this story as they should've.

I guess that's the logical downside to their so-so attendance at Broward city commission meetings and reporting of local news, since there hasn't been a Herald reporter actually present at a HB Commission meeting since at least June, for the joint meeting with Hollywood that Breanne Gilpatrick covered.

The Herald not only failed to write about either city's Wednesday Commission meeting in the paper on Thursday, but botched the job from the start when they covered the first reading in Hollywood on Beach One Resort on October 1st, failing to run a single illustration or rendering of the hotel that everyone, even critics, agrees is beautiful, thanks to the design by architect Carlos Ott.

This is a longer version of the original email, along with with new updated information and URL links.

September 17, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

Things reached a new low(!), if possible, when crazy threats were uttered by Mayor Joy Cooper about actually charging the public to access the North Beach of Hallandale Beach, which is right next to.... why yes, the City of Hollywood and the Beach One Resort.
Does this bully of a mayor have no scruples left?

Is there nothing she won't say or do or threaten in order to get her way?

But then I recall that twice this summer, despite a unanimous HB Planning & Zoning Board vote approving it, she twice voted against an Assisted Living Facility (ALF) application, even though
the applicant had already complied with all existing requirements up to that point in the process.

Mayor Cooper's unconscionable -and frankly, creepy- attitude, especially given the clear and bipartisan public policy intent of the legislature in crafting the law, caused me to unexpectedly get out of my seat in the Chambers and remind the Commission that the vote they cast would speak volumes for the community, one that's full of older residents, and have unintended negative effects for the city if they foolishly followed the mayor's lead.

Fortunately for everyone concerned, especially the future residents of the ALF, Mayor Cooper was the lone vote opposing the applicant in a 4-1 vote.

Lesson learned? She's capable of anything under the sun.


June 25, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier


Above, the iconic Hallandale Beach Water Tower on A1A and Hallandale Beach Blvd., is dwarfed by the three towers of The Related Company's development, The Beach Club.


Pay to use the very public beach the city currently does such an abysmally poor job of keeping clean and maintaining, where they can't even enforce their own code enforcement rules because of the rampant cronyism and corruption thereabouts?



Where even months later, after not being there for years, HB's DPW can't manage to consistently put enough clearly marked BLUE recycling bins on the beach where the public can use them, instead of either hiding them or leaving them in places where the public wouldn't think to look?


The bins are paid for by taxpayers and are there for the public's benefit, to actually be convenient and used, not to be hidden so that DPW employees can do the least amount of work, as has been the case for MONTHS.

The public beach where, as I mentioned at budget meetings months ago, the city uses garbage receptacles without lids at the windiest place in the city? Yes!



Right, because on-duty lifeguards really need one more thing to do than concentrate on their job -cleaning up debris from strong winds or garbage overflows.



The public beach where the Hallandale Beach Police Dept. currently never patrols on a regular basis, even on busy three-day holiday weekends, leaving the burden largely to beleaguered (contractor) lifeguards? Yes!

September 22, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier

An everyday sight for anyone who goes to North Beach in Hallandale Beach as often as myself
is seeing the staff from The Beachside Cafe nonchalantly tossing a myriad of things on top of,
into and below the plants that are supposed to be protected and left alone, including heavy garbage bags, heavy plastic storage containers and cardboard with all sorts of liquids on them.

And as you can see above, they are constantly putting cleaning supplies full of toxic chemicals
outside on the public sidewalk, and those liquids go directly into the ground.
You know, where the birds above are?

I first told Corrine Yoder of HB Code Enforcement about this behavior in person at HB City Hall
in May of 2007, and referenced the encounter on this blog in my June 14, 2007 post titled,
A Chilly Reception at HB City Hall: "Are you a reporter?
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2007/06/rude-reception-at-hb-city-hall-are-you.html
This behavior at this location has been going on for 3-4 years, as long as this bldg. has existed, and people at HB City Hall know about it and do nothing.

Not surprisingly, given the strong connection the owners of The Beachside Cafe have to HB City Hall, I'm not aware of any HB City Commission meeting that has ever taken place where the longtime behavior of this facility has been adequately addressed publicly.
Why not?
Next week I'll be taking a look at the city's lease with The Beachside Cafe, and inquire as to a whole slew of curious if not downright questionable behavior that has taken place there over the recent past, much of it involving public parking.
And, needless to say, I've already got the photos to prove it.

September 6, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier
Above, the beach access for emergency vehicles to the left, usually full of debris, while to the right are the city-owned dumpsters on Surf Road for city lessee The Beachside Cafe, which has been missing code required decorative fencing for YEARS.
And I know with certainty that they toss glass bottles and aluminum cans that could be recycled into the dumpster, because I've seen it -and heard it- many times.
And snapped photos of them doing it, even though there's almost always a DPW recycling bin next to the dumpster.
Just as with the prior photo above, I first told Corrine Yoder about this at City Hall in May of 2007.
You can see the logical results of my having gone thru proper HB City Hall channels for yourself.

Hmm-m..
I forgot, when exactly did the Florida Constitution change and allow cities to charge citizens
of this state, much less, residents of that city, a fee to access the public's own beach?
I must've missed that memo!

October 3, 2008 photo by South Beach Hoosier
Above, Hollywood's public notice sign on the slit-fence on State Road A1A surrounding the Beach One Resort property, with HB Water Tower and HB Fire/Rescue Station #600 to south.

If only there was some way to see what really happened in Hollywood and not just take
my word for it.
Oh wait, there already is.

You can see the wriiten docs at:
http://www.hollywoodfl.org/docdepotcache/00000/814/PO-2008-20.PDF and http://www.hollywoodfl.org/docdepotcache/00000/814/R-2008-327.PDF
and see the video of exactly what transpired in Hollywood on their excellent website at http://www.hollywoodfl.org/Media/Archives/ccm101508/ccm101508_Indexed.pdf and judge for yourself.

It's just THAT version of events is NOT the one that Mayor Cooper and City Manager Good were particularly interested in sharing Wednesday night with HB residents in person or via cable TV, as they told one fantastical and indignant story after another of the myriad depredations they say were inflicted upon them and their City Hall Crew by their mean-spirited and un-cooperative neighbors to the north, Hollywood.

The only thing missing from their stories was "Once upon a time..." plus the usual assortment of princes and princesses.

Earlier Thursday afternoon, I received an update from Comm. Keith London regarding last night's chaotic HB City Commission meeting, and draw your attention to this item which I've actually been concerned with for awhile, and wrote down when he cited the specific figures from the dais, even as City Manager Good stood directly over his shoulder, and Mayor Cooper publicly belittled his attempts to get to the heart of the matter, which she and the rest of the Commission clearly did NOT want to do:
I inquired as to the status of the three (3) appraisals the City Manager (Mike Good) agreed to provide to the City Commission before purchasing property from Commissioner Sanders at 501 NW 1st Avenue, Hallandle, FL.
The appraisal information is as follows:

LB Slater Appraisal #13057 $147,000

LB Slater Appraisal #13057a $147,000

Butterfield Appraisal #8785 $275,000

Broward County Property Appraiser Value $146,360


I proposed a motion to eliminate out the Butterfield Appraisal.
I did NOT receive a second to my motion. What could be the justification of the City Manager (Mike Good) entertaining the Butterfield Appraisal?

That's a very good question Comm. London asks, one which is certainly worthy of a very good answer, don't you think?

So why can't City Manager Mike Good and his staff adequately answer that question and so many others fully and publicly at HB City Commission meetings?

More troubling to me as a citizen of this city, given the current financial situation the city says it's
in, is why none of the other HB City Commissioners seconded this common sense motion by Comm. London, and why are they even considering the possibility of paying a sitting interim HB Commissioner -running for election for the first time- an unwarranted $130,000 of taxpayers funds?

As has usually been the case with this Hallandale Beach City Hall crew since I first returned to South Florida from the Washington D.C. area in late 2003, their continuing pattern of obfuscation, misbehavior and questionable ethical conduct raise more questions than it answers.

Not so coincidentally, these same three HB commissioners who didn't want to second that motion of Comm. London -Ross, Sanders and Julian- are the very same three who couldn't be bothered to make the ten-minute drive up to Hollywood Wednesday for the matter that Cooper and Good apparently considered a veritable red alert. London was there.
As it happens, none of the same three attended ANY of the previous two public hearings in Hollywood that have been held within the past month on the project.
I should know -I went to all three meetings.

If you haven't already seen it yet, a good place to start digging for some answers on what's going on at HB City Hall, especially re financial issues, is
http://www.changehallandale.com/

It's a website started recently by a smart and savvy friend of mine who shares our common interest in seeing reform, accountability and transparency in Hallandale Beach government.
Finally.

The sooner the better!
________________________
This afternoon I spoke with the person behind the Change Hallandale website on the telephone about another matter altogether.
After talking for about 15 minutes, he mentioned that following another HB resident's email relating to the above made the rounds Friday night -which I received- wherein this email writer had complained about a problem he'd had with the site's email function, my friend followed-up with the ISP and discovered that even his own messges to his own site weren't going through.
The ISP fixed the email problem, and he responded to the person who complained.
And what do you know, he actually got a new email today at the site.
It was an email from Mayor Joy Cooper where she wrote just one word: COWARD.
As if you didn't already know everything you needed to know about her style of operation, hadn;t seen and heard enough stories about thin-skinned ego, she goes ahead and throws another log on that roaring fire as to how she reacts to even the slightest bit of criticism.
You may use the phrase, "It's a free country."
But for Joy Cooper, it really isn't.
In Hallandale Beach, Joy Cooper believes it's her way or the highway!
I've mentioned it here before but compare the self-evident differences in style and substance and
what actually gets accomplished at Hallandale Beach City Commission meetings and those in Hollywood.
Especially now that Mayor Bober has taken the nastiness out of their deliberations on the dais by substituting basic fairness and reasonableness, even when he is on the losing side of a vote, as happened on the WSG project for the SE corner of Young Circle.
No threats, no recriminations.
Plus, because Mayor Bober attempts to give every commissioner ample opportunity to speak on every agenda item, doesn't cut them off in their questions or questioing of city staff, and, unlike in HB, demands complete answers from staff and not evasions, the tension is gone that has hovered over Hollywood City Hall for years.
That he won't tolerate staff not providing info to Commissioners in a timely fashion for their review goes a long way towards promoting comity and civility.
One other big difference in how things are handled is that he doesn't feel the need to constantly
provide a running commentary, and comment thru ad lib after each commissioner or speaker comments, as happens constantly here with Mayor Cooper, which is one of the reasons the HB City Commission meetings drag out forever and are constantly behind schedule, as I mentioned as recently as my discussion of Wednesday night's HB meeting.
Nearly three hours of their talking and still no Public Participation?
That sort of time management led me to leave the meeting to catch the debate at home.
The hope that Mayor Cooper is open to changing her behavior and tactics is a fundamental misunderstanding of human behavior in general, and her's in particular.
She can't suddenly change her spots -she is what she is.
Hoping, as some in the community do, that she'll see the light and suddenly change is no strategy at all for getting more reform and accountability, and neither is getting people involved or elected whom I personally perceive as parts of the larger problem (puzzle) involved, for the very same reasons as were true of the mayor.
They are the way they are, and show no desire to be open to changes and reform.
Especially an 82-year old woman running for re-election like Dotty Ross, who, even at this late date, still can't point to a single policy issue before the HB Commission the past four years where she successfully challenged the mayor or city manager on principle, by arguing her case so forcefully and persuasively with facts and concrete examples to buttress her points.
It has never happened!!!
Or, on the flip side, someone inexperienced like Alexander Lewy, whom I think is a pretty good guy generally speaking, but perhaps a bit prone to telling audiences exactly what they want to hear, as many inexperienced pols are, especially one who is a liaison to ethnic communities as his current job.
At least based on what I have personally seen, Lewy has never publicly questioned Cooper or Good's continued bad judgment or propensity for secretiveness even once, and the recent parking kerfuffle on Golden Isles hardly qualifies as public policy debate, since nobody thought it was a good idea except people at City Hall.
He might still do so, but from my perspective, it's getting a little late in the game for him to be something other than a young pol angling for the chance to make this Commission position a stepping-stone.
Where does Lewy or Ross or Anthony Sanders stand on the question of Police Chief Magill's egregious conduct and behavior, which was criminal in my mind, and his future as chief?
Here you have a man in Magill who consciously attempted to use his position to frame two innocent people, two Police officers, and continually lied about what he was doing to his boss, costing the city hundreds of thousands of dollars in settlements and associated costs, and even more to its tattered reputation?
That whole subject has STILL never come up at a HB City Commission meeting with Cooper and Good in charge.
Well, it's pretty easy to guess, isn't it, considering their silence on the matter the past year?
They don't want to make waves, but waves are exactly what need to be made now to wash away the longstanding cronyism, incompetency and sense of entitlement that is rampant at Hallandale Beach City Hall.
If this were a city that is self-evidently well-run like Coral Springs, the luxury of having 'bumps on a log' would be a different scenario, but we aren't, we're talking about Hallandale Beach, and it is in severe trouble.
This city is light years from being in Coral Springs' class of governance, regardless of Cooper and Good's self-serving moves to have the city, Ross and Good nominated for a FL LOC award for excellence, a topic that I will likely deal with in more depth on Sunday.
I simply don't want to replace one group of puppets on a string with another group that over a period of months has shown no real awareness of the severity of the problems this city faces in uncertain economic times, where tough decisions will need to be made, not deferred.
Frankly, I want much more than that right now.
I want to see positive, dynamic changes and reform so this city will stop being a regional punch line and laughingstock that scares prospective businesses and residents away with their weird City Hall machinations and adversarial attitudes towards residents and businesses alike.
The current Joy Cooper/Dotty Ross/William Julian roadmap leads to a dead end, folks, let's not pretend otherwise.
Their continuing poor choices and (ethical) lapses in judgment have gotten us to this current point, and THAT should be enough warning for anyone who is paying serious attention, and who aspires for this city to be much better than it currently is now.
For that reason I'll be voting for Arturo O'Neill and Carlos Simmons on Election Day November 4th for City Commission, and urge you to take your vote seriously and do the same.
(See www.Arturo-Oneill.com for more infromation.)
If you don't, you'll wake up on the morning of November 5th to find the same HB City Hall Crew mentality, just with new faces.
Do you really want more of the same?
Not me.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Hardly Breaking News: Anthony A. Sanders' Political Honeymoon is Over

My comments follow the spot-on comments of South Florida Sun-Sentinel columnist Michael Mayo below.
It's a copy of an email I'd already been writing long before Michael Mayo's powerful one-two punch of Sunday and Monday, with his column and blog posting on the latest (but certainly not the last) Hallandale Beach ethical scandal at City Hall.

Once I saw his column early Sunday morning, online, and then re-read it again over lunch at Denny's, I knew that the time had come to finally send out the thoughts that have been percolating inside my head since last August.

I post that email here with the hopes that perhaps reading Mayo's words and perspective, along with mine, might finally penetrate the brick wall of some in the community, who refuse to acknowledge what's been right in front of them at City Hall for so long, in all its petty and galling form.

I sent this out as an email on Tuesday afternoon to not only citizens, residents and business owners I know in Hallandale Beach, Hollywood and Aventura, but also to many print/TV reporters, columnists, producers, editors and management at South Florida media properties, most of whom I either know or have communicated with at some point in the recent past.
Many of them are quite familiar faces, people whose names you'd recognize, while others were folks who toil behind-the-scenes, but whose opinion helps decide what does and does not appear in print or on screen.
Yes, gate-keepers.

I also made a point of sending a copy to some of their sharper counterparts around the state in Orlando, Tampa/St.Pete, Jacksonville, Tallahassee and points in-between, whom I've also communicated with in the past on one issue or another, often about transit and transportation policy.

Many of them have also written about similar govt. excesses and abuses of power, or violations of the Sunshine Laws throughout the state, so they have a natural interest in the subject and want to know when and where it's happening again.

Unethical and anti-democratic behavior by locally elected government officials and their employees, coupled with efforts to usurp Florida's Sunshine Laws, ought to be of concern in every Florida community and news room, regardless of where it's located.
It simply can't be tolerated, and after the people behind it are exposed, they need to be properly punished and made an example of, to discourage similar behavior elsewhere.

In the current sad case involving Hallandale Beach, the serial offenders are 4/5ths of the elected City Commission, the City Manager and the City Attorney, whose collective ethical standards are so malleable and self-serving that they actually take umbrage at you describing the truth about what they do.

How dare I tell the truth about what they do!

Don't I know that Mayor Joy Cooper went to The White House recently?
Yeah, I know -big deal.

Neither President Obama nor his staff had any earthly idea of who and what Mayor
Joy Cooper is, and what she's capable of, for if they did, she'd never have been allowed to get past the White House security gate she went through, a gate I have more than passing familiarity with.

No, an elected official who consistently displays the sort of anti-democratic behavior and ethical scruples of Joy Cooper would never been allowed to set foot anywhere near the White House when Jed Bartlet was president, because you can be damn sure that either Toby Zeigler or Josh Lyman -or both!- would've made it crystal clear to Miami mayor Manny Diaz what the consequences would be if he didn't have a heart-to-heart talk with Cooper at the hotel.

Something along the lines of:
"Mayor Cooper, The White House says you can't come over for the League of Cities ceremony.  They found out about your completely un-necessary $3,700 City Hall office construction project, and didn't like the way it looked.  They were greatly concerned that a Florida reporter might ask if you are an example of the kind of person who will be making spending decisions with the economic
stimulus funds Washington is sending out."

Right, someone who bills city taxpayers for a new City Hall office that's not necessary, and who enjoys staying overnight at upscale South Florida hotels on the taxpayers dime when her home is less than an hour away, because it feeds into both her imperious attitude and bottomless well of vanity.

As someone who knew both the facts and the City Hall attempts to evade and obfuscate, not just with the Sanders' property in question here, but with all the other questionable incidents over the recent past, some of which have yet to even see the light of day, I was happy to temporarBoldily play the role of Paul Revere.


I also took the liberty of sending a copy of this to many South Florida politicians and state legislators, in particular, the entire Broward County Commission.
I did that so that they could NOT once again claim they didn't know anything about it, an excuse I and other Hallandale Beach citizens have heard far too many times in the past when illegal or questionable things happened in this community.

There's no denying that the "It's just Hallandale Beach" excuse is a very powerful one, as I've been told before by reporters and columnists that I respect, and as there's been so much anti-democratic negativity emanating out of Hallandale Beach City Hall for so very long, at a certain point, people outside the immediate community reach a saturation point and don't want to hear any more about it. 

But those of us who actually live here think we deserve much better than what we've been given, and will start holding publicly accountable the very people in government and law enforcement who are supposed to protect and preserve the rights of the public under both state and county laws -or report on same

As it happens, I also sent a copy of this to the offices of Governor Charlie Crist and Attorney General Bill McCollum, so that their staffs would know in no uncertain terms, exactly what the citizens of this community are up against at Hallandale Beach City Hall -determined serial offenders.
______________________________

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

For one politician, Hallandale Beach's land purchase seems heaven-sent

Michael Mayo

News Columnist

February 22, 2009

The Hallandale Beach City Commission moves in mysterious ways. Take the case of Higher Vision Ministries and the Eagle's Wings Development Center in the city's impoverished northwest area.

At a hastily called Feb. 12 special meeting, the commission approved buying the church-owned property where the Eagle's Wings community center stands for $235,000.

That's $35,000 more than the city's most recent appraisal of the land (in November), nearly $90,000 more than the value listed by the Broward property appraiser and $190,000 more than the church paid for the land in 2001.

Considering the way the economy and local real estate market have been tanking, that's a pretty sweet deal for Higher Visions.

So who runs the church and the social-service center? Pastor Anthony Sanders.

The same Anthony Sanders who's a Hallandale Beach commissioner.

"We were supposed to do this two years ago, long before I was on the commission," Sanders said Friday. "Back in early 2007, the price was $350,000. This should have been done a long time ago, but the city kept dragging its feet."

Sanders, elected to the commission in November after being appointed last summer, abstained from the 3-1 vote. He said the price was fair, noting two other appraisals that valued the property at $275,000 and $230,000.

But one city-sponsored appraisal put it at $147,000, and the most recent valued it at $200,000.

Given the circumstances, Commissioner Keith London (the lone dissenter) said the city should have waited longer. Or at least had the sense to take up the matter as a clearly labeled agenda item at a regular commission meeting.

The land purchase wasn't listed on the agenda for the special meeting. It was brought up as "other business" during the session called by Mayor Joy Cooper on an unrelated matter. The meeting wasn't held in the commission's usual spot where sessions are videotaped, but instead was in an upstairs room without cameras.

"Does this pass the smell test?" said London. "I don't think so."

You'd think Hallandale Beach commissioners, who took a public relations pounding for engineering a pay raise in a similarly sneaky way a couple years ago, would have learned by now.

The city, through its Community Redevelopment Agency, has vague plans to build an affordable housing project on the block where the center stands.

"We're doing it for the good of many, many people in Hallandale," said Vice Mayor Bill Julian, who approved the deal with Cooper and Commissioner Dorothy Ross.

London didn't understand the rush: "If somebody said we have to buy this parcel by a certain date to complete a plan or it will fall through, then I could see doing it. But there is no plan."

I called City Manager Mike Good to get their version of events but didn't hear back.

Sanders said the deal closed on Feb. 13, the day after the special meeting, with the money already in the bank. The Eagle's Wings center hasn't been given an eviction date, he said. The center, which provides computer and other training classes and submits food-stamp applications for residents, was open on Friday.

"Is it standard to buy a property from a commissioner and then let them use it rent-free?" London said.

Sanders said London is grousing because of "envy."

"This isn't a personal thing," London said. "It's a finance issue."

Sanders' church bought the property for $45,000 in 2001. Eagle's Wings has received $130,000 in city grant money this decade, along with county and state contracts. The nonprofit agency's 2007 tax return listed income of $113,190 in government grants.

Sanders, a longtime activist in the northwest area, said the city's purchase of the property is "just a drop in the bucket," noting the $12 million the city spent to acquire land for a park in a better part of town.

Sanders has been critical of the redevelopment agency's stagnant efforts in the northwest. Two-thirds of Hallandale Beach falls within the CRA boundaries, including robust areas near Gulfstream Park.

"When the economy was up, we didn't do anything [in northwest] and now the economy is down and they say we can't do anything," said Sanders. "So when can you do something?"

Seems like Sanders' commission colleagues have already done plenty for him.

Reader comments at: http://www.topix.net/forum/source/south-florida-sun-sentinel/TFOEQPNE0606QV7J6


Michael Mayo followed-up his spot-on Sunday column with a Monday post on his blog, Mayo on the Sideheadlined, Hallandale mayor: Land deal didn't need commission approval

http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/news/columnists/mayo/blog/2009/02/hallandale_mayor_land_deal_did.html



Reader comments at: 


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


Now we have witnessed not so much the 'last straw' as much as the last logical move that we've all, more or less, been anticipating since the 'August Surprise" resignation of Commissioner Fran Schiller.
A calculated move that suddenly brought Pastor Anthony Sanders into our midst at Hallandale Beach City Hall within five minutes of the announcement of a future vacancy, all without ever allowing the public to comment in any way before the vote took place.

A vacancy that was filled like a 'Rush-order' in five minutes, despite their being another regularly scheduled HB City Commission meeting two weeks later, well
before Schiller's resignation would go into effect.
A public meeting where HB citizens and residents could've spoken to the sort of qualifications or qualities they preferred in an interim commissioner, not
what kind Mayor Cooper and City Manager Mike Good preferred.

At a minimum, regardless of the public's own individual personal preference for a replacement, most would've insisted that the position be filled in exactly the same way as the last vacancy was handled in November of 2006, 21 months before, where Cooper and Good's City Hall repeatedly crowed to the press about theimportance of having a transparent and deliberate process in choosing Joe Gibbons' interim successor.

So what happened to that deliberate process back in August?
Simply put, that process became an Inconvenient Fact, and got in the way of what they wanted to do.

Deep down, are you really surprised that the same City Hall crew that made their TRIPLE 'salary grab of 2007' or that approved Mike Good's over-the-top city manager's contract in December, all without the item being properly placed on the agenda, being properly noticed for the public, and without any staff/backup documents being offered before the vote, over lunch, would do it again?

As I've said so many times, there's nothing coincidental about it -that's their default M.O., modus operandi.
They're serial offenders without any shred of remorse.

Seriously, why, given the current economy and the awful financial condition of the city, would Mayor Cooper want to spend over $3,700 for construction of a new office for herself, when there was nothing physically wrong with her existing one?
Because she can, and she doesn't really care at all what you think about it. 


COMMISSIONER REQUEST

REQUEST #048/09

DATE: January 5, 2009  

        TO: Bill Brant, Director Public Works

        Jennifer Frastai, City Manager Administrator  

FROM: Commissioner Keith London  

THRU: D. Mike Good, City Manager

Your browser may not support display of this image.

The following information/action was requested by Commissioner Keith London as noted: 

      RE: Commission Office Expenses  

Please provide me with the following information: 

  • Copy of the time sheets for everyone who worked on Mayor Cooper new office space.
  • Wages including benefits for everyone who worked on Mayor Cooper new office space
  • Copy of expense reports for materials to create Mayor Cooper new office space.
  • Copy of receipts of materials
  • Original letter asking for a new office from Mayor Cooper
 

Additionally, please include what all commissioners have requested for office improvements                           

__________________________ 

      Please take the necessary steps to complete the request and submit a Summary

       Report to my office no later than January 19, 2009.

__________________________ 

DATE: January 13, 2009      

TO: D. Mike Good, City Manager 

FROM: William Brant, P.E., Director, Public Works, Utilities & Engineering  

Your browser may not support display of this image.RE: Above Commission Request 
 

SUMMARY REPORT:  

Staff received request on November 18, 2008, (W/O # WF0031889, WF 0031987) to install window in room 202, move the Mayor's furniture and paint Commissioner Sanders Office. This project was completed by December 31, 2008.  

Staff respectfully request to consider this CR completed and closed. (MM) 


Labor / Wages  

Pedro Perez $35.91 hr  48 hrs $1,724.00 Mayor's Office 

Michael Harris $27.37 hr 24 hrs $560.00 Mayor's Office 

Donald Williams $30.21 hr 7 hrs $211.00 Mayor's Office 


Edward Ryan $30.21 hr 8 hrs $241.00 Sanders Office

Total   87 hrs $2,736.00 


Invoices  

K&K Mirror $360.00

Home Depot $237.40

Sherwin Williams $232.44


Total $829.84 


PROJECT TOTAL $3,565.84 


Staff Researching Request  

Michael Morse $54.16  1.5 hrs  $81.24  

Dean Lettera $59.71  1.5 hrs  $89.56 

Yolanda Benitez $26.07  1 hr  $26.07

Total   4hrs  $196.87 
 

PROJECT TOTAL INCLUDING ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF  

84 HOURS $3,762.71 

___________________________________

Department Head Signature       Date 
 

Department Director/Staff Time to Complete: 4 hrs

Your browser may not support display of this image.

Your browser may not support display of this image.City Manager/Staff Time to Complete: 

_________________________

DATE: January 19, 2009     

TO: D. Mike Good, City Manager

FROM: Jennifer Frastai, City Manager Administrator

Your browser may not support display of this image.RE: Above Commission Request

SUMMARY REPORT: 

The following is a list of furniture expenses:

Mayor Cooper's:

Conference Table: $968.08

Desk Chair: $333.98

Guest Chair: $230.45

File Cabinet: $423.85

Delivery/Set up/Freight: $205.00


Commissioner Sanders:

Desk Chair: $203.49

Desk Accessories: $242.43

Guest Chair (2): 334.80

_____________________

Department Head Signature       Date

Department Director/Staff Time to Complete: 2 hrs

Your browser may not support display of this image.City Manager/Staff Time to Complete: 


So why do you suppose Mayor Cooper waited until AFTER the November election
to demand a new office, despite their being nothing wrong with her old one?

It's not an aberration, it's simply the way they WANT to do their 'business':
self-dealing and doling out your tax dollars to the favored few, away from
the public glare of both citizen's notice or the attendant prying eyes of the local media, such as it is.

There's a logical reason that all these particular matters happened in a HB City Hall room, over lunch, where not a single camera is present, and where Minutes of that particular proceeding won't be publicly available for many, many months:
Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper, City Manager Mike Good -and yes-man City Attorney David Jovewho continually winks at both the spirit and letter of our state's Sunshine Laws- are desperately trying to evade public scrutiny and accountability, otherwise they'd stop doing the same thing over-and-over, year-after-year.

But they're not stopping, are they?

Back in early August, Arturo O'Neill was sitting next to me in the HB City Hall Chambers the moment that Comm. Fran Schiller's "surpriseannouncement was made public.
Arturo immediately turned to me and even before Mike Good finished reading the Schiller resignation letter that he himself had written, said something amazingly prescient and remarkable.

Arturo said that he thought that Mayor Cooper would name Pastor Sanders
 as interim HB commissioner, and might, in effect, leverage that interim
appointment for her political support in the future, plus support the city's
purchase of the Sanders' property, even at a higher cost than seems logical, given the current real estate market, the property's location, and, certainly not least, NO specific public plan to actually do anything there that anyone could point to.

In exchange for his seat at the dais and the mayor's support, at some point in the future, Sanders would try to elicit/create public support in NW Hallandale Beach to re-visit the crazy and unpopular waste plant idea that Mayor
Cooper and City Manager Good attempted to foist on that community for so very long.

Ladies and gentlemen, we have our new Nostradamus -my friend, Arturo O'Neill.
So far, 100% accuracy!

As soon as Arturo said it, it not only sounded 100% plausible to me, it sounded
exactly like the sort of crude sweetheart deal this HB City Hall crew would do,
regardless of how it looked publicly or the costs involved, financial or otherwise,
since as a practical matter, they practically dare HB citizens, residents and the press to do something about their unethical and questionable behavior by continuing to engage in it.
They've found a form of behavior and mode of operation that fits their particular self-interestsand they have no desire to abandon it.

Six-and-a-half months after Sanders was named a Hallandale Beach Commissioner, we now clearly see the logical and predictable result of that tactical move in August by Cooper & Company, just as Arturo presciently predicted.
We see the logical result of the Miami Herald and South Florida's Sun-Sentinel's editorial board election endorsement of Sanders for November's election, where the Sun-Sentinel wrote a story about the HB city commission
race AFTER their endorsement, and the Herald, well, they NEVER wrote even a single story about the HB race.

We see the logical result of the Herald's management and editors consciously choosing to NOT send a reporter to cover the HB City Commission meetings since early June of 2008, at the Joint City Commission meeting with the City of Hollywood, noteworthy for Mayor Cooper strongly suggesting the idea of Hollywood joining them in a lawsuit against the state because of their upcoming outfall requirements.

I've already mentioned to many of you over the past few weeks at venues all over the area that as far as I was concerned, Anthony A. Sanders' political honeymoon had long since ended, and that the very folks in this city who voted for him must now must be wondering just what exactly they got for their troubles in November.

I know for a fact that they wonder, because people have told me so, stopping me at grocery stores, coffee shops and even over at the beach, to share their disappointment and chagrin.

Of their dashed hopes that he'd be a positive voice for change and reform on the HB City Commission, and begin to undo the taint that has been attached to it for so many years.
And how they watch the Commission meetings from the Chambers or from their home on the city's under-utilized cable channel and wonder when he's going to actually -finally- ask a single good probing question from the dais that reveals some degree of knowledge about what's going on all around the city.
Instead, he gives the same canned responses and glittering generalities he's
been spouting for six months.

They wonder when he's going to actually show some independent thought, and
challenge something Mayor Cooper or City Manager Good says or does, not for the sake of disagreeing, but rather because he honestly disagrees with them and has what he believes is a better solution in mind to resolve a problem.
Instead, he simply nods in agreement, hour-after-hour, month-after-month.
Not a voice for change, reform or accountability, but rather just an echo chamber,
someone happy to be on the dais.

In the political and govt. system the City of Hallandale Beach operates in,
Sanders is supposed to represent ALL the citizens and residents of this city,
not just the ones in the NW part of the city, though you wouldn't necessarily
know it by what he and his supporters actually say and do.
And I say that as someone who gave him the benefit of the doubt, and who has long been in favor of a HB City Commission that was comprised of both fixed districts as well as at-large seats, like Aventura's.

If you're really curious and want to see what the real appraisal numbers for the Sanders property were before Mayor Cooper & Company appointed him to the commission, or forgot exactly how we got to this sad point, where the
public-be-damned is HB City Hall's motto, just go to my blog, since I publicly identified them LAST year.

Sanders property at 501 N.W. 1st Avenue, Hallandale Beach, Florida
The appraisal information then was as follows:

LB Slater Appraisal #13057 $147,000

LB Slater Appraisal #13057a $147,000

Butterfield Appraisal #8785 $275,000

Broward County Property Appraiser Value $146,360

Speaking of municipal boondoggles, if you haven't already seen it, please see the article and comments here:

As you may've noticed in the email address field above, I'm sending a cc of this to many people whom you've undoubtedly heard of or seen before, each of whom has power or influence to some degree by virtue of their job.

Some of them actually know all about what's been going on here in Hallandale Beach, and have either asked me or others about it via phone calls, emails or face-to-face encounters here in town, where they've seen for themself what things are really like here, dismayed at how self-evident the problems are, even while HB City Hall whistles past the graveyard.

Still others are folks who haven't shown any interest at all, but really ought to have, given their jobs, yet don't even bother to feign interest when they're made aware of what's been going on here for so long under the current HB City Hall crew.
I won't name names here, but they all know which category they fall into -and so do I.

In the future, you might want to ask some of them. especially the media people,
why there's such a pronounced indifference to what's going on here in the year 2009.

Ask them why it's so difficult for their media organization to cover local non-crime news in this part of Broward, and, IF this is going to continue, why
should you want to read/watch the words/video of people who are, at best,
indifferent to what's going on where you live.
It's your choice after all, and in the year 2009, they need you MUCH MORE
than you need them.

In particular, you might want to ask that question to the Herald's David
Landsberg, the paper's publisher and president. 
I will tell you, though that for myself at least, the longer the newspaper makes the conscious choices they do, which ratify the status quo, the less the Miami Herald's future, if any, is an emotional issue for me, and becomes merely an
academic question.

As for me, I no longer concern myself with the personal feelings of South Florida politicians, government employees, news reporters,  editors, producers and media management, who act like what I can readily observe everyday around me in this part of Broward County, is either NOT really happening, or isn't important.
I disagree and will make my future choices accordingly, and suggest that you do the very same.