Saturday, December 5, 2009

So Chic, So Loud, SoBe: 36 Hours in South Beach, FL, and the noise violation known as the Gansevoort South rooftop

So Chic, So Loud, SoBe: 36 Hours in South Beach, Fla.,
and the noise violation known as the Gansevoort South
rooftop


New York Times

36 Hours in South Beach, Fla.
By Damien Cave
December 6, 2009

South Beach gets a lot of abuse from residents. Too much cologne, critics say; too expensive, too crowded. But like other American meccas of decadence, SoBe still has an irresistible, democratic pull.

Read rest of story at: http://travel.nytimes.com/2009/12/06/travel/06hours.html

----------
"And at the Gansevoort South in Miami, an employee died after a gate fell on him. A source said the unidentified worker "was sent to fix a gate which his employer knew he could not. The gate fell and crushed him. They didn't even call police. At a Miami Beach planning-board meeting, the Gansevoort directors showed up and acted like nothing happened."

see DEATHS HAUNT TRENDY HOTELS
New York Post
March 29, 2009
http://new-yorkpost.biz/p/pagesix/item_IXt8DoS76fm9SZDitmOv1O
--------------------
Miami Beach Planning Board
http://web.miamibeachfl.gov/planning/

Tuesday December 15th, 3 p.m.
Agenda item 2,
File #1840, 2301 Collins Avenue,
(a/k/a 2377 Collins Avenue
Gansevoort Rooftop venue) -
progress report related to a written warning
and a noise violation.


see http://www.gansevoortsouth.com/



Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Formidable! Sonia Rykiel Pour H&M'S Unforgettable Paris Party; video you have to see to believe

Received this package via email early this morning,
about 3:16 a.m. to be precise, but wanted to wait
a few hours to catch my breath, as I'm just trying
to come to grips with how great the 2009 Victoria's
Secret Fashion Show
was last night on CBS,
perhaps the single best-produced show on TV
this year other than the Emmy's with Neil Patrick
Harris
or the Pilot for USA's instant hit, White Collar.


(Plus, trying to get the image of the amazing

Behati
Prinsloo
out of my head.
I've got a post on her coming-up in a few days.)

As you watch this beautifully produced video of the
party last night in Paris for the launch of the
much-antipated
SONIA RYKIEL POUR H&M line,
keep one thing firmly in mind.

Despite having more time, money and resources
to throw at it to make it a spectacle, there's ZERO
chance that the NFL will have anything even
remotely this clever or jaw-dropping for the
Super Bowl down
here in two months.
(I'm thinking Saints 37, Colts 31, right now.)

As I watched this video in amazement, knowing
that she was there, somewhere, I couldn't help
but scan for longtime film fave
Kate Bosworth
in the background in every frame.


When I finally saw her, once again, I couldn't help
but wish that she'd put on a little more weight,
but that's me. I really think there's a truly amazing
actress inside
of her, with range that would be
entirely self-evident with
the right nuanced script,
but wow, her longtime skinny
persona really
makes it hard to concentrate on
what she's
actually saying and doing up on the
screen
sometimes.


At times, it's almost as distracting as her natural

and amazing good looks.

http://justjared.buzznet.com/2009/12/02/kate-bosworth-holds-onto-hm/


I have a lot of similar feelings script-wise
about the
delightfully curvier and funnier
Heather Graham.
Is there a reason why nobody else has thought

of casting the two of them as sisters or cousins?
It's obvious!

Heather
as the older, funnier California cousin,
Kate the self-serious Bostonian cousin who
needs to desperately break out of her shell
a bit before
her perfectionist mode completely
alienates
everyone she knows.
So, when an opportunity presents itself one day,

they take a trip together to Europe when
fashion
exec Heather heads to Paris...

To get a better look at the the new
Sonia Rykiel
Pour H&M
line, go to
http://www.hm.com/us/#/soniarykiel/

---------

from the H&M press release
I received this morning:

FANTASY, MAGIC, FASHION!

SONIA RYKIEL POUR H&M'S UNFORGETTABLE PARIS PARTY

Kate Bosworth, Eva Herzigova and Nadja Auermann partied together with fashionistas in a magical world in Paris last night to celebrate the launch of Sonia Rykiel pour H&M. The Grand Palais, one of the city’s most famous buildings, was transformed into a Parisian fantasy land for around 2,000 guests. Among them were stars such as Jean Paul Gaultier, Ellen von Unwerth and Emanuelle Béart, who walked through an enchanted forest before arriving at a recreation of Saint Germain, the spiritual home of Sonia Rykiel. Then, seated under a specially made Eiffel Tower, guests were given a preview of the Sonia Rykiel pour H&M lingerie collection, which debuts in around 1,500 H&M stores worldwide from December 5, as well as the knitwear collection for women and girls, which arrives in around 200 stores on February 20, 2010.

“It was all about the brilliance of Paris and of Sonia Rykiel. We wanted to give our guests a story-like experience, let them enter a fantasy world where they could discover the Sonia Rykiel pour H&M collections and let themselves go”, says Nathalie Rykiel, artistic director and president of Sonia Rykiel.

“It was the most magical evening. Sonia Rykiel is so totally Parisian, the epitome of chic. This is the spirit of the Sonia Rykiel pour H&M collections that shone through at the party last night. It was such a thrill to work with a fashion icon like Sonia Rykiel. We are really happy with the collections, which we feel is 100 percent Sonia Rykiel. The lingerie collection is really the perfect Christmas gift”, says Margareta van den Bosch, H&M’s creative advisor.

Held on the first night of December, the H&M party for Sonia Rykiel truly marked the start of the festive season. Embodying the essence of Paris as much as Sonia Rykiel herself, the glittering city inside the Grand Palais was like a sparkling and surreal theme park for adults. The collections were displayed on floats which emerged from a recreation of the Arc de Triomphe, with a Parisian funfair as backdrop.

“I’ve always been a big fan of Sonia Rykiel. To me she is so feminine, and so wonderfully dramatic, like a big glittery bow on a dress. It’s crazy here, I wasn’t expecting this. It’s like a mini carnival,” says Kate Bosworth.

“I love Sonia Rykiel, and I love the association with H&M. Sonia Rykiel is like a revolution in fashion. She makes sexy clothes, but ones that are very modern, cool and feminine. She’s super-clever and super-talented and I have big, big admiration for her,” says Jean Paul Gaultier.

“I think it’s very Sonia Rykiel to have her presentation with H&M here. She’s so Paris, and I don’t think she could have had it anywhere else,” says Eva Herzigova.




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqilHsSzQCE&feature=player_profilepage



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3k54qX5xZQM

Now that you've seen it, this is how they put the
Sonia Rykiel show was put together.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFjfbVQ4gVI

See also: http://www.soniarykiel.com/
-------
More H&M vids at http://www.youtube.com/hm

I last wrote about H&M in May:
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2009/05/swedish-retailer-h-plans-2-stores.html

Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Swedish retailer H&M plans 2 stores for...not South Florida,
but Central Florida -where all the Svenska flickor shop.
The H&M in Washington is about six blocks east of The White House.
Meanwhile, in the year 2009, there's still no general interest bookstore within the city limits of Miami. Congratulations!
---------------------
Orlando Sentinel
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/business/orl-swedish-retailer-to-open-two-stores-051109,0,370371.story

Swedish retailer H&M plans 2 stores for Central Florida
By Sandra Pedicini
--------------

Not so sure about the validity of the bookstore thing
putdown anymore, but will investigate further.

Nothing quite proves the lip service of FL transportation policy like Joe Gibbons being MIA on those issues in his own district

Sent this out as an email a few minutes ago to the
folks in my network of concerned South Florida
citizens and to some of the reporters who've written
about this subject over the past week.

----------------
December 2nd, 2009
1:30 p.m.

Regarding some of the recent articles and blog posts
-at bottom- on State Rep. Joe Gibbons and lots of
'huffing and puffing' about changing the dates of the
special FL legislative session on public transportation
issues because of some conflicting logistics over the
National Black Caucus annual meeting to be held
in FTL, that Rep. Gibbons is speaking at tomorrow
-a little local perspective goes a long way.

I think I sent it to many of you originally as a bcc,
but just in case I didn't, back in June, I wrote an
email and subsequent blog post on June 4th that
gets to the heart of the problem as it involves the
state's many transportation issues and what
seems to be a clear fact pattern of Joe Gibbons'
somnolence
here in his own district on those
very issues.

I include it below for your perusal, along with
some other pertinent facts that seem worth
mentioning now that he is expecting the entire
legislature to change their plans because of his
self-interests.
That is, in case facts actually still matter.
---------------
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2009/06/tomas-boiton-is-on-case-south-florida.html


A few paragraphs into my post I write:

Nothing quite says lip service like folks

acting all concerned with transportation

policy and Quality of Life issues when being

interviewed by reporters, but then skipping the

chance to appear at an informative Saturday

morning event where actual concerned South

Florida citizens are present and accounted

for.


Plus there was a great speaker like Gordon Price

of Simon Fraser University in Vancouver,

the noted Smart Growth expert, who made a truly

fantastic presentation that had most attendees

wistful as they watched it, and even more angry

than they expected at seeing, once again,

how much worse this area is than it ought to be

compared to other places.

(See http://www.sfu.ca/city/bioGordon.htm and

http://www.pricetags.ca/presentations.html )


Mr. Price flew across North America from

beautiful Vancouver to deliver a powerful message

in Fort Lauderdale, and I made time to make the

relatively short trip up to the Broward County

Convention Center to hear him - and was very

glad I did, as many other attendees told me

as well.


Based on her pathetic track record and apparent

fear of actually interacting with knowledgeable

taxpayer citizens, instead of the govt. officials

and trade groups she clearly prefers to interact

with, which I've written about here before,

I completely expected FDOT Sec. Stephanie

Kopelousos to be a no-show.


She didn't disappoint, so her non-appearance

was NOT exactly Breaking News.


But where was my own State Rep., Joe Gibbons?

Or my State Senator, Eleanor Sobel?


Gibbons, the former Hallandale Beach City

Commissioner who now acts oblivious to

all the self-evident unethical and incompetent

activity taking place here in HB, happens to be

the ranking Democrat on the House Transportation

and Economic Development Appropriations

Committee, and yet was a no-show that morning,

as were South Florida Senators Alex Diaz de la

Portilla and Chris Smith, both of the Senate

Committee on Transportation and Economic

Development Appropriations.


Nice going!

Way to represent!


The folks who actually attended the Summit won't

soon forget who the no-shows were.


See also:
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2009/03/tri-rails-need-for-dedicated-funding.html

----------

Because of my longtime interest in transportation
and public policy issues, I have been to every
SFECC meeting held in Gibbons' own district
since he was elected, both here in Hallandale Beach,
as well as meetings in next door Hollywood and
Aventura.
And I've been to ones in Miami and in Fort
Lauderdale.

I've seen engaged county and city commissioners
from South Florida like Sue Gunzburger,
Beam Furr, Keith London, Zev Auerbach,
Linda Sherwood
...
But no Joe Gibbons.

I think it's fair to say that I've been to every major
public transportation meeting held in South Florida
over the past 3-4 years, whether the Regional meeting
I reference above, the one held in Dania last Fall
on funding sources for Tri-Rail and commuter rail
in the state, or the one hosted by Broward County
three years ago at the Broward County Convention
Center, all of which had hundreds of people
attending
.

I was even at the somewhat impromptu meeting
held over a year ago at Hollywood City Hall hosted
by Rep, Elaine Schwartz and Sen. Eleanor Sobel
on Tri-Rail funding and related transportation problems,
that drew a few dozen concerned citizens from this
part of Broward County and Northeast Miami-Dade
County.

That doesn't make me an expert, of course, just
a concerned citizen who pays attention to what
is and isn't happening.

Given his position, a State Representative and
the Chair of a Committee that deals directly with
transportation, why is it that at these meetings,
ALL held within minutes of Joe Gibbons' district,
he's NEVER seen?

Not even at the ones NOT held during the
regular legislative session?


That seems like a reasonable question a real
reporter might want to ask him one of these days.

At some point, it's perfectly fair to say that he's
a no-show on this issue in his own area of the
state.
That time is now.

And please, if you can, explain to me why House
Minority
Leader Sands and Gibbons won't
answer the basic
question of what would happen
to the special session if the legislature actually
waited until
Monday to start and run head into
Hanukkah?


We know the answer to that, don't we?
The predictable hue and cry that we would arise.
And yet for their own purposes, Sands and Gibbons
feign ignorance and act like they don't know that
holiday is on calendars in everyone's house and
office.
That attitude certainly explains a lot of why things
are the way they are in this state.
Second-rate, backwards and half-assed.

So what, exactly, is their clever alternative to the
dilemma?
To start on Monday and then stop on Wednesday
for a few days for the holidays and have everyone
leave town, then come back the following Monday?
And to what, use Christmas as a cudgel and
deadline?


That not only doesn't make sense but means the
public will once again be forced to listen to
Members complain about how difficult it is to get
to far-off Tallahassee from South Florida,
a tiresome complaint that doesn't elicit any
sympathy from anyone not related to them,
esp. since taxpayers are stuck paying the
ridiculous sum of $600 for Members' round trip
flights to Tallahassee because of the Legislature's
inability to run logically even during the Regular
session.
Zero sympathy!

If Joe Gibbons is genuinely concerned about
transportation issues in South Florida, why,
to the best of my knowledge, has no-show Gibbons
and his State House Committee never held a single
field-hearing in South Florida, the scene of the
crime, if you will?

In his representation of me and other constituents
in this district on these important economic and
Quality-of-Life issues, at a certain point, it's fair
to say that it's exactly what it looks like: somnolence.
He's now morphed into Rip Van Gibbons.

----------

Black lawmakers: Delay session

MiamiHerald.com - Steve Bousquet, Marc Caputo -
A special legislative session scheduled for this week on Florida rail projects has raised the ire of black lawmakers because it conflicts with their plans ...

Fla. speaker refuses to delay special session

MiamiHerald.com -
AP TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- House Speaker Larry Cretul has refused to delay a special legislative session that will conflict with the annual meeting of the ...

Black lawmaker flap: House Dem leader asks for excused absence from special ...

Palm Beach Post - Michael C. Bender -
Designated House Democratic Leader Ron Saunders, R-Key West, requested an excused absence from the first two days ...

Count Saunders out of special this week: He's with black caucus

Tampabay.com - Ron Saunders -
And so the game of chicken/who flinches first continues between House leadership and black legislators and House Dems... Rep. ...

Black legislators seek to delay special session

Sarasota Herald-Tribune - John Kennedy -
TALLAHASSEE - Republican legislative leaders Tuesday struggled to tamp down rising anger among House Democrats ...

House leaders won't delay special session for black legislators conference

Tampa Tribune - Catherine Dolinski -
TALLAHASSEE - House leaders stuck today to their schedule for a special legislative session starting on Thursday, ...

Session timing at odds with national meet of black legislators; GOP leaders ...

Palm Beach Post - Dara Kam -
TALLAHASSEE — Florida House Speaker Larry Cretul on Tuesday refused to delay the onset of the special session slated to begin Thursday despite ...

Speaker Larry Cretul: no dice on special session delay

Juice - Josh Hafenbrack -
House Speaker Larry Cretul is sticking to his guns: The special session will start on Thursday, as planned, despite protests from Democrats that the ...

Saunders says he'll skip first two days of session

Juice - Josh Hafenbrack -
How many days can the flap over the scheduling of Thursday's special session – which coincides with a national black legislative conference in Fort ...

South Florida meeting won't delay special session on transportation

Sun-Sentinel.com -
AP TALLAHASSEE - (AP) -- House Speaker Larry Cretul has refused to delay a special legislative session that will conflict with the annual meeting of the ...

Black legislators' caucus meeting in Lauderdale

Broward Politics - Brittany Wallman - ‎Dec 1, 2009‎
Leaders from across the nation are expected to gather in Fort Lauderdale on Wednesday for the 33rd annual National Black Caucus of State Legislators ...

Rail special session conflicts with black legislator conference in South Florida

Orlando Sentinel - Aaron Deslatte - ‎Nov 30, 2009‎
By Josh Hafenbrack, Tallahassee Bureau TALLAHASSEE -- The Legislature will be in special session starting Thursday at 9 am, it looks like. ...

House GOP "racially insensitive," Sands charges

Sun-Sentinel.com - Josh Hafenbrack - ‎Dec 1, 2009‎
House Democratic Leader Franklin Sands, D-Weston, warned that the Legislature's Republican leadership is verging on being “racially insensitive” for ...

Black legislators up in arms about special session date

Juice - Josh Hafenbrack - ‎Nov 30, 2009‎
Just one problem: That's a big day for the state's black caucus, which is hosting a national conference for black legislators in Fort Lauderdale from ...

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

The Ding-Dong Broward School Board is meeting in secret right now... James Notter, Class Clown

In which the Broward School Board and Supt.
James Notter channels Joy Cooper's thoroughly
duplicitous and anti-democratic Hallandale Beach
City Hall, and expects nobody to ask questions,
least of all, the media.

And he wonders why the Broward Schools have
a PR problem with Broward taxpayers and parents?
In a normal community with standards, he'd already
have been fired.

Does PR guru Bob Butterworth know about this
meeting in secret?
And when, specifically, is he going to meet with Broward
parents and taxpayers in public and answer their questions?
Just wondering.
Or is that too much to ask?

Meanwhile, a real educator, Miss Frances, does her thing



South Florida Sun-Sentinel

South Florida Schools education blog
The Broward School Board is meeting... Who knew
Posted by Akilah Johnson
November 30, 2009
10:23 a.m.

The Broward School Board is meeting this morning at Taravella High School in Coral Springs to discuss the measure being pushed by the district to change the way the school system measures classroom space.

Apparently, this morning's meeting, which started at 9:30 a.m., was called last minute and doesn’t appear on the district’s Web site or the School Board’s calendar.

UPDATE: They just added the notices about today's meeting to the district site.

Read the rst of the post at:
http://weblogs.sun-sentinel.com/educationblog/2009/11/the_broward_school_board_is_me_1.html

Monday, November 30, 2009

Whistleblower's steadfastness + well-timed FOIA requests + Washington Post's Lisa Rein = evidence of public safety at risk re WMATA's proposed Silver Line.

Below is yet another striking example where FOIA requests and interviews at the right time,
plus some hard, critical questions asked by someone unwilling to look the other way, Steve T. Mackey, has led to evidence of shortcuts on public safety and plain old incompetence in a national transportation plan of consequence, WMATA's proposed Silver Line

The eye-opening Lisa Rein article on train safety referenced below in the WashingtonPost editorial that ran on Thanksgiving, complete with diagrams and photos, is at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/21/AR2009112102323.html

Some excellent photos that pinpoint the exact area under discussion -which is two Metro stations past where I used to live, and near a very popular Applebee's in McLean that my friends and I used to frequent- are at: http://www.roadstothefuture.com/WFC_Metro_Station.html 

 And since it wasn't in the papers down here, I can tell you that they had a crash there on Sunday with millions of dollars worth of damage. 


 And don't overlook the obvious -this is precisely what a first-class editorial looks like. Compare and contrast with the shallow LCD silliness that passes for big-thinking editorials in South Florida's newspapers, esp. the ones dealing with immigration policy. 

Latin America politics, public corruption or anything having to do with real estate. 
----------- 
Supporting evidence 
'You don't build bridges without testing.' 
Thursday, November 26, 2009

THE MANAGEMENT and contractors involved in building one of the largest public infrastructure projects in the nation -- the $5.2 billion extension of Metro to Dulles International Airport and beyond -- suddenly stand accused of slipshod procedures and casual neglect of critical safety issues.

It's a damning indictment. The senior federal official with direct responsibility for transit has charged the project manager, Washington's airports authority, with submitting an "unresponsive and inadequate" plan to test crucial support structures for a planned bridge that would carry Metro trains over Interstate 66. Other officials with intimate knowledge of the project to build Metro's Silver Line are alarmed that safety tests that should have been obvious and obligatory were neglected or resisted by the contractors, a partnership between civil engineering giants Bechtel and URS. A whistleblower who formerly oversaw construction of the bridge has quit the project. And crucial documents appear to be missing.

These and other serious matters, raised in a report Sunday by The Post's Lisa Rein, have cast a shadow over the 23-mile Silver Line project. They will continue to darken perceptions of it unless they are addressed thoroughly, quickly and with an unstinting focus on safety. To its credit, the airports authority now appears to be doing just that, although it has not laid out its plans in detail.

The root of these concerns is the strength and integrity of a number of existing support structures -- concrete-encased steel pilings driven deep into the ground and each designed to withstand 70 tons -- that are to be used as foundations for the bridge. These foundations, built in 1977 in anticipation of Metro's eventual extension, were all but forgotten until workers came across them two years ago. Project engineers then decided to save money and time by using 11 of them as footings atop which pillars would be built to support the bridge.

It seems plain that the money saved by not having to build these foundations from scratch should be used to test the load-bearing capacity of all the underground pilings -- especially given their age and the apparent disappearance of original construction records. That sort of testing is exactly what Steve T. Mackey, the project's former chief bridge manager, insisted on. Incredibly, Mr. Mackey was overruled by a supervisor, and his attempts to alert the Federal Transit Administration about his concerns were ignored (outrageously) for more than six months; he resigned last year. "I'm old enough to know you don't build bridges without testing," he said.

There are some troubling questions here. One is whether the airports authority, which owns the project and the problem -- and is therefore responsible for a solution -- has the expertise, experience and muscle to manage this project. The authority did little to inspire confidence when, pressed to submit a testing plan by the feds, it merely wrote a cover letter for one submitted by the contractor, known as Dulles Transit Partners. Now the authority says all 11 structures will be tested.

Another question is why Dulles Transit Partners resisted testing every one of the foundations, as appears to have been the case. Was it because of cost, or the risk of disruption to service on the Orange Line or I-66, or because some forms of testing can actually harm the structures?

We make no presumption about the condition of the 11 existing foundations; as far as we know, and based on the limited tests that have been performed, there is no evidence to suggest they are unsafe. We understand that testing all the foundations could temporarily disrupt Orange Line service or require briefly closing part of I-66. It's also possible that tests could trigger cost overruns. What's critical is that the airports authority, as the project manager and owner, comes up with an informed, independent and transparent plan based on the most exacting safety and engineering standards. Nothing short of that will restore the public's confidence in Metro's most ambitious expansion plan to date.

Reader comments at:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/21/AR2009112102323_Comments.html

There are a lot of well-educated professionals in Northern Virginia who believe a tunnel would be better and cheaper (and faster) for the Tyson's Corner/Route 7 area than an elevated line, including many of my friends who have offices near there. 

Their slogan is 'It's not over until it's under." See http://www.tysonstunnel.org/index2.htm

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Exclusive: The 2009 Hallandale Beach Blog 'Turkeys of the Year'



And the "winners" of the 2009 Hallandale
Beach Blog
Turkey of the Year Award are...

Owing to the overwhelming number of worthy
and estimable candidates for Turkey of the Year,
I have been forced to create four categories so
that the various nominees are competing against
like-minded competitors, no matter the levels
of incompetence, laziness, petty malevolence,
general lack of concern for others or general
half-assedness in the performance of their jobs
or in the public service.

One group of nominees is being considered for
their performances in Broward County,
including Hallandale Beach and Hollywood,
yet another for South Florida outside of Broward
County, a third for the Sunshine State, and one
for the 57 States of Barack Obama's America.



Friends, I hardly need tell you that the nominees
were all deserving in their own particular ways,
and it's a damn shame they can't all "win,"
but some hard decisions needed to be rendered
by yours truly, as some nominees just proved
more outrageously egregious than others.

You know what I always say, you have to give
people their due when they go above-and-beyond.

That's why I've spent so much time over at
the Panera Bread on Hallandale Beach Blvd.
the past two weeks, carefully going over these
decisions in between sips of Hazelnut coffee
and bites of Asiago Cheese bagels, deciding
which parties made the cut and which ones
didn't.

Over the next week, here on the blog, I'll list
ALL the nominees in the four categories and what
some of them 'brought to the table' this past year
to make them worthy of my consideration here
-and your attention- since in some cases,
their performances might otherwise be completely
unknown to you.

God forbid that you don't discover what they've
said or done before the year is up.

Plus, I suspect you'll now have a better means
of understanding and appreciating how the
'winners' accomplished their feats.

Trust me, in most cases, you'll be glad to know,
so that you will have a more fully-shaped picture
in your own mind of some of these people,
organizations and institutions.

In each category, when possible, I will attempt
to demonstrate thru photos or video how they
came to make the list.

I should also mention that for reasons that will
be made abundantly clear over the next few weeks
and months, there are certain individuals whose
personal and professional behavior, conduct and
words while performing their duties are so
egregious
and harmful to the public good
and contrary to law that I will not mention the
specifics here now, preferring instead to share
them with you in the future after I have completely
finished making my formal written complaints
to the appropriate State and County officials
and law enforcement organizations in Tallahassee
and closer to home.

At that time, you will come to know the true
character or rather the lack of it in certain
people that you think you already know,
and I can tell you with certainty that you will
NOT like what they've been saying and doing
behind your back, in many cases, for years.

So, with all that said, here are the four 'winners'
of the 2009 Hallandale Beach Blog 'Turkeys
of the Year'

a.) The 57 states of Barack Obama:
The Mainstream Media
, MSM.

b,) The Sunshine State of Florida:
Florida Secretary of Transportation Stephanie
Kopelousos
.

c.) The Hegemonic People's Republic of South
Florida: The Miami Herald

d.) The Corrupt and Crony-driven Duchy
of Broward County: Hallandale Beach DPW
Director John Chidsey.

The John Chidsey experiment in the City
of Hallandale Beach is a complete and utter
failure for the citizen taxpayers, residents
and business owners of this city.
He needs to go -NOW!

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Once again, sports reporters eager to avoid angering Tiger Woods and becoming 'Persona non Tiger'

My comments follow this latest update from TMZ.
-----------

TMZ.com
Tiger Woods Cornered -- Turns Cops Away
http://www.tmz.com/2009/11/28/tiger-woods-elin-nordegren-florida-highway-patrol/

-----------
Well, what do you know?
Maybe
ESPN's Sunday morning edition of
The Sports Reporters will actually be
interesting
and relevant for the first time in
what seems like
ages, as the Usual Suspects
of sports sages
weigh-in, gingerly, on what's
happened the past
few days on the golf icon
and guaranteed
moneymaker named
Tiger Woods.

Personally, though I know it will
never
happen,
I'd love to hear them be
straight-shooters for
a change and publicly
call-out their more
spine-less and craven
colleagues in the sports
and marketing
industry, esp. at the TV networks,
who
walk on eggshells when speaking about

Tiger Woods, someone whom I've yet
to ever
hear an original and thoughtful
comment from,
just like fellow Nike
spokesperson
Michael Jordan,
even though he has the benefit of a
Stanford education.

(Not that a Stanford education really did devout
Oriole fans like me any good in the '90's while
Mike Mussina was pitching for the Orioles,

despite how frequently it got brought-up during
ballgame broadcasts, much to our consternation.

A lot of my friends and I still blame Mussina for
not winning Game 3 of the 1996 ALCS against
the Yankees at Camden Yards -I was there-
blowing a 1-0 lead in the eighth inning, with a
dominating David Wells slated to pitch for the
Orioles the next day, which could've plausibly
created a 3-1 Oriole series lead.

His choking performance prevented the Orioles
from getting to the World Series and beating
the Atlanta Braves, when the O's were clearly
the best-balanced team in baseball that year
-despite being the AL Wild Card team- having
thoroughly annihilated the Braves in Atlanta
during an intra-league weekend series.)


Which is fine, of course, since Woods
doesn't
have to be interesting off the course,
or even
take a public stand about any issues
he privately
cares about, as long as he keeps
winning.

But it would be nice if he would...

How interesting would it be if he declared
publicly
in the near-future that, as a matter
of fact, he's
greatly troubled by the whole
'immigration reform'
racket in this country,
including the basic concepts
behind the
so-called "
Dream Act."

That he was particularly dismayed at the

overwhelmingly sympathetic and one-sided
way
the American news media have
portrayed the debate, having
been played,
hook, line and sinker, by someone
like
Cheryl Little of the Florida Immigrant
Advocacy
Center,
http://www.fiacfla.org/staff.php#1

who seems to promise access to her clients
in exchange for favorable media coverage.

(So where are the on-camera questions
about -or interviews with- the parents
who
came here illegally or who knowingly
broke the law and have successfully
avoided deportation for YEARS?

Not on camera, that's for sure because
that'd be off -message, don't ya know.
So who's the most recent example I've
seen of a local Miami TV reporter playing
Cheryl Little's game of Show-and-Tell?
CBS4's David Sutta, who did one on
Nov. 20th after CBS4 did a story the
previous day on the same kids attending
Miami-Dade College.
"Reyes Bros. Freed After Immigration
Struggle
."
http://cbs4.com/video/?id=86995@wfor.dayport.com)

If
Woods actually said that he thinks this sort
of
upside-down proposal penalizes hard-working
foreigners who have followed the proscribed
rules
and laws we've insisted they follow, and
patiently
bided their time waiting anxiously for
legal admittance,
while others have come to
this country either illegally,
or intentionally
overstayed their visas, and now want
to create
a
cause célèbre just because their kids aren't
dopes
and actually paid attention in American
schools, just imagine what people would be
saying?

It'll never happen, of course, but...
Personally, I suspect this latest incident in
Orlando, whatever the true facts, will only
show once gain the full extent to which the
news media, in this case, well-known sports
reporters and columnists -like certain
well-known political
reporters and
columnists last year were (and remain)
completely
in the tank for Obama-
have drunk the Tiger Woods marketing
Kool-Aid, and have deluded themselves
into thinking that , a la O.J., that they
'really know him.'

They don't.

They just think they do.

What those particular reporters fear most
is losing access to him
and his tightly-knit
entourage and being put permanently
on
his "No comment" list.

That's the same thing as excommunication,
since it will
quickly become known throughout
the industry.
And they will be labeled 'Persona non Tiger.'

Friday, November 27, 2009

Hollywood and Hallandale Beach parents aren't feeling love for Notter and Broward Schools; Where's Bob Butterworth?

My comments follow the article.

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

South Florida Sun-Sentinel
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/schools/fl-school-consolidation-20091126,0,2973432.story

Broward school merger proposal upsets parents, officials in east

By Akilah Johnson and Jennifer Gollan, Sun Sentinel

November 26, 2009

Faced with the possibility that their underenrolled schools may be merged, some parents and officials in the eastern part of the county are warning the Broward School District to tread lightly.

There could be a minor rebellion among students upset over being moved, said Thomas Douglas, president of the Parent Teacher Student Association at Boyd Anderson High School in Lauderdale Lakes.

"There can be some separation anxiety and the implications are some of these young people will decide that it is not even worth attending school," he said. "It is basically a no-win situation."

The district projects as many as 33,000 empty desks in the 2013-14 school year, most in the eastern part of the county. As long as there are empty seats, the state won't allow the district to add classrooms or build new schools in the crowded west.

In response, the district is pushing a plan to measure classroom space by using eight geographic regions rather than individuals schools. The county and its cities must agree to the change. So far, Davie, Dania Beach and Cooper City voted to approve the measure. Lauderdale Lakes and Pompano Beach voted against it.

But that plan doesn't address underenrolled schools, and schools Superintendent James Notter is proposing that some elementary schools be consolidated, others could morph into kindergarten through eighth-grade schools or unused wings may be converted into office space for district administrators.

Notter explained that the district's leases on office space in Sunrise and Fort Lauderdale will soon expire and consolidating some underenrolled campuses helps with both money and boundary issues.

In the coming year, only Pioneer Middle School in Cooper City is scheduled to see significant boundary changes but district maps show scenarios in which thousands of students are moved out of overcrowded western schools into less-crowded schools starting in the 2011-2012 school year.

Hollywood Commissioner Richard Blattner said Notter's recommendation is reasonable. "If it means that older schools are closed and it reduces expenses that taxpayers have, it should be done," he said.

But Kristina Brazil, whose children attend Plantation Middle School, questions its merits.

"So…we move these kids out and put [administrators] in and it's a win, win?" she said. "The stance has been 'what's the most important thing for kids?' That doesn't sound like that's what they're doing."

Notter and School Board Chairwoman Jennifer Gottlieb stressed the board has not approved anything yet.

"There are too many unanswered questions," Gottlieb said this week. "We need to know where the kids are going to go; the impact on communities."

Hallandale Beach Mayor Joy Cooper said the proposal to change how class space is measured benefits western communities and the district, which won't have to anger parents by changing boundaries. It does little to address the needs of communities with underenrolled schools, she said.

"If there is crowding in one place in the county and the mechanism is in place to fill those seats through boundary changes, I cannot sit idly by because of the lack of will," Cooper said. "Other cities, particularly those in eastern communities…should be concerned."

Longtime Pompano Beach community activist Ernestine Price vowed to rally against any proposal that might mean eastern schools will close. Price helped found the grassroots group that sued the district in 1995 for neglecting to provide older schools in eastern Broward with the same facilities, programs and quality teachers as newer schools out west.

The thought of consolidating underenrolled schools leaves her resentful and heartbroken, she said. But, it compels her to keep advocating against disparities.

"You have a Broward County School District, and when schools were being opened out west they bused these kids," she fumed. "And now the schools are overcrowded and they don't want to bus anyone to the east. I don't know how anybody can fix their mouth and say that."

Parents and officials in western cities fear that if the proposed change doesn't pass, thousands of students countywide will be moved in a domino effect.

Cooper City Mayor Debby Eisinger has been avid supporter of the proposal and said the intent was never to sacrifice some schools for the benefit of others. The resolution, she acknowledged, may need to be modified to include "some protection for underenrolled schools."

"It should not be an east/west fight," she said. "Let's work together to continue to provide a quality public school education for the children throughout Broward County."

Reader comments at:
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/schools/fl-school-consolidation-20091126,0,3841345,comment-display-all.story

-----------
Seventy per cent of this article from yesterday is the
same as the Sun-Sentinel article from Saturday
that I sent many of you.

Since I returned to South Florida in mid-October of
2003,
Mayor Cooper and the Hallandale Beach City
Commission have
never held a single city-wide forum
on the sad state of education in this city,
nor has she
has a single meeting of the City Commission
that dealt
with it in a serious way.

And in the year since she was elected, we know that

Cooper has also never asked our MIA School Board
member Ann Murray to speak at any city function
to explain what, if anything, she's doing.

Why not?


And lest you forget, Hallandale High School also
serves kids from Hollywood,
whose parents surely
must wonder what it takes for HB City Hall to get
off their butt and actually get more involved in changing
the mix of options for kids in the HB/Hollywood area.


To say nothing of the new residents of Hallandale
Beach with kids who are now moving into
developments
on A1A like The Beach Club.
Who exactly is looking after their best interests?

People who make the sort of financial investment in
a
place like they have will simply not accept half-assed
explanations from elected officials like Cooper and
Murray for why schools are so bad in the area,
and why they seem to have been mere spectators
while it all happened.


So when is
Mayor Cooper and the HB City
Commission going to convene a city-wide meeting
on the state of education in this area, one with

Ann Murray
present and accounted for,
so that people can have their legitimate concerns

aired and maybe even addressed?

A few months ago, showing what happens when
you have a person in charge who keeps their eyes
and ears open and responds in a constructive and
forthright fashion,
Mayor Bober and the Hollywood
City Commission had an interesting meeting that
discussed the pluses and minuses of the city pursuing
an application for a city-run Charter school.


It was very informative and anyone who had an
opinion on the proposal or schools in Hollywood
or Broward in general, got their chance to put in
their two cents and sound-off.


Why is that SO difficult to replicate here in
Hallandale Beach?

Not the Charter School part, simply having the
public meeting?


To me, the one thing that became really apparent
as one parent after another spoke was the full extent
to which the Middle Schools are perceived as a
huge problem for the greater area.


Parents and citizens are
VERY disturbed at what
they see and what they hear, and their perceptions
that mediocrity and sub-standard performance is
becoming the accepted norm, no matter what the
Broward School Board and Supt. Notter insists.

There was much discussion of the negative effect
of the Middle Schools in this area on attracting
families to the area, with many Realtors -
and
'amateur' real estate experts
- speaking to
the fact that they knew or had met people who
had decided to locate elsewhere.


It was also mentioned that as much as people
may prefer not to acknowledge it, many people
already living here were contemplating moving
elsewhere for the very same reasons.


Blame the reality or blame the perception,
but in the end, it's all the same thing if everyone
thinks it's bad.


Again, to repeat myself, since I returned to South
Florida six years ago from Arlington County, VA,
a place that is, if anything, perhaps, a little
TOO
concerned with education, the city has never held
a single meeting on education.


One that, in my opinion, optimally, ought to be held
on a Saturday morning over at the HB Cultural Center
starting around 10:30 a.m., so that kids can be there,
too, with at least one parent or guardian.

You simply won't get the same kind of turnout if you

hold it at night, and we all know that, so how about
some common sense coming into play for a change?

And maybe, for once, the city actually putting up
legible signs advertising
the meeting at least ten days
in advance
in appropriate places
throughout the city,
including near schools, rather than
the typical way
that
everything gets done here:
half-assed.

Just wondering: when are we going to get our chance
to speak to the hydra-headed PR squad selected
by
Supt. Notter to reassure Broward taxpayers
and
parents that the whole Broward School Board
shouldn't just be blindfolded and tossed overboard?

Or as Michael Mayo wrote in his interesting
Nov. 1st Sun-Sentinel column about FP&L
and
Notter both turning to Bob Butterworth
to lend some assistance,
In Sticky Situations, Just Add Mr. Butterworth
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sfl-butterworth-mayocol-b103009,0,2880202.column
a "
volunteer three-member panel to explore
the school district's recent troubles."


Since Mayo's column ran three-and-a-half weeks
ago,
have you read or seen even one article or
segment on
local TV about actual Broward citizens
getting a chance
to speak to them, in either private
or public?


I haven't, and I've been actively looking for news
stories spelling out what they were actually doing.

There's been nothing reported for over three weeks
in either
the Herald or Sun-Sentinel in the form of
an actual article, and my recollection was
that they
were only going to be in operation for 90 days
or so.
What gives?