BCC Minutes 06/20/2013 B (Budget Workshop) BCC
BUDGET
MEETING
MINUTES
JUNE 20, 2013
June 20, 2013
TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Naples, Florida, June 20, 2013
LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Board of County
Commissioners, in and for the County of Collier, and also acting
as the Board of Zoning Appeals and as the governing board(s) of
such special districts as have been created according to law and having
conducted business herein, met on this date at 9:00 a.m., in
BUDGET WORKSHOP in Building "F" of the Government
Complex, East Naples, Florida, with the following members present:
CHAIRWOMAN: Georgia Hiller
Fred Coyle
Donna Fiala
Tom Henning
Tim Nance
ALSO PRESENT:
Leo Ochs, County Manager
Jeffrey A. Klatzkow, County Attorney
Mark Isscson, OMB Director
Troy Miller, Communications & Customer Relations
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NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING
Notice is hereby given the Board of County Commissioners of Collier County will conduct
Budget Workshops Thursday, June 20, 2013 and Friday, June 21, 2013, if necessary, at
9:00 a.m. Workshops will be held in the Boardroom, 3rd Floor, W. Harmon Turner Building,
Collier County Government Center, 3299 East Tamiami Trail, Naples, Florida to hear the
following:
COLLIER COUNTY GOVERNMENT
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
FY 2014 BUDGET WORKSHOP SCHEDULE
Thursday, June 20, 2013
9:00 a.m.: General Overview
Courts and Related Agencies (State Attorney and Public Defender)
Growth Management
Public Services
Administrative Services
Public Utilities
Debt Service
Management Offices (Pelican Bay)
County Attorney
BCC (Community Redevelopment Agencies, Airport)
1:00 p.m.: Constitutional Officers:
Elections
Clerk of Courts
Sheriff
Other Constitutional Officers requesting to address the BCC
Public Comment
June 20, 2013
MR. OCHS: Madam Chair, you have a live mic.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you. Good morning.
MR. OCHS: Please rise for the Pledge of Allegiance.
(The Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.)
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Good morning, and welcome to our
annual Fiscal Year 2014 budget workshop.
We're going to begin with a presentation by County Manager
Ochs, who will give us a general overview of the budget that's being
present for next year for the county for the Board of County
Commissioners.
MR. OCHS: Thank you, Madam Chair. Good morning,
Commissioners.
Before I begin the budget overview, just a couple of
housekeeping matters, if I might, Madam Chair.
Anyone who wishes to address the board with a comment, please
fill out a public speaker slip. They're available in the hallway.
While your agenda, Madam Chair, provides for public comment
at the end of all the budget reviews, traditionally -- and it's the
prerogative of the chair, obviously -- we have speakers who sign up
for particular division-related budget concerns or general budget
concerns.
So with the indulgence of the chair and the rest of the board,
perhaps we could call on public speakers after each section of your
agenda is briefed, and that way we can get the public service and let
them get on about their business without having to wait for the end of
the day.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely. I think that's
appropriate.
MR. OCHS: Thank you. And then just in terms of the general
format, we'll follow our historical format where we will have the
courts and the county manager agency budget briefs in the morning,
and then we've reserved the constitutional officer budget briefs to
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begin at 1 p.m.
And if we need to roll into Friday, we can certainly do that, but
the last few years we've been able to move through this budget
presentation in one day, and that would be our goal again today.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: It certainly is. And I'd like to make
one comment, and that is to thank the budget officers, Mark, and of all
the constitutionals. They did an outstanding job putting the packages
together. So we really appreciate all the work you did, and also the
state attorney, the judges, and public defender; everyone really did an
outstanding job this year.
MR. OCHS: Well, thank you.
And with that, Madam Chair, I'll move in, very quickly, to the
overview of the budget. Staff is very pleased to present an annual
spending plan for Fiscal Year 2014 that keeps your costs low, keeps
your service levels high, continues to steadily retire your debt and
reduce your cost of borrowing; it continues to build your General
Fund reserves, provides funding to construct capital improvements
that will maintain the level of service standards that you've outlined in
your AUIR, it will provide sufficient funding to maintain and address
the critical public infrastructure and capital-asset maintenance that you
have an interest in, and it also provides discretionary funding to
maintain a competitive pay and benefit program for your deserving
workforce.
Commissioners, each year we go through a several-month-long
annual budget planning process that begins with an integration of your
board-approved strategic plan, embeds then the operational planning
that goes on at the division level, and also the fiscal and budgetary
planning, and it is a continual loop that we build from each year on
our budget planning.
Of course, all of the budget is resourced around your
organizational vision and mission. You're very familiar with these, and
I will not read them, but it is -- it's instructed for the public to
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understand that we start at the top with our vision and mission always.
The board has outlined, as part of your strategic plan, six primary
focus areas. You can see those on your screen. They include quality
of place, growth management, community health, wellness, and
human services, infrastructure and capital-asset management,
economic development, and governance to include all aspects of your
county administration and financial management.
Again, your budget is essentially resourced and designed to help
you maintain the service levels and the program and service delivery
that you've got embedded in these six strategic focus areas.
Commissioners, as I mentioned, the budget process is a process
that spans annually over several months, and this is a quick planning
timeline that guides our budget preparation and adoption process
beginning in February of each year when the board sets the budget
guidance. We move, then, applying your guidance to our preparation
of budgets that you will see presented here in the workshop today.
And July 1 we'll get the certified taxable value from the property
appraiser. That will be used then on September 9th when you meet in
public session where you set your maximum millage rates for the
coming fiscal year.
The property appraiser then takes that and prepares the truth and
millage notice that goes out in late August, and then, ultimately, the
process culminates in two public hearings by this board to adopt the
final budget in September. Those hearings will be held on September
5th and then again on September 19th.
Commissioners, let me give you a quick overview of the
economic landscape that we are preparing this budget around and in.
And it's generally an improved landscape from what we've seen over
the last several years as we begin to climb out of the recession.
A couple of points to note. Your taxable values have increased
for the second consecutive year. That increase has been narrowed
among the coastal and the inland districts, and that tells us that your
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taxable value and your economic recovery is not just occurring along
the coastline, that it is spreading to all areas of the county, and that's a
very positive sign.
Your median home prices are up substantially year over year.
Sales tax and state-shared revenues are trending up. Your peak season
visitation in our destination is up year over year over 6 percent. New
construction permitting activity continues to escalate, and it's up well
over 35 percent year over year. Our local unemployment rate is
declining. Another good sign.
And all in all, pulling out of what has been probably the worst
recession that we've experienced here in Collier County over the last
80 years, I believe the organization is fiscally sound and leaner, more
efficient, and positioned to continue providing the quality best-value
services to both our residents and the visitors to our community.
Some of the highlights of the 2014 budget in terms of your
outcomes. The budget guidance that you set has been essentially met
by our agency. We've maintained a millage-neutral tax rates for both
your General Fund and your Unincorporated Area General Fund.
Your General Fund reserves remains stable. Debt service
continues to decline. It's both fully funded and compliant with the
policy that you have set, and we'll talk about that in a little bit more
detail as I move through the slides.
We have for the first time since 2010 some expanded service
requests for your consideration both in the county manager's agency
and in the Clerk of Court's agency. We will get into some detail on
that as we move through the day.
There are no new or increased fees or service charges, and that
includes water and sewer, your solid waste charges, your EMS
transport charges, and other fees and charges.
All of your unfunded mandates at the state and federal level have
been addressed in this budget. The General Fund supported
capital-asset spending is up substantially for the first time in many
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years.
I've spoken to you each year when I've stood up here and
expressed ongoing concern about our ability to continue to defer
capital-asset maintenance, and we did not want to get to a point where
we were in a break/fix mode. That's one of the areas you obviously
have to defer when you're working through the type of economic
recession that we were working through. But we believe it's time now
to reinvest in some of that capital-asset management, and we will
show you that as we move through the budget briefs today.
Then, finally, as I mentioned, there are some dollars available
after we have addressed all the other issues to consider some modest
employee compensation adjustment based on continuing increase in
costs of living.
Commissioners, I mentioned some of the emphasis on
capital-asset spending in the 2014 proposed budget. These are some
of the highlights of the proposed spending for improvements and
maintenance in your capital assets. You can see that they largely
feature improvements in your public safety systems and in your
transportation and stormwater management systems.
Commissioners, as I mentioned, after several years of declining
taxable values and in some cases double digit declines, we're pleased
that we are now, for the second consecutive year, seeing a positive
trend in taxable values, and we are hopeful that that is a sign of good
things to come in the coming years with respect to your taxable value.
It is up in 2014 by 3.6 percent in your General Fund and 3.3
percent in your Unincorporated Area General Fund.
Having said that, it's still important to note that when you look at
your taxable value history over time, when you look at the Fiscal 2008
peak of more than 82 billion in taxable value, and even with the
increase for 2014, you can see at the bottom of this slide that the
variance between the peak in 2008 and what we're projecting for the
coming year, it's still going to take several years of increasing taxable
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values to get back to that peak value that we achieved in Fiscal 2008.
This is just a quick recap of the millage rate history in both your
General Fund and your Unincorporated Area General Fund. You can
see that the tax rate has remained constant in your General Fund since
Fiscal '10 and continues through the proposed budget for Fiscal '14,
and the same for your Unincorporated Area General Fund, proposing
no change in either one of your millage rates for these two funds in
Fiscal '14.
Let's talk about a few of the budget highlights that are proposed
in this budget. Again, this is a millage neutral tax rate with a slight
increase in taxable value that will net an additional $7 million in
increased General Fund tax receipts and about $770,000 in increased
tax receipts in your Unincorporated Area General Fund.
As I mentioned, there are no new service fees or increased
service fees in this budget. We're pleased that we do not have to face
any reductions in front line services in '14, nor do we plan any facility
closures or reductions in current operating hours of your programs.
In terms of your workforce, funded positions in the county
manager agency have increased in the current fiscal year by 19
and-a-half FTE. You will recall, Commissioners, that we added three
positions for your tourism department as a result of increases in
receipts of the tourist development tax.
You've created your four-person economic development office in
Fiscal 2013. We had added 20 positions in your growth management
division that are fully funded by fees from the industry to keep up with
the demand in growth and the demand for service in this particular
organization.
You had a half-time position added to your Metropolitan
Planning Organization, and you actually had six positions eliminated
from your parks and recreation department as a result of privatizing
some of your concession operations at your marinas, and we've also
reduced three management level FTEs in your public utilities division
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by an optimization of the organizational structure over there.
Now, for 2014, you can see below the blue arrows there are eight
expanded position requests in county manager's agency in 2014; one
in your museum system, and the other seven are employees proposed
to service two new community centers that will be opening in 2014.
One at Eagle Lakes Park and the other that's been recently completed
for the South Immokalee Community Center.
These are not surprises to the commission, as we have addressed
those when we came forward with the capital project constructions
award, and we're just following on what we committed to previously.
This is another graph that shows in table form the changes in
position headcount. You will see in the 2014 expanded column the
eight positions that I spoke about in your public services division, and
then when you move below the line, you can see there are
six-and-a-half FTE -- expanded FTE proposed for the Clerk of Courts.
Commissioners, I mentioned that the budget contains some
discretionary funding for maintaining the competitiveness of your pay
plan. We are suggesting that the board consider a one-and-a-half
percent cost-of-living increase for your workforce in FY2014. The
total cost of that is approximately $1.48 million. We would expect
that that number would need to be doubled in order to provide the
funding for a similar increase to the Constitutional officer agencies.
That funding is available. It will erode the increase in your
General Fund reserves that we have budgeted in FY2014, and we'll
talk about that in a minute.
Now, this is just a little bit more backdrop on the rationale behind
the compensation proposal. As you know, over the last several years
there's been a number of changes at both the state and the federal level
that have continued to erode the earning power of your employees'
pay, as well as increases here locally and their contributions to the
health insurance program.
You can see, when you factor in the effects of the 3 percent
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contribution that the state now requires for pension, the offset of social
security that has gone away and the effect of employee health
insurance premium increases that they are required to cover annually.
When you use a $52,000 mean salary and you run those numbers
and you -- even if you add the one-and-a-half percent COLA that's
proposed for 2014, there is still a net erosion in those earnings over the
last five years as a result of some of these other factors that I just
described.
The point of this is only to tell you that we believe the
one-and-a-half percent is modest and still is not something that will
allow our workforce to gain back all of the erosion in the salaries over
the last four or five years.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Commissioner?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Leo, I believe you said -- and I
could be wrong. You stated that -- in one of the slides that the tax rate
will increase slightly. I think what you meant is the increased
collection of taxes, but anyways.
MR. OCHS: Yes, thank you, Commissioner. You're right.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: But on this point, would you
look at -- instead of a salary increase, look at offset healthcare costs
for the same amount? Here's the reason I'm saying that. Any
compensation, in some employees, will put them in a different
bracket. By offsetting healthcare costs, you're spreading it equally
across the board, and there's no, you know, tax implications.
MR. OCHS: Commissioner, we'd be happy to do that, and this is
a good breaking point.
As we get these kind of requests from individual commissioners
or the board as a whole, at this stage of your budget process what we
traditionally do is take these inputs, work those options up over the
summer, and then when you come back in September for your budget
hearing, we will show you the impacts of those proposals, and then
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you'll make those decisions, if that's acceptable.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Does anybody have a problem
with that?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: No.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I think it's great.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I'd like to make a comment as to
what Commissioner Henning said.
Leo, you're absolutely right. And any recommendations that we
make here today, given that this is a workshop, will be incorporated
into an analysis I hope you'll bring forward before the board.
MR. OCHS: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And give us, you know, a number
of options.
I have looked at the payroll numbers both for the board and all
the constitutionals, and I strongly advocate the COLA adjustment for
everybody, for the constitutionals as well as the County
Commissioners' staff.
The -- I've thought about the statement you made that, you know,
there would be a compromise to the reserves if we did it across the
board, and that wouldn't necessarily be the case if we look at the
capital-asset side.
And I know we briefly touched on -- I believe that it was one of
your first slides. Let me go back here. I had -- Page 8.
On Page 8, you list out capital-asset spending highlights.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And if I look at the first few items,
like ambulance replacement, helicopter replacement, the megahertz
system, general vehicle replacement, you're looking somewhere in the
neighborhood of$9 million.
One thing that I would recommend as you're going through your
analyses is that you consider a lease-versus-buy analysis or a buy with
short-term money analysis versus a lease. And it doesn't have to be
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leasing for the full life of the asset. Obviously, it would be a lease for,
you know, a period of time.
You've got some assets here which are subject to rapid
obsolescence. I'm not sure that you want to necessarily invest in those
assets. It doesn't make a whole lot of sense.
And that would actually free up a lot of immediate cash for you
that could go towards building the reserves. And then if you're
looking, for example, at some of these assets being held for, say, three
to four years and you're freeing up that liquidity, you could see a rapid
increase in your reserves while, at the same time, having all the
funding you need to provide for these COLA adjustments in whatever
fashion we as a board, or the constitutional officers, would like to
adopt.
And, quite frankly, what Commissioner Henning said is really
great. And it should be an option. If we as a board want to do it on,
you know -- from the health standpoint, fine. If the sheriff would like
to do it with respect to pay, fine. Give everybody the option. Because
from a dollar standpoint, it doesn't make a difference to us with
respect to the bottom line.
MR. OCHS: Right. Commissioner, those are great suggestions.
We have a finance committee that is composed of financial experts,
frankly, internally from both our agency and the clerk's organization
and some outside assistance.
So I think that would be, you know, a great forum for us to
evaluate the options on the capital-asset spending, both lease versus
buy-out right. We can incorporate that into our analysis and bring that
all back with some options and recommendations.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And, again, what you do is tie in the
reserves --
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- the capital-asset budgeting, and
the employee raises. And, quite frankly, having analyzed all the
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numbers, I think you will come out ahead across the board and will be
able to do everything you want to do.
MR. OCHS: That's right. And we will be pleased to do that
analysis.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: And excuse me. If I might make a
comment.
Mr. Ochs, I think it's also important on the capital-asset spending,
as one feature that does not show in this analysis -- and this is a very
nice analysis, and I appreciate it. But I think something that is
important in each one of these items is to indicate among those which
of them also are attached to future obligations in years in the future
because, for example, in the helicopter -- I think the helicopter
set-aside, for example, is one item where you certainly -- you know,
you might incur additional expenses, and the 800 megahertz system
upgrade, Phase 1 of 5, that's $3 million, but that's attached to a $15
million total expenditure over time.
And I think that's very interesting information that the board
members might appreciate and something that you might consider in
the future. You know, you've got a big overview of big-ticket items. I
think that will help with -- certainly will help with my understanding,
and it might also help with others.
MR. OCHS: Yes, sir. We'll be happy to do that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. First of all, I want to endorse,
from my point of view, Commissioner Henning's suggestion. That
was a great suggestion, and it really is a benefit to our employees not
to have to pay additional tax on money that's just going to go to
healthcare anyway. Why not pay it to the healthcare. I thought that
was an excellent suggestion.
And the second thing is just a minor housekeeping thing. I never
got a copy of your presentation, your PowerPoint, and I was
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wondering if somebody could make one for me.
MR. OCHS: Sure. We'll get them to all the commissioners.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, okay, fine. Thank you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Commissioner?
Commissioner Fiala, if you look at a 1 .5 increase in salary from a
director to that director's -- person that's on the street, there's a huge
disparity there, and this is -- this would equal it out across the board.
Because the healthcare cost for the person on the street versus the
person that's a director is the same.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: How will that happen with the
Sheriffs Office, though, being that they already pay 100 percent of
their healthcare? And how would you, then, change that 1.5 percent
depending on their salary change?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, you couldn't. You couldn't
do that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So what -- to go to your point,
Commissioner Henning, what you're suggesting is that all employees
receive the same adjustment regardless of what their compensation is,
meaning that at the lower end of the scale they're getting a higher
percentage adjustment, at the higher end of the scale, they're getting a
lesser adjustment on a percentage basis?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Correct, not do percentage, but
do the same value.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And the sheriff, because the sheriff
is paying benefits in a different fashion, can make a similar adjustment
just on a cash basis with respect to the salaries rather than through
benefits, and that's why I'm suggesting that each constitutional have
the option of either doing the adjustment through their benefits or
through salaries, whichever they choose to do.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah, and I think we need to
talk to the sheriff about his benefits program, quite frankly.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And not only the sheriff. It's really
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-- what I think we need to do -- and we've had this discussion at prior
board meetings -- is look at the salaries and the benefits across the
entire county. We're one government, and there should be, as
Commissioner Nance once mentioned, equal pay for equal work. So
we need to look at the salaries, for example, for an accountant
between the sheriff, the clerk, the property appraiser, the board. I
mean, everybody should be paid the same for the same type of work.
Taxpayers shouldn't be charged more for the service that's identical
between these agencies in one case over another.
And then with respect to the benefits, again, a comprehensive
analysis ought to be done by staff and brought back to us, because it
may not be so much that the sheriff has to change his benefits to
80/20, but maybe there's some sort of hybrid solution where, you
know, we come up, he comes down. And he's not the only
constitutional that's not on an 80/20 template. It's only the clerk and
the board that are on 80/20, and all the constitutionals -- and who else?
MR. OCHS: Supervisor of Election also.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And the Supervisor of Elections. So
you basically have three constitutionals that are on a different benefits
template and three that are on the same.
So I think, again, looking at the totality of how the county is
compensating across the board and how benefits are being awarded
across the board, I think, is a study that would be worthwhile to be
brought back to us so that we can make adjustments to the budget.
And then, of course, there's the issue of, you know, the raises
where the board has awarded raises to the board's staff but the sheriff
has not awarded raises to the sheriffs staff and that type of inequity.
So, again, I think a comprehensive analysis is in order, and it
should be brought back to the board, and then we can adjust the
budgets accordingly.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. And, again, not to get off track here,
but I will tell you, based on previous direction from the board on that
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issue, there have been a series of meetings with the human resources
staffs, joint meetings of the HR staffs of all the constitutional officers.
I went and saw each constitutional officer; talked to them about this
issue. We all agreed that the first thing we wanted to do was get our
HR professionals in a room and share the compensation and
classification plan for each agency, let them see and do their own
internal comparison before we went out and recommended spending
half a million dollars.
If we didn't have a problem, let's not -- let's save that money and
use it, you know, to equalize the benefits, for example. So that is
ongoing.
They've had several meetings, and they're continuing to meet on
a quarterly basis, and that's the initial approach to get at this
comparability inequity issue that this board has raised both on salaries
and benefits.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Could we set a timetable for you to
complete that study with them and bring it back to the board so, you
know, adjustments can be made? Because, obviously, some people
are not getting as much as they should and, you know, those people
are suffering.
MR. OCHS: Okay. Well, I can tell you that the feedback from
Ms. Lyberg, our HR Director, is that all of the constitutional agencies
are -- they've seen each other's pay plans, and they're all satisfied that
their plan is competitive for them and working for them. The benefits
side, we have not really peeled that back entirely, so that would be the
next step.
You know, the clerk made some adjustments, for example, to his
pay plan that you funded a few months ago, and I think that's got his
agency in line with where he wants to be and, in turn, we've done the
same thing with all the other constitutionals, with the comparison of
their salary ranges and pay plan issues. The benefits is still an area
that needs some attention.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So could we set a timetable to
analyze those benefits and bring it back to the board?
MR. OCHS: Sure, we'll work through the summer and try to
incorporate that analysis into your presentation in your budget reviews
in September.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That would be outstanding.
Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I think it is very important
that we work in that direction. I support Commissioner Henning's
idea and everything, actually, that's been said.
But one thing, I think, we need to do is -- certainly this is not
something we can solve in a single year. And what's necessary is, to
agree with the constitutional officers in principle that we're heading to
some goal, I think, would be step one so that we can all agree that
we're going to have an even playing field, and it's not disrupting
something that they are actually interested in or they're disagreeing
with that approach.
If we can agree that we're going to move in that direction over a
period of years, certainly we can get this done. But, you know, we
can't be making changes in that direction if they're going to make
changes in a different direction. So I think we need to agree in
principle up front that that's in everybody's best interest.
MR. OCHS: Yes, sir. I think a phasing plan is probably the best
approach.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yeah. And when we're talking
about benefits, I believe, from what I've been told anyway, that there
are some -- like the Sheriffs Office, for instance, owns some housing,
and in order to keep some of their people in a high-crime area, they'll
offer that housing free to them. And, you know, there's a purpose to
that, obviously, but maybe that should somehow be figured into the
benefits as well, because that certainly does give their officers a better
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pay scale.
And I don't know how many or, you know -- but that would be
another benefit analysis that could be figured in.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. Again, I think the goal that I hear
from the board is equity and comparability. That doesn't mean that it
has to be identical on every single issue, but there needs to be a
general agreement that the plans are comparable and everybody is
contributing their fair share across all county government.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I agree.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely. Commissioner Fiala is
right. You know, we should look at non-cash compensation. And, for
example, we have employees that have vehicles, and we allow them to
drive those vehicles home.
MR. OCHS: Home, yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Those are, obviously, part of the
compensation package and have to be computed in the total analysis
and, again, between agencies as well.
So good point, Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you so much.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MR. OCHS: So you all got ahead of me, because my next slide
is talking about healthcare, and that's good.
I did want to report for 2014 that your healthcare program is fully
funded at the actuarially determined premium levels. That's important
to maintain that actuary with your actuaries. Premiums, because of
that, will increase by 4 percent.
As the board directed, as part of their annual budget guidance,
the cost share and split between the employer and employee portion of
that annual premium is 80 percent employer paid, 20 percent
employee paid.
As we just mentioned, the board agency, county manager, Clerk
of Courts, and Supervisor of Elections are currently in compliance
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June 20, 2013
with that guidance.
Commissioner, let's go quickly to some of the General Fund
budget highlights.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Can I just -- before we shift out of
payroll, I just want to ask one last thing as part of your analysis.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That you look at all the agencies
and see how raises have been awarded over these past years between
the various agencies, you know, on a percentage basis; if you could
add that.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MR. OCHS: Your proposed FY2014 General Fund is --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Include skills in that, you know.
You can't just go across the board. You know, what skills do they
possess in a certain position that might say the same but maybe
different skills are needed, so you'd have to analyze that as well.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: They're going to have a lot of work
over the summer.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I know.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's cruel and unusual
punishment.
MR. OCHS: Your General Fund budget for 2014 is proposed at
just under $319 million. It represents a 2.9 percent increase from your
FY2013 General Fund budget. And it's still 76 million below the
General Fund budget that you operated with in Fiscal Year 2007.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Leo, how much of this is going
towards impact fee funds?
MR. OCHS: Your loans from the General Fund to impact fee, to
help support impact fee debt service, is about 6 million.
MR. ISAACSON: It's about $4.6 million.
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June 20, 2013
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But we don't actually have that in
the impact fee funds, so it's not really -- we have very limited -- I
mean, we don't have -- we're not bonding --
MR. ISAACSON: Well, you have debt-managed certain of your
impact fee funds, as we talked about during our impact fee workshop.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But not a lot. I mean, is the debt
service on those bonds 4.6 million?
MR. ISAACSON: You have about $15 million in growth-related
impact fee debt service that we're servicing each year.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And so of that we're actually
allocating 4.6 million from the General Fund?
MR. ISAACSON: As loans to offset that amount of money, yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. Thank you.
MR. OCHS: Commissioners, this is the 30,000-foot pro forma
on your General Fund expenses and revenues, and it gives you a little
bit of a snapshot of where the expenses are directed and the primary
revenue source is for your General Fund.
We are going to get into this in some level of detail during the
morning, so I'm not going to spend a lot of time on it right now. But
you can see that reserves are up by $4 million, and that is before we
make any decisions on compensation or additional capital
expenditures beyond what we've already proposed in this budget.
Your debt service is down over $2.7 million, and you can see $8
million, which I outlined earlier, devoted to improvements in your
capital improvement plan and your asset management initiatives.
Property taxes, sales taxes, continue to be your primary revenues
along with fund balance driving your General Fund revenues.
Let's talk about reserves very quickly. We're proud of the fact
that even through a very difficult recession over the last four or five
years and no increase in the tax millage, we've still been able to --
through hard work, to grow your General Fund reserves. It's
important to maintain an adequate level of reserves for all the good
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June 20, 2013
reasons that the board understands.
You can see the trend line in General Fund reserve growth from
2010 through what is proposed in 2014. Again, I need to note the last
sentence on this slide that, you know, the cost of compensation
adjustments, if you choose to do that or if you want to make additional
investments in capital assets, that will lower, incrementally, that
reserve in 2014.
This is another slide that just kind of depicts a couple of
standards for what level of General Fund reserves an organization
would like to maintain. The purple line is a line that depicts roughly
10 percent of your General Fund budget, and you can see that for
FY14 we're just about at that 10 percent level.
Another benchmark is to maintain a reserve that's equal to three
months of expenses in your General Fund operating budget, and you
can see that there's still a large gap and a long way to go to get
reserves to that level.
Frankly, our long-term goal, Commissioners, is to get somewhere
in between those two lines. If we could get to the 45, $50 million
mark in General Fund reserves over time, that will -- that will allow us
to not have to continually look to make these midyear cuts that we've
been doing over the last five years in order to make sure that we have
the sufficient fund balance and reserves going into the ensuing fiscal
year.
And, again, why is it important to maintain General Fund
reserves? The credit rating of the agency is important, the bond
rating. All of the investment firms look at our General Fund reserve
when they're doing bond ratings.
It's the cash flow engine for the budget. It protects your
beginning cash balance, allows you to address unforeseen mandates or
emergencies, and it, importantly, is also the reserve for the
constitutional officers, including the sheriff.
Let's talk about your debt for a minute. As an organization and
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June 20, 2013
an agency, you can see a positive trend line from Fiscal Year '8 to
Fiscal Year '13 where your outstanding audited debt continues to be
reduced. That is good news.
And, again, as I mentioned earlier, you are well within your
board-established policy for debt management and compliance. The
debt for FY 13 is -- represents about 9.6 percent of your total bondable
general governmental revenues. Your cap is 13, so you continue to
whittle down and stay well below that cap. Again, that is a positive
trend.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Leo?
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Before you move to the next slide,
can I comment on our debt position.
It is really great -- Mark, you and the finance committee have
done an outstanding job in trending our debt down and also in
refinancing our existing debt to reduce our debt service cost because
of the low rates that we currently face.
But there is a trend that suggests that rates are going to go up.
And so what we need to do is re-evaluate what we do from a
debt-management standpoint, to take that into consideration and
question whether we want to continue reducing debt and look also on
the investment side and what kind of return we're getting on our
money.
And I was wondering if you could talk to our financial advisors
and to the clerk and bring back an analysis for us to give us an idea of
what the best decisions will be for the future in light of the change in
the market conditions.
MR. ISAACSON: Be happy to do that, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MR. OCHS: Commissioners, moving forward, this is a snapshot.
You've seen this pie chart in past years. It doesn't change too much.
You can see that our mix of general revenue sources is heavily reliant
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June 20, 2013
-- continues to be heavily reliant on ad valorem revenues and revenues
from sales tax and state-shared revenues.
In terms of some of your specific revenue categories that feed
your General Fund, ad valorem, as I mentioned, is up $7 million for
Fiscal '14. Your sales tax budget is up about two-and-a-half million
dollars. State revenue sharing is up slightly in 2014. These are all
signs that the economy is improving.
Your gas tax estimates are up slightly from the prior year.
Impact fees as well are trending up due, obviously, to improving
economy and the construction that follows that, along with receipts of
some deferral revenue, as some of your impact fee deferrals for
affordable housing that are 10-year programs. When those programs
end or when those homes are sold, that impact fee comes back into
your impact fee funds.
Then, finally, your budget and carryforward of about $48.8
million has achieved the target that was set in 2014 for the budget.
Moving along to your Unincorporated Area General Fund, again,
just a few quick highlights. The proposed budget is a little over $39
million. It represents a 1 .3 percent increase from the prior year.
Major changes include the increase appropriations for landscape
and road maintenance, and your reserves are increased by about $1.3
million, and your operating expenses are down almost 33 percent.
That is due largely, in part, to a transfer for your road maintenance
expenses to the General Fund.
This is your pro forma. Again, we'll go into some detail on this
as we go through the budget briefs for each division.
And then, finally, again, you're used to seeing these pie charts,
but it's, I think, important for the public to remember that a typical
unincorporated area residential tax bill contains millages from many
other taxing authorities, and sometimes individuals that are
uninformed think that it's the Board of County Commissioners that's
responsible for the entire tax bill.
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June 20, 2013
Again this year, the county government portion of that residential
tax bill in the unincorporated area is less than 28 percent of the total
bill. You can see it in another way here how it breaks down. You see
the 27.8 percent of county government and then all the other taxing
authorities that comprise the total tax bill for a resident in the
unincorporated area.
Finally, Commissioners, to conclude with a couple of ongoing
concerns, as we do every year. Obviously, we are continuing to
emphasize the need to catch up on deferral of fixed asset, preventative
maintenance, and equipment replacement. Those deferrals began six
years ago, and we are continuing to place, you know, high priority
asset maintenance and equipment replacement funding in this 2014
budget.
I want to assure you, and you'll hear this from your division
administrators, that despite the fact that we are behind, your critical
public infrastructure and public assets are being maintained to the safe
and proper operating levels, and you will see in this budget that we
have addressed all of your critical asset maintenance needs.
And of course, as the board knows, you have authorized us to
continue to pursue a better fixed asset management tool that will not
only allow us to maintain realtime inventory of all of our assets, but
we'll be able to depreciate those on a realtime basis, project a
life-cycle cost of maintenance and replacement so that we're not just
having to do this manually year after year after year but we have a
system that we can rely on that will update your capital assets on a
realtime basis going forward.
Again, we talked about the need to -- as we come out of this
recession and as the economy improves, there will be continuing
pressure as private sector grows to compete for our best employees,
and I think it's very important that we continue to keep focused on
providing a competitive wage and benefit program for our employees.
We need to, as the board has already indicated, continue to keep
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June 20, 2013
in discussion to press for some equity on the health insurance
premium split, continue to be diligent about addressing state unfunded
mandates and cost shifting that comes from the state and federal
government. You can see a few examples of those programs that
impact your General Fund, Medicaid being one that we'll talk about in
some detail as we go through the morning.
As we've talked, again, in the past and I just showed you in the
pie charts, your General Fund and your Unincorporated Area General
Fund still are very heavily reliant on your property taxes as a primary
source of revenue.
As your needs increase and you continue to resist, properly, any
millage increase, we're going to have continued pressure to, as the last
bullet indicates, try to grow your reserves, maintain your asset funding
and your asset management at the appropriate level, and still continue
to reward and incent your workforce as you go down through the next
several years.
So those are the challenges that we see that are continuing. None
of those are unmanageable. We've continued to manage them, I
believe, fairly well over the last few years, and we'll continue to work
on those.
So, Commissioners, that concludes my summary. I'm happy to
answer any questions. I'm delighted that we were able to take a few of
those as we went through the presentation. And if you would like to
move right into the reviews, Madam Chair, we can do that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Coyle has a question
or a statement.
MR. OCHS: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Actually, the county manager
answered my question the minute I turned my light on, but I would
like to amplify on it very briefly, and that's the slide that shows the
total breakdown of the recipients of property tax revenue.
I was wondering where that was, and you did show it. Recently a
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June 20, 2013
newspaper report said that Collier County Government had over 3,000
employees. This has always been a point of confusion for the
taxpayers in Collier County.
The point is that Collier County Government has a little over
1,500 employees, and the other figures include independent agencies
like the sheriffs agency and the constitutional officers.
But there are a total of 19 independent governmental
organizations in Collier County, many of which have their own taxing
authority that we have no control over. You've shown most of them
here. If you break out the independent fire control districts, you get
the others.
But I just wanted to make sure that people understood that Collier
County Government and the Board of County Commissioners is
managing about 13.6 percent of the -- actually, more than that. It
would be about 20 percent of the total budget, the property tax budget.
So we get about 20 percent of the property taxes. Other people
get the other 80 percent. And they need to understand who those
people are who are getting that money and spending it.
MR. OCHS: Yes, sir. And, again, this is Unincorporated Area
General Fund residents.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes.
MR. OCHS: If you live in a municipality, you have additional
taxation from your municipal government.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's right.
MR. OCHS: Madam Chair, if I might, may we move forward
then?
Before we begin the individual presentations, I'd like to take just
a couple minutes just to have Mr. Isaacson run through the table of
your projected taxable values and millage rates.
And then after that, Madam Chair, I know that all the
commissioners have received a letter from a consortium of agencies
that wanted to address you on the Conservation Collier Program. And
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June 20, 2013
I think right after Mark goes through these millage tables very briefly
-- he doesn't have to read them all -- they have registered to speak, and
that would be a good time to take them before we get into the balance
of the agenda today.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely.
MR. OCHS: Thank you.
Mark?
MR. ISAACSON: Good morning, Commissioners. You usually
don't see me up here discussing tax rates and the dollars raised and
taxable values until the September hearing, but I thought it might be
enlightening just to talk a little bit about the changes that are occurring
within our family of property tax rates and taxing authorities.
The bottom line number here, if you look at it -- and we've been
fortunate over the last few years to hold your aggregate proposed
millage rate lower than the rolled back rate. This year I was a little bit
concerned, given the fact that the taxable value increase at a millage
neutral tax rate was driving up our general fund revenue streams.
But with Conservation Collier rolling off the books -- and as you
recall in February we talked during budget guidance about the fact that
our tax structure would change a little bit with this year being the last
year of that quarter mill increase.
As I like to say, that quarter of a mill increase was below the line;
in other words, it was spelled out directly on the tax bill as a
voter-approved initiative and never affected what I would call the
above-the-line aspects of the General Fund tax rate or the other
countywide nonvoter-approved levies.
Conservation Collier itself incorporated two separate distinct
levies on this particular presentation. One was debt service, which is
not included in the calculation of the aggregate millage rate because
it's voter-approved debt. And the other component is -- and it was that
component related to the operational costs of the program.
Both of those rolling off the -- our portfolio this year represents
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June 20, 2013
roughly $14 million, and that was instrumental in helping us, once
again, this year in not publishing what we might term a notice of
proposed tax increase to the newspaper.
These are all TRIM related/DR420 related issues, but I thought it
was nice to at least let you know ahead of time that these are the
things that -- the nuances of the tax rate schedule that are a little bit
changing and evolving as we approach our September hearing
schedule.
MR. OCHS: So the bottom line, Commissioners, the .25 mills
that you've seen that have been part of your aggregate millage rate for
the last 10 years is not a part of your aggregate county millage rate for
Fiscal Year 2014.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So in other words, to simplify, if
that were included, we would not be millage neutral. We would
actually have to increase our position from where we are now?
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. You would have to -- you would have
to increase your General Fund millage as opposed to a voter-approved
debt millage below -- as Mark said, below the line.
So if you want to continue to operate that program and maintain
that quarter mill, you're going to have to add that in, because it's not in
our proposed 2014 budget.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, I think the board collectively
agreed that we were going to be millage neutral. So the only way this
could continue would be if it were, as it was done in the past, below
the line by referendum to be consistent, because that is what the
program is. It would be a very different program if it suddenly -- it
would become, like, a division of parks if you rolled it into the
proposal now and actually increased the millage, and then we would
not be millage neutral.
MR. OCHS: And, operationally, that's exactly what we've done.
We've rolled those functions into your parks and recreation
department for maintenance of passive recreation and conservation
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June 20, 2013
areas; without the millage, though.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's very positive, because if
you've actually been able to absorb those activities without raising the
millage, then the question becomes, why would we even be
considering raising the millage if you've been able to absorb the
remaining operations for that program? I assume that there's a desire
maybe to buy more land?
MR. OCHS: I think you'd have to speak with the --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Is that what it is?
MR. OCHS: -- proponents. And they're registered. This is
probably a good time to call on them.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. Sounds good. Any comment
on that, Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, I was going to comment, but
I'll wait until we hear from them. But, yes, it is about buying land.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: They've bought certain portions of
very environmentally sensitive land, but there's a lot more to go in
order to make it a whole purchase and make it functional and
effective, so -- but I'll wait till they get on there.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Would you like to call the speakers.
MR. MILLER: Madam Chairman, your first speaker is Marisa
Polgar. She'll be followed by Nancy Payton.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: How many speakers do we have?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: On that issue.
MR. MILLER: Two.
MS. POLGAR: Good morning, Commissioners. For the record,
Marisa Polgar on behalf of the Conservancy of Southwest Florida.
We appreciate the opportunity to participate in today's budget
workshop. We realize that there are many important programs and
projects that the county is being asked to fund and many difficult
decisions that you must make in order to have a balanced budget that
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June 20, 2013
addresses the critical needs of the county. We are here because one of
those important county programs has been Conservation Collier.
As we and our partners outlined in the letter sent yesterday on
this matter, we support continuing the Conservation Collier program
because there are many benefits to be derived from such a
continuation.
However, the key message for your discussion today is that in
order to realize these benefits, there needs to be a placeholder for the
.25 millage rate factored into the budget in order to provide the
flexibility to reauthorize the program if that is the direction of the
board based on input received from the community.
Creating a placeholder now will allow this important discussion
with the public to occur over the next several months before the
budget is finalized in September.
Maintaining the ability to reauthorize the .25 mill today does not
in any way obligate you to continue the program. It simply gives you
the option to do so in the future after further discussion.
Therefore, the Conservancy respectfully requests that the board
amend the budget to include a placeholder for the .25 millage rate to
account for these actualities. Since you are at the start of your public
discussion on the budget process, you can leave your options open on
this matter.
Thank you for your consideration.
MR. MILLER: Your next and final speaker for Conservation
Collier is Nancy Payton.
MS. PAYTON: Good morning. Nancy Payton representing the
Florida Wildlife Federation. And we, like the Conservancy, are a part
of the partnership of Vote Conservation Collier that was established
over 10 years ago to promote this program and encourage the
program. It's Audubon, the Southwest Florida Land Trust, Ellen
Goetz, who was the chair, is still involved, and Ellie Krier, who was
the manager, is still managing us and keeping us focused and together.
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June 20, 2013
Today our request is simple, is please keep a placeholder in the
budget of a quarter mill for Conservation Collier and to allow the
discussions to take place over the summer on how that quarter mill
might remain, discussions about a referendum or not, comments from
the public as to what they see the program has done or hasn't done, the
projects that are left to be completed, and there are uncompleted
projects and desired properties, how this program might be integrated
into the watershed management plan conservation projects, also with
other agencies.
There are opportunities for Conservation Collier that exist in the
future, and our request, again, is simple; please keep that placeholder
in there. It's a temporary placeholder. And in September a decision
can be made about whether it should remain, whether it should be less,
maybe more, and what its purpose will be.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MS. PAYTON: You're welcome. In the interest of brevity, only
two of us are here today to plead the case.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: We collectively appreciate that.
MS. PAYTON: I know. Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, it was my understanding
there was a start and an end, and it's due to the end. And, quite
frankly, I couldn't even support bringing it back to the taxpayers.
Over 80 percent of Collier County is in reserves out of the tax roll.
And, quite frankly, I've heard from -- and continually hear from
people about the purchase of Pepper Ranch and not being very happy
about that.
So I can't support continuing the program or even asking the
taxpayers.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And I think the issue of Pepper
Ranch is, from what I've heard, is that the acquisition was well
received but the price was outrageous --
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June 20, 2013
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Correct.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- and seemed to be disproportionate
to what actually was paid for the property a few years earlier and,
quite frankly, stripped the Conservation Collier fund of millions of
dollars that could have been used towards the acquisition of properties
today as a consequence of the bad deal that was made by the county.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah. And it's a program that
will never have an end until you say no, and I'm saying no.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I have done a lot of thinking
and a lot of review about Conservation Collier, and I think it's going to
take actually quite a large discussion for us to really realize the full
benefit.
It's my understanding that since inception we have spent roughly
$138 million on the program that was supported by over 80 percent of
the public. So I think the conservation of land in Collier County was
warmly embraced by the public, and now we're certainly entering into
another phase of it.
In discussions with people that have discussed this issue with me
and talked about extending it, I have indicated that the only way I
would consider extending it in any way was if it was very sharply
focused and it had a particular goal basically centered around finishing
what we began, and that is that there are several conservation
programs that are very tightly defined, like the Red Maple Swamp and
Winchester Head, that are very good, and the completion of that is
certainly a goal that is admirable and allows you to do other things and
actually allows you to lower the cost of maintenance over the long
term.
That having been said, I have considerable concern over the
direction that the maintenance of our publicly owned assets are taking
going forward, and I have considerable anxiety over our conservation
effort becoming something that's focused on recreation and a great
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June 20, 2013
deal of spending -- centered on recreation and not, perhaps, what the
taxpayers were led to believe the purpose of it is.
So I could support something if it was very narrowly focused, but
I have a lot of anxiety over how we need to maintain the public's asset,
and I'm concerned that we not let the maintenance of that asset take on
a life of its own going forward.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. Maintenance, of course, is
important in order to keep these properties pristine. You must remove
exotics and so forth.
They're also an area that is going to be responsible for some of
our future water needs. And if you don't put them aside now, you're
never going to be able to go back and get them. Once it's gone, it's
gone.
You mentioned Pepper Ranch. And, yes, we bought it at the high
but, of course, everything at the time we bought it was high. And who
would ever know that a few years later you could buy it for a third of
the price. We didn't know that. The same with many of the other
purchases. We were -- we were, at the time, in a situation where
everything that you bought was high-priced.
But it's also been used for the public. One of the things that the
public said when they voted this in in the first place was they want to
be able to access the properties. They want to be able to use the
properties, and that's why they voted for it.
And I think it's wonderful that they've been able to use,
especially Pepper Ranch, for camping and fishing and for hunting and
youth programs. And, yes, we paid a high price, but if we would have
known we could wait three more years and pay a very low price, we
would have done that, but nobody has the crystal ball at the time.
I think it's very, very important to purchase conservation lands
now while we still can before they get developed and then we can
never go back and get them again, because they're gone. So I think we
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June 20, 2013
need to keep that in consideration.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Coyle, would you
like to comment?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I don't find the request by
the speakers to be burdensome to us. They're saying, give us some
time to get some public input, have some public hearings, find out
what might be possible, maybe make some changes to the program,
and come back to you later in the year with some recommendations.
I have questions also about the program. And I think that they
deserve an opportunity to be heard, and I think the recommendations
they might have could be helpful to us.
So I'm willing to delay a decision on eliminating the percentage
for Conservation Collier and keeping a -- what they call a --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Placeholder.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- placeholder there. It doesn't
obligate us to do anything, but at least they'll have a chance to be
heard.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I do think it -- there is an issue,
because -- and correct me if I'm mistaken, Leo and Mark. We are
going to have to decide what our millage is going to be, I believe, long
before the Conservation Collier --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Maximum millage, not --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right, the maximum millage. And,
essentially, what would have to happen is that quarter mill would have
to be added to what we are proposing now as the maximum mill.
Are you advocating that the millage rate be increased by that
quarter mill over what staff is recommending? Because right now
we're millage neutral.
And as Mark explained, it was a below-the-line item. It wasn't
included in our General Fund millage rate setting. So now we've got a
very different situation. It wasn't there before. Now the proposal is to
put it above the line and increase the millage if it were to go forward.
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June 20, 2013
So the placeholder -- what's the deadline for approving the
millage rate?
MR. OCHS: July 9th, ma'am. At your board meeting of July
9th, you will adopt your maximum --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
MR. OCHS: -- allowable millage rate.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So, basically, we have between now
and July 9th to decide if you want to either remain millage neutral, as
has been proposed by staff, or to increase the millage a quarter point
to allow for what Conservation Collier is going to look into.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. You asked me a question;
let me respond.
I would not advocate a millage rate that is higher than the current
millage rate.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But what I would be willing to do
is to carry the discussion into the time when we are going to make that
decision on the final millage rate, which would be September.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: No. The final millage will be July.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No, it won't.
MR. OCHS: No, ma'am. The maximum millage.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I'm sorry. The maximum, sorry.
MR. OCHS: You could still lower it before you --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
MR. OCHS: -- adopt your budget in September. You can't
increase it.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right. But if the maximum millage
that we're deciding on July 9th includes that 25, we can also exclude it
later on, but we're not going to be millage neutral if we're going to
adopt an increase of a quarter point.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. Just for order of magnitude, a quarter
of a mill is about $15.1 million. So you have two options. You can,
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June 20, 2013
on July 9th, raise your General Fund millage by a quarter mill to
capture that placeholder, or you can tell us to develop that placeholder
and still maintain a millage-neutral position, but that means that 15
million is going to come out of either your reserves or some other
program or service.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: We can't do that.
MR. OCHS: So those are your two options.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I mean, that is not an option. We
are not capable of doing that. What you just -- that latter point you
just made, we can't. So the only option, then, is to adopt a maximum
including that 25. Is that what you're proposing?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Unless someone can make an
argument -- someone from the Conservation Collier group can make
an argument that they could survive off something less than a quarter
mill, that would be a reasonable proposal to proceed with until we get
to the final decision point.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala, do you want to
increase the millage?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No, you know --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You want the maximum?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No, I don't think anybody wants to
increase the millage. We've been pretty steady about that. I'm trying
to think of creative ways that we can make sure that we can handle our
conservation needs now and not prolong them, because the
opportunities might be lost.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Jeff, how many votes is that
going to take at the budget -- the final adoption to increase the millage
a quarter of a mill; do you recall?
MR. KLATZKOW: I believe it's supermajority.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Supermajority. So I need to
convince one more person to vote no on this?
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June 20, 2013
MR. KLATZKOW: Well, depending upon where you set your
maximum millage on July 9th.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Are we talking about the same
thing?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Does the maximum millage need a
supermaj ority?
MR. KLATZKOW: No.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I just want to make sure.
MR. KLATZKOW: You're going to be setting your maximum
millage at your --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: On July 9th.
MR. KLATZKOW: On July 9th. What I think Commissioner
Henning is getting at, when you set your actual millage, if you're
going to -- if you want to increase it at that time, I believe it's
supermajority.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Can you verify that? I think it's
important that we know that.
MR. KLATZKOW: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You know, the way to do this is
not sneaking it in, but go back to the voters. That only takes a simple
majority to put it on a ballot.
MR. KLATZKOW: That's 2014, unless you want to go through
the costs of mail balloting.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. And you're talking about
properties, if I recall, that are wet. Wet wetlands.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So undevelopable regardless.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah. And, you know, what's
the danger of them being built on? So --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes.
Commissioner Henning, I would support what you're saying, and
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June 20, 2013
I will not support raising the millage rate at this time. Just let me let it
be said; however, I would like the board to consider taking the time
period between now and the obligated time we would have in 2014 if
we were to take this back in the voters to have a wider discussion on
this topic, because I think it really needs a lot of advanced discussion.
I have a lot of problems with it. I will not endorse continuing it
in its current form. I don't think it's appropriate.
So I think if we could have a wider discussion -- I actually
believe the public might support it if we took it back to them under
different circumstances. I don't think the public -- it's unlikely, in my
view, for my constituents to support it in its present form to continue.
But I think if it's more focused and we engage some of the particular
issues, I think they might.
So I would support having further discussion on it; perhaps
bringing it back in the 2014 election cycle, if there are others that
would support that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Leo, Mark, any comments?
MR. OCHS: No, ma'am. Just, again, for full disclosure, when
we talked a little while ago about our ability to continue the ongoing
maintenance, embedding that into our park staff, we're able to do that
because a portion of the quarter mill under the original ordinance was
carved out for perpetual maintenance. So we have that money in a
fund that's dedicated to perpetual maintenance.
I can't sit here and tell you with certainty that there's enough
money in there right now to allow the interest earned annually to fund
the total maintenance on all of the lands that have been acquired.
Finance committee is looking at some alternatives for that as well. So
there is money set aside for maintenance. It's probably $30 million or
so.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: It's $33 million.
MR. OCHS: $33 million.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: The program is not going to
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June 20, 2013
deteriorate or come to disaster in the interim. It's just simply not.
There's $33 million in maintenance monies in reserve that fund it in an
ongoing fashion. But I think it's deserving of, actually, a great deal of
discussion to discuss not only how we're going to do that but, if we're
going to go forward, how we would.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So, basically, what --
MR. OCHS: And theoretically, Commissioner -- I'm sorry for
interrupting. To Commissioner Nance's point -- and this may provide
a third way is if the board, after some discussion, decides that they
want to pare down these land management plans or do less in these
conservation lands that have already been acquired then, perhaps, with
an ordinance change or some other policy change, some of the
set-aside for the maintenance, a portion of that might be rededicated
to, you know, an opportunity buy for land acquisition somewhere
down the road without having to increase millage.
But, again, it's very premature to -- you know, without thorough
analysis to make that kind of recommendation at this point.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So let me suggest that we put this
on a future workshop schedule.
MR. OCHS: I already made the note, yes, for the fall meeting.
That's exactly --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You are so ahead of me. We were
ahead of you before, but now you're ahead of us. Thank you.
One thing that I'd like to address at that time -- and this directly
affects our budgeting -- is the mitigation banking.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: We purchased these conservation
lands with the intent of being able to build our own mitigation bank so
we wouldn't have to go to market, and it has literally been years, and
these banks have not yet been created.
So I think what we need is an update of where we are in the
creation of these mitigation banks and how having those credits will
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June 20, 2013
affect our budget by reducing our need to go out and buy those credits
on the open market for future, for example, road projects.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. We had a recent discussion on that
with regard to Pepper Ranch, and the news was all bad because there
was some changes in the federal laws that are working against --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But only with respect to certain
credits, and there will be different type of mitigation credits. So we
need a full analysis, we need to see what we lost that we paid for, we
need to see what we can get, and we need a definitive timetable --
MR. OCHS: Sure.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- to get those banks established so
we can start reducing what we're paying to outside banks for various
capital projects.
Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I don't want to belabor this
topic a great deal more, because I think having a workshop is a great
idea.
But some of the things that I have heard suggested to me by
people is once we have assets in Conservation Collier, if we could get
together with the regulatory agencies and create a mitigation program
value within the properties that we acquire, that could, with some
creativity and some thinking outside the box, create a mechanism to
take this program forward continuously.
It would be like -- for example, like an environmental CRA,
where we could take the programs, get some mitigation monies, and
continue to acquire properties through an ongoing capture of value.
And that's one of the things I'd like to talk about in the workshop.
But I think there's a lot of ways to do this that we haven't talked
about, and I welcome a workshop. Thank you for that suggestion.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And also solicit funding from other
governments; like the federal government might have a program to
fund us with some sort of grant funding. I don't like the idea of taking
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June 20, 2013
money out of maintenance to buy additional land. I think that's
deadly.
But I think looking at alternative revenue sources is something
that hasn't been considered, and if anything like this is to be ongoing,
that should be -- it should be looked at very closely.
MR. OCHS: Will do.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I was just going to say the same
thing. As far as the mitigation banking goes, if we could get that thing
in order and then the money that could be paid into it would then go to
buy more land.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely. That's --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: That's funny that you just -- that's
why I turned my light off.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right. And so there are
alternatives. You know, we've got the mitigation banking savings,
we've got potential grant funding from the state or federal government.
There are many different options that need to be looked at instead of
raising the millage.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Can I ask why the mitigation bank
didn't go forward?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's my question, too.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. As we discussed at length at the board
meeting the other day, there was a change in the code of federal
regulations that essentially the -- my view is that the owners of the
private mitigation banks were able to successfully lobby Washington
for a change in those CFRs that stripped away most of the value of the
mitigation credits that we were applying for by saying that if you
already -- a local government already purchased that land for
conservation and you approved the management plan that had several
elements that would improve the environmental quality of that land,
none of that could count towards the credits for a mitigation bank.
And we had, excuse the pun, banked on that when we originally
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June 20, 2013
proposed the acquisitions as being able to use that. And that
regulation changed, and that's why it's become more difficult to secure
those mitigation credits. There are still panther habitat credits and
wetland credits through the state, South Florida Water Management
District, that are being pursued, but the other wetland credits are not
available right now.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But like, for example, on Pepper,
the panther mitigation was the key value there. So, I mean, we've got
a lot at stake here, and we need to really capture those dollars.
MR. OCHS: And we're still pursuing the PHUs on Caracara
Preserve and Pepper Ranch.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
I'd like to suggest we take a 10-minute break, because now we're
going to transition into staff, and I think it's an appropriate time.
And our wonderful court reporter has made brownies for
everybody, and they're low calorie, gluten free, and sugar free, right?
Anyway, they're over there. Thank you, again, for bringing those.
So we'll resume at 10:35.
MR. OCHS: Very good.
(A brief recess was had.)
MR. OCHS: Madam Chair, you have a live mic.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you. We're back in session.
And we're going to proceed with a presentation and a discussion
by the courts and associated agencies. We'd like to thank you-all for
being here.
If you could begin by introducing yourselves and stating the
agency you represent. If you would like to make a brief presentation,
please do so. If you would like to skip a presentation and just ask if
there are any questions, you may do that also.
Your budgets are all a matter of public record, and everyone has
the opportunity to review them. And if you state who you are, then
people, I'm sure, if they have any questions, can come and talk to you
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June 20, 2013
directly as well.
So would you like to proceed? Ladies first.
MS. SMITH: Yes. Thank you, Commissioners. My name's
Kathy Smith. I'm the public defender for the 20th Judicial Circuit.
You have before you our budget for this year. Obviously, we are
heavily funded by the State of Florida. There's a few things that the
county are required to pay for as well, which is facilities, IT, and a
couple positions with specialty courts.
We greatly appreciate the cooperation that we have had with
Collier County. And our budget, as you can see, is relatively flat from
last year.
So if you have any questions.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
Any questions for the public defender?
(No response.)
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MS. SMITH: Thank you.
MS. GREIDER: Good morning. My name is Christine Greider.
I'm a Circuit Court judge. I serve as the administrative judge for
Collier County within the 20th Judicial Circuit.
Sitting next to me is our Trial Court Administrator, Chuck Rice,
and he'll be happy to address any questions that you may have.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Any questions on the part of the
board?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: We have a slight increase, and
that's correct?
MR. RICE: Yes, sir. And from the General Fund transfer. Our
budget, overall budget, is requested down 5 percent, but the General
Fund transfer is up this year, yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And what I see, that's attributed
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June 20, 2013
to capital funds?
MR. RICE: It's contributed -- and my understanding, we, last
year, were eligible for a transfer of 177,000 more than what we took.
We decided not to take that to assist other agencies make their target
date. Also our revenue is down, yet another reason for that transfer
being up from the General Fund.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. I see --
MR. ISAACSON: Commissioner, within the family of court
funds, there hasn't been an increase in the General Fund transfer since
2009. And we've been trying to hold that General Fund transfer by
making a number of adjustments within the court family of funds in
order to do that.
We just ran out of bullets this year. And I think the court folks
have been extraordinary in their attempts to try and work with our
office, and specifically Sherry Pryor in the budget office, to work this.
It's just we ran out of options.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Mark, are we obligated to provide
this funding, or is this discretionary funding on the part of the board?
MR. ISAACSON: No. There's an obligation here to fund your
court operations. And, again, I can't emphasize the fact that there's
been a level of cooperation amongst the court folks that is very nice to
see.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commendable.
MR. ISAACSON: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commendable. Any --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I'm sorry. What I see on Page
26, and it's the court IT --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Can we go ahead and put that on the
overhead?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: There's a -- your carryforward
from 2013 is $362,000. What you're proposing is $627,000.
MR. ISAACSON: Commissioner, the court IT fund is a
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June 20, 2013
stand-alone fund. That's really governed by statute.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. This is not part of--
MR. ISAACSON: Right. The primary --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
MR. ISAACSON: -- contribution to the General Fund is the
Fund 681, the court operations, which is a different subset.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Any further questions?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Nope.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
MR. RICE: I'd also like to take a moment to thank Leo and his
staff and Sherry from budget office for being very responsive and
helpful to us also, and thank you for the Commission's support over
the years also.
MR. RUSSELL: Steve Russell, State Attorney for the 20th
Circuit. My -- our funding is similar to the public defender's; we're
primarily a state-based agency with the areas that Ms. Smith
mentioned. We also have those areas through the county.
I'd be glad to take any questions. I, too, would reiterate that
we've had a great relationship with the county staff in working through
this this year and the prior year, and we appreciate that.
So if there are any questions, I'd be glad to take them.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Any questions on behalf of the
board?
(No response.)
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: There appear to be no questions.
We would like to thank you all for the service you provide to the
community.
And, again, you've presented acceptable budgets, and we
appreciate what you're doing. Thank you.
MR. RUSSELL: Thank you.
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June 20, 2013
MS. SMITH: Thank you.
MR. RICE: Thank you.
MS. GREIDER: Thank you. Good morning.
MR. OCHS: Madam Chair, that takes us to the Growth
Management Division.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Before we get started -- I'd like to
ask growth management to come forward. But I would like to say,
Leo, you've done an exceptional job over the last few years in
changing your staff. You have experienced turnover. You have made
decisions about replacing certain staff at the leadership level as well as
throughout the organization.
And the team that we have in place, which is a very different
team than at least I can say when I started, has been exceptional. I
mean, they have performed at the highest level. And throughout this
recession they have maintained the level of service, they have been
consistently cutting costs, and they have maintained, you know,
positive morale in the most commendable way.
So I'd like to thank you, because, you know, the leadership,
whether it's Nick or Len or George, you know, Mike, Steve, everyone
has done absolutely fantastic.
MR. OCHS: Well, Commissioner, I appreciate that very much,
and I just accept that on their behalf. They're the ones that are doing
the good work every day. So I'm very honored to work with them.
Thanks for that compliment.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely. And I think the budget
that each of these divisions is representing here today is reflective of
the effectiveness and efficiency of the new leadership and the new
staff. So thank you all.
MR. OCHS: Thank you.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Good morning, Commissioners. For
the record, Nick Casalanguida, your Growth Management
Administrator. I'll introduce our staff. To the far left we have Allison
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June 20, 2013
Kearns, our Finance and Operations Manager; Gene Shue (phonetic),
our Finance and Operations Director; on my right, Jamie French,
Finance and Operations on the Planning and Regulations side;
followed by Ken Kovensky, who's our Manager on that side.
I'd like to thank the OMB staff. We couldn't do this without their
work, hard work with us, as painful as that is sometimes for Mark, as
he smiles as we get started.
GMD is made up of 397 and a half full-time employees in 2014.
And, perspective, FY 10 we had 474, and going back one more year,
583. So we're not nearly the size we were four or five years ago.
Our total approved budget is about $170 million a year; up five
million from last year.
The positions that we've add were 21 ; 18 BCC approved recently
for the development review on the planning and regulations side, two
positions for your hearing examiner, one for the MPO. The rest of the
workforce is through job bank contract services.
Our revenues come primarily from development fees, gas taxes,
tourist tax, ad valorem, impact fees, and grants. So it's important to
have these two separate folks. They both sit on both sides of me,
because these are segregated funds each having their own nuances,
how they can be spent.
Our management approach in 2010, P&R, has been mirrored now
in construction and maintenance with Gene and Allison coming on
board in the last year, about 12 months or so.
We've centralized finance in both shops. It used to be the
directors had their own budget, people that worked for them. Now
they work for these folks. And we have our own mini budget hearings
coming up for the budget. They actually request funds, and they
almost compete for funds, and these folks here provide guidance, and
we make decisions together as a team.
So having that split does us well, and it provides us good checks
and balances. And we've done a very good job of grants compliance.
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June 20, 2013
I think the audits have shown that as well, too.
I'll get into planning and regulation first, Commissioners. Your
113 fund, which is the building, is up 14 percent. It would have been
more, but you've already approved the 5 percent fee reduction going
into next year. So that's reflected in the FY14 budget. In 131, it's up
over 35 percent. We'll review those fees next year as we go forward.
To give you some perspective from 2010 to 2014, we had a
negative burn rate in 2010 of two-and-a-half-million dollars. We were
spending two-and-a-half million more than we were taking in; 2.2
million in debt in the building, the garage that we had; and 1.2 million
in the 131 that we owed parks and rec.
In this FY14 budget, all of that is paid off. So all of our debt
service --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's great.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: -- for both of those funds are done,
and that includes that 5 percent fee reduction.
So that is an agency-wide teamwork approach. Everybody has
worked hard to make that happen.
Some key points in the planning and regulations side. We are
fully funded for vehicle replacements, as Dan Croft has recommended
from fleet, as it is an enterprise fund.
Our business plan remains the same, and this is important,
because it's working out. We have our core FTEs, and then we
supplement 10 percent with job bankers, and then we supplement that
with on-call contracts.
This year we'll probably put an on-call contract for 131, because
that's what's increasing the most. And if a large project comes in,
we'll use those services to cover that.
One of the increases we have this year in the fund is FEMA 235.
It's a General Fund increase that's in your planning and regulations
side. We have submitted four more basins this year to FEMA, so we
expect those -- as they get approved, we're going to have that same
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June 20, 2013
influx of people coming forward asking for help, and the board in the
past has provided that service to them.
We also have to update our local mitigation strategy and
floodplain management plan ordinance. We're going to outsource that.
That will be done in compliance with EMS's local mitigation strategy.
I'd also like to put on the record that code, while it's funded by
General Fund -- and this is important for our viewers -- it does not
take the fees that it collects and goes back into their budget. So they
don't generate fees and grow their budget. We get a flat General Fund,
and we've been cutting our General Fund submittal -- transfer to code
every year leading up to this year. So it's been smaller. So it's not
going after that.
Now, our new code director, Jeff Wright, will start in a couple
weeks. What I've asked him to do is look at the difference in service
levels between before and after when we had anonymous complaints
to see if we can reallocate some of the services that we provide.
On the challenges in P&R, it's going to be chasing the curve. As
Leo and I talked about -- you know, he asked me a couple years ago,
how you manage the downturn is just as important as how you
manage the upturn, because right now I think our ability to track, train,
and retain competent help is going to be the biggest challenge to
maintaining our service levels, because we are an enterprise fund.
We will review the 131 fund going forward but, you know,
there's a couple slides -- and I believe you were given a package.
There were three slides that just show you what kind of increases we
have in activity year over year.
MR. OCHS: Nick, hold on.
Here comes the package.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Okay.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: We're getting it so late, we can't
study it.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Not a lot really to study; I heard
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June 20, 2013
Commissioner Fiala. It's just going to show you some trends, and that
way you can kind of follow along with our thought process.
There are just really three slides, and they just show you trend in
one- and two-family home construction. We did about 1,300 units in
FY13. We expect about 2,000 in FY14, so that's a pretty big increase.
The second slide is all land development reviews, and you can
see the orange line as it trends up at the end of March. What's
happening is the complexity; the plats are coming online, as well as
the reviews coming online. And then the projected review and
inspection activity forecasted out to 2014.
Now, here's the hard part when you're an enterprise fund and
you're doing a budget that's not iterative every couple months. We
expect -- with homes going to 2,000 units, there's probably about 15
developments that are plats right now that are going to be putting
model homes in the ground, and they're all going to hit about the same
time.
So it's going to be hard for us to see what that absorption rate is
until they're all there.
And our goal is to manage that fee with the level of service and
the quality of service we put out, so that's going to have to be an
iterative process in '14 with the industry.
So that's pretty much a wrap of your planning and regulations
side of the budget; now I'll go on to construction and maintenance.
We are in our fifth year of negative-to-flat budgets in a sense.
Mark and I meet, and we talked about midyear cuts to give you a feel.
Since 2010, we've given back $30 million to the General Fund
between midyear cuts out of operating and capital. What we do is we
complete a project, there's usually money left over in some
contingencies. We'll do a sweep, and then usually it's reallocated to
another project, but what we've been doing midyear is working with
OMB and giving that back to the General Fund where it's General
Fund.
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June 20, 2013
We completed our high-level asset review in 2012. We did a
report card which detailed all of our major categories. In the road
resurfacing, we've got 2,700 lane miles of pavement, about 1,100
center-line miles.
This year, 725 were rated. I expect some upside to come forward
the next six months. I think we're going to find we're doing -- in better
shape with our road resurfacing than we thought.
We reinstated our limerock road conversion program. As a
matter of fact, you have an item next budget meeting, what the board
approved; we're going to give you the four or five roads that we're
doing.
On one issue, it's one of the slides in the back of the book you
have, it talks about our landscaping. We have expanded requests from
the General Fund of about 363,000. We're experiencing 25 to 35
percent increases in year-over-year costs. And when you look at that
slide -- I'll cover it now and I'll cover it later -- it is really reflective.
And one of the numbers that pops out -- Leo, you want to put that
on the viewer. It's that green slide right there. At the very back of
your book, our landscape and maintenance numbers per center line
mile back in '04 averaged about 35,000, and it climbed as high as
60,000.
Recently, in the past couple years, it's been about 27-and-a-half
to 28, 29, fluctuating. FY13 we saw about 2, 3 -- about 5 percent
jump. This year the two contracts we put up had jumped 30 percent.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Nick, I have a question on that.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Sure.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: It shows the number of miles.
Does that include mow-only miles?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: No, sir. These are the landscape
contract median prices. The mow-only miles -- our contract for
mow-only is going to go back out this October, so I don't know what
that hits until that goes back out again.
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June 20, 2013
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: So this is fully landscaped median
miles.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Does this also include shoulders of
the --
MR. CASALANGUIDA: It includes the street trees if there are,
but that doesn't include shoulders.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: But the county right-of-way on the
side of the road, if landscaped, is included?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Yes, then that's in that price.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: But that's widely varying as to how
much maintenance there is in any particular delineated mile?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Yes, sir. That's why it's an average of
all.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: If I may, we've got Commissioner
Fiala and Commissioner Henning who would like to address this
issue.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Sure.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I do want to let the board know that
we do have the discussion about landscaping scheduled for a future
workshop and to remember that whatever we're doing with respect to
the budget, you know, is subject to modification. The budget is a
living document.
So after that workshop, after we've analyzed what's going on with
respect to this issue, we can make changes to our budget accordingly.
I'm not sure who was first, Commissioner Henning or
Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Commissioner Fiala.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Since we started farming out
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a lot of our maintenance, and now -- because we -- you know, we felt
that it would be less expensive to do that, but now that they're
charging so much more, would it be something that we would want to
consider to take a look at in-house again?
We've found that we've had some problems with the farming out
of the maintenance as well, from what I've been told. And so maybe
that would be something that we could analyze and see if we should
bring it back in-house.
The second thing is, it's a surprise because, as we've ripped out
all the grasses and put in those pricker bushes instead, which are
unsightly -- you'd think that with going backwards like that, they
would be less to maintain instead of more. So, I mean, you can see
the beauty of U.S. 41 and Davis Boulevard. One is very unattractive,
and one looks beautiful.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: I think going back in-house is always
a little bit scary because you want to see a trend. Where's our
breakeven point? It doesn't get there until it almost doubles. The
problem we have with contract labor versus us, you know, we treat
our employees well. They work eight-hour days. Some of these folks
and these contract people that come up, they'll work 10-, 12-hour
days. And I don't know what they pay their people, and it's -- you
know, we don't review that.
But I can tell you, for us to be -- to do what we do in the county
manager's organization to bring them in, the cost would be much
higher. It would take a while before it was worth our while to do it.
In terms of quality of the landscape, we definitely had an
execution problem at the end of last year, and it was vendor related. I
think we gave back a little General Fund. And Mark and I talked
about that, because we put in requests for the vendors, and our
contracts didn't have the penalties that we wanted in. So by the time
we got to the end of fiscal year, while the requests went in two to three
months before the fiscal year ended, a lot of them didn't deliver. They
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just put us off. Now, that was the sign of the time. They're now
starting to work for the private side.
So this year we started three months earlier. You're seeing a lot
of activity now; Pam and Liz are out there all the time, every day, and
we're going through each segment. So we won't have that same
problem this year. But costs are definitely going up.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The workshop we're going to
have on landscaping, isn't that in the shopping centers, or are we
covering the medians?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: We're covering everything.
MR. OCHS: We're going to try to cover it all, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Everything. The intent was to
address all the different issues related to landscaping, the funding, the
standards. It seemed to make sense to make it all-encompassing rather
than isolated to a single subject, since the issues have been raised over
time at various meetings.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. Well, I guess that will be
a perfect time to raise some of those, because I have different feelings
than others.
But I would like to see fruit trees a requirement in the Land
Development Code in commercial so when I go to the grocery store, I
can just pick an avocado.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That is --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Rather than go buy it.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I just want you to know that is such
a self-serving agenda, Commissioner Henning. I'm serious.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So I can make some guacamole
and bring it in.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
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MR. CASALANGUIDA: Fruit trees, okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Nick, stay focused. Do not be
distracted by Commissioner Henning. Just stay on target.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: We've got an herb lobby.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Fresh orange juice everywhere.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: All right. Bridges. We'll go to
something that's a little dry.
We've got overall a hundred bridges, depending on what you'd
call a bridge or a culvert in Collier County. They're inspected by
FDOT every two years.
I've got one bridge report that was done as a follow-up. We took
the top 25 bridges that FDOT had a concern, we took that down to a
detailed study. We're doing 20 more coming up this fiscal year.
Every bridge in Collier County that had any concerns has either
been repaired, replaced, or is programmed and funded. So let me put
that on the record. I'm very comfortable that the bridge program is
covered in the budget.
Jump onto page Capital 20. In your budget book, Page Capital
20 goes down, really talks about where all the funding goes. And
there's a couple maps that I provided you, because I will tell you, if
you just go through your budget book and look at these numbers, you
won't know really where they are.
There is your major project tab -- I don't know if it's a tab in
there, but it should be your first map that opens up, and it kind of
corresponds to this in the bridge program as well.
Major projects that we have going into next year: U.S. 41, 951,
and CR951 from Golden Gate to Green, as well as some of the bridges
that are being replaced.
Now, it's for your information. You can kind of scan when you
go through, and it's more for you to follow up if you have questions
later. But your Capital 20 breaks down all of those projects.
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And I'm getting a wave from the county manager to keep this
thing moving, so I will.
Your major intersection enhancements are also on your Page 20
capital, and you've got a map in there as well, too, so feel free to ask
questions if you're looking at it.
Countywide stormwater systems. We've been getting a little
more money from OMB. I think our biggest challenge is the big
binder that's in front of Jean on the bottom. We did a study of Golden
Gate city in 2008, and the biggest challenge we had is actually
implementing that.
We are committed to LASIP by permit through 2015. Golden
Gate City is 15 to $18 million in present-day value cost to fix that.
Fifty year old corrugated steel pipe drainage system that's starting to
rot underneath the road.
Our issue is some of those roads require resurfacing now. So do I
resurface a road that I'm going to rip up to replace the drainage? The
answer's no.
So we're accelerating the Fund 60077 to be able to be flexible to
do both of those, and that's in that page there as well, too, on Capital
21. There's $2.8 million in there. So we have 500,000 budgeted, but I
think halfway through we'll take a look at that.
I want to talk a little bit about asset management and the
three-step approach we took. We did a report card; started in 2011,
we completed in 2012. We basically took everything we've had and
focusing on the critical projects first and then said let's break it down.
Bridges was one, stormwater systems was another. There's a
stormwater book that's over there that's got every single surface water
asset we have with a grading in it. And then that -- we developed our
five-year program.
So, again, I'll say the same thing as surface water. If we're
budgeted the way we are right now, every critical asset in the
stormwater is covered in the next five years except for Golden Gate
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City, and that's a transition from LASIP as we wrap up in 2015 going
forward.
We have one project manager that's assigned to that, Joe Delate,
and that's going to be his focus, and I told him for the next five or 10
years, and he understands that.
The third level that we have that we don't have the detail for --
and county manager's aware of this -- is things like signs, swales,
lighting, and minor components. I think as we develop our asset
management program, that will feed into there, and it's a bit bulky
because, you can imagine, Collier County has a significant amount of
signs and swales that -- but they're not health, safety, welfare related.
Any ones that are we're taking care of.
Challenges in construction and maintenance, inflating landscape
costs, as I've told you. My fear is that we put out projects to bid, you
will see that inflation start to develop in construction projects as well,
too.
We update our engineers' estimates every six months. And I can
tell you, if there are 12 major developments that are getting
contractors on there right now, I would expect to see an increase in
those areas as well, too.
Vehicle replacements in P&R. We're fully funded. To give you
a feel, in C&M, 81 were recommended by fleet. We're only doing 14
this year; a bunch more, as the county manager's expanded budget is
looking at. The challenge we're going to have is probably midway
through when Mark wants to do some midyear budget adjustments, we
will try and condense and clean some projects and probably bring to
the board a BA to do some more vehicle replacements in midyear.
Some of these vehicles are just getting broken down too much
and too much downtime. So that's one of the other ones that I don't
think we have fully covered on the General Fund side, but County
Manager alluded to that as well, too.
That's a high-level review. I could have gone into a little more
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detail, but I'll leave it to questions for you right now if you'd like.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And also, to remind the board, of
course you can visit with Nick and his staff to address any specific
details before we finalize, and we can raise those issues during the
discussion when we do finalize and approve this budget, if we don't
get into the details here now.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: And, Commissioner, one more
comment, just so you know, we are probably the most diversified
division you have. We do 75 percent of all your AIMS contacts that
come through our department.
Mark Chesney and Ebby Ebersino (phonetic) take care of those,
but most of-- whether it's discussions about flooding, traffic, building
permits, code enforcement, come through our shop, and I think they
do a fantastic job, and I just wanted to recognize them.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I just want to make two comments.
The first is the fact that you have reduced your fees in your enterprise
fund and are still maintaining that high level of service and still have
had the ability to hire staff to keep that level of service up is
commendable because that's, obviously, a win-win, and that's
definitely worthy of note.
The other thing you mentioned is you've brought in a new code
enforcement director, which is great, and we definitely need
improvements in what's been going on with code enforcement. There
has been a lot of controversy and upset in the community over
different code enforcement actions.
So I think it's really great. I think your selection of Mr. Wright,
who used to work for the County Attorney's Office and is very
familiar with county operations, you know, obviously, and law, being
an attorney, is an excellent choice.
And I just -- going back to what you were saying in terms of, you
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know, volume of complaints, I think what we have to remember is we,
as a board, have established a policy that if staff identifies an issue, it
doesn't go to code enforcement. The board's position is compliance.
So you give the community the opportunity to comply, and it's
only if there is no compliance and you, as the director, and the county
attorney make that determination does it move to code enforcement.
So that will, if properly enforced by staff or through staff, I
should say, should reduce the volume going to code enforcement.
And whatever policies you can come up with, you know, within
code enforcement with this new leadership to make it, you know,
effective and fair, the better for everybody in the community. You'll
have a safer, happier community as a consequence.
So I think, you know, overall this budget is very fair, very
reasonable, and shows really good management.
Any -- oh, I'm sorry. Commissioner Nance.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes, Nick, just one question in
code enforcement I'm looking at, and I'm seeing that -- you know,
correct me if I'm wrong, but a great deal of your expense under
regulation is enterprise funding; isn't that correct?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: It is all General Fund funded except
for some fees that come in there. It's pretty much almost 95 percent
enterprise funded (sic).
COMMISSIONER NANCE: So, I mean, that --
MR. CASALANGUIDA: I'm sorry. Not enterprise fund,
general funded.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: General funded, okay.
In code enforcement, under the section there -- I think it's Page
33, I notice that you have charges for services as a program funding
source. What sort of charges for services; could you just refresh my
memory, because I can't recall what sort of services code enforcement
is billing people for.
MR. FRENCH: Thank you, Commissioner. That is going to be
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on your lien searches for your foreclosed properties. It's going to be
for lot mowing of those foreclosed properties, and how code goes back
through. We generate that in a revenue category, because we collect
from them. There's a cost to the county that we pay that vendor to go
forward and mow that lawn or trim the trees or do whatever it is to
ensure that the blight is --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Isn't a good deal of that coming
back around full circle from the people that are the offenders, or no?
MR. FRENCH: Most of that money is -- in fact, all of that
money, for the most part, is paid for by the banks. Diane has done a
phenomenal job --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Agreed.
MR. FRENCH: -- working with those folks. And we think that
that revenue line will probably start to decrease as those homes
become occupied.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: All right, sir. Thank you very
much.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: It's not really a revenue. It's really a
reimbursement of the expenditure made by the county for a
noncompliant property owner.
MR. FRENCH: Right.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And, for example, in foreclosure.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Grass mowings as well, too. We
charge and recoupe those costs as well, too. If we have to cut the
grass for somebody, we bill them, and then it's a charge for service
that comes back to us.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: But that's not $43,000 a mile,
right?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: No.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Just for the benefit of the viewing
public, an enterprise fund is basically like a private business. It's
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self-funding. You assess fees based on the costs. We don't assess fees
greater than costs because we're mandated by law where our fees have
to equal our costs. So there's no profit there.
But it's basically a fee-driven initiative without any money
coming from the General Fund, in other words, property tax.
So thank you very much. There don't seem to be any other
questions at this time.
MR. CASALANGUIDA: We're extremely grateful. I've got a
great team to work with.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You do.
MR. OCHS: Commissioners, that takes us to your Public
Services Division. Mr. Carnell.
MR. MILLER: Madam Chairwoman, I do have two registered
speakers for public services for Domestic Animal Services.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MR. CARNELL: Good morning, Chairwoman, members of the
board. Steve Carnell.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Steve, can you wait one moment.
Just let everyone sit down.
MR. CARNELL: Sure.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You've got quite a group here.
MR. CARNELL: I brought several my best friends with me.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: It's a party.
MR. CARNELL: Good morning. Happy to be before you this
morning to talk about the public services division and our FY 14
budget.
I'll give you a very high-level overview, and then, obviously,
we'll entertain any questions from the board.
The good news is that the division budget, our appropriation
budget is within your budget guidance for the year. And we -- as a
rule across each of the departments, we are maintaining existing
service levels at the same or, in a few cases, lower costs.
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Just a few highlights for the division in the new year in terms of
changes or things that we're either adding or building on to.
We are going to be establishing an operations group within my
office to preside over the entire division and to support the entire
division in terms of planning budget and activity and also looking for
opportunities to improve revenue collection or improve our business
efficiency and how we deliver services, and we've got several ideas
we're already pursuing through that.
In addition to that, our alternative transportation department is
getting ready to open the transfer station here within the next few
weeks in the government center, and in the new year budget we'll be
embarking on improvements to the CAT facility at Davis Boulevard
and be including a fueling island there and also adding some other
improvements to make us more ADA compliant in the long haul.
And our department -- I'm sorry. Domestic Animal Services
group, as we've just been through, with the help of the board, the
adoption of an updated Animal Control Ordinance, so we're going to
be implementing that ordinance in the coming year along with
standards of care that we'll be bringing back to the board in the fall.
Our health department continues to perform at a very effective
and admirable way on very limited resources, and Dr. Colfer and her
staff do a great job of just managing a lot of different issues they have
with funding and mandates and, of course, providing patient care in a
highly professional and responsive way.
Our HHVS department is really moving forward in a number of
areas, and you're going to see some important initiatives coming from
that group, a couple of which you've already seen, the victim
advocacy organization, coming -- really coming into full bloom in the
next year, and I think you're going to be very pleased with what you
see from HHVS.
Our library continues to operate very effectively, and I'm happy
to report that we're -- this budget is allowing us to increase
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expenditures for books and related materials considerably. We're
going to be going from what was a budget of a little less than half a
million dollars to almost $800,000, about a $300,000 increase, and
we're really behind in on our book purchases, and we've had to scale
them back because of the recession. So this is our first step towards
recovery in that area.
The library is also pursuing modernization. You're going to see
us take the first step in the coming year in beginning to decrease our
reliance on bar-coding and instead going to RFID chips for all books
and check-out materials. We won't be able to do that all in this one
budget year, but we're going to begin that process this year.
Our adult summer reading program, which we initiated a year
ago, has been extremely successful, well received. We're going to
continue that. And more online learning opportunities for adults.
Parks and Recreation staff is going to be diligently working to
finish constructing and opening two new parks. The Immokalee South
Community Center is actually a rebuild of an old structure and
replacing it with a real live actual building, and we're looking forward
to that. And that is on target to open in January, in your -- we're
asking you to fund 10 months of staffing costs in anticipation of that.
And then we also have the Eagle Lakes community center, which
will be going out to bid for construction this summer and we expect to
come online in the middle of next summer. And we have three
months of funding -- staffing funding for that site.
Our university extension group continues to work very actively
across the county in reaching out and leveraging resources. Mr.
Fleuch's done an excellent job of working with a number of resources
in the community.
We have a challenge, in my view, with Bryan's department in
that Bryan wears two hats. He's the director, and he also is your sea
grant extension agent. And I'm not sure that's really the best practice
in the long term to try to have the director do both of those things.
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So we're looking at alternative funding outside of the Board of
County Commissioners. We are putting in an application through the
Restore Act program to see if we can get some assistance to fund sea
grant. Mr. Fleuch will still be involved in sea grant. He's very well
received in the community, I think, as you-all know, so we want to
keep Brian's face in the middle of it. But we will be trying to get him
some help in terms of making sure we can keep sea grant growing and
effective.
So, in short, that's a quick flyover of where we are. I didn't mean
to miss our museum staff. I think you know that they're going to be
working very diligently this year to try to develop new revenue
streams for the museum system, and we have four or five in particular
that we're already pursuing, one of which is going to be taking one of
the buses from the CAT system and, essentially, reconfiguring it and
using it for tours out at our remote locations. And we do think that
over time that's going to generate some revenue and some very
goodwill in our community.
So with that, we'll entertain any questions from the board.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What's the purpose of the extra
person -- FTE for the museum?
MR. CARNELL: The purpose is to support maintenance of all
five facilities in a more effective manner and also to undergird and
support the revenue expansion activity. Let me start with that second
point first.
One of the activities under revenue enhancement is going to be
looking to rent out facilities, particularly the Naples Depot after hours,
and we need a person who can help us with setup and takedown. We
also anticipate some additional maintenance activity through increased
use of the facilities.
And the other thing is, we're really just in, I think, a little more
cost-effective way doing what we're already doing. Right now we're
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spending about $30,000 a year in operating funds to hire temporary
staff to do maintenance. And so while we're asking for $50,000, it's
really a net increase of$20,000, because we're lowering the operating
expense side of the budget by $30,000.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Can you show that in the budget
book where you're lowering that?
MR. CARNELL: Yeah. I can show you -- yeah, I can show you
in the line items, in the detail, yes. Yeah, there's a $30,000 reduction
against that $50,000 increase.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Can you show also the revenue
anticipated for these after-hours events versus this new hire? And
also, please take a look at potentially, instead of hiring this person to
do after-hours events to raise money, look at maybe a marketing
person to raise money to be less dependent upon the tourist
development tax, as requested by the Board of Commissioners just
recently.
MR. CARNELL: Well, of course, that is what we're intending to
do. That's the purpose of the after-hour activity, to be less dependent
on TDC revenue.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah, but is it compared to
having a marketing person to raise monies to be less dependent on
tourist tax?
MR. CARNELL: Well, what we're -- it's a great question.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So just think about that and --
MR. CARNELL: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- get back to -- actually, that's
what I want. I'm not saying that that's what the others want.
But I find that fundraising through marketing is more profitable
maybe. I don't know. Once you do the analysis, maybe I'm wrong.
MR. CARNELL: Well, let me just briefly address that, and it's a
great point.
We're taking the approach of taking our existing staff now and
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building on them and using our existing structures and trying to
leverage them as best we can and see what kind of results we get in
FY14.
We have thought very much along the lines of what you're
talking about, Commissioner Henning, that if that does not create a
revenue stream that is desirable either in the short or long term -- and
it may take a few years to build all of these revenue streams the way
we want them built, but the next approach might be to go -- I'll use the
word "foundational," which may be, I think, what you're talking about
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Correct.
MR. CARNELL: -- with some type of either marketer or
fundraiser.
Mr. Jamro does have a marketer under contract, an outsource
marketer who's already been helping us raise the profile of the
museum.
And so for the moment we're approaching these other -- we're
taking these other avenues first, but that would probably be the next
place to go if we wanted to try to continue to build museum revenue is
looking at the foundational approach instead of trying to develop more
long-term fundraising and donors into the system.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: All I'm asking for is a business
model based upon what you're trying to create.
MR. CARNELL: Sure. And we can share more detail with you
over time, absolutely.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah. And it should be
realistic, projectionary.
MR. CARNELL: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
MR. CARNELL: Understood.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, two questions. Number one,
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I'm thrilled that you're going to be buying more books for the library;
that's great, because we really needed to do some catch-up there, and
probably a whole heck of a lot more than this will afford us, but at
least we can amortize it over a few years and be able to do that.
The second thing is, I wanted to know, will the libraries be open
any longer than they are now, you know, adding one day a week to
some of them that are only open three days a week now, or is that
something that has to be put off again?
MS. MATTHES: We're getting -- this is Marilyn Matthes,
Library Director. We're getting no new people. We don't really have
the people to extend hours any longer, I'm sorry.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No, that's -- I was just asking. I
know that --
MS. MATTHES: But staff is talking about a plan to increase our
hours gradually, and what we should increase first and second and so
on. And, actually, I talked about that issue with the Library Advisory
Board yesterday. And so we're starting to make those plans for the
good times to come back.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, that's wonderful. I know it was
very disappointing to the community at large when we had to close --
of course, everybody understood, with our financial situation.
And the last question is about the museum. I've long held that we
should be open one day on the weekend, whether it's Saturdays and,
you know, close on another day, the slowest day of the week -- I don't
know what it would be, Monday or Tuesday or something like that --
and instead be open on a Saturday so that more of the community, the
kids out of school and so forth, would be able to go to the museums.
I'm just wondering if that's -- if that's something that's in the plans. Not
any extra money, just change the days.
MR. JAMRO: Ron Jamro, your Museum Director.
Three of the five museums are open on Saturdays, one of which
is Naples Depot, which is the most visited.
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Saturday traffic at the main museum amount to about eight to 10
people, so we just made the business decision that that wasn't a wise
way to put our resources to work, especially now.
So there's no plan to expand that beyond the three museums.
And that covers Naples, Everglades City, and Marco Island. So those
are open Saturdays, and those are the three main centers. I think we
have all we can provide there at the moment.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. I didn't even -- I knew Marco
was open, but I didn't realize anybody else was. And so -- well, that's
interesting. Thank you very much.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I would like to echo
Commissioner Henning's concern with the adding an additional FTE
for the museum. That having been said, I am a great, great museum
supporter. But I think we really need to think about doing that.
I would like to see a lot more cooperative effort between
facilities, for example, and the county and the museums, and I also
encourage Mr. Wert and his TDC marketing to do a better job,
including the museum, so that we can raise the profile on museums
and enable you to capitalize on fundraising capabilities in this county,
which are extraordinary. I think you've witnessed private entities that
have just done an incredible job on raising funds, and I think that's an
untapped resource for you. I would like to see some additional
thought put into those sorts of things.
As far as the libraries are concerned, I'm very concerned about
my district. The library hours in the Estates branch library, for
example, are comparable to others, but they are open when all of my
constituents are at work and in school. They have absolutely no time
to visit the library because that's when their time is already committed.
So I would love if somebody could come up with some flex
hours out there in the blue color portion of the county and realize that
some of our students do need to go there in the evenings and use some
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of the facilities and the technology that we have there that they might
not have at their homes.
Additionally, I would like to say that Mr. Fleuch at the county
extension service is going to be a great asset to us. I think the
University of Florida is something that we really need to capitalize on,
build on our relationship there. I really look forward to working with
him.
And that's about all my comments.
Well, actually, I have another comment. I would like to
commend parks and recreation for working through the staffing and
the FTEs on their transition away from marina operations to operating
the new Eagle Lakes Community Center and the Immokalee South
Park.
I think if you'll notice, in total, you're only adding actually one
FTE in that transition. And that's wonderful, because what we did was
you privatized the marinas; am I right?
MR. WILLIAMS: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: So what you did is you took all
that revenue and all that expense, which was basically a wash, but that
activity made no contribution against six employees. You're now
taking those six employees, you're able to staff Eagle Lakes and the
new Immokalee South Park community transitioning those employees
that were there.
I think you should be commended for that. That's fantastic.
That's what I'm looking for. I love that. I just think that's one of the
most uplifting things I saw in this whole binder. And I thank you, sir,
for getting that done. That's great.
MR. WILLIAMS: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, we have Commissioner Coyle
who would like to ask you a few questions.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: As you probably know, we have
received several messages recently about the Department of Animal
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Services and Sunday hours. The arguments I've read seem reasonable.
And I know that you have been looking at that.
Can you provide us an assessment of the viability of having
Sunday hours so we can increase the number of adoptions? Is it
something you can do soon or never?
MS. TOWNSEND: Amanda Townsend, your Director of
Animal Services.
We'd love to be open seven days a week to the public. We think
that it's appropriate to be able to be open on Sunday for working
families to be able to reclaim the lost pets and adopt new ones.
We don't see the efficacy of closing another day of the week
because we're going to limit service in some way that way, so we'd
really like to be open seven days a week.
And it's something that we could do as soon as the funding was
in place by adding some staff. We have a complete staffing plan
developed behind the -- you know, the request that you're going to
hear from the public to have us open seven days.
So it would be a matter of having the funding in place and hiring
the staff
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I think that can be
accomplished; however, if you don't feel that it could be accomplished
by closing one day during the week, I would recommend that we take
the department and -- because it is an enforcement action, really, and
put it under code enforcement. Of course, that's the county manager;
however, we have the ability to cut the administration overhead and
actually save money and stay -- open up seven days a week. That's
two FTE positions that could be cut.
You know, I -- I think it's very, very questionable about needing
to provide a service seven days a week, okay.
So if you really feel that way, consolidate your departments and
save some further money.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Leo?
MR. OCHS: Well, obviously, that is not the staff
recommendation, and that's not the recommendation you have in your
budget.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I know it isn't.
MR. OCHS: I understand.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: But I'm not going to go there. I
think it's -- you know, this is the same department that came back and
said, we're going to have to kill a lot animals in one budget if we don't
get more money. Now the same thing is happening; they want to
increase service. And I'm just saying, well, we didn't provide extra
money then, and the utilization, as far as I'm concerned, hasn't gone
up, so I'm just providing another way to get to the same place, if
you-all want to go there.
MR. OCHS: Sure. I just, again, want to reiterate that what
you're receiving is either public request or requests, perhaps, from
your advisory board representatives, but the staff is not recommending
in this budget that you go to Sunday service.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah. I don't think it's needed,
personally. And if it is needed, do it through another day.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I just want to get a feeling of the
board. Do you believe that seven-day service is required?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: No, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Do you?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Coyle, you do?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think seven-day service would be
good if it can be shown that you increase the adoption rate.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And I believe that you have a staff
there taking care of the animals and cleaning on Sunday. I don't see
the real need to have a big staff increase in order to do that. I think
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there are ways it can be done economically, and there might be ways
to increase fees a little bit to support that process.
So if you make an argument that people are working and don't
have time to get to the libraries at the times they're open, you can
make the same argument that says that people who are looking for
finding a lost dog or getting a dog for their family are most likely to be
doing it on the weekends than on the weekdays.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Like, on a Sunday afternoon?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes, that's right.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: As opposed to Monday morning?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So I think the request is logical,
and I think that if we put our minds to it, we could do it without
increasing the budget.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So I think the recommendation
seems to be -- I mean, if it can be done without a cost, it should be
considered. But if it can't be done without a cost, it doesn't seem to be
supported.
Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. Commissioner Coyle, to your
statement, I agree with you 100 percent. I believe we need to have
things open at the appropriate time.
And the chair asked me if I supported seven days, and I really
don't think seven days is necessary, but I'd certainly support --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Changing hours?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Moving it to Sunday if that's
important. You know, when I mentioned the libraries, the reason I
mentioned the libraries is the libraries in my district are not open
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday or after hours, and that's a huge
difference between being opening seven days, you know.
So I do support them being open at the appropriate time. And if
they can do that and raise adoptions, I certainly support it. But I'm
unclear that open -- being open seven days is going to raise adoptions.
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It might be more convenient and more expensive. But, you know,
we're really at a point in this budget where we have to do what's
necessary and not necessarily what's nice, and there's a difference.
And I'm not trying to be hard about it, but, you know --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Leo, if I may summarize, I think
what -- if you could show the board how this would necessarily
increase adoptions and, secondly, give the board options how this can
be done without affecting cost, it might be considered, but those
would be the constraints, realistically. I mean, there has to be a
benefit to doing it, and it, obviously, has to be financially feasible.
MR. OCHS: Understood. That's exactly what we'll do.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you. And bring that back.
I'd like to make a couple of comments before we go to the public
speakers. The first is, over this last year there has been dramatic
change in your division, Steve. First, as you pointed out, the animal
services ordinance, which is going to have an effect on cost and
efficiency, was finally settled this year after debate over many years,
so that's extremely positive.
And it's a work in progress. We hope to do more. It's going to
change again and, hopefully, the next change will be better. And, you
know, inch by inch, everything is a cinch.
With respect to grants with, you know, HHVS, I mean, you
know, that division, wow. I mean, unbelievable. And if we're going
to see savings there, it's without a doubt attributable to what Kim and
her new staff has done. I mean, that -- between, you know, the VAO
program that we've established -- and the first grant application is
coming through for our approval at the next board meeting.
The administration of the housing, the whole affordable housing
fiasco that we suffered in earlier years that you have now cleaned up, I
mean, tremendous.
I think you're going to see your costs progressively go down, and
hopefully bringing in an outside consultant, one of the big four firms,
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as we discussed, which is now going out to bid, will even result in
greater savings.
So the trend is absolutely in the right direction. The same thing
with CAT. I mean, you're looking at, you know, revamping the routes
to make them more efficient and effective. I mean, you've established
that short-term ad hoc committee where you're bringing in constituents
or users to actually bring out what the purpose of the system is, which
is to deliver for the customers, which goes to what Commissioner
Nance said, you know, with respect to everybody.
We're customer oriented, so we need to find out what the
customer wants. If, you know, the customer is not going to come in at
eight in the morning, we shouldn't be open at eight in the morning. If
the customer wants to come in at eight in the evening, we should be
open at eight in the evening, regardless of what it is.
With respect to libraries, the one question I had -- and this is an
issue raised in the past, and I'm curious, you know, as our funding
sources begin to grow, electronic check-in, self-check, self-- you
know, self-checking in, self-checking out, or checking out, I should
say. Not self-checking in. Self-checking out is something other
libraries have done. I think, like, for example, in Palm Beach County
they have the electronic checkout.
I would like to ask that you consider looking at that, because
what you could end up doing as a consequence -- like you say, we
don't have funding to have the libraires open for longer hours in
certain instances, if we were able to, for example, bring in these
electronic -- this electronic equipment, it's possible that we could, in
the long run, you know, looking at payback period, of course, have
longer hours without hiring more people and keeping the people that
we have and just, you know, shifting the pool around.
So I'm just adding that as a consideration. And you don't need to
answer that, because it's something I'd like you just to explore,
because it's not on the table right now. But through your advisory
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board, bring back information to us, because that would address, you
know, Commissioner Fiala's concerns, which is a concern of the
community.
MS. MATTHES: Actually, Commissioner, if I could say --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Sure.
MS. MATTHES: -- part of the RFP process for the computer
chips in books is really the first step to self-checkout units.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Good. That's great.
MS. MATTHES: The barcode technology doesn't easily lend
itself to security. The computer chips, RFID chips in a book does
provide the self-checkout units as well as the security, and that's really
part of the whole package that we're looking at, yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's great. So you're already
looking ahead to what I'm thinking of, which is fantastic.
MS. MATTHES: Definitely.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's super.
The last comment I want to make is with respect to parks. TDC
brought in a number of new employees whose focus is the sports
marketing. As you know, I am sports obsessed.
MR. WILLIAMS: That's great.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And as you know, I love the parks.
So I think it's very important that we look at the synergy between Jack
Wert's sports marketing division and our park system this year to
improve the utilization of our parks to generate more revenues which,
in turn, will be an economic development driver with respect to the
tourism industry. I mean, there's a natural synergy, and I have been
working on that and looking at that, and I'd like to sit down with you
because, like I said, I don't see -- I don't believe we will see the
revenue stream this year, so I'm not addressing it in the context of this
budget.
But this coming year I see as the working year, which will be the
driver for revenue growth and correspondent economic development
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in other arenas. So it's really great that we have hired those people,
because it will directly benefit you in parks.
MR. WILLIAMS: Absolutely.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning and
Commissioner Fiala, and then I'd like to go to the public speakers.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
I do want to remind you, a few years ago we had a discussion on
the dais about the utilization of the parks and these outside
professionals and balancing that for our residents who, through
building their house, paid an impact fee --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- parks and rec, who pays their
property taxes to augment that service.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And one of the things that's very
interesting in the discussions I've had with the community is that the
community actually wants these outsiders to come in because they
want to compete against them.
MR. WILLIAMS: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So they actually -- you know, like
the Little League and the pro guys. I mean, now, as I mentioned at the
last meeting, we have our very first sports franchise here in Collier
County, which is Adrenaline, the soccer team.
So, you know, we have been inviting teams in from other
counties to play against our team, and that's where you've got, you
know, the community and the outsiders both being happy, because it's
a win-win. And you're absolutely right, we do balance that against
interests of the local community to have accessibility, and all of that is
being looked at in -- with respect to the inventory of what we have out
there.
So you're absolutely right, Commissioner Henning, and it's a
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very important consideration that we can't lose sight of.
MR. WILLIAMS: Commissioner Henning -- Hiller, just one
other point to make regarding Commissioner --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You can call me Commissioner
Henning anytime.
MR. WILLIAMS: Sony about that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I'll take credit -- every time that
they have given him credit today, I'll take it. Not a problem. In the
press when they say Commissioner Henning had such a great idea
today, you know -- go ahead.
MR. WILLIAMS: Okay. Now I can't say it.
Commissioners, I just wanted to say just to Commissioner
Henning's point, we do allow -- and Commissioner Hiller is correct in
how she's describing it. The locals do like the competition that comes
in.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Love it.
MR. WILLIAMS: We have made available, though, North
Collier Regional Park for that walk-on play that -- where people want
to come in and find a place to play. So we do encourage that as well.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The only reason I mentioned
that, the board has changed, but I'm not sure if the philosophy has
changed.
MR. WILLIAMS: Yes. That's all.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And we want to be sure. And we'll
-- we're going to -- I'm personally going to do everything I can to
bring forward that discussion, and hopefully we can have a workshop
on it because we have a tremendous asset that we are not optimizing,
and that really needs to be done. I mean, the parks are really going to
help us tremendously in terms of being a driver, especially for
tourism.
MR. WILLIAMS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. I have no idea.
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COMMISSIONER NANCE: Commissioner Fiala was next.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And then we really must go to the
public speakers, because I don't want them to wait any longer.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I don't think we're going to finish by
noon with this section.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I'm confident we will. Go ahead.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I will quickly go and say, as a
sidenote to that but another major issue, we've -- I've been going
around talking with different businesses, and Rick Medwedeff over at
the Marriott suggested that we try and attract actual businesses, not
just teams to play one another, but actual sports businesses to the area,
whether it be a team or actually --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Actually, I want you to know I'm
doing that. I've got a paddle board manufacturer that I would like to
recruit to Collier County.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, that's great.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And that's, again, so you and I can
do yoga on the paddle board. Together, remember that's what it's all
about.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Well, we'll talk about that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Just saying.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Anyway, so those are things that I
think could be -- could also be pursued, but through our business
development department.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But it definitely has to do with
sports and a new type of business to be attracted to the area.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: No question.
Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I want to make three brief
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comments before we go to the speakers. One is, I hope that the library
doesn't take this the wrong way, but I know that in a hundred years,
there's only going to be one book in the library, and that's going to be
the one that tells you how to use the Kindle, okay. We're going to
have real small libraries that are going to have much more resources.
So I hope we're moving in the appropriate way to do that,
because that's, I'm sure, what's going to happen, and I don't think I'll
be here.
But the one thing I wanted to say is I wanted to make one more
comment about parks relating -- and we've already talked too much
about Conservation Collier, but I want to point out to everybody that
the program here talks about the transition of four positions from the
Conservation Collier land acquisition function to the maintenance
function.
And I think that's where we need to really take a look at what
we're going on, because I see a lot of things in part -- and parks and
recreation may be the successor that needs to do that. But I want to
make sure that we realize that this asset is an environmental amenity
with a recreation overlay and not a recreational amenity with an
environmental overlay on it, and I think there's a significant
difference.
Finally, I just have a question on public services capital on the
Capital Page 12, which there's just a line that says a large impact fee
deferral is expected during the summer of Fiscal Year '14 in the
amount of$231,264. I just want to ask you what that is. Somebody
mentioned it, so I'm just following up. Somebody thought it was
important enough to bring it out. What is that?
MR. ISAACSON: I can't -- sir, I can't tell you what specific
development that relates to in terms of a deferral back. I'd have to get
the research on it.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Okay. I just wondered, because
somebody, obviously, thought it was important enough to mention. I
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was just inquiring as to what it was. And that's --
MR. ISAACSON: We'll follow up.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I don't want to delay the public
speakers any further.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah. I'd like to close the
discussion and move to the public speakers, and then I'd like to move
to the next division, please.
MR. MILLER: Madam Chairman, I'm -- Chairwoman, I'm not
sure they're still here. Marjorie Bloom. She is still here. Thank you.
She'll be followed by Stephen Wright.
MS. BLOOM: Stephen is not --
MR. MILLER: So this will be our only speaker, then.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Great. Thank you.
MS. BLOOM: Hello, Commissioners. My name is Marjorie
Bloom, and I serve on Domestic Animal Services Advisory Board, but
more than that, I am a volunteer there and have been for about four
years.
Saturday is usually our busiest day at DAS; lots of adoptions, lots
of surrenders, lots of return to owners.
We've been hoping to be open on Sundays because a lot of times
people will say, well, we want to think about it -- which is a wise thing
to do when you're considering an animal, because it is a commitment
-- we'll come back tomorrow. And it -- we always have to say, I'm
sorry, we're not open on Sundays.
People work. Children are in school. Adopting a pet is an animal
-- is a family type of thing to do.
So we've got willing and able volunteers that really want to come
in on Sundays and make that commitment. We also have employees
that are there on Sundays. Even though we would need a few more,
we just feel it would be really worthwhile and would serve, most of
all, the community and the public.
So we hope that you'll consider it. Thank you.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thanks very much. And the other
thing you can do, Leo, is a pilot. You can test market it. Try with
some volunteers and maybe reorganizing a few hours and see how it
works over a month.
MR. OCHS: Sure.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: If it doesn't work, you can stop or
continue accordingly, and we can adjust the budget as the case may be
if needed, or not.
Thank you very much. We really appreciate all the work you've
done last year and towards next year. And what can we say? You
guys are doing wonderful. Thank you.
MR. OCHS: Commissioners, that brings us to your
Administrative Services Division, Ms. Price.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Len, you have 15 minutes.
MS. PRICE: Commissioners, I need 30 seconds.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: We'd be very grateful. No, you have
a very simple budget, and we appreciate, you know, whatever you
would like to contribute to us.
MS. PRICE: I do not want to sell short the contributions that this
division makes to both the community and to keeping the agency
running, but I will cut short on my comments.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Just -- I think that you're absolutely
right, and I think it is important that people understand the
departments in your division and why they're so important.
Would you like to list out the departments for the benefit of the
viewers?
MS. PRICE: Absolutely, the IT Department takes care of not
only the computers and the network system, but also the telephones
that operate the county for not only the Board of County
Commissioners but also most of the constitutional officers.
Facilities management provides us with all of our facilities,
purchases, and sells land, handles building construction not only for
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general office but also for the parks and recreations' department and
provides security to the citizens and to the people who work here.
Fleet management takes care of all of our equipment and all of
our vehicles, as well as fuel distribution.
I'm trying to go in alphabet order by the names of the --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You could just look at the people
sitting beside you, and that would help you. You could just start --
why don't you just start by --
MS. PRICE: Interim makes sure we have people, that they are
trained, that they are taken care of.
The purchases department, every purchase that we make goes
through our purchasing department.
Our risk management department handles not only our insurance,
our health insurance, but also the safety program, that has been so
successful that our workers compensation rates continue to go down.
Our loss -- our claims losses, as well as time off from work, are
continuing to go down.
We also have an incredible wellness program that is helping us
with keeping our employees healthy, keeping our insurance costs as
low as we can, and providing tremendous amount of training to our
community.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: EMS.
MS. PRICE: EMS, Bureau of Emergency Services. We've got
EMS. I don't think I need to share what EMS does, but it provides a
tremendous service to the community.
Emergency management is in a tremendous position right now to
take care of all of the emergencies. We've got strong partnerships in
place, particularly with the school district, with the Red Cross, to
make sure that our -- any emergencies that come up we will be able to
handle.
The facility that we have is perfect for taking care of all of those
needs, and we have two fire districts that take care of small fire areas.
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We've got the medical examiner who handles autopsies and the
like.
Did I miss anybody? Raise your hand if I missed you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Fire departments.
MS. PRICE: That's generally what we do for the community.
Two things that I'd like to highlight for you before you start asking us
questions.
Thanks to our budget department for doing a good job with us. I
think we've got a good, strong budget, and we are in a better position
to handle some of the assets that we've been concerned about
deferrals.
We -- I think that anything that's critical we've got covered, and
we're going to be in a position to start working towards handling some
of the deferred maintenance --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Which is very good.
MS. PRICE: -- as we move forward, so I'm very comfortable
there. And coming up in the next year is going to be a focus on
records and document management that I think you've asked for.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yes. And I think that's very
important. We really need to centralize our -- or let me restate that. I
think it's very important that we centralize how we handle public
records requests, and we have a number of individuals in various
divisions working independent of each other whenever we receive a
public records request, and because we are all committed to
transparency, it's very important that we are responsive in the most
efficient and effective manner.
So a consolidated separate public records department will go a
long way to streamlining what has been a very difficult process
because of the tremendous demand that we face. And I believe Leo
has been working on that and developing a budget for that.
Have you included that restructuring in this budget, or is that
something that you were planning on proposing as an amendment
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coming forward later after board discussion? What was your
anticipation on that?
MR. OCHS: Actually, hopefully better than that. We are
already -- Len is already hard at work with that restructuring in doing
so with existing resources.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Fantastic.
MR. OCHS: And we should have that up and running by the
time you all get back for your budget hearings in September.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's really great.
MR. OCHS: We're very excited about that. I think it's going to
bring great value to not only to the public, but great efficiency in the
way we manage -- the way we manage our documents and our records
internally.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And just for the benefit of the
board, I had brought this to Leo's attention --
MR. OCHS: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- because I was concerned that, you
know, our staff was overburdened and not in a position to be optimally
responsive, and the outcome was, essentially, the restructuring that
Len is going through. And to hear that you're doing it without
increasing costs is outstanding, like, really fantastic.
I just wanted to make one comment, and that is with respect to
what you said about capital, you know, essentially, the capital budget.
With the review of buy versus lease and maybe short-term
financing, you know, rates being as they are, the ability to acquire the
necessary equipment might be faster than the original timetable if an
option other than an outright buy is considered, which would really
benefit the level of service that we give the public.
So in terms of the timetable, as Commissioner Nance was saying,
you know, we're looking out so many years to acquire, you know, X,
Y or Z. The reality is, by looking at alternative funding mechanisms,
which would not overall increase our costs, we would be really doing
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the community a service.
MS. PRICE: Commissioners, we'll be working with the County
Manager's Office on exploring all of those options.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
Len, have you ever figured out what your hourly charge would
be for, like, fleet management and maintenance department? In other
words, have you ever figured out what your -- what it costs to run that
particular operation, how many employees you have, and figure out an
hourly rate like you were the private sector?
MS. PRICE: Commissioners, fleet maintenance is, in fact, an
internal service fund, and we do exactly that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What is your hourly rate, and --
what would it be?
MR. CROFT: Commissioner, Dan Croft, Fleet Management
Director.
Our hourly rate for next year is $76 an hour for vehicles and
heavy equipment and $66 an hour for small equipment.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And, obviously, you know what
the private sector hourly rate is?
MR. CROFT: Yes. It runs anywhere from $89 an hour to about
$120 an hour --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
MR. CROFT: -- depending on the type of equipment, heavy
equipment. Our vehicles and heavy equipment we charge the same
rate.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You charge your customers the
same rate; however, the private sector is around $110 an hour average,
I would say.
MR. CROFT: I would say similar, yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. And that's how you
check to see whether you're competitive against the private sector.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's great.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And we're not competitive;
we're doing much better.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's really good news.
MR. OCHS: That's fully burdened, all in.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's great. That's really good.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And you can say the same thing
with building management, whatever Skip does. I forget.
MS. PRICE: Yes, sir. We remain extremely competitive with
our building maintenance. We've been working on balancing between
taking things in-house and external, and each year we look to make
sure that we've got the appropriate balance.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Great.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Nance has a few
comments.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I just have a few tabs of
things that I would like to mention under administrative services.
I take very seriously the comment that's made under fleet
management, and I want to make sure everybody reads what you've
provided us with, and it says here --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What page?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: It is Page 12. It's Fleet
Management Department Fund 521 . And it says, service level,
beginning in 2009 the county began deferring fleet replacements
results in a longer service life for fleet inventory. It is expected that an
upward trend of unscheduled higher maintenance costs could be
incurred over time, and that repairs will become more frequent and
complex, increasing the repair time required and parts cost as well as
extending the vehicle's out-of-service time.
I'm very concerned about asset management plans to handle that.
And it's -- of course, it's followed up by a line under facilities
management department which says, the budget as provided dictates a
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June 20, 2013
break/fix service level that is limited to emergency repair with
minimum preventative maintenance.
Routine maintenance is similarly impacted with window, floor,
carpet cleaning. So, you know, I would like to really understand
where we are with those things.
Additionally, going through to make -- I have one comment on
EMS, and that is on Page 52 of the packet that deals with EMS. It
makes -- it actually provided me with a staggering piece of
information I did not know, and I think it's worthy of mentioning, that
the operating costs of EMS are only 17 percent of their budget.
You know, the bulk of the costs that we have is in personnel
services, which is the highly trained staff that we rely on to get that
done. I think that's an amazing piece of information.
And also included in this is that the transfer from the General
Fund for EMS that's requested for this budget is $11,333,000, which is
a lot of money, and it just let's you know how important our ongoing
discussions are regarding first responder management in the county.
And, finally, on Capital Page 7, there's a mention of the 800
megahertz radio system upgrade, which is in this four-year '14 budget,
$3 million, but it's -- I think it's the initial payment on a total cost
estimate of$14.7 million over five years.
And Ms. Price has kindly responded to my concern about this.
But I wanted to express my concern about it because, to me, if we're
making a commitment on technology that's over five years, all of you
know what your smart phone that's five years old is like.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And that's exactly --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: It's a throwaway.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And that is --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: So I'm really worried about --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But that's what --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: -- our approach to technology --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And that is why --
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June 20, 2013
COMMISSIONER NANCE: -- on something of this magnitude.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You're 100 percent correct, which is
why -- and I raised the issue earlier, and I said it more generally, but
obsolescence is a big deal, and for us to make such a material
investment in a system which is likely to become obsolete very
quickly doesn't make any sense, which is why I was hoping they
would go back and look at a lease option which would save us that
major capital outlay and, basically, also avoid us sitting with an asset
that is outdated in a very short period of time.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: You know, I do have a concern.
And like I say, I have no expertise in this. Of course, most all of you
know more about it than I do, but I am concerned because I just look
around, and I know most people don't have any technology that's five
years old. Five-year-old desktop computer is a throwaway.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Smart phone, throw away. Well,
you and I have slide rules and things of that nature.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: No, but your point is really well
made, Commissioner Nance. And that is exactly why we need to have
the finance committee sit down with staff with Mark and do the
lease-versus-buy analysis, because it does not make sense to acquire
assets that rapidly depreciate and outlay all that capital when we have
alternatives. So you make an excellent point.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Thank you.
MS. PRICE: And we will be looking into that.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Thank you very much.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I would like to support
Commissioner Nance's position. I still have my slide rule, and it has
never failed to operate. Never, never.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Never lets you down, right?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You're one of the few people left
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June 20, 2013
who know how to use it.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Excuse me? I resemble that
remark.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. So I'm going to lump you in
with him.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: When I got my engineering degree,
they didn't even have pocket calculators.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Really?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: They had not invented the
transistor.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I just want you to know you are
dating yourself.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I mean, really bad.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's okay.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Commissioner Coyle --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Everybody knows I'm old.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: -- we will certainly produce these
items for the chair at a future meeting.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But I would like to make a serious
comment. I don't think there has been a year since -- when I've been
on this commission that we have not had a program to upgrade our
radio system. Every year it seems to me that the budget includes an
upgrade to a communications system.
So you're absolutely right. We will -- when this is installed, we
will have another budget item concerning the replacement or upgrade
of this thing.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So it just never ends.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yep, that's life.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, it's life with technology.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yep.
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June 20, 2013
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But if you had slide rules, you
wouldn't have these problems.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Point well taken.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But in any event --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, maybe I should say --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You're absolutely right, it's a lot
better to try to lease these kinds of things than it is to continually
upgrade and upgrade every year.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Which even goes to our, you know,
transport vehicles for EMS. I mean, those are all options we need to
look at.
With respect to the megahertz system, it is really imperative that
we get that done as quickly as possible. There appears to be a history
of the system, as I understand, malfunctioning. It goes to the Minnard
case where, I guess, signals didn't come through, and there are
concerns.
And given that this is all about the public's safety, I don't think
that this is a project that can reasonably be delayed in light of the
problems we're facing with the existing communications system.
And like I said, we don't expect you to come back with an answer
to us today. We're just raising the consideration for you to go back,
investigate, and bring back solutions to us so we can make the
appropriate -- you know, or develop the appropriate final budget.
With that, it's noon. I don't believe we have any public speakers.
The board has no further comments or questions. And we really
appreciate all you've done. Thank you.
Let me just let the speakers exit.
Leo, with respect to your division administrators and department
directors, can you give me a list of who you have left to speak to
under that category? I know we have George.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am, the big one is public utilities, and I
"big"big just in terms of the size of the division. The briefing will
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probably be no more than five to seven minutes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
MR. OCHS: And then the rest of them we will handle between
Mark and myself and --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
MR. OCHS: -- obviously, County Attorney Klatzkow.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Let me ask, for purposes of our
organization after lunch -- because we're now going to break for lunch
for an hour. When we get back, would you like to complete the
presentation for public utilities and then go to our constitutional
officers and then come back to who you're going to cover?
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. That's exactly the way I would like to
proceed.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: All right. And the reason I bring
that out now is so you can alert the constitutionals to be here, and if
George's presentation is going to be as short as you predict, then they
will be right up after we return after one clock.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. The only other deviation that you may
want to consider is you've got your CRA folks here, but they can -- if
you want to sneak them in before we go with constitutionals, that's
your call.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yes.
Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah, and I don't see Brad
Muckel here, and I don't see Chris Curry. In the past --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: They came at the end.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: In the -- yeah, I don't know if
they came at the end, but they were here, and I'm not --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Oh, I see your point.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah. I'm not sure --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: There he is. Brad just walked in.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Brad, thanks for being here,
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coming all the way from Immokalee. And I'm glad we got things
settled yesterday.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You make a very good point,
Commissioner Henning.
What we can do is have utilities and the CRA present, and then
we can, at the end of the afternoon when Leo presents on behalf of the
others, have Chris Curry present at the same time so he has the
afternoon to get here.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I'm not sure if he's going to be
here.
MR. OCHS: Oh, yes, he is. Yeah, he called me this morning.
He's monitoring, and he will be available when his time is called.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So would you like to schedule it as
suggested, which is have George, have the CRAs, then allow the
constitutionals to present, and then allow Chris and then Leo to
conclude?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah. I don't care how it's
done. I just -- now that I've got it straight.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And Jeff is in there. We'll put Jeff
right at the beginning, because I know how -- we'll put -- oh, you want
to be at the end? Okay. All right. You're a happy note. We'll put you
at the end.
MR. OCHS: He's the balancing number at the end.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, he's the happy conclusion.
All right.
MR. KLATZKOW: You'll be so tired, you'll just --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right. So what we'll do is -- in
conclusion then, what we'll do is we'll do Chris Curry, we'll do the
County Attorney's Office, and we'll conclude with the county manager
representing the balance of the agencies.
So let's adjourn and be back here at 1 o'clock.
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June 20, 2013
MR. OCHS: Thank you.
(A luncheon recess was had.)
MR. OCHS: Madam Chair, you have a live mike.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you. The Fiscal Year 2014
budget workshop is back in session.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: We're going to continue with --
MR. OCHS: Dr. Yilmaz and the Public Utilities Division.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MR. YILMAZ: Thank you, County Manager. And good
afternoon, Commissioners. For the record, George Yilmaz, Public
Utilities Administrator.
First of all, we have met the budget guidance, and our proposed
budget is revenue centric, cost contained, and with no proposed -- I'm
pleased to report, no proposed rate increases to all our water
customers, all our sewer service customers, all our irrigation water
customers, and all curbside garbage recyclable, yard waste, residential
customers. And this is going into Year 3 we were able to sustain our
rates in spite of macro and micro economical conditions where
commodity, including parts areas continue to increase in unit cost or
bulk purchases.
We deliver best-value quality, life-sustaining services that meet
our customer expectations 24/7/365, and we do everything we can to
do better than yesterday.
Our 24/7/365 service includes reliable and compliant wastewater
service, reliable and compliant irrigation water service, reliable and
compliant drinking water service. Every time we turn our tap, without
hesitation, we want all of our customers to feel free to drink that
water, and it tastes better than bottled water, as we won the Best
Tasting Water in State of Florida and ranked fourth in the nation.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: It's called Ode to Collier, just
saying.
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June 20, 2013
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Only because he spiked it with
vodka.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Makes for a happy crowd.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Go ahead.
MR. YILMAZ: Thank you, ma'am.
One of the leading solid waste services in the State of Florida,
under this board's instruction, progress and continue to progress for
best-value service, including twice-a-week solid waste collection,
once-a-week single-stream recycling and recyclables collection, and
bulk service as customers request.
And we were the first county and solid waste organization
initiated single-stream recycling under your direction and under my
chief executive directive, and I'm pleased to report to you that we're
not the leading edge; we are the cutting edge in the State of Florida,
and other solid waste utilities and authorities following our lead.
Furthermore, we have very effective and getting better and better
household hazardous waste collection program and infrastructure
being in place, and we can now do better as we move to the future
going through our master planning process for Solid Waste
Management and updating our integrated strategic plan that we will
bring you -- before you.
And also it's worthwhile to mention that the first time in Collier
County we have our LEED certified landfill gas-to-energy program.
We moved from a landfill that goes above and beyond compliance and
became almost landmarked for the Collier County. Whoever's coming
from 75 north or south, east or west, in that intersection, that stinks.
And now we have a solid waste operation exemplary with gold
awards nationwide that we have received that 24/7 we make sure there
is no off-site odors.
And as a commission and as one of the lead commissioners,
Commissioner Henning from the start was instrumental along with
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other commissioners, all of you included, supporting us in this
endeavor. Not only we need to sustain what we have achieved, but
continue to improve so we don't go back.
All of the above-mentioned services provided with customer
focus with no off-site odors, dust, noise emissions, as well as no SSOs
and major spills.
Furthermore -- furthermore, it's worthwhile to mention, without
taking a lot of time, that we do, indeed, provide timely utility billing
services leveraging our brand new technology, eBill and web-based
system, and we have exponential growth in that area.
Responsive customer service for water, sewer, and solid waste to
acquiesce and meet our expectations is self-evidence that we're
addressing 1,200 to 1,500 customers' inquiries, and my benchmark is
how well we handle those if these benchmarks comes to my attention,
but also, ultimate benchmark is, how many of them goes to my chief
executive's office. And so far I'm pleased to report that this month I
got nothing.
That means we need to handle our customer service at customer
service specialist level with appropriate training, understanding,
sensitivity, and focus. And that has been our business model, and that
has been the executive directive I got from my chief executive.
In terms of planning and project management for best-value
solutions for sustained compliance with concurrency requirements,
and implementation of risk-based compliance during CIPs to meet the
demand now and in the future and setting the conditions and
foundation for GIS-based integrated enterprise asset management
agency-wide, as we plan to have a workshop in September to give you
a progress report and detailed talk to you more about it.
Our progress has been very good, and I think that our anticipation
with the approval of our chief executive in terms of content and
progress, we will be ready for the workshop together with my peers,
administrators, working with us as a team.
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We continue to manage expenditures, fixed and variable costs,
and revenues to maintain optimal AA Rating resulting in lowest
possible interest rates to our customers as well as avoid negative
impact on rate shock.
As you can see on Page 6, overall public utilities total budget at
the fund level, including reserves and how we manage the fund as the
fund manager, shows marginal decrease of .9 percent. And on Page
PUD 7, we have decrease in FTEs shown by three.
All of those three are management level positions through
resource optimization and setting the conditions for the rate study
underway for recurring costs, next 10 years, equivalent to 5 to $6
million, making our position much better for the rate study that we're
going to come before you and present you for sensitivity analysis
integrated with master planning, also based on actual flows and
sensitivity analysis and risk-based CIPs.
Today I have good news for you. I'm pleased to inform you that
as of yesterday we have received AA+ Rating from the rating agency.
And Fitch Press Release was released yesterday and today showing
that our Collier County water/sewer district continues to sustain AA+
Rating through effective proactive fund management, refinancing, and
managing our expenditures in a cost-contained fashion, saving a great
deal of nonproductive dollars called interest rate.
And I'm pleased to inform that as our ex-officio governing board
for water/sewer district, congratulations. And it is consistent with
general guidance and executive directive I got from my chief
executive that, George, I don't want to see that double A plus go
down; otherwise, he may not buy me the lunch.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Which, by the way, would be legal
now, just FYI. Just have to throw that in for good measure. No
orange jumpsuits. Or I don't know, maybe it would be green.
Go ahead, Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Mr. Yilmaz?
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June 20, 2013
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Your contingency reserves is
$3.2 million. I'm assuming that's in case of breakdown, so on and so
forth, that you're expending that money, or am I wrong, or is there
other things within that reserve for contingencies?
MR. YILMAZ: The answer is yes, sir, all of the above. And the
last two years we have looked at reserves and our financial outlook
very carefully. Our reserves were 11 -- discretionary reserves were
about $12 million in Fiscal Year '12, and on '13, we dropped it down
all the way to -- $85 million to $68 million. We're down to $61
million with $10 million being the -- being the reserves that -- not only
for Collier County Water/Sewer District, but solid waste operations
contingency.
And our goal, consistent with Fund 001, get close to three months
of cash flow for operations. But we are, at this juncture in terms of
water/sewer district, how many days, Joe, if I might, sir?
MR. BELLONE: Seventy-three, George, on the water/sewer
district side.
MR. YILMAZ: We have about 73 days of--
MR. BELLONE: Cash reserves.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You're getting ahead of my
questions.
MR. YILMAZ: I'm sorry, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's all right.
So I'm assuming -- my assumption is correct, reserves for
contingency is in case of breakdown, and your -- it wouldn't be staffs
time, because that's already included in there. That would be parts,
correct?
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And contractors?
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: To do those repairs?
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June 20, 2013
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir. Those are unforeseen,
above-and-beyond planned emergencies and/or financial emergencies
where we have shortfall in revenues, we have cash flow to go to
compensate what we need to do for 24/7 compliant operations.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right. But that would be a
budget transfer that the board would see.
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir, you would.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah, we would see. So what --
could you provide me your historical expenditures for this reserve
contingency? You could provide it in a graph, if you want.
MR. YILMAZ: Sure, sir, we can.
And, Joe, I would request that you take that question, and if you
need to put something on visualizer, let's do it.
MR. BELLONE: Commissioners, I actually have a graph of
reserves that kind of takes you from FY'12 to '13 to '14.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I just -- for the reserve for
contingencies? Expenditures?
MR. BELLONE: It looks at the -- it looks at the reserves as a
whole.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I don't need it right now.
MR. BELLONE: I have them, and we have them all on file. We
can actually email them to the group of commissioners, if you will.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
MR. YILMAZ: We'll get that to you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
My next question is reserve for cash flow. I believe you stated
you had -- you want three-months reserves for cash flow; is that
correct?
MR. YILMAZ: That's the goal. That's where we want to go, if
we can over time, consistent with our General Fund, but we're not
there.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. So you're basing it upon
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the rest of the organization that tries to have that head start funding
until the funds come in, and in the county manager's case, would be
until the ad valorem dollars come in; is that a correct statement? You
want three months in advance just like any other department does?
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir. That's been the goal; however, we have
to manage the funds so that the -- we manage it wisely so that we don't
put monies that are at the cost of everything else, and manage a
risk-based financial fund management, so we have put only 60-plus
days for us to be able to get the balance for the purpose of keeping the
rates in my presentation as I have done.
Five years from now, two years from now, 10 years from now,
depending on the economy, macro, micro economical conditions, we
might get that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So you're trying to do that, and
you're not quite there, you said, for three months?
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: But you're not going to do that
on the backs of the maintenance of the facility?
MR. YILMAZ: Exactly correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You're not quite there. So when
does your revenues come in? Are they coming in on a three-month
basis, or are they coming in on a monthly basis, or are they coming in
on a weekly basis from your customers?
MR. YILMAZ: Our billing cycle is -- go ahead, please.
MR. BELLONE: We bill once -- for the record, Joe Bellone,
Director of Financial Operations.
We bill each billing cycle on the water/sewer side once a month.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Once a month.
MR. BELLONE: It's 20 days for -- before that bill is due. But
think about if you bill someone in October, you're billing them for
September's consumption. It tends to be a very low consumption
month. October, as people start to return, tend to be a little bit more,
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maybe a few more customers are back in November. We really only
get the high-season flows until December, which we don't bill till
January.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So it's different than the other
organizations where the other organizations you're getting a lump-sum
payment every year when ad valorem and sales tax comes in, or --
well, tax comes in, you know, monthly, but not -- but you're getting
yours on a monthly basis.
So my final question is, if you're getting it on a monthly basis --
MR. BELLONE: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- why are you preparing for
having a cash reserve for three months' basis?
MR. BELLONE: Commissioners, our operating expenses
generally are fairly average from month to month but the collections
are not. The collections are, obviously, heavier in February, March,
and April although we have been -- we are experiencing operating
expenses, salaries are regular every month. They are the same in
March as they are in October. So keep that --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So you can provide the board
with your operating expenses monthly then, correct?
MR. BELLONE: SAP -- our financials are on a monthly basis,
yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. Well, I mean, I still
continually question year after year of why you have to have so much
reserves, and if your revenues are coming in monthly -- I understand
they fluctuate from year to year -- why do you need three times the --
or actually twice the amount -- no -- yeah, twice the amount of
revenues, the way I look at it? So -- and I don't need a response now.
I just -- I just don't -- I mean, what is it $13 million in cash flow, $13
million?
So, you know, if you're -- again, if your revenues are coming in
different than anybody else, everybody else, why do you have to do
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what everybody else is doing on your revenues? That's all.
And I just need probably a detailed explanation so I don't have to
ask this question every year, because I --
MR. YILMAZ: Commissioner, I got your intent, and we'll
prepare comprehensive and targeted reserves management portfolio
for you, and we'll provide that to you and copy our commissioners.
If there's any follow-up questions, we will respond to it promptly.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you. I will -- if there's
any follow-up questions on that cash flow reserves, I'll forward that to
the county manager.
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Nance, before you
speak, can I comment on -- if you'd allow me to.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: By all means.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I think the points you're making,
Commissioner Henning -- hang on a second. I'm not sure if you can
hear me clearly.
I think the points you're making, Commissioner Henning, are
right on target. And I think what needs to be done -- and you do raise
this every year, and I remember you saying exactly the same thing last
year. The bottom line is, we have to have a policy for how we
develop our reserve standards.
And I think what really ought to happen is Mark should work
with each department, because all the departments have different cash
flow needs and, as a consequence, different reserve requirements, and
I think what we need is a comprehensive policy with respect to
reserves that is part of budget guidance every year, because it should
not be arbitrary. There should absolutely be a rational basis for why
George should have three months as we have three months. And it
can't be just because we have three months. It has to be based on how
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the monies come in. And I see Mark nodding his head.
So if you don't mind, I'd like to elaborate on what you're
proposing --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Please.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- and that is, not just to limit this
discussion to George, but on a countywide basis, look at all the
divisions, look at the departments within the divisions. For example,
Nick has an enterprise fund also. I mean, he's got permitting, which is
-- I'm sorry, six enterprise funds, sorry. I just lump, you know.
So I think it's very -- were you talking to me?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: I was going to say six months reserves
for us.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Oh, six months of reserves. Forget
about the six enterprise funds. It's six months reserves.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: We forgot to pick on him.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah. And, actually, let me tell
you, I was looking at -- as you were talking together, I was looking at
your reserves, Nick, to -- you don't have to explain, because we don't
need to discuss this here and now.
What we need is for Mark to work with each of you and come up
with a division/department policy that makes sense based on how you
do business, and that will become the basis for your future budgeting
and possibly amendments to the current budgeting rather than having
this discussion year after year after year. I think that's what's missing,
the standard.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Great idea.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Then I can really comprehend it.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah. And then -- you know, then
it's really straightforward.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah, that's good.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: It becomes policy.
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COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's a good way to -- good
approach.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So, Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. Dr. George, I just wanted to
-- I want to make a -- I have a few tabs here on things -- a few
comments that I would like to make.
Number one, I would certainly like to give you the highest
accolades, and these are things that occurred before my service here,
but I would like to give the Board of County Commissioners, prior to
my arrival, and solid waste highest accolades for the work at the
landfill. I think it's extraordinary. I don't think it could be any better.
I think it's been a model, and I'd just like to reiterate how much I
appreciate it and how much I respect what you accomplished there.
The second thing is, I would really like to say something great
about your GIS-based asset management effort. I'm -- you are
certainly the entity that, providing the services that you have to do, we
really need a program to keep that in perspective, including a
depreciation and replacement of major infrastructure over very -- a
long period of time.
So I look forward to following your program, and if it's as
successful as I hope and think that it may well be, that it will be a
model for looking at other assets and making it a lot easier for us to
get our hands around what it is that we have to accomplish.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Can I comment on that?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Sure.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Because what you have brought up
was brought up by the board over the last few years before you were
elected and, in fact, it was something that I had addressed because I
was concerned about the exact same thing that you're concerned
about, and that is, you know, do we have an appropriate inventory, do
we have an appropriate aging of that inventory, and Dr. George
basically has been developing that template, and it was with the intent
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that the other divisions use the model that he adopted.
And I believe he's already been working with Mr. Casalanguida
in growth management, using the template in that division. So they
are moving in that direction, and the county manager has indicated
that he is going to come back to us with that information and make
that presentation at a workshop.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: That's great, because I think it is
essential, and it's really going to keep us exactly where we need to be.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: A third point I would like to make
is, I'm very, very interested and excited about a potential for our
irrigation quality reuse water program. It is -- the work that public
utilities is going to do in this area is going to affect many other cost
centers that we have and expenses that we have long term in the
county.
You know, we're going to have a landscape workshop coming up,
but the use of this reuse water and the comparison and impact that it
makes on reverse osmosis water that we have to make today and how
much of that reverse osmosis water that we manufacture actually ends
up being used for irrigation, which is a very, very bad thing. It's a
very wasteful energy.
I'm really looking forward to understanding where we are with
the irrigation quality reuse water program, what we can do to
maximize that under this enterprise management system so that
everybody pays a fair share for its full development.
But I think it's essential for our sustainability. And, you know, if
we want to protect our environmental assets and enjoy them for the
future, we certainly need to maximize that.
Two things of a constructively critical nature. One of them is,
looking at some of your capital improvement programs, I noted an
item, Project No. 177, which is a bio-solids reuse facility. In my view,
programs and interests like this are something that really should be
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best if we could have that done by the private sector.
I think we have a lot of people that are pioneering this sort of
thing, and it's a chance for us to take advantage of that without
generating another agency of government.
And, finally, the only other remark that I have is, our recycling
centers and the costs infrastructure and associations, I would just like
to make a constructively critical remark and remind everyone that our
recycling centers are handling things that we no longer want; it's
garbage.
And I think we need to really critically look at our costs of our
infrastructure, how we're approaching it. It doesn't have to be an
artistic or a sensory experience when we throw things away. And we
need to really hone in on our unit cost for providing that service and
getting those things removed from our community.
And other than that, very nice. Thank you very much.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I believe we have a public speaker.
MR. MILLER: Yes, ma'am. We just did have one registered
speaker come forward. Bob Krasowski.
MR. KRASOWSKI: Good afternoon, Commissioners. Bob
Krasowski, for the record.
I'd like to ask Mr. Yilmaz to touch on the zero waste workshop
design charette that was performed here in approximately 2003; it's so
long ago I can't actually remember.
But this was an effort from -- put together by the public, and we,
the few people that were involved, secured funding to an extent that
we were promised 10,000, it dropped to $5,000, we threw in 2,000 of
our own money to have the workshop design charette, which was a
two-day event, and we brought in zero wasters, engineers, people with
PhDs in economics from the State of Washington, from California,
which is very progressive, especially compared to what we were doing
at the time, and some people from Delaware and Upstate New York.
And over the course of two days, we heard presentations from the
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county and the city, what they were doing, and then also the -- we
heard from the zero wasters. Then we had workshops. And we also
visited all the facilities, landfill and recycling, that was going on at the
time.
And a lot of the county people attended, like Jim DeLony, who
was our -- I believe our solid waste director at the time. Jim Mudd,
who was our public utilities director at the time, was there. I have it all
on videotape. And I actually made a condensed version of it and
distributed it through the County Commissioners and the school board
members, because later on my wife is a teacher, and I evaluated the
school board system and approached them with different things they
could do.
But you never hear anything about that. And as far as I'm
concerned, that was the nexus of the evaluation of options and
assigning values to certain behaviors in the solid waste department
that led to Jim DeLony -- to many other things, you know, but also to
how Jim DeLony then assessed the landfill value. He put sort of like
an imaginary bubble over the landfill and then identified each square
yard as having a value, because once you filled that up, then you had
to move to another landfill or do something else. So that was factored
into analysis, and it's very useful in the way we manage the landfill.
So I'd like to hear from my good friend Dr. George Yilmaz, who
I spoke to many, many times prior to the design charette who
contributed and helped carry forward the actual activity and the
aftermath and hear from him.
And the reason -- the main reason I'm bringing this up as opposed
to just glorifying myself is that this is the type of project that I
envision to hold -- which I will do, public again -- on the beach
renourishment issue, the beach -- coastal zone beach management that
incorporates the needs of the public, but the needs of the wildlife,
nature, the turtles, and all that stuff, because, man, we have come to a
dead end, and it's been a lot of bad thinking and practice that has
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brought us to where we're at today. So we need something like this.
But, George, if you could chime in on that for a moment.
MR. OCHS: George, hold on.
Madam Chair, do you want to get into this right now, or would
you like us to prepare a report --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I would love a report.
MR. OCHS: -- and provide that to the board?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I think that's more appropriate,
because this is off subject with respect to what we're addressing right
now, which is the budget. But it's definitely something we would
appreciate, if you could prepare a report for it, and let us know what
was done and how it succeeded and how it could be applied.
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That would be very, very good.
MR. YILMAZ: And my appreciation goes to Mr. Bob
Krasowski and all the options that was found to be feasible, proven
where construed and have been incorporated into a process, and credit
goes to this gentleman and his leadership.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Great.
MR. YILMAZ: And we thank you for that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you, Bob.
MR. KRASOWSKI: Thank you, very much. Thank George
very much. I don't know if a report's necessary after that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, I think it would be beneficial
for us, because any tool that, you know, allows us to do better is
something worthy of us reviewing. So since the county manager has
offered and George is willing, I think it would be beneficial. And, you
know, who knows how it could be applied in other arenas. So thank
you.
MR. KRASOWSKI: Design charette.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Got it. We got it.
MR. KRASOWSKI: Okay.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So thank you very much. There are
no further questions from the board, Dr. George. You and your staff
have done a great job, and I'm sure, you know, you'll get good
guidance from the county manager and our budget director with
respect to your reserves, and the end result might be that you may find
that there's more cash available to do certain projects than you
anticipated. So thank you very much.
MR. YILMAZ: Thank you, Commissioners. We appreciate
your support very much.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MR. YILMAZ: And thank you, County Manager.
MR. OCHS: Thank you, George.
Commissioners, that takes you to your presentation from your
community redevelopment agencies, and your airport executive
director is also here if you want to cover that budget before we move
into the constitutionals.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Since he's here -- we do have
several of the constitutionals here. We have the Supervisor of
Elections and the clerk also waiting. And, I mean, I'm -- we did say
before lunch that we were going do the two CRAs and then do the
airport afterwards.
MR. OCHS: That's fine.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So I'm not sure -- I would like to ask
the constitutionals, because they've taken away from their day to be
here at the time that we specified.
Dwight, Jennifer, would you be willing to allow Chris to present
along with the CRAs? Would that be acceptable to you? Dwight, are
you on schedule?
MR. BROCK: I don't know if on schedule but, Commissioner,
I'm here at your request, so I'll do whatever you want.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay, great.
MR. BROCK: Just let me know.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. Then why don't you just stay
and enjoy the show, and we'll call you up.
MR. BROCK: I'll go back to my office for a few minutes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You can do that, too.
MR. BROCK: Somebody told me -- I don't remember who it
was -- that it would be about 15 minutes to one when I was going to be
before you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: They lied to you.
MR. BROCK: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So what we'll do is we'll have Leo's
staff give you a call when you're up.
Let's go ahead and begin with the Bayshore/Gateway CRA.
Jean, would you like to present?
MS. JOURDAN: Of course. For the record, Jean Jourdan,
Interim Director for the Bayshore/Gateway Triangle Community
Redevelopment Agency. I also have with me Ms. Ashley Caserta,
who is our Project Manager.
As you know, the CRA has encountered significant budget
issues, one being the decreasing taxable values since 2008 and the
other being the outstanding debt.
As a result, staff has been reduced from five to three; however,
based on the tremendous support from the budget department, the debt
has been restructured and, thank goodness, the taxable values are
beginning to stabilize.
Our FY 13 budget was modest, to say the least, but the CRA will
need to continue to operate on a modest budget in order to diligently
work towards paying the debt through the sales of lands without
having to sell the properties at what Commissioner Hiller once called
a fire sale.
So, basically, although we are going to have constraints on our
budgets -- and that reason being is because the way the loan was
restructured, there were constraints which tie a formula to how much
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operating budget we can expend.
But we feel the CRA will be fine with that because in the interim
that will allow us to do some strategic planning. Additionally, we
have a redevelopment plan that is 13 years old. We have updated our
Land Development Code regulations and the Growth Management
Plan, but we haven't updated our redevelopment plan.
So we will focus on those issues as we continue to manage the
two MSTUs, which is the Haldeman Creek MSTU and the Bayshore
Beautification MSTU.
If you have any questions, I'd be happy to answer them.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I believe Commissioner Fiala would
like to say a few words.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Just a fast comment.
And I'm delighted that you were able to restructure your loan.
And I know that we would like to get the loan -- you know, all the
debt paid off before we move ahead; however, when you -- I was just
in Albany this past weekend -- and just there for a visit with my son.
And what I did notice was when you invest in the community
and you upgrade it or re-gentrify it or whatever you're going to do,
redevelop it, it's amazing what happens, because the appearance
changes. As the appearance changes, all of a sudden businesses
recognize that they -- that they would want to come back to the area
which has been depressed.
And then as they come back to the area, which had grown into a
depressed state but now is picking up, their -- of course, their taxable
values pick up then, and the crime drops. It's amazing to watch.
And I want to make sure that as we deliberate, we don't shoot
ourself in the foot to pay off the debt and then can't recognize any
benefit and say, well, you know, they never went anyplace. Because
you've got to invest in the area. We've only got a short period of time
to do it, or we lose, and that area loses.
So I've got my secretary now looking at some analysis on this
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whole area and finding out what they did, what the results were, and
how it bettered that area and was able -- were able to bring businesses
back.
Thank you.
MS. JOURDAN: You know, to address that, Commissioner
Fiala, if I may, although our operating costs and expenses are going to
be down, the CRA staff is going to continue to move forward.
For instance, this past year in FY 13, we did a $2.7 million
tertiary stormwater project. We're, additionally, seeking more grants.
So the CRA is going to continue to be making improvements to the
area.
And as far as paying down the debt, it's important, because that
will also revitalize the area, because it's key catalyst sites. And we
have had so much interest in the CRA area lately. Right now I can say
with absolute certainty if I wanted to sell the CRA properties for
people who have been coming and making offers to the CRA, which
I've tried to keep the commissioners apprized of, I could pay off that
debt right now.
But the restructuring of this loan will give us the time to
strategize and get what we want there and make sure that the area
continues to improve.
Additionally, in conjunction with the MSTU, we're doing -- we're
going to be doing three major street improvements this year. So we're
going to be continually updating the area.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, that's exactly what I meant.
We don't want to sell off the properties just to get the money. You
want to make sure that you sell them to organizations or to
homebuilders or whomever that will build the area up instead of bring
it back down to where it was.
MS. JOURDAN: Correct, and that's what we're really focusing
on. We've been meeting with some very interested investors who are
actually coming around to want to develop what we want, so that's
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very positive. So we're just taking our time and, like I said, we're
going to make sure it gets done right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Great.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And I just want to comment, Jean.
You have done an incredible turnaround. I mean, when I started, that
CRA was in a horrible state. And I remember when we first identified
that it was really in a financial crisis, you know, the community was in
denial and didn't even understand or realize.
And, you know, since you have taken over this CRA and what
you have accomplished with, you know, restructuring the debt and,
you know, basically, you know, tightening your operating costs and
soliciting outside grants and, internally, awarding grants limited to
commercial development so we focus on that economic growth of the
area has really been a very successful strategy.
I mean, we are so -- in such a different state of affairs than where
we were two and three years ago.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But let me add to that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I think you've done an incredible
job, so I want to --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Of course, we were in the depths of
a recession then also --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, but --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- and the property values had
plummeted to a point where nobody could pick them up. And let me
say Jean has done excellent job.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: She has.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But -- with what she was dealt with.
But you can't blame it on the CRA for being that far in debt. You
have to -- because at the times that they bought it, the property values
were high, and the interests were high, and everything was going
along. Whoever dreamed that all of a sudden, as a door would close
to any more funding and you just go down into the depths of recession
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-- and then there's pulling yourself out. I think Jean has done an
outstanding job.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, she really has.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I didn't mean to take that away, but I
wanted to point out that, you know, the recession did have something
to do with property values.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, the recession definitely did
reduce the stream of income that was coming into the CRA, but the
decision to purchase land in really what was a speculative venture was
probably not the most prudent approach, and to so highly leverage the
CRA, which put it in this, you know, fiscal crisis, was, you know, in
hindsight, clearly not the best business decision.
The point is, you have done a great job working through this
recession, notwithstanding the reduced income stream, to tighten your
operations and to manage the situation appropriately to bring yourself
out of what was a very deep rut in a very positive way.
And all the decisions you've made, you know, how you're
proposing to sell, you know, how you're proposing to continue to
solicit capital improvement grants, all philosophically, are the right
way to go about CRA business. So really good.
MS. JOURDAN: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Huge difference.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I just have to stick up for them one
more time and say many of the properties --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: For who?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: The CRA. Many of the properties
that they purchased were only to get the derelict properties out of the
area which then, of course, reduced the crime immensely, cleaned up
the appearance of the area, and that needed to be done, because you
can never make a winning success over something unless you first get
rid of the problem areas, and that's something that was done. And you
helped in that, by the way. You were guiding that thing along as far
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as getting rid of the flophouses and everything.
MS. JOURDAN: I'll take credit for all the good. All the bad --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I think there's consensus that there's
only good. So thank you.
MS. JOURDAN: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you very much.
And the next is the Bayshore -- I'm sorry, the Immokalee CRA.
MR. MUCKEL: Good afternoon, Commissioners. Thank you.
I'm going to start off by thanking staff and our advisory board at
the Immokalee CRA who volunteer their time.
You'll notice from the budget numbers before you today that our
CRA is an agency in transition. Most notably is our reduction in
property -- I'm sorry -- in overall operating expenses to the tune of
40.9 percent for Fiscal '14.
Additionally, we will realize a 22.5 percent reduction in TIF
revenue expenditures in Fiscal '14 while substantially increasing our
physical and programmatic improvements to the Immokalee
community.
While our TIF expenditures are projected to be 568,000, our
grant expenditures will be over $3 million in Fiscal '14. The icing on
this cake is that -- to all this is that there is a projected 18 percent
increase in taxable values for the properties within our community
redevelopment area next year.
Overall, our CRA will maintain budget compliance by operating
in a proactive, lean fashion which will, in turn, allow us to meet the
expectations of the Immokalee community.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yeah. A while back you had -- you
had a project that you were going to buy property for, I think you
already did, for those two street corners and really beautify the area
and make it more or less like central areas where people could
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congregate and a community could feel more like a community. And
we saw the designs and everything. What happened to those?
MR. MUCKEL: The first of those two projects, Commissioner
Fiala, will be out to bid in two weeks.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, that's wonderful.
MR. MUCKEL: Yeah. And the second one we have yet to find
funding for. But we still own the property, so --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, now that you're going to have
some increase in TIF funds, just maybe that will come about, too.
MR. MUCKEL: Hopefully, yeah.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Nance, it's your
district. Would you like to comment on --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I sure would.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- that, because I'm sure you have a
lot of thoughts.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Brad, I would like to -- I would
like to commend you for making the hard decisions and moving the
transition of your business unit forward. I think the community is
reacting to you very well. It was my pleasure to visit with the
advisory board yesterday.
I think there's positive feelings. You've got a lean, mean plan for
2014, and I think you're well positioned in the community being at the
Southwest Florida Work Center to be together with other agencies that
I think are going to provide some synergy for the community.
So thank you for your work. I've been here just a brief time, but I
appreciate your honesty and forthcoming work with me and
introducing me to the whole business unit. Thank you.
MR. MUCKEL: Thank you, Commissioner Nance.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala, did you want
to speak?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, no.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: The speaker light is on. Is there a
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speaker for --
MR. MILLER: No, sorry.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. Thank you.
Are there any further questions or comments by anyone with
respect -- from the board with respect to the Immokalee CRA?
(No response.)
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And so the next item on the agenda
-- are you with the airport also?
MS. BRUEGGEMAN: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So the next item on the agenda is
the airport budget, and that encompasses three airports, which is
Immokalee and Marco and Everglades.
Chris, would you like to present?
MR. CURRY: Chris Curry, Executive Director, Collier County
Airport Authority. Also in attendance from the airport is Krystal
Wise, Financial Manager, and Debbie Brueggeman, my Executive
Assistant.
The airport has met the goals that were established by the Board
of County Commissioners, and we have decreased our reliance on the
General Fund.
So I'll take any questions that you have.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And, of course, you're going to
come back in January (sic) and make some other proposals on top of--
COMMISSIONER FIALA: January?
MR. CURRY: Yeah, I won't be around in January.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You won't be around?
MR. CURRY: Not as far as I know.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: July.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I'm sorry, January.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: July.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: July.
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MR. CURRY: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Is that a true statement?
MR. CURRY: Which one, that I won't be around in January?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No, we're beyond my mistake of
months.
MR. CURRY: Oh, no. I intend to bring you back a plan for
July.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And I think that's really
unnecessary.
MR. CURRY: I do plan to bring you back a plan for July.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And, Commissioners, if you don't
have any questions at this time but, you know, have any questions
between now and approval, of course, I'm sure all the members of
staff that are here today will be willing to sit down and answer any of
your questions or concerns.
There being no further questions, thank you.
MR. MUCKEL: Thank you.
MR. CURRY: Thank you.
MR. OCHS: Commissioners, we can move now to the
constitutional officers.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Let's go ahead and start with the
Supervisor of Elections. And could you please contact the other
constitutionals and have them --
MR. OCHS: It's already underway, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you. You're very kind.
Hi.
MS. EDWARDS: Good afternoon.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Good afternoon. We just want to
know who's going to win in 2014, and then you can go.
MS. EDWARDS: Oh, let's see. Which commission race do we
want to talk about first?
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Don't even go there.
MS. EDWARDS: I'm not.
Good afternoon. For the record, Jennifer Edwards, your
Supervisor of Elections. And I have with me Tim Durham, Chief
Deputy, and Melissa Blazier, who is my Assistant.
We present to you today our budget, which is $3,182,500, and
this is a $160 (sic) decrease, or a 2.7 percent decrease. It includes, of
course, our operating budget as well as the cost for the 2014 primary,
which will be in the next fiscal year.
I'd also like to bring you up to date on our voting equipment.
Traditionally, voting equipment will last about 10 years. You can ask
any vendor that. And what -- most of our equipment was purchased in
2002, and the voting system which we use is ES and S, and they're in
the process now of upgrading their software and their equipment.
So we currently have money in the 301 capital budget, and we'd
like to maintain that level as well as -- we've done a cost estimate, and
to purchase what we estimate we'll need for the 2016 election cycle,
but we would need to implement the year before, we're going to need
about 300,000 more dollars in the next fiscal year capital budget.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Got it.
MS. EDWARDS: And then, of course, the third topic I'd like to
talk about is space. I've mentioned this to most of you before, and I
had a few minutes to speak with Commissioner Nance about it, too,
this week.
And what -- as you know, we work out of three different
facilities. It's very inefficient, and we have asked for a number of
years that you look at that with us and help us.
And we have, over the last few months, met with county
manager's staff and talked to them about our challenges, and we
discussed proposals.
So we're waiting to hear back from Skip Camp and Len Price on
that.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala and
Commissioner Coyle both have comments, but I would like to just ask
a quick question from the county manager so he adds information to
allow them to, you know, maybe better formulate their questions or
address their concerns.
County Manager, in the various proposals that you have received,
are you contemplating any of those projects for the current year so that
the Supervisor of Elections will be in a better state going into the 2014
election? And if so, what are you considering?
MR. OCHS: Ma'am, I don't have any solid answers for you right
now --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
MR. OCHS: -- I'm sorry to say.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's okay.
MR. OCHS: We're continuing to evaluate those along with
Jennifer and her staff, but --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: What is the timeline we're looking
at to accomplish your needs?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Last year.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, I know, but I'm just -- I'm
talking -- and you're absolutely right. We had this discussion last year,
by the way.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And this is what I wanted to say --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Go ahead.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- you and I both --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Agreed.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- were solidly behind buying the
DeVoe building. We found out that it went for half of what we
wanted to -- what was -- what they were asking for.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And yet we turned them down and
are allowing that now to go into different hands when it would have
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accommodated the Supervisor of Elections --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Perfectly.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- beautifully right there on the
campus. And I don't know how we can be so penny wise and pound
foolish. But I'm just very, very upset about that yet, especially
because we both had said we needed to buy that building.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, absolutely.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: We could have found the money in
reserves, and we did not. Don't let that happen again.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yep.
MS. EDWARDS: I appreciate your comments.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And I just want to add,
Commissioner Fiala and I both agreed that you needed space.
MS. EDWARDS: I know. And I really appreciate your support,
but what we would need to look at and work with the county
manager's staff is work around our election cycles. Other than that,
we are ready and able to help.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I'll make a deal. You can take our
offices, and we'll move into the courthouse, and then we'll move the
clerk down into your old offices. And I think that would work out just
perfectly.
No, very seriously, I mean, there is an issue, and it does need to
be addressed and, I think, needs to be addressed in this budget cycle,
the reason being is that the next -- well, actually -- maybe I'm wrong
about that, because actually this budget cycle does go into the
election, so that would be inconvenient. And so really what we need
to do is plan now to make that transition in the 2015 cycle.
MS. EDWARDS: Correct.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah. So it's my mistake. So it's
not something that would be ripe for this budget but definitely has to
be addressed now so we can anticipate it properly for the next year.
MS. EDWARDS: And we've discussed options with the county
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manager's staff. So we've sent them information, which they're
reviewing now, is my understanding.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala, did you want
to make any other comment?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No, I just had to make that on the
record.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Sure, of course.
Commissioner Coyle?
MS. EDWARDS: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I'd just like to remind the
board that barely seven months from now we're going to be providing
guidance for the 2015 budget.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So we've known for a long time
that Jennifer needs space. The only way she's going to get space is if
we tell staff to get her some space. Now, it doesn't have to be in this
budget if Jennifer finds it to be inconvenient to move during an
upcoming election year.
But if we don't provide guidance to staff about what we expect to
happen, there won't be anything in the Fiscal '15 budget either,
because nobody will have finalized a plan to do that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You're very right. You're very
right.
So let me make a suggestion to advance this project. Why don't
you give me the information, and I will put it on the agenda on behalf
of the board to direct staff to get this done so that -- and that it be
implemented on whatever is a mutually agreeable timetable, you
know, budget permitting.
MS. EDWARDS: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Jennifer, you have enough
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space, but it's just not put together in a form that you find it to be
efficient for your operation; is that correct?
MS. EDWARDS: We don't have adequate space. We have -- and
because we're separated into three different buildings and we lease
3,000 square feet that needs to be improved upon -- my answer to that
is we do not have adequate space and the fact that it's -- what we do
have that is inadequate is over three different locations makes it
extremely inefficient, and it's stressful on the equipment.
We've had to actually do some retrofitting because we have to
move the equipment back and forth so many times.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So how much additional feet do
you feel you need?
MS. EDWARDS: That's in the report. We're looking at -- we're
asking for just under 40,000 square feet.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Total?
MS. EDWARDS: To meet our needs, yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Or additional?
MS. EDWARDS: Total.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What do you have right now?
MS. EDWARDS: We have about 30,000 square feet -- 27- to
30,000 square feet.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Twenty-seven to 30,000.
MS. EDWARDS: Twenty-seven thousand feet to 30-.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. So you can provide us, if
you have 40,000 square feet in one location, what the monetary
efficiencies would be, correct?
MS. EDWARDS: We can provide that, but I will tell you right
now, it's not a great deal of money. What we're dealing with is
inefficiency of movement of resources, which includes people and
equipment.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, that efficiency of
resources, personnel, should show some kind of efficiency.
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MS. EDWARDS: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. You could provide that,
right?
MS. EDWARDS: Yes, we will, yep.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I was able to enjoy a very
nice discussion with the supervisor prior to this meeting. And in my
view what the Supervisor of Elections' main problem is is not a space
problem. It's a logistics problem and, of course, those are inextricably
combined. What she needs is she needs a very -- a well and a
complete thought-out analysis of movement of materials.
She has a situation where she has sensitive equipment, she has
security issues, she has storage and movement issues that are on a
highly restricted time frame, and I think it's more of a logistics
problem than a space problem. I think if you can solve the logistics
problem, the space will follow.
And I believe we need to dedicate some resources to her. And I
believe there's all sorts of economies and efficiencies that are not only
going to allow us to, perhaps, save money, but certainly allow her to
function in a reasonable way and take the burden off her a little bit. I
think she's in an untenable situation.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And the other thing to remember is
that the space that Jennifer is using that we don't lease obviously
becomes vacated, and because it's directly on campus in prime
location -- in a prime location, it should be used to some other end that
could materially benefit the county. You know, maybe that's where
you might consider -- well, maybe some sort of an economic
development visitor center. I mean, I'm just throwing out options.
There are other things we can do with that space where it would not be
wasted because, I mean, it is absolutely a first-class location.
We could move the commissioners in that space if we don't move
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the clerk there. I'm just saying, before we start redecorating.
I don't see any further comments. There are no public speakers.
And so I want to thank you very much. And it seems that -- it must be
the middle of the afternoon since everyone is starting to break out in
like -- I won't say tears, but laughter.
Thank you again.
MS. EDWARDS: We will provide you with the information.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yes, if you would.
MS. EDWARDS: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And what we'll do is we'll -- I'll get
it on the July agenda, and that way Leo has direction to move forward.
And, you know, whatever the needs are will be evaluated and, of
course, facilities will work to make the right decision.
MS. EDWARDS: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
Who would have guessed that going through a budget workshop
would actually be amusing? Just saying.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Must be the hockey.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, it is the hockey, by the way.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Rum-and-coke lunch.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I wish I had eaten.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: When I get home tonight, I'm
going to put on the --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Replay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- replay --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So you can fall asleep tonight?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- while I fall asleep.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, I was going to say. It
definitely -- yeah, it definitely works.
We have before us the Clerk of Courts, Dwight Brock, Crystal
Kinzel.
MR. MILUM: Ray Milum.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And, Ray, what is your position
with the Clerk's Office?
MR. MILUM: I'm the Accounting Manager.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. Thank you.
Clerk?
MR. BROCK: Commissioners, I've spoken to most of you, and I
think my staff has spoken to the rest of you. I don't want to take up
any more time than is absolutely necessary. We're here to answer any
questions that you may have with regard to our budget request.
I mean, our job hasn't changed. It is appreciably the same, and it
has been there since the constitution was originated, so --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I just -- I've spoken to Crystal at
length. I've got all my questions answered. I just wanted to make sure
that your employees got the same raises as we got; Crystal confirmed
that. And she told me about the extra employees, what they're needed
for. That was fine with me. You know, you have to operate an
efficient department. And as we're growing back again to where we
should have been, you have to have the employees, so I'm fine with it.
MR. BROCK: Commissioner, since you brought that up, there's
something that I would like to say. I have seen a transition take place
in the last year, year and a half-- year, probably, in the operations that
exist between the county staff and the Clerk's Office.
You know, the input I get from my people is that we have a
better working relationship today than it appears that I've had in 20
years. I actually had Mark Isaacson come to our office and ask us for
assistance in trying to solve some of the cash problems through
Crystal.
When I need something, I call Leo up. I don't think that's ever
happened, that I can recall, that I felt comfortable just calling the
county manager up and speaking to him that way. I don't know that
that was intentional or anything of that nature.
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As you could have seen in the back, I get along with the directors
of your departments better than I have gotten along with them in
years. And I think it is beneficial for the community for it to operate
that way.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: There's no question.
And what I will say is, you know, we have -- in effect, really a
new county. That's what I was saying earlier to the county manager.
We have, you know, really all new directors, new staffing, and the
county manager brings a different way of doing business, which he
has been developing. You know, we have new board members. I
mean, it's -- if you look at the totality of the change, it's really
refreshing to hear that it has had a spillover impact in the relationship
between the Clerk's Office and the board which, historically, prior,
really, to this year, has been very hostile.
So we're delighted to hear that it's working positively and, you
know, that's what it's about, working together for the benefit of the
people.
MR. BROCK: I agree.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So if there are no further questions,
thank you very much. And we're also -- I just want to say I'm very
happy to hear that the issue of equal pay for equal work has been
resolved, because that, obviously, was a concern.
MR. BROCK: That will continue to be an issue that we will
continue to work with. But I mean, we have met with county staff.
Actually, Leo's people initiated the process. You may not know -- and
I probably ought to tell you this at this point in time. You know, when
we came in asking for the funding to establish parity, I had a
personnel director --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yep.
MR. BROCK: -- on staff who's no longer there; he retired. So I
have a new personnel directer who is working with Leo's people and
trying to pull together the information, and that will be a continuing
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process. So --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And just again --
MR. BROCK: It should be. That's the way it should work.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: The emphasis -- and this is during
our opening remarks where we talked about this as a board, this is an
issue that is a countywide issue. Whether it's an accountant in the
Sheriffs Office or the board's office or your office, you really have to
have equal pay for equal work.
MR. BROCK: And I loved Commissioner Henning's suggestion
to do it through the insurance.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's brilliant.
MR. BROCK: I thought that was a wonderful solution to the
process.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: What I really liked was that when
that one guy called me Commissioner Henning and, you know, him
getting all the compliments. So if you want to call me Commissioner
Henning and repeat that, I'm okay with it. You don't mind, do you?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Just don't call her Mrs. Henning.
MR. BROCK: Did they call him Commissioner Hiller? Thank
you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Oh, I love that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Just don't call her Mrs. Henning.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That would be bad. That would be
very bad.
MR. BROCK: I mean, even with the commissioners, you know,
I want to thank you for, you know, having an open door when we need
to convey information to you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely.
MR. BROCK: That -- you know, it just makes everything work
so much better.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely. And thank you --
MR. BROCK: Thank you.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- also -- thank you for being open
minded to the change in the process on the audits, Dwight. That will
really benefit us to have it ahead.
MR. BROCK: Not a problem, Commissioner. If I'd have known
that was what you wanted, we'd have done it a long time ago.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Hey, sometimes you just have to
ask for the order.
MR. BROCK: You got it.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
Leo?
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. That would take you to the Sheriffs
Office, who would be the final constitutional officer you'll hear from
today.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's great. Thank you.
MR. OCHS: Sheriff, good morning (sic).
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Sheriff, would you like to come
forward with your team.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Good afternoon. If you can give us one
second, we have some things we want to show you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I highly recommend the clerk's
approach, which is, if you have any questions, and if you don't thanks,
goodbye. That works, too.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Good for us.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: If it were only so simple.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Good afternoon, Madam Chair,
members of the board. Thank you for the opportunity to come before
you today.
You know, it's extremely nice when I can come before you and
affirm for you that we have had an incredibly successful community
safety plan. And as you know in the past, that plan has been created
by the residents of Collier County to address crime, traffic safety,
information, prevention, and youth programming.
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But, you know, we don't do that alone. And in addition to the
residents and the businesses who help each and every year, I wanted to
take a moment because I think it's very important to thank a number of
people and groups. And I will tell you the first that comes to mind is
the county staff. Everyone from facility management who maintains
our building, to parks and recreation that help us with our summer
programs, and everybody in between does a terrific job.
We have a great relationship with the county manager and his
management team, and that makes it very, very easy for us to continue
to give the level and quality of service that not only you expect for
Collier County residents, but Collier County residents as well.
We need to thank our peers in law enforcement, fire, EMS,
because, again, all of public safety works together.
Thank you to the board for the support you've given throughout
the years, throughout the last year, the men and women of the Collier
County Sheriffs Office who do this every day, 365 days a year, and
my management team that you see before you today because, without
them, I'd never be able to get to go on vacation. I, at least, like to take
a couple of days off.
You know, FY 14 marks the second year of submitting a flat
budget. And I know everybody throughout the county has done the
same great work in trying to reduce those operating costs.
If we remember back to FY08, we're actually down about $20.6
million as we stand here with you today, and that's a savings to the
taxpayer of more than $48 million and still providing the level and
quality of service that everyone expects.
But, you know, just like in any other business and operation,
there were costs that had to be absorbed even when we were able to
submit and meet the goal that you established for a flat budget.
The most significant of them was a $2.4 million increase,
state-mandated increase to retirement. In most cases throughout the
state, unfortunately, that is passed through. We, in Collier County,
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have chosen not to do that.
We've got a couple other projects that are coming up. As you
know, we've submitted for a grant for some additional school safety
officers. We've offset that matching dollars for that submission.
Hopefully we get that, because that could potentially be an additional
cost.
We also are looking at, with your help from facilities, a HVAC
system renovation at the jail, and the overtime costs that we're going
to need to cover that, we've absorbed that as well.
So as we move along, again, I have to recognize the ladies and
gentlemen right here and those on the street who know exactly how
important it is to manage the budget properly and on behalf of the
taxpayer of Collier County.
Crime remains down 10.4 percent. There are still only 12
counties out of 67 that have a lesser crime rate than we do here in
Collier County. That continues to be a mainstay of where we have
focus.
We look at our road safety, which was another element of the
community safety plan over the last five years. We've seen a 35
percent reduction in traffic fatalities overall and a 16.4 percent
reduction in traffic crashes.
And as we've talked before, that is a great combination of
engineering through the Department of Transportation, enforcement
with our people, and we'll say education, but we really prefer to say
prevention information that gets people to pay more attention to
driving rather than operating cell phones and texting, as well as other
things that they do.
Our youth relations program, you know, it comes down to
staffing, training, and one of the best partnerships that I'm aware of
throughout the entire State of Florida. As you already know, we have
48 law enforcement deputies assigned to our school system. We have
20 crossing guards. And this year we have trained 35-plus liaison
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deputies who can supplement when we need them to visit our schools
on a random basis and to supplement where we need them. So that
was a terrific concept.
We were the first in the State of Florida. We held the training
here in Collier County. And it was a terrific outcome.
Our youth programs, we continue with Summer Fest. The driver
-- the teen driver challenge, our youth leadership programs, our youth
resource center. We continue to regularly contact more than 40,000
young people a year, and only four years ago we were making contact
with 5,000 a year. So we continue to look at that as, again, a direction
that the community has given us.
And in the end, it pays us dividends that we'll never ever know
except that we have great young people to lead our community.
Reintegration programs. We've really headed out on this avenue
this year. As you know, as we can contain the number of inmates in
our jail facility, that continues to allow us to keep one of our facilities
closed except for overnight holds.
One of the ways in the future of corrections that we are going to
be doing this nationally is to stop people from coming back to jail. It's
very simple. It's a very costly process. We can't do it with everybody.
Some people need to be there. Some people will stay there for a long
time. But those that qualify and get involved in things like the cell
dog program, get their GED, get their certificate for culinary arts so
that they are employable upon release from our facility and learn the
seven habits on the inside, which is a partnership with Cubby
(phonetic), to get people thinking about how they take care of
themselves when they're not incarcerated.
All of that together helps, one by one, one person at a time. And
this year we have had more than 70 people come out of those
programs, and that's a great accomplishment for our corrections staff.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Sheriff, can we go back to that one
moment. I want to mention something. And you and I had spoken
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about this, but since you bring this up, I think it's, you know, worthy
of stating publicly.
The Pugh Foundation has been working on a pilot program in
several states to develop a new approach to budgeting called
evidence-based budgeting. And one of the programs that they targeted
was exactly what you're describing here as a -- the impact of
reintegration on recidivism and how that lowers the cost of basically
managing your jails.
And I had the opportunity to see their presentation on that. And I
think you really need to see what they're doing. I'll give you the name
of the contact. And maybe you want to use this reintegration program
as a pilot program, if you will, for this evidence-based budgeting to
show that if you can justify that you're going to reduce your jail costs
by introducing programs like this, that it be will a net benefit to your
bottom line as well as to the community. So it's actually a very, very
smart way to do business, and I would encourage you to look at it.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: We absolutely will, because we agree
fully with that conceptual idea. And, thus far, it's working pretty well.
But we need to get out a full year with the individuals --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Of course.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: -- out of incarceration to really give you
some better stats on that, but absolutely.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Sure.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: You know, with all of what we have
done, that's great, but we're not going to stop. We certainly want to
maintain the great programs that we've got. We continue to invest in
technology, because that helps us reduce the need for bodies for
certain functions, and that becomes very, very important, as well as
improving connection with the community and information to and
from the community, that exchange that we look to so that we can
provide the best service.
Increased community engagement. That's never ever going to
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stop. We have had great benefits, and we're going to do even more of
that in the future than we've done in the past.
And we certainly -- as the economy improves, we know that the
State of Florida's going to be looking at hiring of law enforcement
officers, and we want to continue to recruit the best that we can for
Collier County.
And so those are just some of our goals for the coming year.
Bottom line is Collier County remains a great and safe place.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Just a couple comments. You were
talking about school crossing guards and so forth. I just want to say
what an asset it's been at the East Naples Middle School where the
kids were hit by cars. And so you guys jumped in when it was
reported to you, and you provided that safety measure. And it was so
appreciated by the parents of these children, because it's kind of hard
to cross Davis Boulevard with the morning rush-hour traffic and no --
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: It is.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- you know, and nobody guiding
them along.
And the second thing I wanted to compliment you on is the
YRDs. That's a great program in these schools.
And I've been working around with the East Naples schools and
the principals, and they just feel it's one of the best assets that they
have, and they're so pleased that you provide that service, and so am I.
Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Nance?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. Sheriff, thank you for
everything that you do. We already touched on this earlier today, but
I wanted to, perhaps, drag you into the fray today on the 800
megahertz radio system.
I assume, sir, that you're the largest consumer of this
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communications network that we're engaging in?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Yes, sir.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And I'd like you to opine a little bit
about, you know, where you think we are with it. You know, your
agency probably knows more about it than anyone.
Can you help us get some comfort with where we are and, you
know, what -- please tell us what you think.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: You know, I think you and I had a brief
moment to talk a little bit about the future of communications, and I
think that's where we all need to be focused. It's not what we need
today. Today, if we look at buying a particular piece of equipment, is
that going to be viable, usable to its fullest extent five years from
now? I'd say 10, but in five it will change.
So wherever we go, whatever system we look at, we have to
make sure that we can -- it's automatically able to integrate with what
we've got or where we're going, but more so, we have to strategize,
and we have, where do we want to be in the future?
You know, I will tell you that five to 10 years down the road,
hand-held communications devices through the Internet, even for
public safety, will be the operating plan, I believe. That's a personal
opinion from all the information that I've seen.
We have actually established a committee, and members of the
county manager's staff are on it, in our agency. We've been working
on that for probably the last six months where I open the meeting and
overviewed where I thought our vision for communications should go,
where technology is going that we know so far.
So when we had the opportunity to talk, we were right on board
with you about looking at the right direction to make the right
decision.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes, sir. Well, I just hope we can
all -- my hope is that we get to the very best outcome, and thank you
very much.
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SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Thanks.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I actually am going to make a
comment which is probably surprising. I'm actually concerned that
your budget -- don't be in shock because I know you've probably
never heard this from a commission before -- could be too low. And
my concern is payroll and your staffing.
And while I really appreciate your very successful numbers, my
question is, is how stretched is your staff? Because you did let a lot of
people go. You did put a freeze on hiring. You haven't been giving
raises, while the county has been giving raises.
And so my question is, you know, is your staff stretched? Are
they getting tired? Will we be able to sustain the standard that you
have set for the community if you keep going without hiring more
people and without compensating them proportionate to the
contribution that they're making to the community?
And I can't be the judge of that, but I raise that, because I
remember several years ago we had a conversation in this room during
budget hearings, and you basically said, you know, down the road we
will not be able to continue in the manner in which we're operating
now, that this is basically a short-term situation.
So I have concerns. I have real concerns. I have concerns about
the adequacy of your staffing (indicating). I have concerns about the
adequacy of your staffing. I have to be very honest with you and
question whether the proposed budget from a personnel standpoint is
the right budget going forward.
Let me add, the profile of the county is changing. Tourism is up
significantly, which means in season our population is growing far
more than it did during those prior years. And we're beginning to see
an uptick, I believe, in population growth. A trend of what was is
clearly changing. And we also are seeing a change in the profile of
the community which suggests, you know, a future uptick in crime in
certain areas.
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COMMISSIONER HENNING: What?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Not many areas.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Not many. Very few. We'll scratch
that.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Don't jinx us, Commissioner.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I'm not jinxing you.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I'm not getting insulted here, am I?
Are you disparaging my district?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: No, I'm not. Actually, all the
murders are in mine, so I just want you to know. Isn't that true?
Where's our homicide team?
I just -- I would hate to see the trend change because we're being
penny wise and pound foolish. And I don't know what the right
number is, and maybe I'm completely wrong, but I need to hear from
you what the answer is to the dilemma that I'm presenting.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: There's a lot of information to respond
to your questions. But let me begin with we are at that point where we
need to look at all of those things you mentioned, because the county
is growing, things are changing. We've already established a plan not
only for this year, for next year, for the year after, because we look
three years out.
And as I stand here today, I can tell you that I will be seeking an
increase to budget at the next session for the next fiscal year with
specific reasons and bases for that.
One of the issues that we have right now, we're doing as much
hiring as we can find qualified candidates. Our dilemma is not that we
can't -- we don't have the funding to hire. We can't find candidates to
pass the examination process that is set forth for security and guidance
through the FBI, through our local organization.
We get about -- well, less than 10 percent of those who apply
actually wind up with a position. And so it will take us at least that
throughout this year to catch up to that.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And you're looking beyond?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Yes, and we're looking -- and we're
looking well beyond that. And I will do what's necessary. And if that
means coming to you and saying, look, we have 10 highly qualified
candidates, and I'm asking for additional dollars prior to the end of the
budget year, I will absolutely do that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: But I won't do it unless I need it.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Of course. And that's up to you to
determine. I just want to be sure that that's being properly weighed,
and you're telling me it is.
What about compensation for your current staff?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: We also were able to provide a 2 percent
increase that was consistent throughout the county last year, and we've
included even that in the absorbed cost for this year.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So have you given your staff a 2
percent increase for the current year in the current budget?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So if we give the COLA adjustment
to all the constitutionals, as I suggested this morning, would that then
give them an increase of 3.2 percent? If we give you -- or is that 1.2
that I'm suggesting inclusive in the 2 that's being proposed?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: I would see that as being inclusive in
what you've proposed and maybe offsetting some of the
state-mandated $2.4 million cost.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So what you have presented to us in
your current budget includes the 1.2 percent, whereas, this morning
when we were talking, the county manager didn't present it to us in
that fashion, because his presentation was that we would be
considering it, that none of the budgets actually included that at this
point.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: No, that is correct. I mean, in order to
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meet the objective that you set forth for guidance, we had to absorb all
the costs that I overviewed with you. But if you're going to increase
that objective, then certainly we would add that above what we've got.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. Because that's a little bit
different than what you said earlier, because what you said earlier is
that that 1 .2 was incorporated in that 2 percent. And Leo is nodding,
but what I'm hearing you say now is that 1 .2 would be on top of the 2
percent.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: I don't think I said 1.2 was incorporated
in the budget. All I said was we gave a 2 percent increase like other
agencies did.
MR. OCHS: This year.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: This year. We're not talking --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I'm talking -- okay. You and I are
using -- it's semantics. When I'm talking about this year, I'm talking
about this -- the budget that we're talking about now, the 2014.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Yes. There is nothing included there to
meet your guidance for an increase.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. So right now your salaries
are flat?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Comparable to this year?
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: This year, yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So that if we as a board decide to
give a 1 .2 percent increase across the board, that would be on top of
the budget currently presented by the sheriff?
MR. OCHS: That's correct.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Yes, you're correct. I'm sorry. That was
my fault. I thought it was funding for this year.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah. You were about to short
yourself. Just saying.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Okay.
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COMMISSIONER NANCE: They would have reminded him.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But again, I just want to go back. It
is -- because you really haven't been giving your staff raises --
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Correct.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- at all where we have.
MR. OCHS: Wait a minute, wait a minute.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Have we been giving our staff
raises?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: He just said he gave a 2 percent
raise.
MR. OCHS: We are keeping pace with each other.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Yeah.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. Well, that's what I'm asking.
Someone needs to tell me these things.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: All right. So there is parity; we're
giving the same type of raises?
MR. OCHS: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: All right. That's good. I just wanted
clarity on that. Just checking. Just checking.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: You're taking this under
advisement, right, Mr. Ochs? You're going to come back to us with an
analysis of this so we understand what year we're talking about and so
forth?
MR. OCHS: Yeah. We'll get your calendars correct.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Thank you, sir.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I just don't want to see morale
adversely affected because they're -- you know, your staff is not
getting paid. And I understand and so much appreciate how
conservative you are, because you know fiscally I'm conservative also.
But, you know, as I see it, people are your most important asset.
So, you know, while we sit here and we talk about bridges and roads
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and stuff like that, yeah, that's important to you too, but not as much
as people. So I want to make sure that, you know, it's all being
properly addressed and that we're not, like I said, being penny wise
and pound foolish and stopping a trend, which is great.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Right, and we agree. And since we've
been able to keep up, if you are going to grant something, we certainly
want to be included in that grant.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. Well, it is my proposal, and I
will bring that forward as a motion, you know, when the time comes,
because I do believe we have the funding to be able to do that.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: The last clarification I'll make, and it
probably just makes it worse, but it would not go on the top of a 2
percent next year. It wouldn't be 3.2 percent. It would be whatever the
percentage is that you grant above.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I don't even want to discuss it
further. You are so confusing me. I'm like, you know -- is there
anyone blond here? I feel like a blond, so -- with all due respect.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I'm blond. Just to mention.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I forgot. But let me just -- only her
hairdresser knows for sure.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: You're forgetting Commissioner
Henning. He just reminded me.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You know what, I'm going no
further. We're done.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I think maybe this is a good time to
stop.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: It is. Thank you so much. I don't
think there are any further questions.
SHERIFF RAMBOSK: Thank you very much for your support.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Leo?
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MR. OCHS: That now takes us to your debt service and your
management offices.
Commissioners, I --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Wait a second. What about the
property appraiser and the tax collector; are they going to present at
all?
MR. OCHS: No, ma'am. They don't get transfers from your
General Fund. And, in fact, the tax collector's not even required under
law to submit his budget till August 1st.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
MR. OCHS: So we typically don't have them join us during your
June workshops. It will be appropriated into the budget itself.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I didn't know -- and I didn't know if
they just publicly presented their budget just to let the public know
whatever they're doing with -- I mean, you have them on the list here,
so that was why I was asking.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: We received one from the property
appraiser.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, we did.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But that's just to --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I do want to ask a question. And we
did receive the budget from the property appraiser. In fact, I have it
right here. But I have a question before you begin with respect to
revenues, and this is really a question directed both to the property
appraiser and the tax collector.
I would like information on the appraised values and the taxes
collected on oil and gas rights. And I think it's really important that
we have an understanding, because right now there's all this discussion
about drilling for oil and -- so I think we need to have that
information.
I would like to know, for example, what we have assessed and
collected over the past five years. And I think that information should
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be presented to the board. And if you think that there's any further
information with respect to that that we should request, please let me
know.
Commissioner Nance?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I would actually like to add
something to that discussion, because it came to my attention in
dealing with the various questions from the community about the
status of mineral rights in Collier County.
And it's my understanding that the lands that were transferred to
the Department of the Interior that make up the Big Cypress National
Preserve were originally slated to become part of the Everglades
National Park.
And they did not become part of the Everglades National Park
for the simple reason that the Department of the Interior was not
willing to compensate the property owners for the underlying mineral
rights which, apparently, are substantial and may be getting more
substantial as time and technology allows them to be extracted.
So I think this is a realistic thing that we need to evaluate and
understand what the value of this is and what the implications are for
us, because it's a vast part of our county.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yes, it is.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Jobs.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yep. Well, you know, if you -- I
mean, look at Pepper Ranch as an example. You know, we were
talking about that earlier this morning. When Pepper Ranch was sold,
the owners of the property were allowed to retain the mineral rights.
Well, those have value. You know, what's the present value of those
-- that potential future stream?
And my understanding is the owner of those rights is supposed to
be taxed based on the current fair value, and it's supposed to be a
separate tax bill separate and apart from the property. So I think it's
very important that, you know, we're assured that those rights are
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being assessed and that those taxes are being collected, because that is
potentially a large revenue stream if they're not.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. I will --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So let's find out what's going on.
MR. OCHS: I've got both of those constitutional officers and --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
MR. OCHS: -- we'll get the board's questions answered.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And if you could report back to us
and let us know, that would be great.
MR. OCHS: I'd be happy to.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Before you begin, I think we need
to give our court reporter a break. Commissioner Fiala,
notwithstanding that she's blonde, reminded me.
So we're going to take a 10-minute break, and we'll be back at
2:50.
MR. OCHS: Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Thank you.
(A brief recess was had.)
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: The 2014 budget workshop is now
back in session, and we're going to begin with a question from
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Leo, I -- correct me if I'm
wrong, when we were cutting our budget, maybe 2009/2010, didn't the
sheriff give his employees raises?
MR. OCHS: Oh, boy. Commissioner, let me check.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Because if we're doing this for
parity reasons, why are we starting now? Why didn't we do that?
And I mean, I just --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right, I agree. Everything should be
fair.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And is it your understanding
this is above and beyond what the printed budget for the sheriff is?
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MR. OCHS: Yes, sir. He came in with a flat budget that, from
what I'm told and what I'm able to read in the budget document,
doesn't include any appropriation for salary adjustments.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right. So we need to know how
that's going to affect our budget, what we need to cut.
MR. OCHS: Well, no. What I indicated this morning,
Commissioner, you've got -- the '14 budget adds $4 million in reserves
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, it does.
MR. OCHS: -- to your General Fund, and your sheriff is always
funded with a transfer, as you know, from your General Fund to cover
the cost of his operations.
What we said this morning was that if you apply that
one-and-a-half percent adjustment to our agency, it's about $1 .8
million. Just doing quick math, we have about half of the total
number of employees. Constitutionals have the other half. We figured
it would take another million eight. So you're looking at 3.6, so you'd
still have a half a million dollars of build-up in your reserves in '14,
not obviously the 4 million.
As I mentioned this morning, anything that we do in terms of pay
adjustments or additional capital expenses would come off of that
reserve.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And, Commissioner Henning, if I
may, part of the analysis is that if you look at leasing some of those
assets which have a -- the risk of rapid obsolescence as opposed to
purchasing them, and we have them as purchases now, then what
happens is you free up that capital which can be applied to reserves.
So you satisfy your reserve objective while still being able to give
everyone the very same COLA adjustment.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Which -- oh, are you talking
about the bio? No, that's a different one. Which capital improvement?
MR. OCHS: No. Commissioner, we had proposed a set-aside of
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$3 million as the first of a two-year set-aside to purchase a
replacement helicopter. We had budgeted $3 million to upgrade your
800 megahertz public safety radio system. That was only Phase 1 of a
five-phase program. Some equipment, heavy equipment replacement.
There was about $9 million worth of capital expenditure that
Commissioner Hiller had asked us to look at instead of an outright
purchase, some kind of a lease/purchase --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
MR. OCHS: -- where we wouldn't have as much upfront capital
outlay. You could spread the cost over a reasonable number of years,
and I think most of the board was in agreement that we ought to
evaluate that at least.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And maybe -- right. And what we
could even consider doing, like I said, as an example, the 800
megahertz system, which we discussed with the sheriff where, you
know, if we know five years from now whatever system we have
won't integrate with whatever equipment will be, you know, the
equipment of the moment, why even buy it? I mean, why not a
short-term lease and then, you know, in three years upgrade to
whatever the next best system is that integrates with what we're doing,
so we're not committing 15 million to something that would be a
complete waste.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I got where you're coming from,
so you can apply that to your reserves.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: By the way, my desktop is
2004.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Well, when you come back with
your evaluation, sir, though, if you're going to report to us on where
you think the inequities are, like I suggested earlier, we may have to
move over a number of years. We might (sic) be able to accomplish
this in one bite, depending on what your evaluation shows and
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recommendation may be.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right, of course.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: You know, I think, if we're
dedicated with the constitutional officers to move in the proper way,
everybody can agree, you know, to a pathway to get that done, and --
MR. OCHS: Yes, sir.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I'm certain you're going to
take into consideration the issue of taking one-time expenses for
capital improvements in expenditures and applying that to recurring
obligations forever in the future, because an adjustment to salary is a
recurring revenue every year, whereas a capital improvement is
generally a single payment, and saving it doesn't happen every year.
So, of course, that's going to be part of your analysis, but there
might still be some economies there that are significant, so --
MR. OCHS: Yeah, I understand.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I support continuing, but just --
you've got to keep that point in mind, okay?
MR. OCHS: Absolutely. That's a good point.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Fiala, and then I'd
like to go ahead, and we've got a number of staffers waiting to speak.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. And while you're analyzing
these things -- now, Commissioner Henning suggested maybe that
one-and-a-half percent instead would pull down our health insurance
costs, I mean, you know, rather than having to pay a tax on it;
whereas, in the sheriffs office they don't have any health insurance
costs. Are those -- are those wages even?
Now we were talking about everybody -- about parity, but if they
already make the same as we make but their insurance is paid a 100
percent and ours is paid 80 percent, now are we talking parity? So
while you're analyzing, I think it would be nice if you would check
into that as well.
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MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And there's a difficulty with that,
because, you know, they have a different type of employee than we
have. So you can't very well, for example, compare a homicide
detective to, I don't know, one of the -- to one of Len's staff. I mean,
so the -- you know, what is fair as to what their pay is is something --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But they probably get compensated
for, you know, danger pay, you know. I'm --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I'm not sure. I wouldn't know that,
but I just think -- again, the objective --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I just want to make sure it's fair for
everyone.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right. The objective is fairness. I
mean, we want to make sure there's equal pay for equal work. We
want to make sure that, you know, if we're getting a COLA, they're
getting a COLA. We want to make sure that --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And the clerk. For instance --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Just fair, right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- if the clerk -- you know, he
doesn't have anybody in danger pay, but, you know, he would want to
make sure that he gets the same pay also for his employees. And if
everybody's --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: You know, if somebody's getting
free health insurance and the rest of us have decided, you know, as we
did a few years back, to cut it back to 80 percent, and there are other
constitutional officers doing the same thing, where their employees
get 100 percent, then our employees shouldn't -- and the same with the
clerk's office and the elections office -- shouldn't be getting less pay
when you figure health insurance isn't included.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And, you know, I just thought of
this. Commissioner Fiala raises an interesting point. If, for example,
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the sheriffs payroll has been held lower, and he is basically making up
for that lower payroll by giving that health benefit at that higher
percentage, he may be doing that for the very reason that
Commissioner Henning recommended, which is so that these people,
you know, are not receiving it as part of their paycheck but rather as --
and I don't know. Is it a nontaxable benefit?
MR. OCHS: What's that, ma'am?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: The benefits, the health benefits.
Like, the portion that we pay for their benefits, that's nontaxable,
right? That's not considered compensation?
MR. OCHS: No.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So, you know, it may very well be
that he's doing that for the very reason that Commissioner Henning is
suggesting we do it at the county. And I don't --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Should we evaluate all of them so
that it's fair and square? You see what --
MR. OCHS: It's a complex task, and we need to hurry up and
finish this meeting so I can get started.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Isn't that what the auto -- yeah. Isn't
that what the auto -- isn't that what the auto industry did? Like, one of
the companies in the auto industry -- someone was telling me that in
the auto industry they were, like, constantly upping the benefits
instead of the pay, and then there were all sorts of problems. I don't
know much about these payroll issues, but it's something our HR and,
quite frankly, our County Attorney's Office should look at.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I'll make one more brief comment,
and I will just say, in Silicon Valley where they have some of the most
progressive companies, a lot of them have salary and benefit
determinations, but they really have a cafeteria plan where some
benefits are more important to some people than others, and they get
an option to select among a menu of benefits that are equivalent and
fair and honest.
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But, you know, some -- one person might not need insurance for
some reason or another, where another, you know, it's a great benefit
and it's preferable.
So not to make things needlessly complicated, but there's a lot of
companies out there really examining, and what it does for them is it
actually makes them more attractive in the workplace for employees
than another competitor might be.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So, Leo, here's a suggestion.
Cancel your trip to Las Vegas and get to work, okay, because I'm
telling you --
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- our board has been very fruitful
with ideas today.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: He's already got workshops
through December already.
MR. OCHS: Exactly. You guys have filled up the workshop
calendar.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Next item.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Come on, let's go. Let's move on.
MR. OCHS: Commissioners, we have three items left. The next
two are your debt service and your management offices. I'll try to
kind of roll those real quickly into a couple of succinct summary
remarks.
Your general governmental debt service for FY 14. That's the
interest payments on your principal debt for general governmental
debt, not enterprise debt, is down $17 million from current Fiscal Year
'13; that approximates about a 30 percent reduction.
You saw the bar graph during my presentation this morning.
This board continues to retire its debt at an aggressive pace, and we
also have worked under your guidance to aggressively restructure debt
to take advantage of historically low interest rates over the last few
years. You'll see another utility bond re-funding on your agenda next
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Tuesday.
So the news is generally positive with regard to the trends in both
our overall debt and our ability to manage our debt service well within
the 13 percent cap on all bondable revenues that the board had set
several years ago.
So unless there's any other questions on general governmental
debt service, we can move on to the management offices.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Good work, Leo.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, but we are going to come
back with the analysis from our investment advisors as to what the
future ought to be.
MR. OCHS: Yes, absolutely.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: The debt management.
MR. OCHS: And then the next item on the agenda is your
management offices. You have the directors of those areas sitting in
the front row. And, again, I would tell you that these consist of the
Office Management and Budget that Mark runs; your Tourist
Development and Tourism and CBB, with Jack Wert;
Communications, Customer Relations with Mike Sheffield; Pelican
Bay Services. Kyle Lukasz is representing Pelican Bay Services; and
your Office of Business and Economic Development, Bruce Register.
In terms of their budgets for next year, there's no expanded
service requests, no new position requests. All of them are essentially
in compliance.
Your remittance payments for some of your economic incentives
are bumped up next year because they've performed to the next level
in their contract.
Other than that, there's nothing remarkable about those budgets.
They're here to answer any questions that the board has.
If not, we can move on to --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I have a couple of things.
MR. OCHS: Okay.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Coyle would like to
COMMISSIONER COYLE: How about the County
Commissioner's office? When are we going to do that?
MR. OCHS: Right after --
MR. ISAACSON: We can do that right after or now, sir.
MR. OCHS: We can do it right now. Let's do it right now.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I don't have any questions of these
guys. They're all good.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I have a couple things that I would
like to inquire about.
MR. OCHS: Sure.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Under economic development,
we've talked about, you know, beginning with that, and basically what
I would like to address is the Seminole contact money, which I see is
being applied to the Economic Development Incentive Program. And
I think that's really a misuse of this money, and I will tell you why.
Out in Immokalee where we're blessed with a great many
not-for-profits that, quite frankly, own some of the most significant
buildings in the Immokalee urban area, we have a situation where
these people are not contributory to things like the fire district, and it
puts a tremendous burden on the citizens out there.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Do they contribute to TIF?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I'm sure --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: CRA TIF money?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I'm sure that they impact the value
of the community. There's absolutely no question about that.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But they don't pay taxes, right?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Well, they don't pay fire
assessments. You know, the fire -- the fire and rescue district out
there has to have equipment to address the structures that they have to
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protect.
And, you know, there's a situation there where, in these rural fire
districts, these people actually pay an extraordinarily high tax rate for
services because there's not enough of them, and they're spread thin,
and the services are required.
In addition, you'll note that the MSTU in Immokalee is for
beautification. And one of the reasons, clearly, that the beautification
was done was to set the stage for things like the Seminole Indian
Casino, which is a big attractor and one of the greatest destinations in
our county.
So I really think it's a travesty that this little bit of money that we
receive from gaming revenue in the amount of$265,000 is taken away
from that area when they need it so very desperately to do a few things
in that town.
Those people -- you know, they pay a lot of taxes based on their
income and their ability to pay, in my estimation, for things like
beautification. That's pretty tough out there for them right now. And I
really think that the dedication of this money from the tribe should be
reevaluated.
I certainly support funding for economic development. I think
we need to come to grips with it. But I think to pick off a little sum of
money like $265,000 from Immokalee is just unfair.
MR. OCHS: Well, Commissioner, I will tell you that, obviously,
under the gaming compact, it's general revenue -- discretionary
general revenue to the Board of County Commissioners to put
wherever you want.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Agreed, agreed.
MR. OCHS: A couple of years ago when we began to talk about
economic development and how we would begin to develop some
funding separate and apart from ad valorem revenue, I just suggested,
since this was new revenue that was generated by visitors to the
community and people from all over the community, it should come
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back to the board as a general revenue to decide where they want it to
go.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I understand. I --
MR. OCHS: At that time they decided to begin to put it away so
we could develop a potential for some incentive; if you find a
company, even one that wants to come to the Immokalee airport and
develop or some other place out in that area of the community, you
could use those funds to incent out there as well as you could
anywhere else.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Understood.
MR. OCHS: Board policy decision, bottom line.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning?
Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Commissioner Nance, I hope
that you would encourage the fire departments to consolidate. And I
think --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I absolutely do.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And you ought to ask the
question, if we give this to you, where are you going to put the
money? What are you going to do with the money? I think that's a
fair question.
Like Immokalee, Golden Gate has a beautification MSTU started
by the citizens to beautify the area. It was an initiative by the citizens.
And I think Immokalee has been probably there since the '80s. It's
been there for quite a while. But like Golden Gate, it wants to bring
up the community --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Absolutely. And don't get me
wrong. I do not have anything that I would -- if you asked me, what
would I do with this money, I'd have absolutely no answer. I hadn't
considered it all, actually.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And, you know, it, quite
frankly, going to the fire department, maybe it probably is a worthy
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one, but you'd want to know -- I would like to know if that is being
proposed.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I'm not proposing that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. So where are you
proposing that money to be --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I'm not proposing it to go
anywhere. I'm just responding based on the sentiment that a lot of
people out in Immokalee reacted to. You know, they looked at it and
they thought, wow, you know, we're -- you know, we're in support.
We're spending our tax monies to help this be successful. It's the only
thing we've got going on in town. Isn't it a shame that the money
disappeared on us? That was the reaction.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, there's nothing wrong
with earmarking it for economic development in the Immokalee urban
area, period.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And then, Leo, you would have to
find another source of revenues to fund the economic development
office.
MR. OCHS: No, ma'am. Not a penny of this has ever been
spent. We would --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Oh, you were just building the
reserves for payment of incentives; I understand.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. In case you get a company that you
would want to consider.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. So that's how you have been
-- yeah, that's fine. So why not just earmark it in exactly that manner?
That makes sense. Is that acceptable?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Sure.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Is that acceptable?
MR. OCHS: Well --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Let's think about it.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay.
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COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. Let me just make an
observation. The Unincorporated General Fund is made up of taxes
paid by people from a very, very broad area. And Immokalee gets a
fair portion of that. As a matter of fact, I think if you were to take a
look at the amount of money flowing into Immokalee from other
communities, it would far outweigh the total taxes paid by the people
in Immokalee.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I have no doubt of it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So there are other people who are
paying to help Immokalee improve, and nobody is complaining about
that.
So I would be careful about trying to earmark General Fund
money to a particular community. Certainly if it's brought to the board
and you have a good reason for it, we would approve it just like we
approve the building of park facilities and other kinds of things in
Immokalee.
But I am weary of taking money and just earmarking it for
anything specific, because at some point in time that becomes unfair
to other communities who are being taxed.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Commissioner Coyle, I understand
exactly what you're saying, but in many respects the service standards
that we have in the urban coastal zone are not the service standards
that we have in Immokalee.
And I hear it in subtle ways all the time. You know, I hear about
the quality of the equipment that shows up at our parks and recreation
facilities. A lot of times they're hand-me-downs, okay. And the
people are reacting very poorly to that. They understand that they
don't pay the taxes that the people in the urban coastal zone pay, but
they also don't ask for a lot of the services that the urban coastal zone
asks for.
But they do want to -- they do want to be treated -- they don't
want to be -- to feel like they're always being treated like second-class
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citizens. In a lot of cases, I'm sorry to say, that I think that they
actually are and, you know, I have to advocate for them.
So I just want a little consideration. I'm sure Commissioner Fiala
has areas in her district that the people feel the same.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, let me add, in Immokalee only
-- you know, I never thought about it till you mentioned it -- there are
so many not-for-profits, and they don't pay any tax. And they do
contribute to the welfare of the community, but they don't pay a tax.
And same with the Seminoles; they don't pay a tax. They give us --
they give us an amount to compensate for not paying any taxes.
So now you've got -- and then you've got a lot of people that have
properties that probably, by the time you take your homesteading and
so forth, they don't pay a tax. So now you come to very few taxpayers
but a lot of needs. And so, you know -- and that -- I can understand
what they're saying.
I think that the county has really responded to their needs. They
have three lovely parks, and they've got a library. I mean, I wish I had
three parks that had community centers in them. I do not.
But I think the county has tried to do what they can to support a
better life in Immokalee but, yet, there's hardly any taxpayers to give
extra money to it.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Let me remind you of one other
thing, and then I don't want to belabor this discussion. But our CRA
out there that really needs to be focused on economic development
finds itself competing with 15 or 20 not-for-profits out there, and
they're going head to head for those grants. So the CRA, a lot of
times, doesn't get the grants for economic development.
The social service agencies receive the grants. And granted,
those are very, very important services. The people out there need
social services. But let me tell you what they need the most. They
need jobs.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Jobs.
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COMMISSIONER NANCE: They need jobs. We need to get
some money into economic development out there. You know, we
need to give them a hand, not a handout. And I'm not -- and I'm not --
I'm not criticizing those social service agencies out there. They are
magnificent. But our CRA economic development has to compete
head to head. And it's tough, because they're good not-for-profits.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Now, let me feed on that one,
because if there aren't taxes being paid, then there aren't TIF monies
being paid; is that correct? And so, if there aren't TIF monies being
paid, then the CRA is not getting the benefit of tax --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Well, the TIF comes from the raise
in the value of the taxable properties.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Of the taxable. But not-for-profits
don't pay tax.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And the Seminoles don't pay tax.
What I'm trying to say is --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: What about --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- they're less funded because --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: What about all the ag exemptions
out there?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, I don't even know about the
ag exemptions.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, sure, because --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But they certainly pay an
agricultural --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yeah, but it's teeny-weeny, because
COMMISSIONER FIALA: That's what I'm saying.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But you don't --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: You're both saying exactly what I'm
saying is, they have such a less advantage because the money isn't
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going into TIF or it isn't going into taxes to support community. And,
of course --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I respect what Commissioner
Coyle said 100 percent.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: My intention was not to snag this
money. But what I wanted to say was, that I think there just should be
some consideration made about it at some point in the future before
it's just out of pocket dedicated to this without another thought. That's
all.
No -- I don't have any plans for it. Not trying to steal it. I just --
I think we need to think about it.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Good thought.
The next item on the agenda, then, is the discussion of the Board
of County Commissioners' budget. Is that what you wanted to discuss
next, Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I just have some questions
that are not -- there's not enough information in the budget to answer
my questions, and that relates to how the budget is going to be put
together and who is going to be responsible for doing that.
We understand how the salaries work, we understand how
expense budgets work, but I'm not certain about how you deal with
general things like postage and paper and proclamations and the
proclamation paper and frames and general office things. Those
aren't, I hope, being allocated to specific commissioners. I would
hope there's --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I hope not.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- there's a catchall for all of this
miscellaneous stuff, so -- faxes and telephone calls and all that sort of
stuff.
If you can just explain to us how you're going to do that, I think it
will solve my problem.
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MR. ISAACSON: Commissioners, the -- remember when you
had this discussion -- I don't recall when it was, Leo, when it --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It was the second meeting in March
at 9:45 in the morning.
MR. ISAACSON: Right. And then there was -- and then there
was direction from the board that talked about separating into five cost
centers for personnel services, and then those specific appropriations
that relate to each one of the commissioners, travel, et cetera.
And then we talked about creating a sixth cost center that is
essentially what we call a general cost center for items,
Commissioner, that you just mentioned.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Overhead --
MR. ISACCSON: Yes.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- essentially.
MR. ISAACSON: Now, we've also talked subsequent to that
amongst us, including some of those -- some of your executive
assistants, sitting down with them and saying, what would be
appropriate to put in that particular cost center? That discussion is still
ongoing in terms of what would be appropriate for that particular cost
center, and that's how we're going to handle it moving forward.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's fine.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. ISAACSON: I don't know whether that answers your
question or not.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So you're working on it, but the
general concept is, you take all that miscellaneous stuff, lump it into
one cost center, or one line item, and manage it that way?
MR. ISAACSON: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Which is fine. That's a logical
way. I can't imagine people taking the time to decide how much paper
or postage each of us --
MR. OCHS: No, that's not the intent.
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COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. So you're not going to do
that, good.
All right. Then you've answered my question. I approve of the
budget.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: The next item on the agenda, I
believe, is the County Attorney's Office.
Hi. You have a really nice budget.
MR. KLATZKOW: Same as last year.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: It absolutely is marvelous. And
what's interesting about your budget -- because I actually do read
those reports that you put out with all our litigation listed -- is that you
have been able to basically service us without changing our staffing
and without expenditures towards outside counsel, notwithstanding the
volume of litigation we have. That, in some instances, you know, has
increased.
MR. KLATZKOW: I have good people.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You have very good people. I'm
personally curious to see -- I remember when we had a different
county attorney, and we had a lot more people working under that
county attorney. I would be interested in seeing how things have
changed, if you have any information that would show where we are
from, say, you know, five years ago in terms of people and
productivity.
MR. KLATZKOW: We've lost one-third of the office and
one-third of the budget, and the work is identical.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Oh, wow.
MR. KLATZKOW: The work hasn't changed. We track our
work through what we call RLSs, requests for legal services, and it
hasn't changed. And I think the explanation for that is twofold. I
mean, first of all, we were -- in my opinion, the office was
mismanaged before and we were overstaffed, and we've gone through
that.
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But there's another core issue here, and that's that with the county
manager's help over the years and this board, we've spent a lot of
money in IT in this county.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: We have.
MR. KLATZKOW: And the productivity I can get out of my
office compared to five years ago or 10 years ago is remarkable. I
mean, we don't use fax machines anymore because they're too slow. I
mean, we just -- it's instantaneous now with electronic email. We've
got a wonderful database system that the county manager's people
service, and I keep losing people, and I keep losing people, and I'm
making it up because of--
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Efficiency tools.
MR. KLATZKOW: -- this IT we have now. And I think the
country's finding that out, too, because you're going through a bit of a
recovery here, but the employment numbers aren't changing. And I
think what's happened in my shop is happening to some of Leo's shops
and it's happening throughout the country where we spent all this
money over all these years on IT, and we never realized what a big
productivity gain it really was until we started having to shed people
because of budget, and then we found out that we just don't need as
many people because it's just faster.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: That's a very interesting
observation.
MR. KLATZKOW: I started out years and years and years ago
in high school. I was a messenger in New York City. I worked at a
law firm in the World Trade Center. And I can't imagine that job even
exists anymore because now -- it used to be they would give me a
contract, and I'd get onto the subway, and I'd go midtown and deliver
the contract and wait and then come back. This is all electronic now.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right.
MR. KLATZKOW: You just take your contract, you zap it up, it
zaps right down. It's just -- it's a different world now.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Yep. Very interesting.
Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Not to anything on county
attorney's budget, but getting back to Commissioner Coyle's question.
Are we still going to have to separate out office supplies such as
Commissioner Coyle needs a ream of paper, I need a ream of paper,
there's two different POs for that -- for two reams of paper?
MR. ISAACSON: No. We should -- we would have that all on
one central cost center where --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. The only thing that we're
separating out from the individual commissioners is salaries and
travel, and the rest of them will be combined?
MR. ISAACSON: Well, there will probably be other things.
MR. OCHS: You might have cell phones, maybe, sir. There's a
few things, but most of the general commodities will be one
consolidated cost center.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. So Commissioner
Nance's aide can order a ream of paper for Commissioner Coyle and
myself? It won't be a problem?
MR. ISAACSON: Well, right now, I think --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That might violate the Sunshine
Law.
MR. ISAACSON: Right now I think there's --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: As long as there's nothing written
on it, Commissioner Coyle.
MR. ISAACSON: We actually have held back --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: It's probably still a Sunshine
violation.
MR. ISACCSON: This particular fiscal year we've actually
made the separation with the exception of some of the operating cost
centers, and we're waiting for some training to get done with some of
the assistants so that everybody is on board and can do the same types
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of things, so --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: My last question, would
anybody object to having this landscaping workshop called the edible
landscaping workshop?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, I would object to it.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, we're still talking about
canopy trees.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You mean the ones that are -- that
get canopies when they're 70 feet high when my grandchildren are
born?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: How about if we have an item under
the category of landscaping to discuss edible landscaping.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's fine. I mean, I'm just
thinking as far as the tourism marketing thing is, geez, you know, we
came to Collier County or came to Naples, and I went to the store to
buy some suntan lotion and --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And pulled an avocado off the tree.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- and I picked a navel orange
off the tree. Nowhere else in the State of Florida I could have done
that.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Or there were oranges all over my
car, and it stained my paint job.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: But it smelled really good.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Oh, boy.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Or a visitor was eaten by an
alligator trying to pick a coconut.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Are you guys in the audience asking
me to bring order to the forum? I mean, go ahead.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes, please.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Are we going to invoke --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I have one more comment.
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CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: -- the code of conduct here? A
secret code, by the way. No one knows what it is, so don't tell anyone.
Go ahead, Commissioner Nance, and then I have a comment.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes. I have one more general
comment that I was waiting for this meeting to -- as the newest
member of the board, I have worked diligently to be in this office on a
very, very regular basis during my first six months, and I will tell you
that there are several vehicles that are parked out in the parking lot. I
have parked next to them daily. And during my first eight months in
your service, I will tell you that each one of those cars -- one of them I
think has been moved once, and the other one certainly less than a
dozen times during that period of time.
I would suggest, in the spirit of efficiency, that we repatriate
those vehicles into the motor pool. And if one of the commissioners
here, which don't people seem to be using these vehicles now, should
need one, they should go to a rental car agency and rent a Bentley,
because we would be saving money, because birds are making nests
on these vehicles out there. I mean, they're having birthdays, and
they're not being used.
So we should either use them for a better purpose, sell them, take
the money, buy some paper for Commissioner Coyle, whatever we
can do, and gain a little bit of a something, because right now they're
just in the way, and they're deteriorating. Really, they're deteriorating,
and they're not being used.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I think that's an excellent
observation, and you're absolutely right. It is a wasting asset, and they
should be put in the motor pool. And to the extent any commissioner
needs a vehicle, Leo arranges for a car to be pulled on an as-need basis
and eliminate that from our budget.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Can I make a friendly amendment
to that motion?
COMMISSIONER NANCE: Yes, sir.
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COMMISSIONER COYLE: Why don't we use the money that
we save from that to build a shed over our parking spaces?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Oh, I like that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It would save me a fortune in car
washing fees, because every time I park under that tree, you're right,
birds just --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And then the berries, when the
berries fall off at a certain time of year and stain it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I'm kidding, but it's
something that somebody, if you come up with extra money and you
don't have anything else to do, keep that in mind.
MR. OCHS: Well, we have some gaming proceeds in
Immokalee.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: See, there we go.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: What'd you say? Say it again.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: It all comes back to you, doesn't it?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: What did he say?
MR. OCHS: I said, we have some gaming proceeds from the
casino in Immokalee.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I do -- I have one question.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I think the meeting is deteriorating.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: We're desperately looking to figure
out how to get to 5 o'clock.
The question I have relates to ongoing litigation. Jeff, can you
give us an update on -- and I know the state has been knocking on our
door and asking for that $11 million. Where are we on the $11 million
de-obligation by FEMA related to the beach renourishment? And
where are we on the $9 million that they have denied us related to
beach renourishment? Basically a total of$20 million that the feds are
pulling out of your budget.
And then my question after that is to Leo. Where or how have
you considered the contingent liability of the $11 million that we need
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to pay back if that is -- if that request does have to be followed
through on?
MR. OCHS: Commissioner, you have $11 million sitting in a
reserve in your Fund 195, beach renourishment fund. That's
earmarked for nothing other than to pay that back if and when we're
required to or some portion thereof.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
MR. OCHS: The $9 million was money that we never received.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Correct.
MR. OCHS: So there's no loss of revenue or return of revenue,
per se.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But no anticipation of revenue
either.
MR. OCHS: No, we did not budget that.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right. And I just wanted to make
sure that we've earmarked to pay back and that we haven't in any way
reflected the potential recovery of the nine.
MR. OCHS: No.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Commissioner, could I just ask,
we've got a bunch of people still sitting here. Do we --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: They're done.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, you're all done?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, did you --
MR. OCHS: They're done, yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: They are done. We went through it.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, okay, fine. I was going to say --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Unless there is anything -- that's
why we had moved on to the next item.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: We are done, too.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, almost done, because I want
to know from Jeff where we are on that litigation for the 11 million.
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We don't have any litigation related to the 9 million; we just have a
denial.
So with respect to the 11 million, my understanding -- is that
correct, we're on the third appeal on that?
MR. KLATZKOW: I wouldn't call it an appeal. We're going
through an administrative process. We're in the Atlanta offices right
now. We've hired outside counsel who's working with staff hand in
hand to see what we can do.
He tells us he doesn't think he's going to get a decision for a year,
year and a half, because FEMA has other issues right now they're
dealing with, and this is very low on their priority. But it's going to be
a very slow and lengthy process. But we'll see.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: So in the meantime those funds
can't be used, is your point?
MR. KLATZKOW: I wouldn't touch them.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Okay. I just wanted to confirm that.
So that basically, you know, remains as a contingency reserve for
litigation.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: All right. Is there anything else that
you would like to discuss, Leo?
MR. OCHS: No, just to thank the board for their time and their
indulgence is always -- it's a long document, and we do appreciate
your focus and questions, and we look forward to bringing back good
answers to your questions in September.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Well, staff did a very good job this
year in staying on point and, you know, within the guideline.
County Attorney, is there anything you'd like to address with
respect to the budget?
MR. KLATZKOW: No, not at all. Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Members of the board, are there any
additional comments that you would like to share?
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COMMISSIONER COYLE: A question.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Nice --
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Go ahead. County -- I'm sorry.
Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Just a quick question. I have a
copy of the Chapter 2013-193 laws of Florida. I am not certain that
this is a requirement in our current procurement procedures, but it
certainly -- I'm just interested in knowing if this is something new.
And, essentially, they're saying that if we're letting a contract for any
public work for the construction of public bridges, buildings, or other
structure, we must specify that contract lumber, timber, and other
forest products produced and manufactured in the State of Florida
must be used.
Do we have a requirement for that in our procurement procedures
now, or is this a new requirement?
MR. OCHS: I'm not familiar with that requirement,
Commissioner. I'll have to research that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. It might be part of a
proposed bill, but it is something that we should be aware of if we're
going to do that.
MR. OCHS: Yes, if I could get that citation from you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'll give it to you after the meeting.
MR. OCHS: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You know, you bring up
something, Commissioner Coyle. With the economy really turning
around in Collier County, I think it may be time to do away with the
local preference as we had. And the location for professionals could
be an asset to -- on pricing, if that's one of the criteria for
professionals. But the preference, I'm getting the gut feeling that we
should amend that. And just trying to get some feedback whether I
should bring that back or not.
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June 20, 2013
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: I think it may be premature.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Premature?
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: You know, we're just really starting
to see the benefit of the recovery. And to cut out that sort of economic
incentive to the local community -- down the road definitely. I mean,
if it doesn't make sense, it doesn't make sense. But for right now it
probably is premature. I don't think we're quite there, but it's a point
that really should be --
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I think we should talk about it,
because there's a lot of nuances that, you know -- I've had several
discussions with staff members recently about bid processes. And,
you know, I'm sure when we get to our meeting on Tuesday we're
going to be talking about our success and failures in bidding.
And, you know, some of these things may have some advantages
to us that we haven't tapped in -- you know, maybe we can have a
discussion about it at that time, but I've got a couple thoughts about it
as well.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I agree with Commissioner Hiller as
well. If other counties who are not doing as well as we are still had
their preference in place, that means that their people can come in and
take our jobs, but our people then have no place to go to try and get
other jobs.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Exactly.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So I think maybe it is a little
premature.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: And we should just monitor what's
going on and, you know, definitely not take our eye off that ball. But
we don't want to hurt our locals as they are emerging out of this very
difficult time.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: But it's a good point. I want to
conclude with what I got out of the only thing I eat during meetings,
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June 20, 2013
which is chocolate.
And thank you, Leo, for providing sustenance.
This is straight out of Dove. And it says -- and it's really a great
saying, and that's why I have to read it. The more you praise and
celebrate your life, the more there is in life to celebrate.
So something positive.
COMMISSIONER NANCE: I thought you were going to say,
you live long life and prosper.
CHAIRWOMAN HILLER: Right. This meeting is adjourned.
And thank you very much.
*****
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 3:35 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
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