BCC Minutes 06/20/2001 S (LDC Amendments)June 20, 2001
TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Naples, Florida, June 20, 2001
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 5:11 p.m. in SPECIAL
SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex, East Naples,
Florida, with the following members present:
CHAIRMAN:
VICE-CHAIRMAN:
ABSENT:
ALSO PRESENT:
James D. Carter, Ph.D.
Pamela S. Mac'Kie
James Coletta
Tom Henning
Donna Fiala
Tom Olliff, County Manager
David C. Weigel, County Attorney
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COLLIER COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
AGENDA
Wednesday, June 20, 2001
5:05 p.m.
NOTICE: ALL PERSONS WISHING TO SPEAK ON ANY AGENDA ITEM MUST REGISTER
PRIOR TO SPEAKING. SPEAKERS MUST REGISTER WITH THE COUNTY MANAGER
PRIOR TO THE PRESENTATION OF THE AGENDA ITEM TO BE ADDRESSED.
COLLIER COUNTY ORDINANCE NO. 99-22 REQUIRES THAT ALL LOBBYISTS SHALL,
BEFORE ENGAGING IN ANY LOBBYING ACTIVITIES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, ADDRESSING THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS), REGISTER WITH THE
CLERK TO THE BOARD AT THE BOARD MINUTES AND RECORDS DEPARTMENT.
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AGENDA MUST BE SUBMITTED IN WRITING WITH EXPLANATION TO THE COUNTY
MANAGER AT LEAST 13 DAYS PRIOR TO THE DATE OF THE MEETING AND WILL BE
HEARD UNDER "PUBLIC PETITIONS".
ANY PERSON WHO DECIDES TO APPEAL A DECISION OF THIS BOARD WILL NEED A
RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS PERTAINING THERETO, AND THEREFORE MAY
NEED TO ENSURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE,
WHICH RECORD INCLUDES THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE
APPEAL IS TO BE BASED.
ALL REGISTERED PUBLIC SPEAKERS WILL BE LIMITED TO FIVE (5) MINUTES UNLESS
PERMISSION FOR ADDITIONAL TIME IS GRANTED BY THE CHAIRMAN.
IF YOU ARE A PERSON WITH A DISABILITY WHO NEEDS ANY ACCOMMODATION IN
ORDER TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS PROCEEDING, YOU ARE ENTITLED, AT NO COST TO
YOU, TO THE PROVISION OF CERTAIN ASSISTANCE. PLEASE CONTACT THE
COLLIER COUNTY FACILITIES MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT LOCATED AT 3301 EAST
TAMIAMI TRAIL, NAPLES, FLORIDA, 34112, (941) 7744380; ASSISTED LISTENING
DEVICES FOR THE HEARING IMPAIRED ARE AVAILABLE IN THE COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS' OFFICE.
1. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
2. AN ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE NUMBER 91-102, AS AMENDED, THE
COLLIER COUNTY LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE, WHICH INCLUDES THE
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June 20, 2001
COMPREHENSIVE ZONING REGULATIONS FOR THE UNINCORPORATED AREA OF
COLLIER COUNTY,FLORIDA, BY PROVIDING FOR: SECTION ONE, RECITALS:
SECTION TWO, FINDINGS OF FACT: SECTION THREE, ADOPTION OF AMENDMENTS
TO THE LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE, MORE SPECIFICALLY AMENDING THE
FOLLOWING: ARTICLE 1, GENERAL PROVISIONS, DIVISION 1.8.
NONCONFORMITIES; DIVISION 1.19. AMENDMENTS TO THIS CODE; ARTICLE 2,
ZONING, DIVISION 2.2. ZONING DISTRICTS, PERMITTED USES, CONDITIONAL
USES, DIMENSIONAL STANDARDS, DIVISION 2.3. OFF-STREET PARKING AND
LOADING; DIVISION 2.4 LANDSCAPING AND BUFFERING, DIVISION 2.5. SIGNS;
DIVISION 2.6. SUPPLEMENTAL DISTRICT REGULATIONS; DIVISION 2.7 ZONING
ADMINISTRATION AND PROCEDURES; DIVISION 2.8. ARCHITECTURAL AND SITE
DESIGN STANDARDS AND GUIDELINES FOR COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS AND
PROJECTS; ARTICLE 3, DIVISION 3.2. SUBDIVISIONS; DIVISION 3.3. SITE
DEVELOPMENT PLANS; DIVISION 3.5 EXCAVATION; DIVISION 3.8 ENVIRONMENTAL
IMPACT STATEMENTS (ELS); DIVISION 3.9 VEGETATION REMOVAL, PROTECTION
AND PRESERVATION; DIVISION 3.12 COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT; DIVISION 3.13.
COASTAL CONSTRUCTION SETBACK LINE VARIANCE; DIVISION 3.14. VEHICLE ON
THE BEACH REGULATIONS; ARTICLE 5, DIVISION 5.1 BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS; DIVISION 5.2 PLANNING COMMISSION; DIVISION 5.3 BOARD OF
ZONING APPEALS; AND TO ADD DIVISION 5.5 HEARING EXAMINER; DIVISION 5.13
ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISORY COUNCIL; ARTICLE 6, DIVISION 6.3. DEFINITIONS,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE DEFINITIONS OF DESTINATION RESORT
HOTELS, PARTICIPANT, PSI (POUNDS PER SQUARE INCH), RIGHT-OF-WAY,
STRUCTURE, UNAUTHORIZED COMMUNICATION AND YARDS; ADDING APPENDIX
G STANDARD BEACH EVENT PERMIT CONDITIONS; SECTION FOUR, CONFLICT
AND SEVERABILITY; SECTION FIVE, INCLUSION IN THE COLLIER COUNTY LAND
DEVELOPMENT CODE; AND SECTION SIX, EFFECTIVE DATES.
3. ADJOURN
2
June 20, 2001
June 20,2001
Item #2
ORDINANCE 2001-34, AMENDING ORDINANCE 91-102, AS
AMENDED - ADOPTED WITH CHANGES
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Welcome to the Board of
County Commissioners Land Development Code, Session 2. We're
now in session. If you'll all join me and stand for the pledge of
allegiance.
(The pledge of allegiance was recited in unison.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Lovely idea. Unfortunately, our no-
gifts policy does not allow to us accept these. Whoever the generous
organization was that placed this here, we have to return it, but you
may give it to the organization of your choice. So thank you.
Believe me, it breaks my heart and particularly my associate's heart,
who already had her eye on it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That chocolate looked pretty
good to me.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All right. Ms. Murray, are you ready
to take us through the process?
MR. OLLIFF: Mr. Dunnuck may have a comment or two, Mr.
Chairman, just in -- in opening.
MR. DUNNUCK: Yes. For the record, John Dunnuck, interim
community development/environmental services administrator. A
couple comments I wanted to make tonight is that this is the second
of two hearings, and this is actually the hearing where you will make
votes. One of the things I wanted to point out this evening is that it
takes a 4/5 majority vote in order for these codes to pass, these
amendments. Therefore, in view of the fact that Commissioner Fiala
is absent, it'll have to be a 4-0 vote on everything this evening.
With that I'll turn it over to --
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June 20,2001
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Mr. Dunnuck.
Commissioners, we understand the rules. Let's proceed. Do we have
on the agenda tonight where we have numerous public speakers
signed up for any one issue, Mr. Olliff?.
MR. OLLIFF: Speaker slips are out in the hallway on the small
table. And if anyone is interested in speaking on an item, if they
would just fill one of those out and give that to Mr. Dunnuck, who's
raising his hand there in the blue shirt, we'll be sure to call your name
as we get to that item on the agenda. With that, Ms. Murray, I think
we're ready to roll.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All right. Let's do it.
MS. MURRAY: This evening we'll go ahead -- I'm sorry. I'm
Susan Murray for the record, interim current planning manager.
Again, this is the second hearing, where you will be voting on these
items tonight. Your preference, of course, Mr. Chairman, but the
summary sheets that you have in your packet are listed in the order in
which -- actually, it's probably the same order you took them at the
last hearing.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, let us proceed, and you give us
direction on how you want us to deal with each area, and we will --
MS. MURRAY: Within--
CHAIRMAN CARTER: -- proceed accordingly.
MS. MURRAY: All right. Within your packet you will be
working from the handwritten page numbers, which are in the center
of the page.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
MS. MURRAY: And the first item on the agenda is the floor
area ratio or commonly known as the RT zoning district provision.
That starts on page 5. And I'm going to kind of let you take the lead
on this, Mr. Chairman. I'll just remind you that we kind of left you
with a number of choices here. In summary, the first choice was kind
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June 20, 2001
of a hybrid to incorporate the FAR as recommended by staff with a
density cap of 26 units per acre.
You also have a choice of the FAR as recommended by the
Planning Commission with the -- and they also recommended the
density cap of 26 units per acre. That's one -- two choices there.
And then you also have the option of reverting back to the old,
straight 26 units per acre, which was the way it was prior to the June
of 2000 amendments.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I believe the overall direction that I
have received from the community that has voiced the most concerns
to me is to resort back to pre-June 2000 language. And if staff feels
there are any modifications in there that needs to be put anywhere
that would deal with other countywide issues, I certainly would be --
I'm certainly open, as other commissioners may have questions on
that; and/or we got to get into the grandfather issue to make sure that
that language is there, that any permits pulled prior to July 1 of that
year would not be affected by this or any approvals by this, etc. I
think I've got that right so ...
MS. MURRAY: Okay. Would you like me to read -- I would
have to read this into the record, and I do have some
recommendations. It's not entirely going back to the way it was, and
I'll explain why. But it will necessitate me reading a lot into the
record, if you'll indulge me.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. The board's pleasure, if
we can hear that.
MS. MURRAY: Okay. And this would be reverting back to the
pre-June 2000 language. You would have to amend the following
sections as noted: 2.2.8.4.5, which is the maximum density
permitted, and it would read as follows: A maximum of 26 units per
acre for hotels and motels and 16 units per acre for time-shares and
multifamily uses when located within an activity center or if the RT
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June 20,2001
zoning was in existence at the time of adoption of this code. When
located outside an activity center, except as provided above, the
density shall be determined through application of the density rating
system established in the Collier County Growth Management Plan
but shall not exceed 16 units per acre.
The next part I'm going to read is the grandfathering language
that we discussed last time. Any project which received approval at a
public hearing prior to July 1, 2000, shall not be deemed to be
nonconforming as a result of inconsistency with density limitations.
The next change would be to Section 2.2.8.4.7.2, and that would
revert back to a 300-square-foot minimum with a 500-square-foot
maximum for hotels and motels, except that 20 percent of the total
units may be utilized for suites. You may -- let me just comment
here. You may want to contemplate that a little bit because you are --
would be imposing a maximum of 500 square feet for a hotel room,
and you may want to not -- consider not doing that in light of current
market conditions. And I'll just leave that and go on to the next.
The next section would be 2.2.8.4.8. That's the floor area ratio
section. You would delete the maximum floor area ratio for hotels,
motels, and time-share facilities shall not exceed a factor of 0.60
except for destination resort hotels as defined in Article 6.3 where a
floor area ratio of 0.80 is permitted. And the word after floor area
ratio would then be added -- would just be "reserved." There would
be no regulatory mechanism under that section.
Then I would suggest that you do not adopt the following
proposed definition, and I'm not going to read this in its entirety, but
it would be Division 6.3, the residential hotel. And I believe the
county attorney's office may have some comments that they want to
put on the record with respect to that recommendation.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Mr. Weigel? Ms. Student?
MS. STUDENT: I believe Mr. Weigel is going to --
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June 20,2001
MR. WEIGEL: Thank you. David Weigel, county attorney.
Just to let the board -- recall to the board that at a regular board
meeting, daytime board meeting, and then at the first hearing that this
board had in regard to these Land Development Code amendments,
the board asked to consider the addition of a definition of a hotel that
hasn't been defined in the Land Development Code. And, as Susan
has indicated, it would have a definition place in 6.3 under
definitions.
This has some history in origin in regard to the discussions that
the board had outside of these particular proceedings in its daytime
proceedings concerning the Beachcomber Hotel project on Gulfshore
Drive. And the concept of the residential hotel has also been
described as the high-end, extended-stay, boutique hotel, which
would potentially have the ability to have larger hotel rooms, as
opposed to smaller or even 500-foot-maximum hotel rooms, as well
as specific definitional requirements concerning the use of the space
within the building providing for amenities, concierge-type thing,
facilities for the guests to use, open space, things of that nature.
So the hotel concept includes not only potential for larger
rooms, but also that the envelope that the building would comprise
would have other dedicated uses and requirements aside from merely
units. And, therefore, the conceptualization of such a hotel may, in
fact, have less units and more amenities. There is a range that could
occur in there. That's before you this evening. It was brought up in
the context of discussion and deliberations, both with people that live
in the community as well as the Beachcomber Hotel representatives
at your most recent Land Development Code hearing on June 6th.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. But since then we've had
numerous discussions, Counselor, with all parties. Is there shortened
phraseology here that we can all live with so that we don't end up
with a situation on Vanderbilt Beach?
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June 20,2001
MR. WEIGEL: Well, the situation on Vanderbilt Beach is --
and I think it's important for all to know is -- that the Land
Development Code in this particular subsection and division of the
RT zoning district provides for the use of hotels as well as
multifamily residences as a matter of right, a property right. And the
question of hotels and the existence of hotels or development of
future hotels in the district is not before this board this evening and,
in fact, may be problematical at any point in time for this board to
consider the elimination of hotels in the district.
So that being said, the question is, does this board wish to
contemplate a hotel definition, therefore a conceptual development
provision, in this code of a hotel that would be different but with
specific requirements not here before recognized or defined in the
code? And it provides a different kind of parameter for hotel
development.
The board's had significant discussion amongst itself at the Land
Development Code hearing as well as at the daily -- regular meeting
concerning the Beachcomber in regard to hotels, the concept of the
hotels, and the kind of intensity of use that comes with the
development of a hotel. And we've had discussion and the record
would show that there is a -- there is discussion, not necessarily
agreement, in regard to larger-size rooms of a hotel, potentially
having lesser number of units, and the intensity of use that comes
from the different kind of concepts as well as the different market
that comes and uses it.
We also have to recognize that the intensity of use of a hotel,
which is a commercial structure, is different than the density that
comes from a residential structure. Again, there's a bit of a reprise of
what we've been dealing with all along here. We know -- in fact, we
know specifically -- that this board is under a threat of lawsuit
concerning the actions it's taken outside of Land Development Code
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June 20,2001
hearings such as this concerning the Beachcomber and that particular
-- that particular site up there.
Part of the discussions that were had at the most recent Land
Development Code hearing, June 6th, involving counsel representing
the Beachcomber interest, concerned the concept of the extended-stay
hotel. My recommendation to the board would that -- would be that
you include that concept with your consideration tonight. And if you
want a county attorney recommendation, it would be to put it in there.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Put in the extended-stay definition?
MR. WEIGEL: That is correct.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: The extended stay, do we put any
limitation on square footage in those rooms and that size? I mean, if
I take Hawthorn Suites and some of these others -- I'm going to go
off the top of my head; I certainly can be corrected on this -- it seems
to me we're looking at a range of somewhere between 5 and 800
square feet in total for those extended-stay suites.
MR. WEIGEL: You could do that. However, if you -- if you
allow the parameter of larger suites, that would potentially provide
for fewer units.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Can I also comment on that,
Commissioner? Because as we've all done our research about what
are these extended-stay hotels and that business, I've -- there are a
couple -- everything that I could find locally was, like you said, about
800 square feet max, the sort of Embassy Suites and Marriott
Residence Inn and that kind of thing. But there are also -- what I
think we're talking about here, if we are going to talk about it -- and
I'm not sure we even should.
But if we are going to talk about it, this is a different concept
from what exists in Collier County right now. That's more like what's
up on Sanibel Island, for example, or more like what's around
Orlando or more like -- there are actually a couple on Fort Myers
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June 20,2001
Beach. And these really do walk, talk, look, smell, everything, that
operate like a condo. They're condominium units.
And if I lived on that street, I would rather have hotel units that
are that nice. If I'm stuck with hotels, I'd rather have a 3,000-square-
foot hotel unit that looks like a condo. And I see you shaking your
heads no, and I'm not saying that I know what you want. I'm just
saying what I would want. I would rather have very large, very nice,
fewer, lower density hotel rooms that look like condos than have a
ten-foot-story (sic) box full of 500-square-foot hotel rooms.
I don't understand -- I mean, I think we've lost sight of that
altogether. What -- if I were looking for what is more compatible
with a residential area, a hotel that looks like a condo is more
compatible with a residential area than the most beautiful Registry or
Ritz in the world.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Commissioner Mac'Kie, I tend
to agree with you, and this is a new concept. And, you know, looking
at the -- in the paper, we have seasonal rentals on condos, beach
access, and blah-blah-blah. And they're hard to find, from what I
understand, when they come out to rent. So there is a market out
there for it, but maybe we need to do this in a certain area or put
some parameters around this so the acreage size would fit into the --
for that use.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Right now the size of the piece of
property determines what can go in the box. Whether it's a condo or
whether it's a hotel room drives that process. Now, the question
becomes -- I'll listen to the community and their feeling. I'm just
going to say, as I understand it -- they will correct me if I'm wrong --
is they would prefer the broader definition of not including extended
stay but just going with hotel. And whatever ends up in that box,
ends up.
You know, will you build a Hawthorn Suites? Will you build a
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June 20,2001
condo? Will you -- what will you do? And I think the cost of the
property, the size of the property, where it's located isn't going to
drive what anybody's going to build there. And I think that's where I
understand that they're coming from, to let the free market determine
what you put in the box. Don't try to build in "we think it would be
better if you had an extended-stay definition." At least ifI am
reading that correctly -- I see their heads nodding out there -- this is
where they are.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I think that makes sense. The
only question I would have is, do we then need to put a maximum
unit size if we're going to let the free
COMMISSIONER COLETTA:
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well,
no.
market control?
A possible suggestion --
I mean, or a minimum unit size.
in the true free-market concept,
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: You let the market -- you let the
market determine what goes in the box.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And maybe that's how we've
gotten in this -- this, you know, bad place is we're trying to be a little
too micromanaging about what goes on in that little piece of land.
Maybe what's wrong is that we are trying to manipulate the market,
and we need to just say hotels, this is how big the box can be. And
those -- those two facts are not even up for debate, as I understand it.
We know that this is a hundred feet. We know that this is a hotel.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Right. And there --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And I personally would choose
something different on the inside than what the neighbors who live
there would choose, but that's their business and, more importantly,
the business of the person who owns the property and paid the
money.
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June 20,2001
CHAIRMAN CARTER: And there's a list of criteria that says if
you're going to build a hotel, you have to do these things. It's there in
the code. It says you have to have these certain criteria met, so that
drives what goes inside. Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Just a point. It seems like
there's still a certain amount of indecision. I wonder if we really have
put this together and given it enough thought. Would there be a
possibility that we might be able to send this back and put a study on
this and report back at the next cycle and meanwhile put a -- what do
you want to call it -- suspension of building rights to this property
until this is decided?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I think you're going to fall down a
slippery slope. I think you have to make a decision on the code, and
there will be an extended study in the area as a part of this.
Transportation is going to do a study, but we're going to expand that.
And Marjorie Student has some other thing that we're going to look
at that needs to come in front of this board of a bigger study, which
got back to the interim control process that we discussed last time.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I kind of started this discussion,
and I've done some more research on it since our last meeting about
this interim development control measure. The bottom line that
concerns me about -- okay. Let me just say it. Let's be blunt. If our
goal here is to try to have an effect on what's built on the
Beachcomber piece of property, then we need to go into this with
open eyes. And -- and the peace that I have, you know, sort of
reawakened myself to is we can say we are going to defend, you
know, the powers of good against the powers of evil and we're going
to sue and we're going to stop the construction of this hotel.
We can say that, and we can file such a suit, or we can take an
action and have such a suit filed against us. And we can do that and
say that if we lose, we know we're going to have to pay damages.
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June 20,2001
But what I lost sight of previously is that there's another element to
that. We can lose and have to pay damages, and then they get to
build it anyway.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's what a judge would say
under the right facts, circumstances. I'm not saying this is that fact
pattern. But we -- you know, we -~ we don't have the power that
we've been acting like we have. We don't have the power to stop
something unless we are going to buy the piece of land flat out. You
know, we've got to be realistic.
And when I think about -~ you know, I've been critical of the
City of Naples with their Hamilton Harbor lawsuit, and they get sued
for $19.2 million. Well, what we've forgotten about is not only are
they sued for $19.2 million, but after they pay that if they lose, then
the developer still gets to build Hamilton Harbor. Well, for God's
sake, let's don't do that.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I think that really gets back to as
simplistic as go back to pre -- pre-June 2000 code -- it really covered
the issue -- until we look at a further study of the area and how it
might affect that area. It also does not disrupt anything else done in
Collier County in terms of what can be done, and we don't get into
trying to dictate a singular piece of property. I also noted that that
property has some other -- other challenges on it that's not going to be
brought by us, but by other agencies.
So if we went back to pre-June 2000, when that property was
bought by that development corporation, they could have put up 15
condominium units or, I believe, what, 24 hotel rooms or 26 --
MR. WEIGEL: That's based on the .92 acre.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: -- based on the acreage of that time as
determined then. If that changes to something else, that's certainly
not in the control of this Board of County Commissioners, but that
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June 20,2001
was the criteria. If you resort back to that, it says you can do what
that code said, if we go there tonight.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Commissioner, doesn't this
project already have a building permit?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Not anymore.
MR. WEIGEL: No. You revoked that.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We revoked it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Oh, yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Mr. Chairman, can I make a
suggestion to poll the board on the discussion that you just had,
which is 2.2.8.4.8?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Right.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
units an acre?
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
Which is to go back to the 26
Or I'm sorry. It was 2.2.8.4.5.
Which is to go back --
Right.
-- to 26 units an acre? Okay.
Well, before we do that, I don't want to make the same mistake I've
made before. I need to know what could be built on a typical 1-acre
site if we go back to May 2000.
MS. MURRAY: June 2000?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, May, because June is
when we changed it.
MS. MURRAY: Right. Prior to your change. Prior to -- well,
if it was a 1-acre site, you would have -- and it was a hotel, you
would be allowed 26 units per acre. And then if you go in -- in its
entirety back, you would then have the limitation of 300-square-foot
minimum and 500-square-foot maximum for hotels, except that you
could use 20 percent for suites, and you would not have a floor area
ratio calculation involved. And I think that --
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June 20,2001
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And so on a 1-acre site, I would
be able -- and how tall could the building be? MS. MURRAY: A hundred feet.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And would that include the
parking?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, the size of your property, yeah,
would dictate your parking whether -- however you configure that on
there.
MS. MURRAY: If you -- right. If you did your parking as a
parking garage per se, with the hotel on top, yeah, it would -- the
hundred foot would be included.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's my question.
MS. MURRAY: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: If you did -- which everybody
does there because of FEMA and the flood regulations -- you would
put your parking underground. And say you had one level of parking
-- I don't know how much it would be necessary to have to support
this. But if you had one level of parking, how many floors of hotel
could you have above that within the hundred feet?
MS. MURRAY: It's -- it's hard for me to do that calculation.
Again, with a 500-square-foot maximum and 26 units, I don't know.
I would just be guessing, honestly.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I just think we -- I mean, this is
how I've got into the mess that I got into on the floor area ratio when
I voted for it before, is the concept sounded good, but nobody did the
math and showed me what could be built with that. And I'm not
going to vote for something again until I know the answer to that
question. I mean, Mr. Weigel, I hope I don't have to vote without
knowing.
MR. WEIGEL: Well, you see, what we went to before was pure
floor area ratio without a limitation of units. And what's before you
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June 20,2001
tonight in two versions is you could back to May 2000, you've just
got units, you don't have floor area ratio in the RT district, which may
be a good thing.
What's also been proposed to you and winded its way through
the CCPC is not only a floor area ratio, revised from what it is right
now, but also a maximum number of units. So, therefore, you could
never get more than 26 units on an acre for hotel; but at the same
time they have a floor area ratio, so the units could be bigger,
purportedly to meet a changing market, but also to obtain a slightly
different use and the clientele, things of that nature.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, I'd like to hear from
somebody about what's bad about that idea, a floor area ratio with a
maximum number of units of 26. And I've got the public -- they're
the most informed group of people I've met with in a long time.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: They would have to fill out sign-up
slips, and they would have to come forward to comment on that.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I bet they have.
MR. OLLIFF: They have. And, Mr. Chairman, you've got a
number of speakers registered on this item. And perhaps the most
efficient thing to do would be go straight to public speakers.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
MR. DUNNUCK: You've got eight speakers on this item. And
if you can come up two at a time as you're called and one sit on deck
so we can keep this thing moving, that would be appreciated. First
up is Joe Connolly followed by Carol Wright.
MR. CONNOLLY: Good evening again.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Good evening, Joe.
MR. CONNOLLY: It looks like --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We will get you back to Tennessee, sir
-- I mean to Georgia.
MR. CONNOLLY: I don't want to go to Tennessee. I want to
Page 15
June 20, 2001
go to Georgia. We've come full circle, it looks like, and hopefully we
can return to a world of reality, understandability, and keeping it
simple. Joe Connolly for the record.
Before I get to our wish list, there's a couple of things I want to
clarify. Number one, he's not here tonight, I don't think, but we had
an expert witness, I guess he would call himself, to put forth this
residential hotel scheme that everybody's moving toward and so
forth. The fact is that is not so. There is no move toward residential
hotels. In fact, the movement is to smaller units. That same expert
witness said that the suite hotels were about 1100 square feet; false.
Suite units are about 5 to 600 square feet.
Mr. Weigel, not intentionally, but could have misled some
people by saying that there were 13-, 14-, and 15-story units on the
Gulfshore Drive; I think you might believe all up and down the street.
That's not the case either. There's one small pocket on the very north
end that was, is, and has been zoned RMF-16, and that has some 12-
and ! 3-story buildings on it. That's what it was designed to be for.
The rest of the -- of Gulfshore Drive, or 85 percent of it, is 4-, 5-, and
6-story-unit (sic) buildings over parking.
The answer to the question that you asked of parking is, you'd
have one level of parking and nine stories of hotel rooms. I don't
know what's so difficult about that.
Also, somebody made the statement that Lot 50 and 51, which is
notorious now as Beachcomber property, was for 45 years and is
commercially zoned; wrong. It was for 45 years and is zoned RT.
So now to the wish list. We would like to go back to the pre-
June, May of 2000 that you-all have been talking about, and it allows
26 hotel rooms, 300 to 500 square feet, 20 percent suites that may be
able to be a little bit larger, per acre; 16 time-share and condo units
per acre. Now, this residential hotel, the residential conforms --
means more -- looks more like a condo than it does a hotel.
Page 16
June 20,2001
So if you're going to do a residential hotel, which you don't need
to do, then let it be 16 units per acre like a condo is because that's
what it is. There's no need in -- to go through all this paraphernalia
of trying do something when there's no need for it. If you want to
rent a condo, rent a condo. They're available in all different sizes and
for all different time periods. So let's not make a monster out of
something when there's no need for it.
The other thing we would like is that the hundred-foot minimum
(sic) include parking, and we don't want any more multistory parking
garages. If you'd like to see the result of what happened last June,
please ride down Gulfshore Drive, look on the bay side at La Playa,
and you will see a concrete wall going up, which is their six-story
parking garage. I pity the people that live on the bay that have to
look at it.
We don't want any wedding-cake setbacks. The setbacks should
be from the ground level, foundation, to the top of building, without
going through all this crazy tier thing. That's what it was intended to
be. And how we ever got into that, I don't know. And, like I said, no
more multistory garages.
We strongly endorse the interim development control study
which encompasses the Vanderbilt Beach -- the drive -- traffic study
and also the community character study. And that no building
permits be allowed for multifamily units until that study is
completed. And that basically is our wish list. (Clap of thunder)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: You may have had the support
upstairs on that one.
MR. CONNOLLY: Got some reaction, didn't I? And that's
basically it. We appreciate your indulgence through these months
that we've been talking to each other, and I hope you-all have a nice
summer.
Page 17
June 20,2001
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Joe. You have a good
time in Georgia.
MR. DUNNUCK: Carol Wright followed by Frank Holds.
MS. WRIGHT: Good evening, Commissioners. My name is
Carol Wright. I represent some 700 members of the Vanderbilt
Beach and Bay Association, which I don't think I even need to say
anymore because I've been up here for six months telling you these
same things. You know how I hate to speak, and I'm going to hope
this is my last speech because tonight you're going to make a
decision. I wish Mrs. Fiala was here. We know how sick you are of
seeing us, and it's almost a game of who can outlast who, and believe
me, we will not give up.
There is only one thing to do tonight, and that is to take the LDC
back to where it was before June of 2000, which was 24 hotel units
per acre with 3-to-500-square~feet maximum and 20 percent suites.
You've heard a lot over the months about how hotel suites have to be
1100 to 3,000 square feet, and we feel we've done our homework and
found that this is absolutely not true. Most hotels are 4 to 500 square
feet and some suites are 800. If you want 3,000-square-foot hotel
units, that opens the door to developers. If you want 3,000 square
foot, put it in at 16 units per acre.
We're asking that you preserve the character of Gulfshore Drive
on Vanderbilt Beach by putting it -- putting us in an interim
development control study along with the corridor study, which is
already funded. We need to get rid of all the definitions of hotels and
say a hotel is a hotel. We want you to restore the wording that 100
feet is from the foundation to the top of the roof. We are so opposed
to a floor area ratio, and hopefully in your findings and studies you
are opposed now also.
In your heart you know what has to be done. Please don't let us
down. Be known as the commissioners who stood up for what you
Page 18
June 20,2001
knew was right for our area. Just say no. Too much has gone under
the dam. The others have ruled too long. Please help us get back on
the right track. And with that, I thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Carol Wright. Next
speaker, please.
MR. DUNNUCK: Frank Holds followed by --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Pass. Next speaker.
MR. DUNNUCK: Chuck Brooke followed by Dr. Richard
Bing.
MR. BROOKE: Good morning. My name is Chuck Brooke. I
live on Gulfshore Drive, and I'm also the treasurer of the Save
Vanderbilt Beach Association. I've had the opportunity to address
you in previous meetings, and I continue to believe that the changes
made in June of last year will cause irreparable harm to the residents
of Vanderbilt Beach by allowing much larger hotels to be built than
was contemplated prior to June of 2000.
I've shared my reasoning in some detail with some of you and
with county staff, and I would like to elaborate on that right now. I'm
not an expert, but I think that it is very critical that when you talk
about the box and you're going to let the free market determine what
goes into that box, whether it's 4,000-square-feet units or 200-square-
feet units, but to define what that box means and the size of it. To me
that's a critical point, and I want to try to do that. Again, I'm not an
expert, but you should have plenty of experts, and I think you should
have a good idea of what that box is and how big it is before you
make the decision. So let me give it a try.
I'm going to start out with a principle that a box for any kind of a
hotel, whether it's a residential hotel, destination hotel, plain old
hotel, whatever you want to call it, be equivalent to the box that a 16-
unit condo would go into. Just a basic simple principle. If you're
going to regulate something, you're going to let the free market take it
Page 19
June 20,2001
into consideration, then don't give one side an edge one way or the
other. That's the basic principle.
The first problem you have is that right now in -- and even prior
to June of 2000, defining the size of the box for the condos isn't
simple. It simply says 16 units, okay, per acre. It doesn't say how
big it is. But let me try to fix the size of that box by just saying
-- I'm going to pick 2,000 square feet as the average size of a
condo. That's my -- my figure. If I take the number of square feet
that are in an acre and I take 2,000 square feet per unit, I come up
with a size available for the building of roughly 38,000 square feet.
That's what I'm going to define as the box for a condo. And what that
means -- again, I'm a layman -- is there's your box. You've got 15
percent for common areas, and you got the rest of it for units. And
you can make them 300, you can make them 3,000 square feet. This
is for a condo. So if you'll stick with me -- and that's the size of the
box for a condo, roughly 38,000 square feet.
Now let's translate that into a hotel, any kind of hotel you
want. Okay. Let's start out with 38,000 square feet --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Hundred.
MR. BROOKE: Right -- for a hotel available for common areas
and for building units of any size that you want. Well, at that point
then, if you're limiting it to 26 units and you want to keep the same
size of the box and you're not going to define the size of each unit,
then you got to define a FAR. And once you define that FAR, it's
fairly simple because you've got the number of square feet in an acre,
and you know what your maximum size of the box is. It happens to
come to around .8. At least that's my calculation.
Then you've got that box of roughly 38,000 square feet for a
hotel, and you can make it, you know -- I put in 25 percent area for
common usage, and the rest you can build units on. According to my
calculations, which, again, are layman's calculations, you can build a
Page 20
June 20,2001
thousand square feet -- you can have 26 units, okay, of a thousand
square feet each for this hotel. Or you can go to 3,000 units -- I mean
3,000 square feet per unit and have 11 units. So that gives you your
range.
Now, all I'm trying to say is what I'm trying to define, at least
for me -- and hopefully you would go through the same thought
processes. Make up your minds what is the box, what should it look
like, how big is it? And then make sure that what is written into the
code reflects the size of the box that you want.
I think it would be much better, in my opinion, if you took a
breath, took some time to study it. It doesn't have to be two years;
four months, six months, so that you could go over this. You could
have plenty of counterplay between people saying those numbers are
right, those numbers are wrong, until you finally settle in your mind
what it really is like and what the basic principle should be and then
make your decision. I would suggest that it's going to be difficult for
you to do that tonight, but if you can't take the time to study it
carefully, then please try to think it through very carefully tonight.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. The next speaker, please.
MR. DUNNUCK: The next speaker is Dr. Richard Bing
followed by Diane Ketcham.
DR. BING: Richard Bing, president of Vanderbilt Gulfside
Condominium, and I live on Gulfshore Drive there. First of all, let
me thank you, Commissioners, for your public service. We certainly
do appreciate that and the effort it takes. It often puts you in a
precarious situation. I've listened to some of the dialogue about if
you do this way, you're going to get sued; and if you do this way,
you're going to get sued.
And having been in your situation -- in a similar situation,
elected office, I think the thing you have to really come down to is,
Page 21
June 20,2001
what is the will of the majority? And, yes, individuals do have
property rights, but in this case I think you have to really think about,
what do the majority of the people who are property owners on
Vanderbilt Beach want? And when we bought our property -- and I
know some of you came here voluntarily. You chose to live in
Southwest Florida because you had a choice between Fort Lauderdale
or Miami Beach and concrete jungle, etc. You had a vision of what
this was going to be like, and we'd like to retain that vision.
And really, on Vanderbilt Beach we're fully developed now.
Anything that would increase density or intensity, to us, is
unacceptable. And I think that puts you in a tough situation. But,
you know, counting acreage that's under water, considering
commercial development on something that's less than 1 acre doesn't
make any sense. So I'll leave that with you. I don't want to get into
floor area ratio because I don't understand it that well. But basically,
16 units per acre, regardless if they're big, should be the limit. And
then if you're going to go with the other side and stay with 24 and a
smaller unit, fine. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, sir. Next speaker, please.
MR. DUNNUCK: Diane Ketcham followed by Michael Volpe.
MS. KETCHAM: Hello again, Commissioners. My name is
Diane Ketcham. I'm a board member of the Vanderbilt Beach and
Bay Association and head of the Save Vanderbilt Beach Association,
and I feel like we're all aging together. We have been here so many
times in the last eight months that our cars can get here by remote
control. We know where every bathroom is in this building, I think.
But tonight may be the night. Tonight you can make the
residents of Vanderbilt Beach sleep a little easier and stop seeing us
for a while. Tonight you can say, "We hear you on Gulfshore Drive.
We've had enough of changing the Land Development Code without
a full appreciation of what those changes can do. We don't want to
Page 22
June 20,2001
force something on you you don't want, don't need, and have cause
more traffic, more burden to the infrastructure, and more density on
your fragile beach road, coastal high hazard area. We commissioners
want to maintain the character of your neighborhood. We want to
work with you to make sure the Vanderbilt Beach tomorrow stays the
jewel that it is today."
You see, it's really easy what you need to do to make us all
happy and basically go away. For the short term, just give us back
the Land Development Code we had before the disastrous changes
were made last June, changes that were made with no input from us
and, if you look at the transcript, no input from the board of
commissioners. Give us back the control on the amount of hotel
units per acre; 26.
Give us back the size of the units being between 300 and 500
square feet with 20 percent guest suites. That square footage works
with all suite hotels. We did the research. We have given you the
information. Another example that I found today, Doubletree, which
was built in the RT zoning right by Pewter Mug, their one-suite (sic)
units are 405 square feet; their presidential suite is 819 square feet.
All suites work within that 500 square foot and then the 20 percent
for their bigger units.
If a hotel developer wants bigger units for extended stays, like
time-shares and condos, let them build it under the multifamily use of
16 units per acre. Many other places in the country do that, including
the City of Naples. Naples says any hotel unit with a kitchen is given
less density: 18 units per acre. And, please, also make sure time-
shares go back to the 16 units. And I think now they are back, rather
than all of a sudden they mysteriously went in with hotels and got a
greater density.
And also give us back the maximum height of buildings being a
hundred feet from foundation to rooftop. Get rid of the reference to
Page 23
June 20,2001
10 stories. No building on the bay side of Gulfshore Drive in RT
zoning is higher than seven stories. Nobody ever talked about
building ten stories on those little bay side lots before June of 2000.
Give us back the building height definition that had teeth in it.
But bringing back the code isn't going to solve all our problems.
We need to plan for the future responsibly. We need to control the
growth. We need to save some greenspace. We need to keep the
height of buildings at a level that people can see the sky. To do this
we need a freeze on building until we get it right. I know we can't
use the "M" word, moratorium, but we can use the IDC, interim
development control study. It can be incorporated in the Vanderbilt
Drive corridor study already under way and already funded. It will
give us time to stop this crazy development that's taking over
Vanderbilt Beach. Give us a year. Give us six months. Give us
something to decide what will work.
People are talking about changing the zoning on Gulfshore
Drive to all residential, grandfathering in the hotels and motels
already there. I haven't heard anybody who's opposed to that, even
the motel and hotel operators. They don't want any more
competition. But we need time to do that. Don't rush into
redeveloping our area. Rushing has caused the problems we have
now.
And please stop this nonsense of changing the codes every six
months by adding a different definition for everything a developer
wants to build. Our RT zoning is only half a mile long, yet the
planning staff has already got a destination resort hotel, and now they
want a residential hotel. What comes next year, a resort residential
boutique casino hotel.'? A hotel is a hotel. Keep it simple. We're not
sure anybody wants to build another hotel on Gulfshore Drive.
Everybody knows the money's in condos.
So, please, tonight give us a reason to believe in government
Page 24
June 20, 2001
again. You did that last month when you stopped the hotel project
that would have been disastrous for our area. Now you must stop
changing the code, which would bring more disaster upon us. Please,
let's go back to the way it was, and also let's have a freeze. Give
yourself and us time to plan for the future instead of always having to
repair what was done in the past. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Diane. Mr. Volpe.
MR. VOLPE: Good evening, Mr. Chairman, Members of the
Board. My name is Michael Volpe. I'm here this evening
representing the residents of Vanderbilt Beach. This debate began
back in December of last year, and we are in June of 2001. Six
months later I think we see that there is some -- as Commissioner
Coletta indicated -- there is some indecision, and there still seems to
be some confusion about what was actually intended back in June of
2000 when the board first amended the Land Development Code to
introduce the new concept of floor area ratios. Why was that done,
and what was it that the board was intending to address at that
particular point in time?
As the board, I'm sure, knows, there are a limited number of RT
zoning districts within Collier County, very few of them, very few of
them that are undeveloped. We have seen that under the Land
Development Code as it existed prior to June of 2000, we saw a host
of new hotels, suite hotels, being built in our community. Nobody
seemed to have a problem developing the type of hotel -- which the
residents have done their homework and have actually determined
that the actual size of these units is somewhere in the neighborhood
of between 400, 500, 800 maximum, which has all been done under
the prior code.
Floor area ratios, the reason why it was first advanced was the
staff felt it would be more appropriately used for commercial
structures. That's why they did it in the first instance. That's what
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June 20, 2001
they said. We've gotten other concepts introduced, residential hotels,
which are sort of refining, but obviously for a specific land -- pieces
of land, parcels, not the overall RT zoning district.
For your information, in the City of Marco Island, they do not
use floor area ratios. For your information, in the City of Naples,
they do not use floor area ratios. The question is what are we trying
to accomplish by going to a floor area ratio? We've seen that what
has happened, in my opinion, as a result of the change that occurred
in June, was that we have ended up with unintended sequences that's
brought us here, beginning back in December.
It would be my recommendation to the board that we know what
we have had prior to June of 2000. Ms. Mac'Kie's -- has raised some
issues about property rights -- very important -- and the possibility of
litigation. But if you were to restore or go back to where you were in
June of 2000, I'm not sure what the lawsuit would be. And as a part
of -- I mean, this is what people had under that Land Development
Code. And it would give the board an opportunity -- maybe not to
have any kind of an interim development control; this is the zoning.
You can go ahead and do whatever it is. As Commissioner Mac'Kie
has indicated, you're going to get a 26-unit hotel on 1 acre, whatever
number of units you can build under the existing Land Development
Code.
And then the board can, at its leisure -- and it's a very busy time
of the year for all of you to actually do the study. You've
incorporated Gulfshore Drive into your traffic study, but there are
other issues which I think you're hearing your constituents raise some
concerns about. There is only, really, one RT zoning district left in
the county, and it is on Gulfshore Drive. So if you do take -- you
know, step back or pause, in my humble opinion, I think that you'll
accomplish what it is that you intend to do.
And if you look back as to what we were trying to do in June of
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June 20,2001
-- of 2000, you obviously -- there are other ways of getting at that.
And so I would suggest to you that by going back to 2000, June of
2000, limiting the number of units for condominiums to 16 units an
acre -- and for hotels, a hotel is a hotel is a hotel; we've seen what's
developed under those Land Development Codes -- you've protected
the rights of all of the individuals that are concerned, and you'll give
the board and your staff a little bit more time to kind of sort through
this confusion.
One last point and then I'll be seated, and that is floor area ratios.
When your staff originally recommended you -- a floor area ratio to
you, they did so that it would equate to the number of units which
were presently allowed. What has happened now, you-all have
picked some numbers that -- that kind of-- I don't know where
they've come from and for what purpose. And we go from. 7 to .8 to
1.15 to 1.65, and really nobody understands what the unintended
consequences will be.
And what has just been said to you by Mr. Brooke is that if you
look at the chart, the floor area ratio will determine the mass of the
structure that can be built. And depending upon floor area ratios,
depending on what number you pick, that 38,000 square foot box that
he was talking about, if you apply a higher floor area ratio, you'll
double the size of that box. That's how I've sort of tried to understand
what's going on here.
Thank you very much for your attention. It's decision-making
time. We need four of you to vote, and hopefully you will all bring
us back to where we were before this debate began in December.
Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Mr. Volpe.
MR. DUNNUCK: You have one final speaker who -- I believe
Mr. Anderson is willing to waive as long as there isn't any changes or
discussion relating to the grandfathering in of the existing hotels.
Page 27
June 20, 2001
CHAIRMAN CARTER: And I think for the record Ms. Murray
has one little piece of wording to put in there that may not be in front
of us in regards to grandfathering, and then I would like to move that
we go back to where we were prior to June 2000, no floor area ratios,
keep it simple. And then as we move forward, we can look at what
we can do with the study that's under way and then broaden that base
as an additional discussion tonight. Ms. Murray.
MS. MURRAY: Mr. Chairman, if you go back to the old
language, as you've described, I've already read that into the record.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
MS. MURRAY: So you're covered.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay.
with the density and --
MS. MURRAY: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
And grandfathering is covered
And I'll second that.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: There's a second. I have a first and
second. Discussion?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah. I just want to say a
correction. There is RT zoning vacant land in Golden Gate and in
East Naples, so it's just not in that one area.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, then this gives us an opportunity
to really define that, Commissioner, so that we have a better handle
on this. It's been a hell of a learning curve, is all I can say, and I hope
I never hear the word "floor area ratio" again as long as I live. But I'm
sure it has application. I think the intent was -- was a good -- the
intentions by staff were not devious. They were not ones that tried to
get us into difficulty. Sometimes, as well said by Commissioner (sic)
Volpe, we have unintended consequences. Staff is already discussing
in the future, let's really get to a big horizon before we do some of
these things.
So if you're all in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
Page 28
June 20,2001
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER:
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER:
(Applause.)
Opposed by the same sign.
Motion carries 4-0.
MS. MURRAY: I do need a little bit of clarification on that, so
when I go back -- may I make sure that you basically amended
2.2.8.4.5, which is the density?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Right.
MS. MURRAY: You also included 2.2.8.4.7.2, which is the
limitation on square footage including the minimum and maximum;
is that correct?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Right.
MS. MURRAY: And then, of course, we deleted the language
for floor area ratio.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes, ma'am.
MS. MURRAY: Anything else that I --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: What about the destination or the
residential suite or whatever it is?
MS. MURRAY: The residential hotel, that really was the
question. You had gotten some information from Mr. Weigel. And
did you mean to delete that or not?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Is that a part of where -- well, let me
go back. Does that require a separate motion, Counselor?
MR. WEIGEL: No, it really doesn't. You said to go back to
pre-May or June 2000. That wasn't part of pre -- that wasn't part of
pre-June 2000. So our understanding, and the record should reflect,
that is omitted from consideration. It is not part of the adoption
tonight.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Ms. Student.
MS. STUDENT: Mr. Chairman, I just have one general
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June 20, 2001
comment. And you may be taking separate motions on different
pieces of the code, but at the end, in the final motion, if you'd make a
finding that all of the amendments are consistent with the comp plan.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Counselor. I will do that,
and I know you'll remind me if I don't remember. Okay.
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I would like to say I think this
extended stay does have some merit, and it -- obviously we should
not be doing anything this evening. But I think we can have it here in
Collier County under certain conditions, certain parameters where
we're not raising things way up in the air but, you know, spread it out
on a bigger piece of property, parcel of property.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And that's one thing that we
need to keep in mind, is that hotels are not permitted only on RT
zoning; they're also permitted in commercially zoned areas. So that
possibility would exist in a commercially zoned site; true? MS. MURRAY: That's correct, yes.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: So we didn't really interfere with that.
If you want to have an extended stay in a commercial site, you can
still do that; am I correct?
MS. MURRAY: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And I also would like to say,
for the next LDC cycle, that I would like to see the heighth
amendments in all the commercial districts along with setbacks in the
-- in the uses.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I agree.
MR. DUNNUCK: Just for the record, I don't know if you
caught my memo that I had sent to the board over the last couple
days, but that's on our --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: RT districts, setbacks, heighth
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June 20,2001
restrictions, etc. I have proposed to staff that we incorporate our
energy this fall towards reviewing the entire sections of the code,
including a memorandum from Mr. Dunnuck that I have.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But does it also include
commercial districts instead of just RT? MR. DUNNUCK: Yes, it does.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And I'm just saying I support
that.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All commercial zoning districts.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Good.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, let me read it. All commercial
zoning districts, C-1 to C-5, allow the use of setbacks, height
restrictions, etc.; bullet, landscape regulations, one year, RT district
setbacks, height restrictions, etc., architectural regulations, one year;
bullet, transportation needs, slash, land use. And he says it's only the
beginning, but we hope in the next cycle we could address these
issues.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And, Commissioner, I think
we're getting to the community character plan and smart growth.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We're doing all of those things. But
keeping us focused where we are this evening, let's go forward, and
let's go to the next situation.
MS. MURRAY: The next situation would be -- and we can take
these all as one -- the -- starting on page 7, the annual beach events
permit, the coastal construction setback line variance, and the
vehicles on the beach. I have a few things to read in the record, but
I'll just preface that by saying that we believe the information
provided to you reflects the changes that you indicated you wanted at
the last hearing. And if somebody from the public disagrees with
that, I'm sure they're signed up to speak about that. But I do need to
go ahead and read a couple things into the record because you
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June 20, 2001
received some handouts tonight that had some last-minute changes.
The first thing I need to read into the record is with respect to
the consistency of the LDC Sections 2.6.34 and 3.14 with Policy
10.4.10 of the Growth Management Plan. Based on the board's
interpretation expressed at the meeting on June 6th, staff needs to
merely put it onto the record that the manner and use of vehicles
being authorized in each of these sections does not constitute "traffic"
or "vehicle traffic" as those terms are used in the stated policy.
Having said that, you'll note that Section 3.14.6 adds the words
"environmental maintenance" to ensure that this exception in Policy
10.4.10 is added to the text of--
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Excuse me, Susan.
MS. MURRAY: -- this provision. Sure.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Before you go any further, I
looked on page 70, and that wasn't it, so help me out.
MS. MURRAY: Hang on just a -- it's on your -- actually, it's in
your handout. You should refer to your vehicle on the beach -- it
should be three separate handouts grouped together.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Annual -- is that the annual beach
events?
MS. MURRAY: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Vehicles on the beach too; right?
MS. MURRAY: Right. Vehicles on the beach, annual beach
events permit, and coastal construction setback line variance.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Got it.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. And you don't have to read all
that again, but tell me which one it was. I can quickly skim it.
MS. MURRAY: 3.14.6, which is on the vehicle on the beach
regulations.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay.
MS. MURRAY: And that's roughly page 5 of the vehicle on the
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June 20,2001
beach regulations. You should see it highlighted in yellow there. It
says "environmental maintenance." That was added. And it makes it
more consistent with the stated policy of the Growth Management
Plan.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Motorized? Is that what you're -
- I don't understand what was added.
MS. MURRAY: I'm sorry. Section 3.14.6, page 5 of the
vehicle on the beach regulation.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes.
MS. MURRAY: Right about the middle of the page, the words
"environmental maintenance." Is yours highlighted in yellow?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Huh-uh.
(A discussion was held off the record.)
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I think we'll share now.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. As long as you got it, I'll be
okay. I got it. Got it.
MS. MURRAY: So that was added.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Susan.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I was interested, Susan, are you
going to take us -- oh, you're getting us to the penalties part; right?
MS. MURRAY: I'm going to -- I'm just -- if you have
questions, I would just request that you ask them of me or my staff,
really. I'm just kind of being the facilitator here.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The one thing that I wanted to
be sure was not in here anymore was our ability to revoke a permit
for violation. You know, maybe there should be an annual review on
if a permit should not be reissued for the following year based on
something. Is that in here?
MR. DUNNUCK: Yes. What we've done is we've taken out the
language where we've actually used it as a penalty. Now, I think
there will be discussion from counsel, and maybe you, by giving
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June 20, 2001
some direction right now, can clarify this, regarding the
representative of the Ritz. There is an overall Land Development
Code provision that allows staff and the Board of County
Commissioners to revoke permits. They're looking for some
protective language in there that wouldn't even -- that would actually
add on to the general provision that we couldn't revoke a permit at
any given time because of the implications it has.
If the board is in support of that, what I would recommend is
that the commission, if they're looking to do that, that maybe we add
the language in there that says it can only be revoked by the Board of
County Commissioners as opposed to at the staff level, if they're
willing to go that route.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'd like --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What is the stick in there
besides that permit thing? Is there any other sticks in there?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Big money.
MR. DUNNUCK: Just fines.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What is the fines?
MR. DUNNUCK: The fines, I believe, go up to $5,000.
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
MR. DUNNUCK: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
COMMISSIONER COLETTA:
$5,0007
So there is -- there is a stick.
Third or more violations.
MR. DUNNUCK: Which is the maximum we can go to under
the current provisions of the Land Development Code.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And I -- let me just back up and
say fundamentally I think that the idea of granting somebody a permit
to use their own property for an event is backwards. And it's only
because of that that I'd be willing to consider reducing the right to
revoke the permit to something that can only be done by the county
commission, because we've got to keep in focus here, guys.
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June 20, 2001
What we're talking about is -- what is really driving this is we
know that hotels -- part of what comes with the hotel is the right to
have parties at the beach on the property that you own, if you happen
to be a hotel that has beach property. As a part of our responsibility
for protecting the sea turtles, we need to know if you're going to be
doing anything out there during the sea turtle nesting season.
So we've set up this process whereby we give you a permit to do
things on your own property during sea turtle nesting so that we can
go out there and watch and be sure that the turtles are protected. The
problem is, is that we called it a permit. We really should have called
it some kind of a notice.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Or license?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Just anything, you know,
because the point is, they need to pay us a fee equal to the cost of
monitoring their activities to be sure that the turtles are protected, and
we need to know when they're going to be doing activities out there
that might affect the turtles so that we can monitor them. And if they
do anything that might harm the turtles, not only do they have our
fines to deal with, they have state and federal, serious, issues -- much
more serious than our $5,000 of jurisdiction -- to deal with.
So -- but rather than rewrite the whole code and say, you know,
stop calling it a permit -- because it really shouldn't be; it's their land
they're using, and we just need to be able to monitor its effect on the
turtle nesting -- I'd be happy to say that it could only be revoked by
the Board of County Commissioners after hearing, at the least.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Commissioner, let me put this
in perspective, because I think you really hit a good point. It is their
property, and a single-family homeowner, if he had a code violation
of-- of 18 inches of weeds, he would get a -- a notice to do it. And if
he doesn't do it, the county goes in and does it and charges him. And,
I mean, you can't say, "Well, we're going to kick you out of your
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June 20,2001
house," and that's basically what you're -- what we're saying. And I
like that language that you want to put in there about let it come to
the county commissioners.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You know, this is certainly more
important -- from my perspective, protecting the interest of the sea
turtles and their nesting is more important than the mowing, and I
know you didn't mean that but --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, no. I mean --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: No. But the analogy was -- was there.
Let's not debate analogies. I think you're both on the same page. It is
their property --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: -- and license or whatever, and I think
in a future LDC we could properly reword this and get away from the
permit kind of thing. But I truly believe and agree, the Board of
County Commissioners -- if it's that serious of a violation, it can
come to us, and we can have that discussion. But state and federal
agencies are going to be so tough on them if it gets to that level that,
you know, it becomes almost a moot point to me that we're even
involved. It's--
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, that's --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: But it's okay. I'm okay with the
wording so that it's a built-in insurance. But you're right. Let's get
there. How do we get there? And how many speakers do we have?
MR. DUNNUCK: We've got five registered speakers.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Do we need to go to speakers?
We need to go to speakers. We want to know what you -- who
speaks and --
MR. DUNNUCK: Matt Grabinski followed by Rich
Yovanovich.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Matt, how would you feel about
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June 20, 2001
if the Board of County Commissioners was the only authority that
could remove the, quote, unquote, permit after a hearing.'?
MR. GRABINSKI: With all due respect, we would still be
uncomfortable for this reason: As you have all acknowledged, this is
a vested right, and it was subject to new regulation last fall. And
while you may be reasonable now, this year, we don't know who's
going to be sitting in those chairs next year, the year after that, or five
years from now or ten years from now.
And if you do not put express unconditional language saying
that the permit shall not be subject to suspension or revocation, you
leave yourselves -- maybe staff can't do it, but Collier County leaves
itself a back door to come in in the future and try to shut down the
most valuable vested right that these beachfront hotels have, and it is
something that they can just -- they cannot accept.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But if they have a series -- I
mean, what if we -- I don't know. Because I agree with your concept
completely. It's just you're asking us to say in our code that we issue a
permit that we can't revoke, and that's just illogical. So I don't know
how to get around it. I'm -- I'm open.
MR. GRABINSKI: Like you -- like you said, if you would feel
more comfortable revising the code to change the name from permit
to something else, whether it's annual beach event notification form,
then do that.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's what it ought to be.
MR. GRAB1NSKI: Then -- then let's rename that section of the
code, and then you don't feel like you're issuing a permit that can't be
revoked. Instead you're requiring commercial beachfront property
owners to notify Collier County, submit an annual fee, and then
submit them monthly notices, and you don't feel like you're sitting up
there issuing a permit that you can't revoke.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Is that possible to do in this
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June 20, 2001
cycle, lawyers, county lawyers? I don't know who to call on.
MS. STUDENT: That's Mr. White's --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We've got three of them in the room.
MS. STUDENT: He may wish to address it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Everybody's pointing like this.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Everybody's got a specialty.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The other guy.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: This is the turtle man.
MR. WHITE: For the record, assistant county attorney Patrick
White. Thanks again for the opportunity, Commissioner Mac'Kie.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'll give you a hard -- easy one.
MR. WHITE: I believe that it would not be possible to do it in
this round given that there hasn't been, if you will, adequate notice of
the intention to revise the code in that manner. I believe, though, that
there is some countervailing argument to what Mr. Grabinski brings
to the table.
And that is kind of-- as you'd said, maybe it's not illogical all
alone, but also that -- assume that there's a mistake of fact in an
application for, quote, unquote, a permit or there's something that we
erroneously did in the issuance of that permit. I think, under those
circumstances, we rightfully retain the opportunity to revoke that. !
admit that those are very extreme circumstances, but I can't think of
any reason why we would want to otherwise take a permit.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So maybe that's the language
then.
MR. GRABINSKI: Well, could I -- if I could just respond to
Mr. White's concerns, I don't know if you've looked at the beach
events permit, or maybe I should start calling it a notice form right
now. It's about two pages long. It basically asks for the name of the
hotel, its address, the actual property owner, and who's going to be
the contact at the hotel. And then it asks you to check how many
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June 20,2001
events you expect to have and submit a fee.
Now, there are about five or six hotels in the county that this is
going to apply to. And so I ask you to consider -- this isn't a type of
permit that has pages and pages of conditions and information that
the county needs to have in order to protect a valid interest. The
purpose of this permit is to put you on notice so you can come and
monitor the beach.
I -- I would be hard pressed to find any type of technical
inaccuracy or misinformation in a permit that would prevent Collier
County from receiving its notices and going to the properties. If the
permit says the Ritz-Carlton on it, is anyone going to really look
around and say, "Well, is this really the Ritz-Carlton or should we
have gone to The Registry instead?"
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I have a thought, that maybe
there aren't -- there are no circumstances in which I would think that
a -- even a hearing for revocation of this, quote, permit could get to
the county commission sooner than a year from now. So I could live
with the language that we can't revoke this permit for a year while we
instruct staff to rewrite this business from being a permit to being a
notification process. How would everybody feel about that? You get
what you want for a year, but you understand that we're going to
rewrite the whole thing, so it's not going to be a permit.
MR. GRABINSKI: That's fine. After that it won't be a permit.
It'll be a notice form. It'll still look and smell like it looks and smells
right now, from our standpoint. The county is still going to get what
it gets now, which is a fee and the notice.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Which is all I care about. So, I
mean, that would work for me.
MR. DUNNUCK: If I could make a recommendation in that
regards, you know, I don't have any problem with that, from our
perspective. What I would recommend, though -- staff's spent an
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June 20,2001
awful lot of time on this issue, and frankly, from our perspective,
from the county's perspective, we have very little to gain on it. What
I would recommend is that we require the hotels to go through the
Land Development Code process and apply for it and they actually
write the amendment, and we are in more of a posture of reviewing it
as opposed to actually drafting it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Excellent.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's a good idea. And can I
ask, what is the history of fines or -- have we been charging fines
before? What -- is there any kind of history of--
MR. DUNNUCK: I'll ask that Michelle Arnold come up and
give you a quick overview of the history.
MS. ARNOLD: For the record, Michelle Arnold, code
enforcement director. We have not issued any fines lately because
we kind of suspended and were just monitoring the situation at --
along the beachfront because we didn't know which direction we
were going to go to. There has been violations that have occurred
over the years, and there's been citations that have been issued to
some of the hotels for failure to comply with a temporary use permit,
such as in our special events sections of the code, as it was written
before this annual beach event permit.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And violations of, like, leaving
furniture on the beach and --
MS. ARNOLD: Yeah. It ranged from leaving furniture on the
beach overnight to vehicles on the beach, you know, to transport
some of the furniture for special events and those types of--
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Anybody digging up turtle
eggs?
MS. ARNOLD: No, not that I'm --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: They didn't have a turtle egg fry out
there, to my knowledge.
Page 40
June 20,2001
MS. ARNOLD: No.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Shame on you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Come on, folks. I guess that went
over as well as my barbecued manatory (sic) story at The
Conservancy. But anyhow, let's --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Next speaker?
MR. GRABINSKI: Do you have any other questions?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: No. Next speaker, please.
MR. DUNNUCK: Next speaker is Rich Yovanovich followed
by Ed Staros.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Hopefully I'm not going to snatch, I
guess, what is it, victory from the jaws of defeat or vice versa. But,
anyway, I don't even think you need a permit. You've -- you've
adopted your regulations to limit what we can do on our property,
and I assume we're getting to where we need to be.
I just wanted to point out two things: One, the hotels are already
paying for the monitoring of the turtles through the TDC funds.
Okay. So they are already paying for the impact that they have on
the monitoring issue.
Second of all, I wanted to point out that what was presented to
you was in no way intended to be an improper gift. It was an
example of what the Edgewater Hotels and Boca Resorts hands to all
guests that come in during the turtle season to show you that they are
already trying to provide education to the residents as to the impact of
the Edgewater Beach Hotel, which is beachfront, on the turtles so --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Even this? This is cool.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah. That goes out along with the nice
chocolates. So the Registry, like the -- Boca Resorts, like The Ritz,
does try to be proactive in letting their clients know what is going on
during turtle season and to keep off the lights.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So this is not a gift. It's an
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June 20, 2001
example.
MR. YOVANOVICH: It is an example. But, you know, feel
free to remm the chocolates to me.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: No, no, no. We need to taste the
chocolates to fully understand the experience that they have at the -- MR. YOVANOVICH: It was an educational opportunity and
not a gift.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Quit looking at me like that, Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You really think it's a good
idea for people to be eating turtles?
MR. YOVANOVICH: I kind of had the same comment.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Is that any kind of an example
for our youth?
MR. YOVANOVICH: But if you read the card that goes along
with it --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's really nice.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Very nice card, by the way.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Very nice.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I appreciate the thought.
MR. DUNNUCK: Ed Staros followed by Ron Albeit.
MR. STAROS: Good evening, all. Last week -- two weeks ago
it was, two weeks ago tonight, Mr. Coletta, you mentioned, on the
same subject, what are we doing to educate our guests and so forth,
so I went back and looked. And on the same subject, we do have an
article about sea turtles in our in-room directory, which is a leather-
bound directory in the guest room, followed up by an in-room letter
that goes to each guest that goes -- talking about sea turtles as well as
the mangroves.
Then we also have a nature walk book for our guests that talks
about the mangroves, the sea turtles, and the sea oats. We also have a
newsletter that goes worldwide to all of our trade shows where there
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June 20,2001
are the sea turtles, the dos and don'ts about sea turtles and the sea
turtle season.
And last but not least, we have a coloring book that we have for
all the kids that come to the hotel, that we give to all the kids in the
day camp, as well as outlets, as well as we give it to the local schools
as well, Naples Park Elementary, Seagate, etc., so the children can
learn about the manatees and the sea oats and the turtles, etc. So I
thought I would just mention that since you asked the question last --
two weeks ago.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I did, and that's a very good
answer.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And you have the good sense
not to give it to the county commission.
MR. STAROS: You can have them if you want, you know, but
it might be a gift, so I don't want to do that. Thank you very much.
That was my only comment.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, sir.
MR. DUNNUCK: Ron's waiving --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Next speaker waives.
MR. DUNNUCK: -- followed by Ilene Barnett.
MS. BARNETT: I'm also waiving.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Next speaker waives.
MR. DUNNUCK: Michael Simonik followed by Kathleen
Avalone.
MR. SIMONIK: Good evening, Mr. Chairman, Commissioners.
For the record, Michael Simonik representing The Conservancy of
Southwest Florida. I think a lot of our substantive comments were
made by Nicole Ryan at your first public hearing, so I'm not going to
reiterate all of those.
As you know, we've been working in good faith with the
hoteliers on this issue for the past six months, and there are a couple
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June 20, 2001
points that I do want to make, though. We do not believe that this
language will be in compliance with the Comprehensive Plan. We've
said that many times, and I'm just saying it again tonight for the
record.
Beyond that compliance issue, we also believe the suspension
should remain in the language and that the fines are wholly
insufficient to deter these -- any violations.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But you understand there are
legal limits, right, to fine amounts?
MR. SIMONIK: Right. So let's change the limits.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You know who to talk to about
that. It's not us.
MR. SIMONIK: The fines will just become a cost of business,
then, so ... There's obviously a heightened awareness among the
hotels. We've seen it tonight with the kind of education that they're
giving their guests. And I believe that they're going to do their
utmost to follow these rules when they pass, and at this point I don't
think they dare mess up because they know we're all watching very
closely.
I don't agree that the permit is not a permit. I think it's a permit.
That just came up today. But I don't think we should call it a notice.
Let's continue to call it a permit. A permit comes with conditions and
stipulations. This language has conditions and stipulations in it. It's
a permit.
I want to use the remainder of my time to share with you some
of the thoughts of some of the children in the county. Our summer
camp counselors talked to the kids this morning about sea turtles and
ATVs on the beach. And they had their own thoughts on it, so I'm
going to -- I'm going to submit these for the public record and read a
couple of my favorites. Now, they may not have all the facts straight,
but I think it would be good if some our groups go down to the Ritz
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June 20,2001
and The Registry and have some tours, and they can get both sides of
the issue. They got one today.
Dear Commissioners, would you please help any -- well, any
eggs from getting run over? Please don't -- please watch where
you're going because you could run over turtle eggs.
Dear County Commissioners, please don't pollute on the beach.
It's important. Please don't use an ATV on the beach, and try to save
sea turtles. Well, that's my opinion.
Dear County Commissioners, I like ATVs, but I don't that ATVs
should be allowed to drive over turtles' nests.
My favorite part, no ATVs. Take a rocket.
My favorite, don't drive an ATV if you want to be a Ph.D.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's you, Commissioner.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Young kids. The words of wisdom.
MR. SIMONIK: That's my comments. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Michael.
MR. DUNNUCK: Kathleen Avalone followed by Ronnie
Poplock.
MS. AVALONE: Hello. Kathleen Avalone, Citizens for the
Protection of Animals. I'm sorry I don't have a chocolate example to
give you, but I can provide you with a lot of road kill if you'd like.
I'd like to just say that I don't understand this whole concept. If
you can't revoke a permit or even suspend a permit, then what's the
incentive for these people to adhere to the code? You need -- you
need something. You need a bigger stick. This -- these fines that are
in -- and I understand there are -- they're the maximum you can
allow, but they're pocket change for places like The Ritz and The
Registry.
So I just want to urge you that -- urge you to really consider
putting back into the language the suspension of permits, because it's
obvious that the sea turtles are going to lose this battle. But we need
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June 20,2001
to have a little bit stronger penalties for these people. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Next speaker, please.
MR. DUNNUCK: Last speaker, Ronnie Poplock.
MS. POPLOCK: Ronnie Poplock, Collier County Audubon
Society. I guess I'd like to hear from a staff person to tell me and --
how the monitoring would be -- could be effective, how it would
work. Maura, could you -- could you answer that, if you think --
well, how the monitoring could be effective, how it would work.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The monitoring, you mean, like,
in the morning, that they would look at it before --
MS. POPLOCK: For, you know, parties and events before the
events would -- I'm -- I guess I'm not clear on how the monitoring by
the county would be -- would work. And if-- I wanted to know if the
staff thought it would be effective and if it would effectively work.
MS. ARNOLD: Right now, as I indicated to the commissioners,
we are monitoring based on the information that we're getting on a
monthly basis from the hotels for special events. They provide us a
monthly notice telling us when we're -- when they're going to have
events, how many they're going to have, from what times they're
going to be, and the size of the parties that are going to be occurring.
So we'll go out and monitor the setup, and also we'll monitor the
breakdown of the events to make sure that they're done in accordance
with the guidelines that are provided.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Michelle, correct me if I'm
wrong. Don't we walk the whole beach looking for turtle crawls and
MS. ARNOLD: Well, there's a daily monitoring of our natural -
- from our natural resources department.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Do we do that on foot?
MS. ARNOLD: No.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: What do we --
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June 20,2001
MS. ARNOLD: They use ATVs.
MS. POPLOCK: The county uses ATVs. Okay. So I guess my
final question to you would be, so do you think that there are --
there's enough staff to do this and that it would -- it would be
effectively done?
MS. ARNOLD: Well, what I can say is that the staff that I have,
we will try to do it as often as we can. We're going to be using --
coordinating with the natural resources department because some of
the events will coincide with their monitoring or some of the setup
will be coinciding with the monitoring, so we're going to monitor it
as best we can.
MS. POPLOCK: Okay.
staff?.
CHAIRMAN CARTER:
Can I ask one more question to the
It's your time. Yes, ma'am.
MS. POPLOCK: Thank you. Have you heard of violations up
until now? Because I know Brad Cornell, at the last meeting, from
the Audubon Society was mentioning violations that we have heard
of.
MS. ARNOLD: Well, during this sea turtle nesting season, we
have not detected -- I haven't -- I'm not aware of any violations that
have occurred. They're not using vehicles currently to set up and
break down. They're doing it manually, and -- and they're doing it in
accordance with the guidelines.
MS. POPLOCK: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Next speaker? That's it?
MR. DUNNUCK: I believe that's it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I -- I don't know if a motion's
appropriate, but what I'd like to do is accept the staff's proposals with
the one change that the -- that Mr. Grabinski has requested and with
the condition that the language describing this as a permit be
reviewed by the hotel's attorney and brought forward for us to look at
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June 20,2001
for the next cycle to make this more of a notice procedure and not a
permit procedure.
MR. DUNNUCK: And I think one other clarification for the
record, what they were looking for in the language, is that -- that
these penalties right now are resetting annually as opposed to -- as
opposed to they keep going. So, like, if you had a penalty this year
and you had a penalty in two years, that that wouldn't keep building
upon the penalty provision.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Let the penalties keep building.
I don't -- I don't go for that. One violation this year, you don't get to
start over again next year. Next year is your second violation if you
do it again. And then your third, I don't care if it happens ten years
from now, it's your third violation.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Pam, that's kind of severe.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I can't go there. I really believe that
it's an annual review. And, you know, 15, 20 years from now,
Violation No. 3, I've got to pay that? I just -- I don't feel comfortable
with that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I don't either. There's one other
thing I was wondering. We know that it's a violation to harm a turtle
nest, either intentionally or unintentionally. Is it -- does it state so in
the notification or permit or whatever we're going to call this
document, that if it does happen, that certain authorities have to be
notified as a measure, just to make sure that if something does
happen that's unforeseen that it's not passed over and we're trying to
handle it on the county level rather than passing it on to the federal?
MR. DUNNUCK: Well, I believe you have permits at stake at
both levels, so they would be pursuing their violations; we would be
pursuing our violations.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But we would share the
knowledge with them --
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June 20, 2001
MR. DUNNUCK: Correct.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: -- if we knew of a --
MR. DUNNUCK: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: But shouldn't it be stated so in
the -- in the document that -~ that violation for this -- there is a
violation where there's damage done to the nest or to the eggs or the
sea turtles, that such an act would have to be reported?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I think that's already in the law,
state and federal.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Is it?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: All over the place. Somebody
correct me if I'm wrong.
MR. DUNNUCK: I believe that's the protocol.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Doesn't hurt to ask.
MR. DUNNUCK: And I believe that's a protocol that we would
follow.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I think if there's a situation, that state
and federal do not limit it to a singular violation. I think they would
look at case history of the -- of the offending party and would take
that into consideration. So if there's a building up of problems, you're
going to be in a lot more trouble than if it was the first time. It's, I
believe, the way the process works. Ms. Murray.
MS. MURRAY: Mr. Chairman, while we're on that subject, I
did need to read one final thing into the record for -- that was
changed. And that is, again, under the annual beach events permit
section, a note that when a state permit is more restrictive than the
LDC requirements, the state requirement shall supersede, and the
county shall enforce these requirements. And that appears twice:
Once in the regulations and once on the permit itself.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. All right. Do we need to
collectively, again, Counselor, or should we take this -- well, maybe
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June 20,2001
we ought to, just for the record, take it singularly so everybody
knows where we are, and then we'll do it collectively at the end.
MS. STUDENT: Particularly on this one, if you'll make the
finding of consistency with the comp plan since that was an issue.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, I made a motion. I don't
think it has a second.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I'll second it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, I don't think you want to
because I didn't agree to -- I think the fines should be cumulative.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Withdraw my second.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: If somebody can explain to me
why that's not the right way to go. As the lady said, this is pocket
change to these big hotels.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, I think the state and federal
review of these cases would accommodate that concern and -- versus
MR. OLLIFF: Mr. Chairman.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: -- making it cumulative. Yes, Mr.
Olliff.
MR. OLLIFF: Since we're coming back within 12 months with
the -- the new process which will not be a permit, does this --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It makes it irrelevant, doesn't it?
MR. OLLIFF: It makes this matter fairly irrelevant, and we can
bring back some recommendations at that next amendment cycle.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So I can suck that up for a year.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Then you want to make a
straight motion?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes, sir. I'll make the motion
you like.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Don't put that burden on me. Just
make your motion, and I will second it.
Page 50
June 20, 2001
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I've already made my motion,
and I will add to it the restriction that Mr. Dunnuck read about the
fines not being cumulative from year to year.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I'll second that. Any discussion?
All in favor signify by saying aye.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Opposed by the same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Motion carries 4-0.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm sorry. But should we get the
hotels' attorneys on the record saying that they agree to take on that
responsibility for review and drafting of the code? I don't know
which hotel or who, but I just want somebody to say they're going to
do it.
MR. GRABINSKI: Yes. Matt Grabinski for the record. I will
take on that responsibility.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
CHAIRMAN CARTER: For?
Excellent.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Will you take your candy?
MR. GRABINSKI: For redrafting any portion of the code
pertaining to --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: For which organization?
MR. GRABINSKI: -- beach events. Beach events, vehicles on
the beach, any portion of--
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Organization, please?
MR. GRABINSKI: Ritz-Carlton.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Who's candy is this?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: That's yours.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No, it's not.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: You get one.
Page 51
June 20,2001
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Where are we at?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All right. Okay. Thank you.
MS. MURRAY: We're up to the hearing examiner.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm sorry.
MS. MURRAY: Hearing examiner.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I didn't do, though, what
Marjorie asked me to do, and that -- and so should we make that
finding separately now, Marjorie?
MS. STUDENT: We can catch it at the end in a motion and just
say all of them are consistent.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: You keep good notes, Marjorie, and
then you can give me the summary at the end. Thank you. All right.
Ms. Murray.
MS. MURRAY: The next item would be the hearing examiner,
and I'm going to turn that over to John.
MR. DUNNUCK: Well, I believe real quickly we'll just go to
the summary of what we've changed previously from the last hearing.
I think what we heard loud and clear from the board is that you want
to take baby steps with regard to this issue. We went back, and the
way we have it structured for your presentation today is that variance
issues, under the hearing examiner, you make final decisions and, I
think, with the acknowledgment that we'd probably want to do two
hearings for that and we develop that in the administrative code.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Is that in there, or is that
something you're going to change?
MR. DUNNUCK: That is something that would be changed at
the administrative code level.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay.
MR. DUNNUCK: Second issue was conditional uses, and right
now we have it as a recommendation to the Board of County
Commissioners coming from the hearing examiner with the board
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June 20,2001
making final determination. And we have withdrew the provisions
regarding recommendations regarding zoning projects, at which it
would stay at the board level and the Planning Commissioner and the
EAC level until the board feels comfortable with the project,
understanding that we're coming back with the public participation
plan, where we have some opportunities to -- to ensure that the public
is well notified of this process and educated, in September, October
in a special Land Development Code cycle.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Public participation plan and
citizen advocate would have to be in place before this hearing officer
kicks off, even for variances.
MR. DUNNUCK: Absolutely correct. This is just one step.
Nothing is implemented as of this evening. Until the Board of
County Commissioners feels comfortable with the process, has
developed a public participation plan, has developed the
administrative code, and feels comfortable with the hearing examiner
that they have chosen to hire, and that -- at that time the board would
adopt a resolution implementing this program.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So we have a conditional,
conceptual proposal.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes.
MR. DUNNUCK: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well said, conditional conceptual
proposal with a lot of blanks to fill in.
MR. DUNNUCK: With that, we have two speakers on the
issue. We have Sally Barker followed by Janet Vasey.
MS. BARKER: Good evening, Commissioners. For the record,
Sally Barker. I'll try not to speak very long because, frankly, I can't
speak very well. But I did want to thank you very much for the
changes that you've agreed to in the hearing examiner program. They
have made me feel much more comfortable with the program as a
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June 20,2001
whole. And I wanted to thank Patrick White and John Dunnuck for
the help and their willingness to listen to me and whoever else had
problems with this.
I just had one other point I wanted to bring up that -- and that
was the testimony that comes before you, the commission, on
recommendations from the hearing examiner. As the code is written
now, it is restricted strictly to individuals who have prior spoken at
the hearing examiner hearing. And I was wondering if your intention
was to open that up to the general public.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: My intention was to have as
much public input as we can.
MS. BARKER: I know this is a legal process and there are legal
reasons for trying to restrict the testimony, but from a -- from the
perspective of the public at large, of which I am one, I think it would
probably be good to have as much public input as possible at these
hearings and not restrict it to just those who had testified before the
hearing examiner.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: For me, that is a question to be
decided after I see what the public participation program is and after I
see when and at what point -- I'm sorry -- when and in what manner
the ombudsman, advocate, whatever, would come into play. You
know, do we have -- is that on the table for decision tonight?
MR. DUNNUCK: We would have to add that language in there.
My recommendation would be, as you have an opportunity and
would in the December cycle, should you want to add that at a later
date in there regarding the public participation on --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: No. No. My question is if we
adopt what's in front of us, have we -- no, we haven't. I already know
the answer.
MR. WHITE: Mr. Chairman, if I may interrupt. Again, Patrick
White, assistant county attorney. I believe if you'll look on the lower
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June 20,2001
right-hand comer of your packages, it's page 56 of the June 20
agenda, you'll see a section referenced there known as 5.1.2 entitled
"Public Participation." I believe the packages that you have on page
56 for Section 5.1.2, in the middle of that paragraph, if you will, the
gray bar text starting with the words "The Board of County
Commissioners" -- do you have that or not?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes, sir.
MR. WHITE: I believe that that provision addresses the
comments being raised.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Let me just read it for you,
Sally.
MS. BARKFiR: Okay.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: "The Board of County
Commissioners may, upon approval of a motion, elect to hear
testimony or to receive other evidence from persons other than
participants or their representatives who appeared before the hearing
examiner subject to the foregoing limitations regarding comments on
matters within the written record and new evidence." What does that
last "subject to" mean?
MR. WHITE: There is a statement in the sentence before that is
a limitation, if you will, on the scope of matters that may be brought
to the board at that second hearing, and it makes it the same as that
limitation. That's all.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But it sort of takes it and gives it
away, doesn't it? I mean, doesn't it take it and --
MR. WHITE: What it does is give you the same --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Give it and take it back?
MR. WHITE: It gives you the same thing that all of the
participants, who are the folks who did appear at the hearing
examiner, had as rights.
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June 20,2001
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yeah. But that's not the issue
that Ms. Barker was addressing, I don't think.
MS. BARKER: No. Because there are individuals who may,
for one reason or another, be -- not be able to participate at the
hearing examiner's hearing who may want to participate in the
hearing before the BCC.
MR. WHITE: And this provision affords them the same exact
rights that those participants at the hearing examiner would otherwise
have.
MS. BARKER: But are they restricted to just what was --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: New evidence and corrections
for the record?
MR. WHITE: What was in the written record, yes.
MS. BARKER: So they're still restricting it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And it's not really --
MR. OLLIFF: But at some point if you're making decisions
based on the hearings that were provided through the hearing officer,
I'm not sure how a hearing officer process works if you're going to
simply allow, at the second hearing, a bunch of new evidence
because then that's unfair to the hearing officer. So what we're trying
to do to get around that process is, through the public participation
process, to require two hearings at the hearing officer level.
So what normally happens here at the county commission level
is oftentimes the public doesn't -- or isn't aware of what the petition is
until it hits the Planning Commission or the EAC. And then they
become aware, and their antenna goes up, and then they show up here
at the county commission meeting, and they know what the issues are
at that point. We're trying to make sure that that same process
happens, but at the hearing officer level, so that through the
ombudsman, through the initial hearing, the public is made well
aware. And then they are there for that second hearing protecting
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June 20,2001
their rights to be able to be here in front of the commission for the
hearing.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And I, frankly, support that
position and don't necessarily agree with Ms. Barker on this point,
but I didn't want her to think that we were pulling a fast one.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: No. And you have the whole public
participation process in front of the hearing officer, which I -- which
to me was -- conceptually, Sally, is giving us that opportunity to
make sure we have done everything we can to get the people there
who need to be heard on the subject.
MS. BARKER: I appreciate that, and I appreciate the
explanations. But, Tom, I thought the two hearings before the
hearing examiner were just for those things like variances on which
the hearing examiner would be making the final decision.
MR. OLLIFF: No. We anticipate two hearings in front of the
hearing officer for every item, period.
MS. BARKER: Oh, great. That's wonderful. That answers a
lot of my concerns.
MR. DUNNUCK: And, really, you're only talking conditional
uses at this point in time because we've withdrawn the zoning issues.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But eventually, as we write up
the code, we anticipate that we will have two hearings in front of the
hearing examiner before it comes to the county commission. And
that, coupled with the public participation plan, coupled with the
ombudsman we are hoping is going to make for more opportunity,
not less, for public --
MR. WHITE: And there is a safety valve in all of this, too,
Commissioners, and that is that with respect to any issues that may,
quote, be outside the record in front of the hearing examiner or not
otherwise be new evidence, there's still the avenue of approaching
each of you individually on the ex parte conversational level and
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June 20,2001
having a discussion. And if you believe that there's something that
was not properly considered, then I believe in your hearing for the
final decision you would have the option to remand it to the hearing
examiner for consideration of that matter.
But, again, that reinforces and bolsters what Mr. Oliff has said,
which is the whole intent of the process is to get all of the issues into
discussion as early as possible so that they're considered by staff so
the taxpayers' money is put to its best possible use and come up with
the most appropriate decision.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I think that's a really important
point that, frankly, has been lost in this discussion, so I'm just going
to say it again. That even after the two hearings in front of a hearing
examiner and after the public participation and after the ombudsman,
if a member of the public believes he's got a piece of information that
is relevant, even then he can come to his county commissioner and
say, "Here's what I think is really important." And then the county
commission can say, "We're remanding this back to the hearing
officer and instructing you to consider this piece of information
before it comes to us for the final recommendation." So it -- the
public's never cut out of the loop.
MS. BARKER: The more safeguards the better.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Absolutely.
MS. BARKER: I have just one more point, and then I'll get off
the subject. In that regards, the -- on page 30 of the current one,
participation before the hearing examiner, the language says, "At a
public hearing before the hearing examiner, all persons will be heard
as participants; however, the hearing examiner has the right to refuse
to hear testimony which is irrelevant, repetitive, defamatory, or
spurious, and to establish reasonable time limits on testimony."
When I met with Mr. Dunnuck and Mr. White yesterday, Mr.
Dunnuck came up with language that effectively enabled the hearing
Page 5 8
June 20,2001
examiner to control the meeting, but I felt was far less offensive to
the public at large. Do you have that, John?
MR. DUNNUCK: We have amended language, and I think
Patrick can either pass that out or read it into the record real quick.
All it does is really makes it more consistent with your current county
commission ordinance that states the protocol for Board of County
Commissioners meetings. It just takes it over to the hearing
examiner.
MR. WHITE: While I'm handing those out to you-all, if John
would just read through what essentially -- or take a look at what the
yellow text is. That's essentially what's replacing what you have in
your packets presently. It's a mixture of both what we discussed in
our meeting with Ms. Barker as well as what the actual board's
provisions itself are in Article 2 pertaining to board meetings. And
I'll hand you each a copy of that, if you'd like.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Of this same language that's on
the visualizer?
MR. WHITE: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Frivolous, unduly repetitive,
including impertinent or slanderous remarks -- that would be good if
you could control the county commission. Who gets to tell us?
Never mind.
MS. BARKER: Should be used to slanderous remarks by now.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And often frivolous and unduly
repetitive.
MS. BARKER: Those too. But I feel it's the public's, you
know, right to be as repetitive and off the wall as they want to be as
long as it isn't outright slander.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'd be satisfied with this
language.
MS. BARKER: Good. Thank you. And with that I'll get out of
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June 20,2001
your way, and I look forward to participating in the public
participation plan. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you very much, Sally Barker.
We appreciate all your effort on this. I know you've worked hard,
and I hope we've gotten where you think we need to be. Ms. Vasey.
MS. VASEY: Thank you. Good evening. Janet Vasey for the
record. I, too, have a problem -- some of the same problems that
Sally has with Section 5.1.2 on the restrictions before having the
public speak before the county commission. There will be times
when people still will not know about issues. It happens in Lee
County. Michael Simonik mentioned at the Planning Commission
that he's dealt before the Lee Commissioner -- Lee County
Commission before on zoning issues, and people show up, and they
want to talk about an issue that's coming for final approval, and this
language will not allow that to happen.
I do appreciate some of the changes that you made on the ex
parte, having that -- having the capability now to remand some of
these issues to the hearing examiner, but it still doesn't change the
fact that people will want to talk to you in public about some of these
issues, and I think it's a big mistake to leave this section in. I think
you should -- you should delete this whole section.
Also, on the -- the language change that you've got up there, I
think that's a good change too. I found that, in the original version,
quite offensive. And, in addition, I believe Patrick White said at a
Planning Commission meeting that in all the years that he attended
the Lee County Commission meetings on this, only once did anybody
-- once was that ever invoked to stop someone from talking. So it's
not a really active big issue, and I don't think it should be overkill.
Thank you very much.
MR. DUNNUCK: You had two late speakers who gave me
speaker slips. And it's at your discretion, but you have Michael
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June 20, 2001
Simonik followed by Nancy Payton.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We'll take them both. Mr. Simonik.
MR. SIMONIK: Thank you. How was I late?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: That's not an issue. Just speak, sir.
MR. SIMONIK: Michael Simonik for The Conservancy. I'm
glad to hear today that there were some good changes made to this
language. Good things happen when you go on vacation, I guess, at
home and out. But I do believe that you have not yet removed the
fatal flaw to this language, and it's been spoken by Janet and -- Ms.
Vasey and also Ms. Barker. You have to allow the public to come to
the BCC meeting at the final hearing.
And if someone wants to speak, they're going to want to speak.
And you're going to find that your constituents are going to be very
angry with you when they get here at the BCC and cannot speak.
Like Ms. Vasey said, I've watched it happen in Lee County. They're
very disgruntled. It's not a good process. It's not open to the public.
That, to me, is still the fatal flaw of this language.
You're getting close on it, though, with two hearings and taking
baby steps for now as we move into the hearing examiner. And
generally The Conservancy, as you've heard before, we support this
hearing examiner process. But not allowing the public to speak at
BCC is a fatal flaw. Thanks.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Mr. Simonik. Although I
think, to my knowledge, Lee does not have a two-hearing process.
Lee does not have this public partition -- participation. Lee does not
have an ombudsman -- ombudsperson, excuse me. And I just believe
that we need to let this evolve and continue to get public input. Ms.
Payton.
MS. PAYTON: Nancy Payton representing the Florida Wildlife
Federation. And you just said basically what I was going to say.
We're very different from Lee, and we're going to learn from Lee's
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June 20, 2001
shortcomings and problems. And it's not that the public is not going
to be able to speak before the county commissioners. They are going
to be able to speak. There's some policies, there's some procedures,
that are going to be taken in place. There's going to be a plan. But I
still say, as I said two weeks ago, that we are going to have greater
public involvement, and we're going to have a more educated and
sophisticated public involvement in this program. And Florida
Wildlife is dedicating itself to make sure that that public participation
plan delivers that promise.
Also, I wanted to comment that -- wanted to make sure that the
staff was being instructed to move ahead with the public participation
plan, the ombudsman description -- or however that program is going
to be -- and the criteria for selecting the hearing examiner. And I
think I did hear that. I just was a little bit unclear about the
ombudsman, but I think that's --
MR. DUNNUCK: That's correct.
MS. PAYTON: And one other comment -- kind of disjointed --
is that my understanding is that if I'm not able to attend one or two of
the hearing examiner's hearings -- which we've recommended one be
in day and one be at night so there's more flexibility -- that ! still have
the opportunity to send an agent, that I can deliver my testimony. I
can send an agent who represents me, gets me in the process, and I
can come at the next hearing examiner hearing or I can come before
the county commissioners, but I'm in the process. And that's
something else that will be made known to people, that there is a way
-- if they can't make either one of those meetings, there's still a way
that they can get early into the process, and they can get their
concerns on the record.
So we're going to be looking at all different avenues, hopefully,
so that this is going to be the best hearing examiner program, public
participation, ombudsman program, in the -- in the State of Florida.
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June 20,2001
And people are going to be looking to us as to how we ought to
operate and deal with the public.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Hundred percent agreement with that,
Nancy Payton. I thank you. Because that's where we want to be, the
best of the best. We promised and we will deliver.
MR. DUNNUCK: And for the record, that language is included
in these provisions.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Motion for --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Question.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Question.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Is -- we are not -- the public
can come to the BCC meetings and speak on a subject if they didn't
speak on -- before the hearing examiner?
MR. DUNNUCK: You will still have your public comment
section as part of your Board of County Commissioner meetings, if
I'm understanding the question correctly.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right. Okay.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: And they have access to you,
Commissioner. They'll always have access to you.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm going to make a motion to
approve that subject to the change with the language that's on the
visualizer in five five four about conduct of meetings.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And I just have another
question. What is he going to -- the hearing officer going to do
besides conditional uses and variances? I mean, we're going to be --
this program is going to cost around $200,000.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, eventually we hope that --
MR. DUNNUCK: Well, I believe we can be very creative in
how we hire that person. I think the 254,000 -- when we go back and
actually are looking at a hearing examiner, whether we use a contract
or whether we actually hire a person in here full time, we can take a
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June 20,2001
look at those things, and we'll be bringing that back to the Board of
County Commissioners at a later date.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So a hearing examiner would
be working for us under contract?
MR. DUNNUCK: We could potentially --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And could he work for
developers in --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: No.
MR. DUNNUCK: Those are stipulations that I'm sure that the
Board of County Commissioners would support in not allowing.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And none of that will happen
without our vote anyway.
MR. DUNNUCK: Correct.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We have the ultimate control,
Commissioner Henning. And I think we need to develop that, and
then it'll all come to us and look to staff to say based on everybody's
consideration at this point, contract, full-time employee, but they
cannot have any association with or represent anyone, any entity that
would cloud their thinking in this process. I mean, that is a very
hard-and-fast rule.
MR. DUNNUCK:
County Commissioners.
Mr. Olliff.
And the person will work for the Board of
It'll be a contract similar to Mr. Weigel or
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So we're going to hire a
litigator to do land use items? Anyways, I will second the motion.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. I have a second by
Commissioner Henning. Any further discussion?
All in favor signify by saying aye.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Opposed by the same sign.
(No response.)
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June 20,2001
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Motion carries 4-0. Thank you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You got it, David, didn't you?
(A discussion was held off the record.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: A little break. Take ten.
(A break was held.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Let's go live. All right. Ladies and
gentlemen, we're back in session. Mr. Dunnuck and Ms. Murray, if
you will continue and take us forward.
MS. MURRAY: Commissioner, at this point I'd recommend
that we go to the boat dock facilities, which is page 99. That's the
next item which we have a number of registered speakers to speak
on.
I'll just refresh your memory. Last hearing Tony Pires got up
and put a number of items on the record, and he actually sent us some
correspondence. And staff took a look at his correspondence and
responded to the extent that we felt we agreed with it. And I have a
staff member, Ross Gochenaur, here who would just like to
summarize for you the three areas where we have a little bit of a
problem with the language that he proposed and why, and then I'd
recommend you go to public speakers after that. CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay.
MR. GOCHENAUR: Good evening, Commissioners. For the
record, Ross Gochenaur, planning services.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Good evening, sir.
MR. GOCHENAUR: As you know, at the last hearing, Mr.
Pires made a few comments on our proposed amendments primarily
relating to the changes in criteria for boat dock extensions. We
revised our criteria in response to these comments. We agreed with
some; we didn't agree with others. And yesterday he sent us
notification that there were mainly three points that were still of
contention. What I'd like to do now is briefly recap what we think
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those are and our position on those matters.
First, with regard to being more specific about the advertising
for public hearing, we've agreed with that. We've included language.
However, Mr. Pires would like to guarantee that the property owners
receive their letters of notification no later than 15 days prior to the
hearing. We can't really guarantee what the mail is going to do.
Currently we send out these letters 20 days before the hearing, and
normally people receive them around 15 days prior to the hearing.
So I think the current language covers that as much as we can afford
to guarantee.
A second issue, Mr. Pires objects to the use of terms "marked"
and "charted" to describe navigable channels. One of the criteria
indicates that the proposed dock should not interfere with navigation
in a navigable channel. We originally wanted to use simply marked,
and that was changed later to marked and charted in an effort to
define as clearly as possible what the petitioner is expected to provide
us. There are only two ways I know of clearly marking a navigable
channel, and that's with navigational markers or on charts, which
most boaters carry. So I do feel that we ought to stay with that
particular language.
The third point of contention -- and ! think this is the main point
-- is with regard to view as criterion for a boat dock extension. We're
responding in this amendment to comments, numerous comments
made by members of the Planning Commission and also by -- in
response to our experience in presenting boat dock petitions. We find
the two existing criteria with regard to view just impossible to
evaluate objectively, and what we're looking for here are clear
objective criteria that the Planning Commission can use to make a
decision based upon competent and substantial evidence and also that
members of the public can clearly understand what they have to
expect or what they must provide us in order to get a boat dock
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extension approved.
We do feel that we should stay with the language that restricts
the impact on view to that of the abutting property owners because
they're the most affected by the entire procedure. If you disagree
with this use, as Mr. Pires does, I might suggest that you consider
either the term "adjoining" or, if necessary, the term "neighboring,"
but surrounding we just feel is much too broad. Everybody is
surrounded by everything, and we feel that the neighbors most
closely affected should be the ones that -- whose input we and the
Planning Commission consider most seriously.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: See, my -- and I think my point on
this, sir, would be if I live on a waterway, canal, and I think
neighboring would encompass that, because if I live across from this
proposed situation, I think I would have as much of a right for input
as a person who lives on either side of it. But I don't want somebody
six waterways away coming over and saying, "It's blocking my
view."
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But, Commissioner, how -- if
you and I live across a canal from each other, how can my dock
interfere with your view?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, I'm sure Mr. Pires will have an
answer for that.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I mean, it seems to me it's
abutting and nothing else. I don't see why --
COMMISSIONER HENN1NG: Let me ask -- so if I want a boat
dock extension and the obstruction might come into play, if my
neighbor has a boat dock without an extension and it's obstructing my
view, can I ask him to tear it down?
MR. GOCHENAUR: No, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Huh.
MR. DUNNUCK: With that, it may be appropriate to go to
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speakers.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Public speakers.
MR. DUNNUCK: Anthony Pires followed by Diane Holds
(sic).
MR. PIRES: Mr. Chairman, Members of the Board, Tony Pires
with Woodward, Pires & Lombardo. And I've had the pleasure in the
last few months of doing a number of these boat dock extensions
before the Planning Commission and the board. I might become a --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes, sir. I'm feeling like a pen pal.
MR. PIRES: But I think it's an important issue for communities
who are severely affected by the applications for these boat dock
extensions. And the query is how, if I live across a canal or a water
body, am I affected? I think that was addressed in one of the
petitions that this board reviewed in which the board upheld our
appeal -- we're not in litigation; nobody ventures one -- for the
individuals who probably had the greatest adverse effect on their
view. I'm not sure if this is working or not.
In that particular instance, the applicant was proposing a boat
dock extension in this direction. The -- these two parties, these
owners, are not abutting, but they are, in fact, surrounding property
owners. This -- these individuals would not have had any
opportunity to provide any input, nor would any staff or Planning
Commission decision or recommendation have had to take into
account any of their input.
And the same can occur over here. We have these property
owners. And, in fact, to show the impact, this was in the Liberty
Ventures. It's upside down. This is taken from the dock of a
nonabutting, nonadjoining but, by golly, a surrounding property
owner. That's what the dock extension request would have provided,
for a dock to go across that view of this property. So I think it is
significant to keep surrounding versus abutting.
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June 20,2001
And I'm wondering what's the impetus for this change? I mean,
it's been around for a long time. All of a sudden now we're starting to
make it easier, quite frankly, for the extensions to be granted. That's
my concern and the concerns of some other individuals you may hear
tonight. What's the rationale? What's the impetus? I know
Mr. Gochenaur indicated that that's a very subjective criteria. But it's
just as subjective -- if you want to call it subjective -- as the other
criteria that talks about you don't want to have excessive dock surface
area. Now, what's excessive in that particular context?
So I think, frankly, that it needs to be -- the surrounding property
owners still need to be protected. I think this board has a great sense
of direction that the community needs to be protected, the values
need to be protected, allowing individuals to use their property. If
somebody wants to ask for an extension, listen to those who are
affected. That is the surrounding property owners.
As far as charted, marked, navigable channels, again I query,
what's the reason for that change? I'm not much of a navigator or
boatsman, but how many channels are marked inside Vanderbilt
Lagoon? Who's charting it? Is it the Coast Guard? They probably
don't chart once you get inside that particular body of water. Leave it
to navigable channels. There are some navigable channels that are
just known by local knowledge and by usage. They may not be on
any chart, may not be marked at all. So I think that using that term
"marked" or "charted," again, is geared towards making it easier,
quite frankly, to get an extension, and I think these terms need to be
deleted.
And as far as mailing out the notice, if it's mailed out in 20 days,
I think that's a very good time frame. As an aside, I think this board
may want to, in the future, look at the policy that was adopted a
number of years ago. Quite frankly, it's frightening. When you get a
notice of an item before the Planning Commission, usually you get it
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8 to 10 to 12 days beforehand, and it says you need to have your
materials in, you know, a longer -- a long time before the Planning
Commission. That doesn't give people adequate time in which to hire
a planner, hire an engineer, hire an attorney to get documents in.
I've raised this issue before with the prior boards, but I'm going
to raise it again, just to let the process be a little more flexible. The
Planning Commission is very good about taking testimony and
evidence, but the notice can scare people away and has, in fact,
scared people away from participating at the Planning Commission
level. I've talked to a number of people.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Tony, where's that, which
section?
MR. PIRES: The part about the notice?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Charted.
MR. PIP, ES: Charted? That appears in the proposed Section
2.6.21.3.1.3, and that is on --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Top of page 124 of our packet,
108 -- you've got it right there.
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
not looking --
One twenty-four here. You're
MR. PIRES: Page 108. That's correct. And one other note, as
far as the reason I only responded, I think, on the 18th to the most
recent revisions, I did not receive them until last week when I asked
for them. But I tried to respond back as promptly as I could.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But, Tony, that does say
"marked or charted," not "marked and charted."
MR. PIRES: Well, there are -- once again, there are navigable
channels that aren't marked or charted, but I just think leave it at
navigable channels, which exists today.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But the only new words we're
adding is "or charted."
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June 20,2001
MR. PIRES: Marked. Marked wasn't there before. The word --
neither the word "marked" existed nor the word "charted" existed in
the existing code. You're looking at a revision to the prior --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I see. Revision to the revision.
MR. PIRES: So the existing language does not reference
marked or charted.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The only reason I like that
language, and I don't think it's -- would make things simpler; I think
it would make things more measurable. And there's so much that's
difficult to define in this area. Like you were saying, there's so much
that's subjective that it would be nice to have one objective criteria in
is it a known channel.
MR. PIRES: Well, I think you can get testimony and local
knowledge and local history from those who use the waterways as to
where the navigable channels are.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But, you know, the last time you
were here, there were people arguing over where the channels were.
MR. PIRES: They weren't marked or charted, but yet they did
affect navigability as to where the extension was requested to be
located.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think Mother Nature is going
to change that anyway.
MR. PIRES: That's very true, so that's what makes it more
difficult for the marked and charted. We'd ask that neither one of
those two terms be utilized.
And we think view is a -- also should be a primary criteria and
not secondary. I think if you're a property owner that lives on the
water, that's a major aspect of living there. And to make it a
secondary criteria, I think, gives short shrift to that particular aspect
of that property ownership.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And I disagree with that
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because I think that people would want to live on a canal -- the reason
they want to live on that canal is to have access to the water via boat.
Otherwise, you know, they'd be on a golf course.
MR. PIRES: Well, that and the view, I think. But, once again,
we -- I ask that --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: So, Commissioner Henning, you
would prefer what kind of language? You're a boater. I defer to you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I think that the biggest
criteria that we need to have is to make sure that the water is
navigable and there's not a safety concern as far as with the boat dock
extension, if it's going to be encumbersome (sic) to navigate two
boats around the boat dock extension.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
MR. PIRES: Thank you very kindly.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Next speaker, please.
MR. DUNNUCK: Diane Holds followed by Ben Nelson.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Diane had to leave?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: She waives.
MR. DUNNUCK: Ben Nelson followed by B. J. Savard-Boyer.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That would be the Honorable
Ben.
MR. NELSON: Not tonight. Thank you. It's a pleasure to be
on this side of the podium for a change.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I bet.
MR. NELSON: I'm here to speak in favor of Ross's suggested
revisions to this, and I'd like to comment on some of Commissioner
Henning's comments. The primary reason, I feel -- and I've lived in
Florida for 45 years. And the primary reason, I feel, people choose to
live on the waterfront is for access to the water. The canal network in
Florida wasn't built so that people could get a view of their neighbors'
backyards or whatever. The canal network in Florida was built so
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people could have access to the waterways. I think the primary
considerations in here should be the navigability and the safety
issues.
So far as the view issues, if you want -- if view is a major
consideration in docks, why not make it a major consideration when
you're building houses? You know, if you build a house and it gets in
the way of your view of the neighbor's house next door or the street
down the way, you can't build a house there. Well, I think that it's
quid pro quo in this case.
So I -- I would think that -- that what you need to consider here
is to support staff's revisions. They're fair, they're reasonable, and
they afford the reviewer and the concerned parties accurate
information so they can make that determination. There's some
added expense there, but we've all agreed in the industry that it's
important for you to have that information and to have accurate
information so you can make the determination. Thank you.
MR. DUNNUCK: B. J. Savard-Boyer followed by Rocky
Scofield.
MS. SAVARD-BOYER: B. J. Savard-Boyer. I live in the
Vanderbilt Beach area. You've seen me here several times before
with this dock facility thing. Everybody does live on a canal because
they want to have a dock, and they want to have a boat. I mean, that's
why we moved there. And most of the people there do have docks,
and most of the people there have 20-foot docks.
However, in the last year we've had several dock extension
proposals, and some of them have, you know, succeeded, and some
of them haven't. The one that Mr. Pires showed you with our
neighbor the Griffiths across the way, we did meet with the
developer, and we came to an agreement. They would not have had
any view. They have lived there since the early '70s. They had a
boat and whatever. So they're -- they would not have had a view of
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the lagoon.
Most of the canals have docks on each side, and we don't -- we're
not worrying about views. We're worrying about the open bodies of
water, the -- it's a sensitive area there. You all know that it's a
sensitive area. It's not very deep in the middle. The people that want
the dock extensions are going out into the lagoons. I fail to believe
that it would not hurt navigability. We don't have 60-foot docks there
right now. ! think the longest dock out there is maybe 30 to 40 feet.
I'm not sure.
The other thing with this view is why do we have to change it?
Why can't we leave it surrounding.`? I mean, why.`? How many people
have come before you and asked that their view be preserved other
than the Griffiths? The only -- the only reason the other dock facility
was brought here was not specifically for view; it was for the fact that
it sticks out so far in the water and it will hurt navigability no matter
what you say. And it's also going to hurt our manatees that come in
there and flock around. But that's been dropped. I truly believe that
the wording has to stay the way it's been. I don't see a necessity to
change it. And if you do change it, we're only going to be up here
more than we've been here before.
The other thing, that those bodies of water are zoned sensitive --
single-family and sensitive treatment, which is regulations to
preserve and protect environment sensitive lands. Why in -- in the
code are all of the dock extensions in -- the wording in the same
codes.`? In other words, for Keewaydin Island or for Isle of Capri or
for Goodland or all of those, they are open bodies of water, are they
not.`? I mean, they are open bodies of water, aren't they.`? Can
anybody tell me they are or they aren't7
MR. OLLIFF: Some are, some aren't. Some are canal
communities. Isle of Capri is primarily a canal community, and
others are open-bodied waters, so it's different wherever you go
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throughout the county. But the idea of a Land Development Code,
unless there is a specific overlay, is to a standardized code that
hopefully is practical from one end of the county to the other. I know
where you're going with this.
MS. SAVARD-BOYER: Well, the thing is that we have small
bodies of water, as far as I'm concerned, and it -- and it is sensitive.
It doesn't have a flow through. We're -- Vanderbilt Lagoon is at the
end of the whole thing, and then -- and then it has to go back out
through Wiggins Pass. We're going to have a lot of docks in there, as
you know. The future for The Regatta is 56 docks. I know I'm not
here to talk about that, but what I -- what I mean is they're going to be
-- there's going to be so much traffic in there, if we have docks
sticking out all over the place, I don't know where all these people are
going to navigate.
And why can't we have an overlay of Vanderbilt waters? I mean,
why can't we have a different wording for them? Is that not possible?
Can anybody answer me?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Mr. Dunnuck?
MR. DUNNUCK: Well, I believe it's possible. What I would
say is that you do have provisions in that current code that do restrict
the navigab -- nav -- I'm going to get it a tongue twister here -- the
navigability of that waterway to ensure that everybody can safely
access the water.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: And as we do the study there, would
that be an appropriate inclusionary item along with everything else
we're looking at?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I kind of like the language that
-- as long as we're not presenting a safety problem, let's afford
everybody the same rights, and that is the use of waterways.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I agree.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's right. You can't take
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away people's property rights.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's right.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I do have --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Miss Student.
MS. STUDENT: I will say that -- for the record, Marjorie
Student, assistant county attorney -- that there are riparian rights that
are pertinent to property. And so, therefore, individuals have to be
able to utilize those riparian rights, and one of which is access to
navigable water.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: We went to law school to be
able to say riparian rights, so we have to use that in --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We need to let Ms. Boyer finish if
we've answered your --
MS. SAVARD-BOYER: No. I just feel that the wording last
year was tolerable, and I think there isn't any necessity to change it.
And if I could find out how to get special treatment of our water, I
would be glad to go in that direction, and I know I'm not getting an
answer tonight on that. But I think it should just be left the way it
was last year. Nothing was hurt. People got their extensions if they
wanted them. We didn't take up too much of your time. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Next speaker, please.
MR. DUNNUCK:
Yovanovich.
MR. SCOFIELD:
Rocky Scofield followed by Rich
Rocky Scofield for the record. I'll have to
say I agree with B. J. On that last comment. I have no problem with
the way it was. The fact that we're here tonight is the cumulative
effect over the past year and basically because of Mr. Pires's
comments. Now, every time we've had a hearing, Tony has picked
apart every word. He has challenged everything, and everything has
always boiled down to view. View is subjective. I don't care if--
people can always come here, and they can voice their opinion on
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view, and they can show pictures; that's afforded them.
But this whole thing, this code has changed. The staff has done
this, and this is all because of the turmoil and all of the -- you know,
the stuff we've gotten into on these petitions and at Tony's insistence.
Now they want to have it both ways. They want to have it changed.
Well, the staff has worked hard to change a lot of things that they've
wanted changed. It's made it a lot tough -- it hasn't made it a lot
tougher; it's made it a lot more work and a lot more cost to the
owners.
As of January this year, the fees were changed on the extension
from four twenty-five to a thousand twenty-five. That's the
application fee because the staff has got more work to do. If this kind
of stuff goes on, it's going to go up again. My fee has tripled to my
clients, after these new effects go in. Now, you know, you have to
prove -- excuse me. Safety and navigation are the utmost concerns.
Those things are always proved.
Now we have to go out and have to hire a surveyor. There's
another thousand dollars added on to this application process right
now. It's a thousand dollars. The surveyor has to do all the water
depths. We've been getting that done if we know there's any
contention in the petition. They have to survey the adjacent
properties. If there's docks there, prove there's no navigation
problems there. We're just adding, adding, adding, and I don't know
where you stop. Now they've come here. They want this change,
they don't want that change, they want to go back, they want new
stuff. I don't know where they stand. I was fine with the old way.
But I'm here to tell you, staffs worked hard. I'm okay with it.
It's added a lot of work for me. That's fine. It's more money for
me. Unfortunately, it's a lot more money for homeowners to go
through. So I support the staffs changes that they've done. I've
already instituted a lot of those changes, and the wording that they
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have is fine. I have no problem with it. If you have any questions,
I'd be happy to answer them.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I guess I have a big one. What
-- who initiated this change? Was it from outside or from inside?
MR. DUNNUCK: Actually, I believe it was through discussion
with the Board of County Commissioners regarding several of the
boat dock issues and probably the appeal. The board had raised some
questions regarding water depth and how we'd prove it and who the
burden of proof should fall upon. The staff took that as an initiative
to look at the Land Development Code a little bit more closer and
bring back these amendments.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I personally think that, you
know, it's an improvement. It's making things more quantifiable,
more measurable and less sort of, you know, the good ole days when
we could do things based on because everybody knows how the
waterways are. We're past that now, and we have to do this a lot
more measurable. And it's too bad that we are -- have to be more
regulatory, but I think the staffs proposed a set of documents -- I
mean, a set of regulations that'll be copied all over the state.
MR. SCOFIELD: Yeah. And, you know, when it -- when you
boil down to it, if it's being contested, the -- everything that we have
to go through to prove it, our point, is going to be there. Now, the
facts are the facts. The only thing that isn't a fact is view, and view is
in the eye of the beholder, and it's always going to be that way.
So, you know, whether we have the old set of rules or the new set,
it's basically -- to me, it boils down to the same thing. You've got a
word changed here or there. But if I have a dock that may be
impacting navigability, I have to go out, and I have to prove it
doesn't. I have to go out and do the water depths. I have to show
there's plenty of room to go around or that there's a channel here or a
channel that locals used to use. They say we can't go anywhere else.
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Well, if I can prove to them that there's a lot bigger area they can use
by having it professionally surveyed, then those are the things we
have to do. And those are -- those are items that will also be brought
up when we have, you know, a contended petition.
So I support -- you know, I'd rather it be back the old way, but
we've gone through this much, and we've added all this. And I
support what the staff has done, and it's fine with me.
MR. DUNNUCK: Your final speaker is Rich Yovanovich.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Again, for the record Rich Yovanovich.
Fortunately -- or unfortunately -- I've had the pleasure of appearing
before you on a few boat dock appeals myself. And I view what the
staff has done as an effort to quantify the issues that were perceived
as loopholes in the past, making -- making the application more
complete, providing greater detail on the potential vessel that will be
there, greater detail on the water depths by requiring surveys. You
know, I think the -- the changes that staff agreed to by -- agreed with
Mr. Pires on are -- are good changes, makes the process better. And
actually the burden of proof has always been on us.
As Commissioner Mac'Kie said, you know, riparian rights are
rights that adjoining property owners have to use the water. When
you buy on the water, you have the right to use the water. Now,
naturally it's subject to reasonable regulations of the government, and
I think that your regulations, as proposed by your staff, are
reasonable. You're concerned primarily with safety and navigation,
where everybody is concerned with safety and navigation.
View is an issue, but it's not a primary issue, in my opinion.
And I don't think it's a primary issue when you -- the only case I
could find that's similar to what we're talking about on view dealt
with an eminent domain case in Lee County where the county built a
bridge and blocked 80 percent of the property owners's view. And
that property owner brought a lawsuit for inverse condemnation
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claiming that they took their ripdrian right to a view. There's no
doubt that you have a riparian right to a view. It's not a right to a
totally unobstructed view.
And I think we should use the language in this case to help better
define what we're looking at as view. And I'd like to read to you
what the Court says. It says, "Owners of uplands along navigable
waters enjoy common law riparian rights, one of which is the right to
an unobstructed view over the water to the channel. These rights can
constitute property which the government may not take or destroy
without paying just compensation."
What was the standard that they applied? They applied a standard
that said the impact must be -- it must substantially and materially
interfere with and disturb the view across the waters. The standard is
substantially and materially interferes with, and the Court recognized
that's a case-by-case analysis. And in this case they said an 80
percent effect on the view was material and substantial.
I think you need to put those words in there. Rephrase
2.6.21.3.2.4 to read whether or not the proposed facility substantially
and materially interferes with and disturbs the view across the water
of abutting property owners. That's the standard. If we substantially
and materially interfere and disturb their view across the water, we
should not -- it should be considered and factored in the approval.
It's good enough for the Court. It's the standard that's applied
to governments when they are building their facilities. It ought to be
good enough for the private sector when using their property that
abuts the water. So that's the one change I would make to the
provisions that staff has submitted.
Again, we are not trying to make it easier; we're trying to make
it more measurable because, you know, it's a standard that my clients
have to meet. They need to know that they've met the standard and
that they're entitled to the extension. We need to have some certainty
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in this process. We're trying to make it as objective as possible.
Candidly, I'd love for you to eliminate view altogether, but I
know you can't. But all these cases boil down to, as Rocky has said,
view. They try to couch it in other terms, but we always provide
evidence that we're not affecting navigation when we go through with
our permits and requests for extensions, so we have to couch it in
other areas. But it always comes down to what's really happening,
impact of view.
I think the suggestions I made provide greater assurance to the
public and provide greater assurance to the property owners adjoining
the waterways as to what the measure of standard will be as far as
view goes. And with that one change, I would support staff
wholeheartedly in the revisions they've made, and I think that they've
done an admirable job to incorporate comments that were both before
you on various appeal issues and before the Planning Commission on
various permit issues when they were the fact finder. Unless you
have any specific questions, I'll sit down.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Does anybody have some
heartburn with increasing the notification time? It says 15 days, and I
think Mr. Pires brought up a good point of, you know, doing research
and if they feel like they need to hire a lawyer, is to increase that to
20 days.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It's already 20 days.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, this is 15 days, isn't it, 15
days in advance from the hearing? Second posting of the signs, it just
says 15 days.
MR. YOVANOVICH: It's mailed 20 days. I don't know how
you guarantee any certain time period for the receipt.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, no. Let's just --
MR. YOVANOVICH: I mean, if you want posting -- if you
want to post the property 20 days, I don't think that's a problem.
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June 20, 2001
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, and send out notification
20 days in --
MR. YOVANOVICH: Mail the notice 20 days?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- twenty days in advance.
MR. YOVANOVICH: That's what they do already.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh, it is?
MR. YOVANOVICH: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And right now it's -- but here it
says 15.
MS. MURRAY: Twenty days, I believe; is that correct, Ross?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I can't see it very well, then.
MR. PIRES: Commissioner Henning, I think that Mr.
Gochenaur indicated that they mail it 20 days. Susan mentioned that.
But the ordinance proposed does say 15, you're correct. It does not
say 20.
MS. MURRAY: I'm sorry. What page are you looking on?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: It depends on which page
number you --
MS. MURRAY: Handwritten page number.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Handwritten number, Commissioner.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: One twenty-three on the lower
right, is that what you want? It is 2.6.21.3.
MS. MURRAY: Okay. I'm sorry. It says "at least 15 days in
advance." Our technician tells me it's mailed out 20 days in advance
typically.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, let's put 20 days in there.
MS. MURRAY: That's fine. We don't --
MR. YOVANOVICH: That's fine with us.
COMMISSIONER HENN1NG: At least 20 days. Two years,
20 days, what's the difference?
MR. YOVANOVICH: Two years may be a little bit much, but
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20 days certainly is fair.
MR. PIRES: Mr. Chairman, if I may just have a brief moment.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes, Mr. Pires, if you please.
MR. PIRES: Just I'll be real brief, only because there was the
implication or inference left by Mr. Scofield that I asked for these
changes to be made to the code. That could not be farther from the
truth. I've had no input, wasn't called, had any suggestions. My only
involvement was before this board in that first group that came two
weeks ago before this board for consideration.
I think it should be left as it is. We've not asked for any changes.
You know, once again, I'm -- and I differ with any impetus for
changes. Leave it alone, I think, would be a very good action or
nonaction by this board. I think that's what the community is --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Marjorie, do you have a comment? I
saw that look in your eye.
MS. STUDENT: No, not really. If it had gone, maybe, in a
different direction, I would have. I have -- I have some case law here
about view too, but I think it's been adequately covered.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Motion to approve staff's
recommendation.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I have a motion by Commissioner
Mac'Kie. I have a second by --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'd like to add --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: -- by Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm sorry. I'd like to amend my
motion to change the 15-day notice to at least 20-day notice.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And I second -- I'll put that in
in my second.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And what about the view?
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June 20,2001
Where do we stand with that?
MS. MURRAY: Staffs recommendation was adjacent.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Adjacent properties only.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It's good enough for me. That's
the way my motion's going to go.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: It's what the motioner said. All in
favor -- any further discussion?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Did I get a second?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I've got a second by Commissioner
Coletta. All in favor signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Aye.
MR. DUNNUCK: If we can keep this thing moving, we have
three speakers left on three different issues.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes. In regards to -- where do I think
we are on the last one?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, let's just call the three
speakers if we could maybe.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, I -- you know, I haven't cast a
vote on the last motion yet, Commissioner. I'm sorry. At this point
I'm going to say no because I want -- I hear enough out there that tells
me leave it the way it is. If we can find something else and we're
going to have a hearing examiner, I'm just not going to go there this
evening. So I'm going to vote against it. And if you had another
commissioner here you could have changed it, but I -- that's where I
am.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So we're going to -- we're going
to undo all these -- all this work and go back to these vague
standards?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: That's what I --
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June 20,2001
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But, Commissioner -- oh, okay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, there's no sense arguing
about it because we're not going to get anywhere. So I make a
motion that --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You don't have to make another
motion. It just dies.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: It's done. You've got to have four
votes. It's done. Next subject, please.
MR. DUNNUCK: Next subject, and I'll let Susan bring it
forward, and we have three. One's regarding PUD, one's regarding
Goodland overlay, and one's regarding C-4 zoning changes. I'd
recommend the Goodland overlay at this point.
MS. MURRAY: Just to bring you up to speed, I don't recall you
having any -- there was -- let me back up. There was a public
speaker that came to the podium. He had a number of issues he said
he would discuss with Marjorie Student. I do believe, in her opinion,
they've probably been resolved.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: This is with regard to
Goodland?
MS. MURRAY: This was the Goodland overlay, and that's on
page 95.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
that one speaker.
Maybe we could just hear from
MS. STUDENT: And they mostly were resolved. And the
addition I passed out to you was the result of a meeting I had with the
speaker at the last meeting to clarify -- further clarify that. And that
goes under 2.2.34.6.1(e). I don't know if--
CHAIRMAN CARTER: And the speaker is?
MR. DUNNUCK: Your speaker is Edward Fullmer.
MR. FULLMER: My name is Edward J. Fullmer, president of
Goodland Civic Association. We met with Marjorie and the board
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June 20, 2001
and discussed the things, and she changed the items which we were
concerned about.
And one other thing I want to say, Commissioner Carter and
Commissioners, that it's been a pleasure working with you's for the
last three years and all the help that you've given Goodland. We
went back after the last meeting and discussed with some of our
citizens the way the Goodland gateway came out. And they're not all
happy, but ifs something we can live with. And when the new
developer comes, we'll sit down with Planning Commission, which
did a great job on the overlay and on the PUD. And we appreciate all
the help that we got from the county and from you commissioners
and from Marjorie. Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, sir. Mr. Henning --
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Sir, if this -- if I'm looking at
this, the leasing of VR or RSF zoning property shall be the sole
purpose of-- the purpose of storing fishing-related equipment will be
prohibited. What is the purpose of-- and intent of a fishing village?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It's not fishing?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I mean, the storing of--
historically what we've had in Collier County -- well, first of all, let
me go back. The fishermen on Marco Island was kicked off because
Deltona bought it. They packed up, moved their houses onto
Goodland, stored their crab traps all over Goodland, and now this
language is saying you have to own the property, and otherwise you
can't store it there?
MR. FULLMER: What was discussed in the overlay, it was to
protect the fishermen that's there now that did get kicked off of
Marco down to Goodland. And through generations -- we have third
and fourth generations that are still fishing on the island, and they're
using their crab traps and all. And we didn't want them to be forced
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June 20, 2001
out of business because there wasn't a provision for them to have
their crab traps on their own property. So we had that in the overlay
to protect them.
What this here does, it stops people from coming in, whoever it
is, and renting a property to somebody else to put the fishing traps on.
We're protecting the people that came from Caxambas and from Old
Marco in 1949 that got moved down there. And that's -- we just don't
want people coming renting them in. We're having that happen now
on commercial property. There's a parking lot down there that's
normally been a parking lot for 30 years, and now it's became a crab
trap sanctuary. So we don't want that in the residential area and the
VR district.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Let me just say -- I'll give you a
scenario. Let's say that, you know, I was a fisherman, and I have a
long line of family, you know, son, grandson. And my son -- I give it
on to my son, and my son does some wild thing, and the property is
foreclosed on. What about my grandson? Where is he going to do
that at on Goodland?
MR. FULLMER: Then you would be losing the property. That
would be on you. I mean, it's just that --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: My grandson wouldn't be able
to do it.
MR. FULLMER: Say somebody came into my house and said
to me, "Ed, I want to rent your property to store my crab traps," and
I'm in a residential area, that's -- we don't want that. We have
decorative also in this -- in this overlay to where I can put decorative
stuff out there. But that's not my business. So why should I start
renting my property to somebody that wants to have a fishing
business? That's almost making a commercial property out of my
residential property or my VR property. That's what we want to
prohibit with this ordinance.
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June 20,2001
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And going back to the purpose
and intent of a fishing village, that's the whole thing, is we want to
keep it that way so those people can do it forever. And once we start
putting in restrictions like this, then some people are going to get
caught, just like that for instance that I just gave you, the grandson.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I personally don't -- I mean, I
don't understand why if-- well, I have two thoughts. I might as well
put them both out there. I don't understand why you would want to
have this prohibition because I thought this was the character of
Goodland that we were trying to perpetuate.
And at the same time, I wonder why we don't have some
architectural standards that go across for residential and, you know,
that whole fishing village bit that we have now on the new projects
coming in. It seems to me we ought to have those same kind of
requirements for all construction in Goodland. I was going to bring
that up for the next cycle, you know, and not try to add it onto this
one. But I don't understand. The two things contradict each other.
MR. FULLMER: Well, we did discuss having an architectural
review board for Goodland. But talking with staff when Mr. Mulhere
was there, he advised us not to put that in the overlay. But I think the
standard you've set with the PUD and which Goodland LLC set, I
think that's going to be the standard for the future in Goodland, is the
Old Key West-style village. And I think you've helped set that.
That's why --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: He has, but we better get that in
the next cycle of the LDC code if we want that to be a requirement. I
mean, right now you're hoping that that's the way it'll work out, but it
needs to be a requirement.
MR. FULLMER: I think you's gave it a pretty good clout. I
think staff and Goodland LLC did a good job on it.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I make a motion that we accept
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June 20,2001
staff's revision to the Goodland overlay. CHAIRMAN CARTER: I'll second that.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Including the crab trap change
proposed by Ms. Student?
COMMISSIONER HENN1NG: No. Prohibit--no. I don't
want to make that -- I want to make it -- keep it a fishing village.
MR. BELLOWS: Except for 2.2.34.6.1(e)? Except that? That's
the last one that you have as an amendment from Ms. Student.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. That's what it is? I have
2.2.34.6.1.
MR. BELLOWS: (E).
COMMISSIONER HENNING: (E)?
BELLOWS: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh, yeah. Okay. There's (e).
Okay.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So with that exception you
move approval?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Move approval.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I seconded it already, and I will
include that in my second.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm sorry.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Any further discussion? All in favor
signify by saying aye.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Opposed by the same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Motion carries 4-0.
MR. DUNNUCK: The next item I'd recommend is regarding
PUD, planned unit development. It's page 73 of your Land
Development Code. There's one speaker on that issue.
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June 20, 2001
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: In the middle or the right?
MR. DUNNUCK: I believe it's the middle. This is relating to
planned unit development district, Section 2.72, amendment
procedures. And I believe this was a follow-up item to the impact fee
consolidation ordinance where the board had given some direction
relative to transportation impact fees stating that they wanted to make
sure it referred back to the newly developed ordinance.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Before we hear from the
speaker, can we -- I need to understand from staff what this
amendment proposes to do.
MR. DUNNUCK: I believe what this amendment proposes to
do is to re -- you know, when we talked about restricting the ability
of impact fee credits through the impact fee ordinance at a -- at an
amount to be determined by the Board of County Commissioners, I
believe this is just follow-up language that enhances that we will not
be -- you know, that the Land Development Code follows along the
lines of that impact fee ordinance so that if we ever redraft it, we can
move forward.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay. I'm still confused.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, I'm getting the impression it
keeps the two documents in synchronization. Is that where I am?
MR. DUNNUCK: Correct.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yeah. But when you read it, it
appears not to do that, to me.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I'll let counsel tell me that. Mr.
Yovanovich, you are a speaker?
MR. YOVANOVICH: I am. For the record, Rich Yovanovich
again. The problem I have with these two sections is the same
problem I raised when we went through the impact fee ordinance
revision. And it deals with the fact that as we're going through a
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June 20,2001
PUD or we're rezoning property through a straight rezoning district,
there may be times where the Board of County Commissioners
requires the property owner to set aside their land for a roadway
purpose. And in doing so you're -- you are taking the ability to use
that property from the property owner and giving it to the public.
Normally you would do that through an eminent domain
proceeding. However, sometimes you have the opportunity, during
the rezone process, to set the land aside. That has never been an
issue. The issue always has been, what's the value of the land when
you impose a restriction on our land? The way this reads, it says you
may give us credits for up to the fair market value, but you can
negotiate with us a lower amount. Now, that is fundamentally unfair
and probably a taking when it comes to the point where you say to us,
"You're going to set your land aside, and we may give you impact fee
credits; we may not."
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It says "negotiable."
MR. YOVANOVICH: The point is is you -- once you take our
land, you need to either pay for it then or guarantee us impact fee
credits. What I'm proposing is you need to put a provision in there
that says when we set the land aside, it will be at the value on the date
you ask us to convey it to you. You shouldn't be able to freeze in time
the value of the land if you're not willing to pay for it at that time.
Second of all, you need to make it a -- you need to make it clear
that it will be -- you will either get impact fee credits for it, or you
will be paid cash. And you also have that scenario, as we've
discussed, where sometimes the value of the land being dedicated to
you far exceeds the impact fees to be generated from that project. So
none of these situations are addressing either the impact fee
ordinance or your Land Development Code.
We are always stuck with, at the time you come to us and say
dedicate the land, we negotiate a developer contribution agreement.
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June 20,2001
And we have to argue over value. We have to argue over whether we
get impact fee credits at all, and we have to argue over whether we
get cash. There shouldn't be any argument. It should be clear that
the property is given to you for a public purpose, for the same
purpose that you're giving -- you're making us pay impact fees.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, what if somebody wants
to contribute it for less?
MR. YOVANOVICH: That should be their choice.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's what this says.
MR. YOVANOVICH: It shouldn't be mandated.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: This just says it's an option.
MR. YOVANOVICH: No, it doesn't. It does not say that.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It says not more than.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Shall be negotiated on an amount no
greater than the market value.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Negotiated on.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. Well, what if we say we want
fair market value? Can the county say to us, "Well, we're not going
to give you fair market value?"
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I don't think so.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. Well, if that's what the intent was
and that's the legislative history, let's make that clear.
Secondly, you're putting the burden on us to prove the value of
your taking. That should be your burden. You should do the
appraisal, and we should have the right to agree to it or not to agree to
it. In any event, you shouldn't impose a limitation on us as to when
we provide the appraisal. It should be an appraisal provided at the
time you ask us for the property. We'll give you the appraisal. You
shouldn't be able to say, "Well, if you don't provide us with an
appraisal within 90 days, guess what, we get to decide what the value
of the land is."
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June 20, 2001
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But, Rich, you're in charge of
this, because if you don't want to play in this field, then don't apply
for the PUD; go under the zoning you got.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: When is the last time the Board of
County Commissioners ever asked you to change land use?
MR. YOVANOVICH: Excuse me?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: When did we ever ask you to change
land use?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, DRI.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, if you are zoned agriculture and
you want a PUD, I believe, sir, that the burden is on you to tell me
the values, not the burden on us.
MR. YOVANOVICH: The burden is on me to prove to you that
the requested zoning I am asking for is consistent with your Land
Development Code and the provisions within the Land Development
Code and your Comprehensive Plan. The burden on me is not to buy
zoning from you by agreeing to donate land to you and pay impact
fees.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Counsel, please.
MS. STUDENT: I would like to point out that Mr. Yovanovich
is discussing provisions of this code that are not being changed
tonight. They have been in there for quite a number of years. Heidi
Ashton of our office, who is not here -- nor is anyone here that deals
with impact fees -- to address this. However, this language has been
there for quite some time, and what's on the table is what's underlined
and stricken through.
MR. YOVANOVICH: And I -- with all due respect to Marjorie,
what I see and what was handed to me, the words "may" and "shall"
are -- are new words. And all I'm trying to point out is it should be
mandatory that we get impact fee credits. It shouldn't be may unless
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June 20,2001
we voluntarily give them up. And we should get cash if you can't
give us impact fee credits. That's all I'm saying.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But that's the law already.
MR. YOVANOVICH: No, it isn't. It's not --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Otherwise it's a taking.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Commissioner Mac'Kie, I can cite to
you very painful examples of where it has not been applied as the
law, and I've had to fight for my client's rights to get impact fee
credits or cash for the value of the land. So I understand what the law
is. I would just like the code to be consistent with the law, and that's
all I'm asking.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Why do I get this feeling that this is a
legal counsel debate?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I don't know. I get the same
feeling.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I just -- I have a question.
Shouldn't we put in this with -- it says the board of commissioners
may. Shouldn't we put board of commissioners or hearing examiner?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I don't think we're there yet. We're not
there yet.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. Well, I make a motion
for approval.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I'll second that motion. Any
discussion?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, I mean, I'd like to hear
from our lawyers that we aren't taking property or --
MR. OLLIFF: All this is doing is providing a provision where
they may receive the credits. It says nothing else about what the
other options are here. I mean, this language simply provides an
opportunity for a developer coming in for a PUD rezone, that they
may receive impact fee credits for that. It does not talk about what is
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June 20,2001
or is not the other alternatives to that contribution for land, and I'm
not sure that it's necessary that it be a part of your Land Development
Code if Rich and you and every other attorney in the room knows
that it is part of the law that if I take their property, there's got to be a
just compensation for that property.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Okay. I'll take that. Why don't you say
you will provide us just compensation? Does that work? MR. OLLIFF: No.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Because then it becomes you can either
give me impact fee credits on --
MR. OLLIFF: -- the Land Development Code providing every
option available for what's going to happen in return for this property.
I am providing you an option here, and one of those options is the
credits.
MR. YOVANOVICH: What's the other option, Tom?
MR. OLLIFF: There's a number of other options.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Cash, gift --
MR. OLLIFF: There's a number of options.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: -- trade, 1031 exchange. I don't
know, but there's lot of other options.
MR. YOVANOVICH: You know, Commissioners, I understand
that, you know, this is not a popular amendment. But I am just
dealing with -- I'm telling you my real-world experience has been if
the county ordinance doesn't say you can pay us cash, I can't get cash
approved in an agreement. So all I'm asking is clarify the record. If
you just tell me that's the intent, is that we'll either get credits, we'll
get cash, we'll get -- we'll get just compensation in any combination,
the legislative history is good enough for me. I just want to be able to
make clear that that's the intent.
MR. OLLIFF: And I think I'm not willing to tie our hands to
any option that might be available to us as a PUD comes through the
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process.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I hear Mr. Yovanovich; and I'm hearing
you, Mr. Manager, County Manager Olliff; and I'm listening to our
legal counsel. And I support what the staff has recommended.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Call the motion.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Any other speakers?
MR. DUNNUCK: No, sir.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Now the chair -- thank you.
The chair will call the motion. All in favor signify by saying aye.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Opposed by the same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Motions carries 4-0.
MR. DUNNUCK: The final issue you have a speaker on relates
to the C-4 zoning changes. And, Susan, if you can address that issue.
MS. MURRAY: We're working off of page 68, 69, and 70.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Handwritten?
MS. MURRAY: Handwritten, in the middle of the page. Let
me just give you a little bit of history. When we talked about this
last, Tim Hancock came up, and he had given me, I think the day
before, some proposed language changes. I reviewed them,
massaged them, and put them in the document that you have before
you.
However, kind of in -- in thinking about it a little bit more, our
concern grew a little bit because I think what we've been trying to do
is, not fully understanding the impact of having storage uses in a C-4
zoning district, which is our primary commercial zoning district and a
storage use is more of an industrial type of use, we thought and had a
greater comfort level with having the miniwarehousing as a
conditional use in C-4. And, really, the definition of a conditional
use is a use that would not be appropriate generally or without
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June 20,2001
restriction, but which is controlled to its number, area, location,
relation to neighborhood, and would promote the health, safety,
welfare, including aesthetics, of the area.
And we thought rather than trying to bullet a number of
stipulations as a permitted use, that we would bring forward to you
our recommendation that you -- rather than do it as a permitted use,
you would do it as a conditional use. That way you could look at
each one on a case-by-case basis, assess the merits of that, and apply
any, you know, standards that were -- would necessarily address any
of the issues that were brought forth through staff's analysis.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner Henning, you have a
question?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No, just a statement. I've been
looking at this since our last LDC, and I can see where it can be a
value to the community in C-4 on major arterial roads where we're
going to have architectural designs and stuff. My heartburn -- and I
don't think that needs to be a conditional use. I think it could be a
permitted use, but I do have a problem with it adjacent or abutting
residential.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's why you want to make it
a conditional use, so you can make sure you come in at the right time.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I understand that, but let's leave
it like that. Let's try it. That's what I would like to do.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA:
you want to go?
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
I'm sorry. Which way is that
Well, keep it a permitted use
and a prohibited use next to or adjacent to residential in C-4.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I have a problem with that
because there may be -- you may have some upscale business in a
certain area of C-4 that might take personal offense with this going
in. Suppose you have an art museum or something. I mean, I'm just
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June 20,2001
giving you an example. This is straying from what C-4 was originally
intended for. But I agree with you that it may have some certain uses
in certain communities. There is a demand for this service. So if you
leave it as a conditional use, we can call it as it comes down.
MR. DUNNUCK: It may be helpful to hear from your one
registered speaker, Tim Hancock.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Mr. Hancock.
MR. HANCOCK: Good evening, Mr. Chairman,
Commissioners. First, as is the vogue this evening, I want to state
that I had nothing to do with the inception of this language. I don't
know who did. I saw it coming through and have a couple of
property owners that own C-4 land, and so we're trying to monitor it
through the process. And as I did and discussed it with them, that's
how this -- my involvement came about.
The C-4 zoning district is singly your most intensive commercial
retail zoning district. It's not C-1 or C-2. It's not convenience retail.
It's not small scale. It's not office. It permits car dealerships with
service repair adjacent to residential zoning. It permits, as of today,
100-foot-tall office buildings. It permits the widest variety of uses
that are not deemed industrial.
And I disagree with Ms. Murray. If you look at Olde Naples Self
Storage on Goodlette-Frank Road by Immokalee Road, if you go up
Goodlette-Frank to get to Immokalee, on the right is Olde Naples Self
Storage. That is self storage today. That is self storage under the
architectural standards that exist today. This is not an industrial
block building with garage doors in it. The land values do not permit
you to do that kind of storage.
By the same token, the analogy that a high-end C-4 use is going to
locate on property that you can get for the same price where you can
financially build self storage is not a realistic opportunity out there
either. A lot of work has gone into this. There are a lot of things that
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need to be done in our commercial zoning districts to create a little
more continuity from one to the next. There are a lot of gaps and a
lot of holes.
My request is that we leave it as a permitted use. Commissioner
Henning has mentioned that it not be permitted when directly
abutting residential zoning. I don't -- again, don't have any problem
with that. Granted you can have uses more noxious in C-4 adjacent
to those residential uses, but as far as this goes, I don't see that as
being problematic.
Second is if you limit the heighth on miniwarehouses to a
reasonable, you know, level, I don't see that as problematic. By
going to conditional use, you've already eliminated the conflict with
adjacent residential properties. You've already reduced the height to,
I would assume, less than half what is currently permitted in the
zoning district. You have standards that exceed what anybody else in
C-4 have to comply with by way of your commercial architectural
guidelines.
Quite frankly, if there are more conditions placed on it, you
aren't going to see self storage in C-4. And there isn't enough C-5
land out there. It's not available. And you can't just go out and make
it. If you try and rezone to C-5, the intensity of C-5 zoning and the
perceived intensity makes it such an uphill battle, no one's willing to
try it.
We have needs in the community for storage. We don't have the
volume of land available. Industrial has become far more valuable
than I think we ever imagined. Look at the sales prices on Trade
Center Way. So as our population increases and the demand for
storage increases and we have caused storage to become a higher-
end, upper-scale aesthetic appearance from the street side, we've
already driven the cost up some. We're driven it up significantly.
I'm concerned that if we don't do something to allow for storage
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June 20,2001
outside the C-5 zoning district, all we're going to be left with is what
you see in the City of Naples, which is air-conditioned vault storage
for oil paintings and furs. That doesn't serve the average Joe. That
doesn't serve the family who's here three or four months out of the
year that goes back up north. And we're just not seeing enough
inventory in the C-5 zoning district to accommodate this. So the idea
here was -- and I support staffs intention, which is to limit it, to
attach a greater level of -- of detail to it to make sure it is even more
compatible, above and beyond architectural standards. I think that
has been accomplished here.
So the conditional use process adds anywhere from 10 to $20,000
to getting to the point that you can even start getting a building
permit. It's going to drive the cost up more and more when, in my
opinion, in my professional opinion as a planner, is that based on
your architectural guidelines, the ministorage use is one of the least
intensive uses that will be contained in your C-4 zoning district,
forgetting the additional standards. Trip generation is dramatically
lower than the retail uses in C-4.
I mean, I don't know if you'd rather live behind the service
portion of a car dealership or ministorage. I would prefer
ministorage. The external impacts for the project are far less than
what's allowed in C-4 today. So I don't think it's opening the flood
gate by any means. I think it's recognizing a need and a lack of
inventory.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: When did we ever get to the
point that car dealerships could go into a C-4 as a -- as a permitted
use rather than conditional use?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: It's been there for a long time.
MS. MURRAY: It's been there for quite some time.
MR. HANCOCK: Decades.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I wish we could change that
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June 20, 2001
too.
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
I'm working on that we're going to -- COMMISSIONER COLETTA:
use is a necessity in this.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE:
And there's some things that
But I still hold that conditional
I agree.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: If someday in the future they
wanted to change it, I'll be all for looking at it. But at this point in
time, I want to be able to call this back and talk to the residents and
see if there's a real problem with local businesses, if it's going to be
fitting into the business pattern of that particular area.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Let me ask a question here because I -
- I'm going to just ask, and I don't know if we can answer it on a
specific area. But let's take where Costco is. Let's take where Lowe's
is and look at that. If we change this, is that going to upset that
business PUD where they can't build a smart park if they chose to put
one in there? Does that become conditional use under the changes? I
mean, you already have -- are --
MS. MURRAY: It's --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: -- allowed to do office.
MS. MURRAY: I'm sorry. I believe it's already a PUD.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Yes.
MS. MURRAY: So unless their PUD specified that they could
have that type of use, then they would have to come in and amend
their PUD.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: If there's not a -- if there's any uses
they want to do there today that require no amendments, this change
would not affect it.
MS. MURRAY: That's correct. And then, again, amending
their PUD, as would be required, they would be before you in a
public hearing setting where you could look at -- if they wanted to
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June 20,2001
amend it to include self storage, you would essentially have the safety
net of the public hearing process to look at what's surrounding that
property.
MR. DUNNUCK: And I'll just say this goes back to the
opening comments that we made, that we're going back and looking
at all these commercial districts and seeing, you know, where the
board stands on these issues. My goal is to outline a schedule for
you-all where we're bringing items forward to the board in advance
of Land Development Code where we have some public discussion
about them, get some input from the Board of County
Commissioners, and then move forward with the changes and look at
where you-all want to be with these commercial districts as a whole.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'd like to make a motion that
we pass this and determine they're a conditional use.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Second.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Any discussion? All in favor signify
by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Aye.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Opposed by the same sign.
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
COMMISSIONER COLETTA:
period.
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
Aye.
That means there won't be any,
Let me make a motion.
Conditional use in the C-4 zoning for ministorage warehouses not
abutting or adjacent to residential and must have -- well, no metal
doors, roll-up garage doors, shall be allowed on the outermost walls.
I don't know if that's already in here or not.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm not going to support it, and
the reason is I have seen this board mess up too many times by
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June 20, 2001
drafting from the dais. I'm just not going to go there.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I mean, this was the Planning
Commission's recommendation. So you -- you would say you're
opposed to not next to or adjacent to residential?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm saying I'm opposed unless I
can have it for a conditional use review.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Period?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Uh-huh.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. My motion -- my vote
stays.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. It fails. We're right back to
square one.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Does staff have a
recommendation in that circumstance?
MR. DUNNUCK: Well, what I would recommend -- I would
recommend approval of this subject to the fact that you're going to be
reviewing it this fall on a conditional-use basis and that you can move
forward. Beyond that, if that doesn't sway the commissioner to
reconsider, then I would say let's move on to the next item.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: The problem with that is that in
the meantime we've opened the doors.
MR. DUNNUCK: Conditional use where they'd have to come
before the commissioners.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: They'd have to come before the
commission. We will not meet for them to come in front of us.
We've got one meeting in August, and then it's the fall before they get
back. So if that's a concern, I think by the time it would get through
the system, you're going to have plenty of opportunity to review it, if
that's your concern.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Let me tell you, my concern is
we are not going to be sitting here all the time. Well, we hope that
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June 20,2001
we're not. We hope we get to move on.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Be careful. You're digging a
hole, Tom.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And my concern is, you know,
somehow one of them gets through the cracks, and then we don't
have citizen participation about concerns about neighborhood traffic
impacts. That's my concern, is neighborhood impacts of traffic.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Conditional use, one more
time.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's what we're --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA:
saying.
COMMISSIONER HENNING:
COMMISSIONER COLETTA:
Same thing. That's what you're
Right.
Same concern we got. Remind
you, again, they can always change it sometime in the future if you --
MS. MURRAY: You might want to --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The reason that --
MS. MURRAY: You might want to consider it. And then after
you have a few conditional use cases, you might say, "Well, gee,
we're really not having a problem, you know, historically. Let's make
it a permitted use." But this is kind of a -- the conservative approach,
but it at least gives you the opportunity to see what the impact is and
what the residents are going to say. You're going to get to look at
traffic impacts, traffic circulation, architectural, proximity to
neighborhoods in a public hearing.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner Henning, I respect your
vote, but I think what we're trying to say is all the safeguards will be
built in in a short period of time, to look at it. And if we want to
further do something after they bring the bigger picture back, I think
you've got, perhaps, more safeguards under what you do tonight then
you might have had in the past, is what I'm understanding. But that's
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June 20,2001
your call, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: When have we talked about
traffic impacts under a conditional use?
MS. MURRAY: You're required to analyze them as part of the
conditional use process.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. I -- I can live with that.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Great.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: You want to change your vote?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I will change my vote.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All right. Duly note for the record that
Commissioner Henning now votes in the affirmative.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: We need a new motion.
MS. STUDENT: You have to have a new motion and second
and vote.
MR. WEIGEL: If the motion is the same as the previous motion
made that failed --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Can I make a new motion?
MR. WEIGEL: Is it going to be brand-new and different in
some respect?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No.
MR. WEIGEL: Okay. Then you are reconsidering the previous
motion. So first make a motion to reconsider.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Move to reconsider the previous
motion. Somebody say second.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Second.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'll second.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Call the question.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All in favor signify by saying aye.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Opposed by the same sign.
(No response.)
Page 105
June 20,2001
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Now we're back to --
MR. WEIGEL: You're ready to go.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All right.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Now all in favor.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All in favor of the -- of the staff's
recommendation signify --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: With the conditional use.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: -- signify by saying -- I mean second.
I need a second.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. All in favor signify by saying
aye.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm sorry. Didn't we just -- by
reconsidering we called back up the other motion and second that
was already on the floor? Isn't that what the motion to reconsider
does?
MR. WEIGEL: Right. It brings it up to reconsider, but you've
got to vote again.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Right. So let's vote again, but
we don't have to restate the motion because we're going to screw it
up. So the motion that's back on the floor is the first one. The
second's already there.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. All in favor of the motion as
originally stated, now back on the floor, signify by saying aye.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Opposed by the same sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Motion carries. Thank you very
much.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Boy, I'm sorry.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Motion to adjourn.
Page 106
June 20, 2001
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Good work, Tom. You're going to be
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Move the rest of the
amendments to the LDC.
MS. STUDENT: I have a point of clarification.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Point of clarification.
MS. STUDENT: Does that include the changes to the rooster
amendments that I passed out to the board?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Next item up?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Do you like your roosters, Mr.
Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I like them fried and baked.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Did you see the amendment
which is somewhere around here?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Let's go over it and review it,
wherever it is.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Can you read it for us, please?
MS. STUDENT: Yes.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: You're going to read about this
rooster? I can hardly wait. Let's do it.
MS. STUDENT: In the rural ag district under permitted uses, it
would be under (a) with those things that are underlined now out.
And it would say, owning, maintaining, or operating any facility or
part thereof for the following purposes is prohibited. And the
purposes are, one, fighting or baiting any animal by the owner of
such facility or any other person or entity; two, raising any animal or
animals intended to be ultimately used or used for fighting or baiting
purposes -- I just think that extra "or used" should be out -- and for
purposes of this subsection, the term "baiting" is defined as set forth
in Section 828.122(2)(a) Florida Statutes --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: We'll give it to you in writing.
Page 107
June 20,2001
MR. OLLIFF: Mr. Chairman, to help I think these are
amendments clearly defined to try and prevent people from raising
animals strictly for fighting purposes.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Mr. Olliff.
MR. OLLIFF: And I think we've got it written for you. You've
got that, and we'll provide a copy for the record.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All in favor of the rooster amendment
-- no. I need a motion to entertain the rooster amendment.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I make a motion that we accept
staff's --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Can we just do the whole
package including that, please?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Can we?
MS. STUDENT: And just make the finding that all the
amendments tonight were consistent.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: All stated -- as stated by legal counsel,
I entertain a motion that all amendments changed tonight, including
the one that's now on the table in regard to roosters and any other -- COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Are consistent with the
Comprehensive Plan.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Comprehensive Plan. Is that sufficient
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's my motion.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: -- Ms. Student?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Second.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I have a first. I have a second by
Commissioner Henning. Any discussion?
All in favor signify by saying aye.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Motion carries 4-0. We stand
adjourned.
Page 108
June 20, 2001
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 8:19 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL D~UNDER ITS CONTROL
JAME~ AR TE R, Ph.--~., CHAIRMAN
ATTEST:
DWIGHT E. BROCK, CLERK
'~')': ::. [ne.s:e~m~hures ~roved by the Board on
. :'::.:a~prCS~nt~ea ~ or as co~ected
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF DONOVAN COURT
REPORTING, INC., BY BARBARA DRESCHER, NOTARY
PUBLIC
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