BCC Minutes 06/15/2005 B (Budget Workshop)
June 15, 2005
TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BUDGET WORKSHOP
Naples, Florida, June 15, 2005
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 and have been created according to law and having
conducted business herein, met on this date at 9:00 a.m. in BUDGET
SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex, East Naples,
Florida, with the following members present:
CHAIRMAN: Fred Coyle
Jim Coletta
Donna Fiala
Tom Henning
Frank Halas
ALSO PRESENT:
Mike Smykowski, Budget Director
Jim Mudd, County Manager
Leo Ochs, Deputy County Manager
Marjorie Student- Stirling, Assistant County Attorney
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NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING
Notice is hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Collier
County will conduct Budget Workshops on Wednesday, June 15, 2005,
Thursday, June 16, 2005 and Friday, June 17, 2005 at 9:00 a.m. Workshops
will be held in the Boardroom, 3rd Floor, W. Harmon Turner Building,
Collier County Government Center, 3301 East Tamiami Trail, Naples,
Florida to hear the following:
COLLIER COUNTY GOVERNMENT
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
FY 2006 BUDGET WORKSHOP SCHEDULE
Wednesday, June 15,2005 - 9:00 a.m.
General Overview
Courts and Related Agencies (State Attorney and Public Defender)
Administrative Services
Public Services
Transportation Services
Community Development
Public Utilities
Debt Service
Management Offices (Pelican Bay)
County Attorney
BCC
Airport Authority
Thursday, June 16,2005 - 9:00 a.m.
Constitutional Officers:
Property Appraiser
Elections
Clerk of Courts
Sheriff
Friday, June 17, 2005 - 9:00 a.m.
Wrap-up (if required)
June 15, 2005
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, ladies and gentlemen, the Budget
Hearing is in session. Will you please stand for the Pledge of
Allegiance.
(Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you very much. I see we have a
number of elected officials and other dignitaries in the audience -- that
doesn't include you, Sue Filson; you can't hide from us, we know who
you are -- and we will introduce you whenever we get to the budgets.
Otherwise, I'm afraid I'm going to miss somebody.
We have an item left over from yesterday. County Manager, will
you guide us through this?
Item #3A
THIS ITEM WAS CONTINUED FROM THE JUNE 14,2005 BCC
MEETING - A PRESENTATION OF THE ADVISORY
COMMITTEE OUTSTANDING MEMBER AWARD TO RUSSELL
A. BUDD, CHAIRMAN OF THE COLLIER COUNTY PLANNING
COMMISSION FOR JUNE, 2005
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. This was a continued item, Mr.
Chairman, Commissioners, from yesterday. It's Item 3(A(I). And it
was a presentation of the Advisory Committee Outstanding Member
award to Russell A. Budd of the Collier County Planning Commission
for June of2005. And I'd ask Mr. Budd ifhe would come forward to
the dais.
And the reason we continued is he was out of town and we
wanted to make sure that we gave this award to him.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Now, how long has Russell been serving
MR. MUDD: Sir, we will --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- the public? A long time, right?
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June 15, 2005
MR. MUDD: It seems like forever.
The -- Russell demonstrated his belief in community service by
his active participation -- now, Mr. Budd, you need to come over here
so everybody can see your picture, okay?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: We're even going to get a picture of this,
Russell.
MR. MUDD: -- demonstrated his belief in community service by
his active participation in numerous organizations. He is the
immediate past chairman of the Board of Directors for the Greater
Naples Chamber of Commerce; he has served on the Collier County
Planning Commission for 11 years, and is currently the Chairman.
His service as a Planning Commissioner will terminate in July.
In addition, Russell is currently serving as a volunteer on the
selective service Board, and is a member of the Board of directors for
the Bank of Florida. He was elected to the Board of Commissioners in
the Golden Gate Fire Control and Rescue District in 1993 and served a
four-year term, acting as Chairman for three of those years.
Russell is a past member of the Naples Golden Gate Rotary Club,
and the Paul Harris Fellow in 1988. And the 1987 through '88 club
Rotarian of the year. He served for six years as a member of the
Board of Trustees for Seacrest Country School -- Day School. He is a
former member of the Board of Directors for the Greater Naples
YMCA.
Through Russell's efforts over the past 11 years, the overall
effectiveness of the Collier County Planning Commission has
increased significantly, and the impact that he has had on the
Commission primarily over the past three years has improved
considerably the Planning Commission's effectiveness in formulating
recommendations regarding all land use petitions and all proposed
amendments to the Collier County Land Development Code and the
Growth Management Plan that ultimately go to the Board of County
Commissioners.
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June 15, 2005
Mr. Budd has had a positive impact on this community and has
contributed significantly to our efforts to promote trust and confidence
in local government. His professionalism, patience, confidence and
integrity have ensured that government continues to look out for the
overall well-being of the citizens of the County and not simply the
petitioner's needs and desires.
His overall effectiveness performance and participation on the
planning -- as a Planning Commissioner has in one word, been
outstanding. His actions validate that he is truly deserving of receiving
the advisory committee outstanding member for his overall
contributions to the citizens of Collier County.
Mr. Chairman, Commissioners, I present to you Mr. Russell A
Budd.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Russell, it's a pleasure -- (applause).
Russell, it's a please to present to you this plaque to indicate our
appreciation for the many contributions you've made to Collier
County Government and to the citizens of Collier County. Probably
the most valuable part of this presentation is a parking space.
CHAIRMAN BUDD: Handicap parking.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: No, it's not handicap. No, it's not
handicap. Parking space and an J.D. card to get you into our now
secure parking, since you probably spend as much time here as we do.
Thank you very much, Russell.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And Russell, can I tell you from the
Planning Commission how much they all admire you and your
leadership. And just a message from them that they have enjoyed
every bit of time working with you. You've been a great leader, thank
you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Now, we want to get a picture with you,
if you wouldn't mind here.
MR. BUDD: Okay.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, Mr. Mudd?
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GENERAL OVERVIEW
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, if you'll notice in your packets, the
first page is the Notice of the Public Hearing. And I'm going to focus
in on Wednesday, June 15th. This is a three-day meeting. Hopefully
it won't go three days. But for today, we'll start with a general
overview . We'll go to courts and related agencies, we'll go to admin --
and then we'll start into the County Manager's organization,
Administrative Services, Public Services, Transportation, Community
Development, Public Utilities, we'll turn to Debt Service, Management
Offices, with Pelican Bay included, the County Attorney. Ms. Filson
gets to do the BCC side of this, and then the Airport Authority will
close out the day.
So without further ado, we'll start on that particular item, and
we'll start with a general overview.
Commissioners, I normally start this, and I don't have any secret
beans or any dust today. But we normally talk about how well we did.
You gave the budget guidance out. The Board sent budget
guidance out to all the agencies, including the constitutional officers.
And we want to go over -- we want to make sure that you have a kind
of a tally of how well we did on that particular budget guidance.
The general fund millage, the Board told us they wanted to have
that millage neutral. And that's that first bullet up there. And indeed
we came forward with a budget that's millage neutral.
The same millage neutral approach was applied to the MSTU
general fund. We like to call that the unincorporated general fund.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And by the way, millage neutral means
not requiring a tax increase.
MR. MUDD: A tax rate increase, yes, sir. I use the word rate on
that particular -- some people have some properties that have
appreciated values that have gone up significantly this year.
General fund capital millage, the Board sets aside a .33 mil.
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equivalent. And again, that .33 mil. equivalent has been kept, and our
score card is over here on this column.
Stormwater millage, the Board basically set aside .15 mil.
equivalent, and the .15 mil. equivalent has been applied.
For the County Manager's Agency, there's a limit on new
positions, with the exception -- and the Board made that exception
with the North Naples Regional Park -- excuse me, the North Collier
Regional Park. And you can -- and we've come in at 25 net positions,
and you can see the math.
The Board approved seven positions here in May of -- May 24th
that had to do with unfinanced requirements for the '05 budget. The
46.1 -- I still have to find that .1 person yet -- at North Naples
Regional Park, and it basically nets out at 25 positions.
Now, we have received a request from the Big Cypress Basin
Board. Last year's budget, '05 budget, they had asked for two
positions that they would fund in transportation in the stormwater
department. To date we have not added those positions because the
money has not been forthcoming from the Big Cypress Basin Board.
This year they asked for two positions worth of work out of our
pollution control section. And so I don't count those positions because
I count those as contract employees. But I just let you know, right now
Big Cypress Basin has an FTE ceiling, but they have money in order
to get the job done.
Adherence to the general fund budget allocation is the next item
that we'd like to talk about. The Board basically said that our
assumption was to keep the budget at 11 percent assessed value. And
what -- and that was our guess at what the assessed value was going to
come in, because in '05 the assessed value came in at 11.3 percent, I
believe. So our 11 percent was pretty much a little less than it was last
year, because our assessed values had been going down over the last
couple of years. This year it spiked up to -- well, it's good news for
the County.
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You can see who brought their budgets in at the 11 percent
taxable rate. And then if you take a look at what the rate finally came
in at from the property appraiser, you can see who came in under
those particular -- and that's kind of the pie, you know, the slice of the
pie based on what their allocations were in the '04 general fund. You
basically told everybody to stay within those percentages. And I'll talk
about that a little bit more as we move on.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning, did you have a
question you wanted to ask now?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah. I didn't notice when
public speakers are going to talk about the budget.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: At the end?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay, at the end.
MR. MUDD: Or Commissioner, would you like to do it after --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: After each budget?
MR. MUDD: -- after each presentation, if it's directed at that
particular area?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: We can do that. But if it's the budget in
general, we'll do it at the end.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, at the end of each day?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah.
MR. MUDD: Okay. And if you'd turn your speaker slips into
Leo Ochs -- put your hand up, Leo -- okay, that sits over there, and
he'll get those things arranged.
The next part of your budget guidance was to take a look at
budget metrics. And this was an effort that we started last year to try
to compare ourselves to other counties, comparable counties, to see if
our budgets are in the ballpark or not. You know, you take a look at
what need that you have and then you take a look and see how
everybody else is doing it and try to measure yourself against it.
As far as proposed budget and who sent in metrics: County
Manager, yes, Sheriff elections; Tax Collector, no, Clerk, no, Property
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Appraiser, no. And some of those three constitutional officers have
some issues. The Clerk's under Article 5, part of it's state funded, very
difficult as that system starts to work its way out.
And then you can see by the different highlights, the Tax
Collector's budget is submitted on August 1. You've got the Clerk on
Article 5, and the property appraiser has a budget approved by the
state.
One of the other things that you talked about in your budget
guidance was overtime. One of the other things you talked about was
overtime. And the guidance was to basically -- in previous years we
had worked on a fill of 96 percent. And we assumed there would be a
four percent attrition. In this particular budget, we assumed that our
fill would be at 98 percent and that that two percent left over, that we
would have to fill that particular slot that was vacant with an overtime
position. And sometimes folks are at double time, okay, when they do
that. Sometimes it's time and a half. To try to work that in the
guidance to figure out what percentage that is gets to be very tedious,
so we basically said okay, that two percent would be double time for
budgeting guidance.
Now, your departments and agencies exceptions, I've put down
my departments that didn't meet it as an agency in the County agency
overall. I meet that guidance. But I did highlight those departments
within my organization that had problems meeting that particular
guidance. And I knew it would be an interesting piece of guidance
that -- to have people meet in the budget for some of the departments
that I have.
But again, from a County Manager's agency overall, I -- in some
departments I have no problem making it. So overall, those
departments basically group up under the County Manager and we
make the guidance.
The Sheriff did have some problems with this particular item.
Discretionary operating expenses. Current service discretionary
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operating expenses limited to 3.9 percent. I had three departments that
had some issues with that particular item. And they will talk to you.
All are in the Public Utilities division, and they will talk to you about
that today during their particular presentations.
Graphically how did we do as far as the guidance is concerned? I
did mention that we had some issues with making the pie in three
particular places. We had it with the road program subsidy. That
basically is -- reflects the debt service on the road bonds and the use of
the 14.1 million road reserves.
Commissioners, as you know, you just did the second bonding
item on the road program for gas taxes. And I've got a slide that will
talk about that in just a second. What that basically did is it let us pay
that second bond issue back, and we did it inversely. So the first one
we paid up front higher interest in premium payments, and then in the
second one, they were easy in the first part and then they were heavy
at the end. So that basically leveled out both payments to the tune of
about 14 and a half million dollars a year.
With that, we don't have the spike that we had contemplated with
that road reserve. And you remember last year, we had it up to $14.1
million in order to capture that spike so that we could smooth it out to
$26 million.
We didn't have to add new money in, so we kept it at 24 million,
and we're moving that reserve out into transportation to do
pay-as-you-go. But again, next slide that I show you will talk about
that particular item in details.
The -- on the Sheriffs particular -- oh, by the way, that road
subsidy was off some 19 million, but we moved that money out and
that's why you see that difference on the road subsidy.
Then you run into the debt that reflects the full 1.5 mils in
storm water. The '04 budget pie did not include a separate millage for
the stormwater. It also includes $1 million from the Big Cypress Basin
to offset cost of the debt associated with the Fleischman property on
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Goodlette and Golden Gate Parkway.
And if you remember correctly, that's also part of the settlement
for the South Golden Gate Estates roads, where the Florida
Department of Environmental Protection, South Florida Water
Management District basically, for turning over those roads to them so
that they could add that to the comprehensive Everglades restoration
program, they give us $1 million a year for 20 years. We got them to
agree that the first 10 years would be used against the Fleischman
property, and they give us a million a year on that, and that basically
talks about that particular item.
Everybody else. The Sheriff is, based on the pie figure of 39.6
percent, is over his percentage by $917,269.
I said I'd talk a little bit about the road debt service. And I
wanted to make sure that we at least keep an acting total that's going
on. If you take a look at the shortfall -- and I want to you think back,
and I don't want to get you into the nightmare side of the house, but if
you remember the half penny sales tax referendum. The shortage on
our road program for not keeping our impact fees up to speed for
about a decade was some $257 million. That was defeated in the
referendum. It seemed that we had a clear direction from the voters
that they wanted to make up that shortfall by using current revenues.
What the Board did in 2003 is they borrowed $98 million using
gas taxes. It was a revenue bond. And then we did another revenue
bond on the remaining gas taxes here this year, just about a month
ago, and we're finishing that up right now so the chairman can sign all
the papers. And that basic bond issue went for 96 million.
If you subtract those two bond issues from the total of 257
million, it leaves you $62 million left. And that was the part that we
were going to pay-as-you-go out of ad valorem taxes and sales tax
revenues. Well, it all goes into the ad valorem -- or goes into the
general fund.
First year pay-as-you-go we were able to free up 5.9 million. So
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we've paid in '03 5.9 to the pay-as-you-go. '04 we paid 4.2. And '05,
we paid 10.8. This year, by pulling that money out of the reserves,
we're able to pay $21 million.
Now, what does that do for us? Our original plan was the
pay-as-you-go amount, we would have to go for commercial paper.
We have pulled a lot of that money in previous years, so we freed
those dollars up and we don't have to do the commercial paper. So we
don't have to go out and pay interest on that fund.
And so in '07 our projection is 9 million and that would leave 11
million. By '08 we'll be pretty well paid up as pay-as-you-go. So
there's really no need to do that commercial paper and then have that
steep spike that you'd need to have those reserves.
So I just wanted to give you a full read-out of where we sit as far
as the pay-as-you-go is concerned. And you pretty much have put
away $24 million now in recurring dollars going to transportation
every year out of the general fund in order to pay that. The difference
is off the debt payment for the two bond issues, we'll use those to get
at the shortfall and transportation as we move along in the future; may
that be east of951 as a result of that study. And I think I briefed all
the Commissioners at one time on that particular issue.
Commissioners, if you'll look in your booklet, you'll notice under
the general fund, there is a -- there is a page -- Mike, can you give me
the page on that? There is a page that has a highlight. And again, this
isn't an eye test.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: A-5.
MR. MUDD: On A-5 there is a highlighted number in the
middle of the page that basically talks about capital outlay UFR,
unfinanced requirement. Based on the budgets that have been
submitted, you have $7.8 million to go against unfinanced
requirements. And we'll hear about those a little bit. Plus you have an
unfinanced requirement list that's also been attached under my tab.
Mike, where does it start on the pages, please?
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MR. SMYKOWSKI: It begins on A-IO. There's an itemized
listing, and that is followed in the same order. There's a description of
each of the UFRs.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, and what we've done is we've
taken all of those that have been brought forward in the book and
summarized those on one page.
Then if you turn to the 111 expense summary, you'll notice
there's also a highlighted box -- Mike, page? -- that says capital outlay,
unfinanced requirements on the 111 expense summary. And you have
$991,000 that's unspent that you can use against those particular
UFRs.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: That's on A-6, Commissioners.
MR. MUDD: And now I'd like to talk about my particular
agency, or we can go to the layout as it sits in the book.
On A-2 and A-3, you've got the Collier County '05 budget
summary in a macro look. And what -- we've designed the book, and
we've kept to that format so that you can go from there to any division
and you can drill down and get the specifics on any particular issue
that you want in that budget.
The budget that you have at the bottom of A-2, the total net
County budget is minus .3 percent. And the total net budget, without
the Tax Collector, who we don't get a budget until the 1 st of August, is
at 1.4 percent increase. So we're doing pretty well holding our own as
far as the budget is concerned from a macro view.
What I'd like to do a little bit now is to take a look at the County
Manager's operation on the top part, and take a look at the operating
budget and talk a little bit about what I tried to do was drill down
some of the things that seemed to have caused some anomalies in the
budgets and some things that we can't control.
If you'll look up here -- and again, it's a little bit of an eye chart,
but not too bad, if you're looking at it in your computer screens. At
the County Manager's agency, you'll see a 4.1 percent. When you
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take -- and it's basically the same 4.1 percent that's sitting on the page
that sits on A-2.
When you take a look at that and you take out the Collier County
fire districts and the County fire -- you take out Ochopee and the Isles
of Capri and the County fire, which are all controlled by MSTU, and
then you take -- and you move those things, those particular items out
of the budget, then my particular items turns out to be around 2.9
percent.
In Administrative Services, you'll see that it's at 12.6 percent. Up
here you come down to Administrative Services, and there's some
things that seem to want to stick out that aren't really controllable.
The budget reflects four special revenue funds: Driver's education, the
800 megahertz, the GAC land sales and the ADA compliance, which
increased our carry forward.
Fleet fuel distribution increased by $454,000. The risk
management fund, the reserves increased by seven million, reflecting
better claims, experience and increased cost. In property insurance
market and in the value of assets, because we've had some new
facilities that have had to be insured. When you take those particular
items out, that 12.6 percent comes out to be about 8.9 percent.
Public Services Operation, and in each one of those, the division
administrators and the department heads will talk about those in
particular, but I'm trying to give you a macro.
The Public Services Operation, the museum budget increased by
some $365,000. Almost 366, due to a strong tourist tax revenue
stream.
The North Regional -- the North Collier Regional Park operation
has an operating fund of about 2.4 million in expanded service. If you
take those particular items out of Public Services operation, that 14
percent goes to 6.8 percent.
Transportation Services operation. Let me take it down just a
little bit. Transportation Services operation, the landscape programh
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increased approximately 1.6 million. The Transportation
Disadvantaged Program increased approximately a half a million
dollars. And you have $1 million for lime rock road paving program.
We have about 107 to 110 miles of lime rock road that we're trying to
get paved out into the estates and other areas of Collier County, and
you can just go down in the Bayshore area and you can see dirt roads
down there, too, so we don't have to go too far to see that.
That million dollars basically will pave around seven miles of
road. And it's going to be something to get at that particular program
over a series of years.
If you take those items out of Transportation Services operations
budget, that 5.9 percent comes out to be a negative 1.5 percent as far
as this budget is concerned.
Community Development, Environmental Services is next.
You'd look at that thing and you see 40.4 percent, you go, oh, my
goodness. Conservation Collier maintenance reflects the third year of
program, the total appropriations increase by approximately $2.2
million. The Immokalee CRA increase by $163,000. CDS reserves
increased by $9 million, due to strong activity in building, planning
activity and bonding for capital facilities last year.
That 40.4 percent, if you take those particular items out of
Community Development's budget, brings that percentage in at 13.3
percent, as far as the increase is concerned.
And last but not least is Public Utilities Operation. And that
utility reserve increased approximately 6.4 million. They've got
continued system growth, and they do get some line breaks, especially
on U.S. 41. We have three recent examples there. And they're doing
some major pipe changing out in that particular area.
If you take that 6.4 million increase out of their reserves, that
13.7 turns out to be about 8.8 percent. If you take a look at that from a
County perspective, if you take all of those particular items, as they
seem to be a little bit of an anomaly from the County Manager's
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budget, that 14.5 percent that sits for the County Manager Agency
turns into about 6.8 percent. And we'll hear from each one of those
division folks as we move forward.
One of the things that I'm also required to do is basically talk to
you about metrics a little bit. And what we did, we asked to be
compared in the budget guidance to Lee, Manatee, Charlotte, Marion
County and Sarasota County. And this basically talks about the
number of employees you have in the County Manager's agency
against 1,000 people population. Right now there's 6.34 employees
per 1,000 in Collier County into the manager's agency. Lee is sitting
at around 8.6, Manatee, at 7.1, Charlotte around 7.08. Marion
County's big, but it's also pretty rural, and Sarasota County is sitting at
around 8.17.
From what I see from those particular metrics, we're trying to do
more with less, and we're trying to hold our head count down in some
areas as we talk about the budget today. We might have held it down a
little bit too tight. But from an employee standpoint, we're under
everyone except for Marion County.
If you talk about adjusted budget per capita in unincorporated,
you take a look at Collier against that same menu of counties. Collier
is spending about 1,207 per person, and that's what's in their budget;
Lee is around 1,500; Manatee's at 1,366; Charlotte's at 1,300; Marion's
at 806; and Sarasota's at 1,952. So I would say from this particular
metric, you should take a look at it, I think the citizens of Collier
County are getting some great service for a minimal expenditure of
dollars on their part.
One last thing I'd like to talk about is -- and, you know, I'm going
to wait for this part. There's a lot of people waiting here. We'll talk
about this particular innovative project. I'd like to transpire maybe at
the end of the day and we'll get after it then.
Without further ado, sir, the next presentation that you're going to
get is from courts and related agencies: State attorney, public
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defender. Ladies and gentlemen, if you'd just take those seats that are
on that table right there.
COURTS AND RELATED AGENCIES (STATE ATTORNEY AND
PUBLIC DEFENDER)
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Commissioners, there's a summary of the
Courts and related agencies on Page B-1 on the Courts and related tab
in your budget binders.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And if you wouldn't mind, for the benefit
of the public, would you please introduce yourselves, starting with
Judge Manalich.
JUDGE MANALICH: Good morning, Mr. Chairman, members
of the Board. I'm Judge Ramiro Manalich from County Court.
MR. MIDDLEBROOK: Good morning. Mark Middlebrook,
Senior Deputy Court Administrator, the 20th Circuit.
MR. RUSSELL: Morning. Steve Russell, State Attorney for the
20th Judicial Circuit.
MR. JACOBS: Good morning. Robert Jacobs, Public Defender,
20th Circuit.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you very much. Welcome.
MR. MIDDLEBROOK: Commissioners, basically I'm going to
give you the overview for the courts and let the state attorney and
public defender answer any questions for their budgets.
Our submission went down about $500,000 from last year. We're
doing a lot more work with a lot less resources. Fortunately the state
has stepped up and is picking up a majority of our court costs. We
still have a few outstanding bills out there from cases prior to July 1 st,
2004, and that requires us to carry some money in our court cost
budget.
Other than that, we really have no additions to our submission
from last year.
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June 15, 2005
MR. MUDD: Mr. Chairman, this is a really good budget as far
as the courts are concerned. They've done a great job making sure that
they're almost paying for themselves. And the reason I say almost, if
you look at B-1, you'll notice that the general fund outlay for their
particular item -- I'm looking at revenues in '04, '05, they were at
870,000. If you look at '03, '04, they were 3.4 million. A lot of that
has to do with Article 5 and some different fees that Article 5, revision
seven let the Board enact and let the court system enact. And if you
take a look at the '05, '06, that's down to $371,000.
Pretty much we've given them everything they wanted, okay, in
their budget. And we even increased, based on a committee that's
taking a look at jail overcrowding in which you were the chair. We've
even taken a look at increasing the staff in the State Attorney's Office
and the public defender in order to work on those case loads so that we
can try to help and maintain and decrease the amount of inmates that
we have in our jail. And so I believe that's an initiative that will serve
us well.
Now, if we could only get some more judges to help out with the
caseload, that would be great, but I believe the legislator's going to
take care of that.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah, I think that's going to be taken
care of.
But with respect to our program that we've been discussing in the
public safety coordinating council meetings, has any money been
included in our budget or the courts budgets to help with that? Are we
at the point where we need to be considering that in this upcoming
budget?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. There are expanded positions in the state
attorney and the public defender's budget in order to bring on sections
that can help with the caseload and work that out, so we've added
those in these particular budgets.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. So that the public understands
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June 15, 2005
what we're talking about, we of course have a problem with
overcrowding in our jails. Some other counties have developed
programs which have resulted in the reduction of j ail population by
expediting some case handling procedures and assuring that only those
people who need to be incarcerated are actually incarcerated. And
then those who represent no threat can be released on their own
recognizance, and thereby begin to solve some of the problems with
jail overcrowding and the high cost of building jails and staffing them.
So I understand we are planning some additional resources,
financial resources for that program, and hopefully will it will yield
the desired results.
Since the County Manager is in such a generous mood today, is
there anything else you need as far as money is concerned?
MR. JACOBS: I thank you for all your help with us.
MR. RUSSELL: From the State Attorney's end, we appreciate
Colonel Mudd's leadership on this jail management issue. Mr. Jacobs
and I have been working in another County with a similar project and
have find it very successful trying to keep much larger costs down to
avoid millions of dollars.
I do want to just make one note, and the County Manager is
certainly well aware and working on this, but space -- just to make
everyone aware, space in the State Attorney's Office is becoming a
critical issue. And we're working on it with the County Manager. But
we're subdividing and subdividing, and cutting up conference rooms
and file rooms, and it's just getting to be a very critical matter.
And again, I don't mean to imply that it's not being worked on,
but I just wanted to make the Commission aware that that's the top
priority for my office.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good. Thank you very much, Mr.
Russell.
Any questions by the Commissioners?
(No response.)
Page 18
June 15, 2005
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Are there any public speakers on this
section of the budget hearing?
MS. FILSON: No, Mr. Chairman.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Thank you very much. I
appreciate it. And thank you for working so closely with us and
adhering to budget guidance and making things a lot easier for all of
us. Thanks for the work you do.
MR. JACOBS: Thank you all. Thanks to Mr. Mudd as well.
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to our next
presentation, and that's -- that now down into the County Manager's
Organization, and that's the Administrative Services. If you could
please come forward to the table.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: While they're getting assembled, for the
benefit of the viewing public, the Administrative Services Division is
comprised largely of the internal support functions of the agency,
things like Human Resources, Purchasing, the IT functions, the Fleet
Management supports, and Facilities Management Services.
Ms. Lynn Price is the Administrator. And we would be on Page
C-1 under the Administrative Services tab in your budget binders.
MS. PRICE: Good morning, Commissioners.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Lynn, how are you this morning?
MS. PRICE: In deference to last night's meeting, I'm going to try
and make this as brief as possible.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you.
MS. PRICE: I just wanted to let you know that as a division, we
were able to follow the guidance that was given to us. There were two
exceptions in the overtime formula, and that was under fleet services
and facility services, both of which are responsible for 24/7 service to
make sure certain facilities run; for instance, the jail, the ambulances
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June 15, 2005
and the buses. Not all of that can be done during the routine day. As
so when emergencies come up, we have to take care of them. As a
division, however, we were well under the guidance for our overtime
budget.
As you go through, Mr. Mudd identified certain areas where
there were significant changes from last year's budget. I want to go
over those in just a little bit more detail. Under the driver's education
grant, the first year the school district chose not to make a grant
request. We now have about 15 months worth of revenues, and they
have in fact made a request of $200,000 to provide driver's education
services during the summer.
So that is a pass-through from monies that we collect from
moving violations on traffic tickets. So that passes from us onto the
school district.
Last year we budgeted $2.10 a gallon for fuel. This year we've
brought that in at $2.20. As you know, there's been significant
changes. We believe that that will be sufficient to cover the ups and
downs in the fuel. The 2.10 this year has worked out for us,
remembering that we don't pay, you know, full retail prices that you
see at the pumps.
Under maintenance and campus utilities, those increased, based
on adding several new buildings, some this year and some that are
coming on line next year. The annex parking garage, North Naples
Regional Park, the jail addition and some others. That is what spurred
those increases.
You'll notice a significant difference in GIS support. That was a
capital proj ect that this year is falling under the operating budgets of
the departments.
We've made a significant increase in investment for IT security.
Most of the problems that we face with IT security would be more of
an annoyance basis, but in truth we're looking at approximately
$20,000 an hour in productivity if our systems are hacked into. That's
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June 15, 2005
not an acceptable amount, and so we are making some investments to
ensure that our systems are as secure as we can make them.
The 800 megahertz system has for years gotten its funding from
-- also from revenue from moving violations. That revenue stream has
decreased. Or let me say that our investments are now outdoing our
monies coming in, and we're going to have to start supplementing that
some from the general fund.
The health insurance premium rates have actually gone down for
employees and for the County. However, we were able to meet all of
our reserves because of some aggressive planning on our part, as well
as our wellness program that's working real well. Our experience has
been very stable. And so that's allowed us to meet all of our state
requirements as far as that goes.
Those are the significant changes in our general fund budget.
And there is one item under the unfinanced request that I'd like to call
your attention to. It deals with records management. With the
proliferation of documents that we deal with, as well as the documents
we create through all of the computers and programs that we have, the
time has come, I believe, to take some significant steps in managing
those records, making sure that they're properly stored, properly
disposed of when the time comes, and easily accessible. And so I'm
hoping that after you've sorted through everything, that you might
give some priority to putting together a formalized -- more formalized
records management program.
At this point I'll open it up to any questions that you might have.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: GIS support system, huge
increase. I didn't understand, can you explain that a little bit better?
MS. PRICE: First three years of that project, it was a capital
project. None of the funding came from the general funds or from the
operating departments. This year the capital part of that is over and
we're charging all of the departments for the upkeep, for the licensing.
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June 15, 2005
And Barry can speak to some of the other expenses. That's why you
see such a big jump.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So that's maintenance. You did
the capital, now you're doing the maintenance and applications for the
GIS.
MR. AXELROD: If I may, Commissioner, the bulk of the cost
that you see there in that shift was due to a tactical reorganization. We
moved -- we had a separate section last year for the GIS staff. We
merged that in with our development staff so it shows as an increase in
that cost center. So the personnel, there were no additions, we just
merged them and moved them so it shows up as a larger expense, plus
the addition of the termination of the -- or the ending of the capital
project did result in the addition of operating expenses to that budget
as well. But the bulk was due to a reorganization. We moved about
eight people from the business application section, where you see a
decrease, to the GIS section.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Yes, Commissioners, to give you a -- to
hone in, on Page C-l, the business applications, the adopted budget in
'05 was 1.83 million. The proposed in '06 in current service is down
to slightly above $1 million. And the GIS system support went from
375,900 adopted in '05 to over a million dollars. So you're just seeing
that shift from that business application systems into GIS. And so that
kind of offsets each other. And then the expansion is geared towards
some of the maintenance that Ms. Price was eluding to.
THE COURT REPORTER: May I have your name, please.
MR. AXELROD: Barry Axelrod, the IT director.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You stated that's billed out to
the other departments --
MS. PRICE: Right.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- is that correct?
Where is that? That would be a revenue source, correct?
MS. PRICE: Mike could help you identify where all that's
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June 15, 2005
coming from. The general fund departments themselves aren't billed
out, but the -- all the enterprise funds and all the separate funds
actually have an IT allocation, and it's wrapped up within the IT
allocation.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Commissioner, on Page C-2, under the
funding sources, you see total operating revenue. Then there's -- the
second kind of grouping is total inter-County billings, the second one
down is department billings, information technology, and they're
billing out almost $1.8 million in offsetting revenue from that
department for --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And that's up $200,000 --
quarter of a million.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's just billing to enterprise
funds?
MR. AXELROD: Non-general funds.
MS. PRICE: Non-general funds.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Non-general funds.
MS. PRICE: Right.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Yes. As we add system applications in
other areas -- obviously if utilities is adding a supplemental billing
system, the general fund taxpayers should not bear the cost for a utility
system application. Therefore, that cost is paid for in part by those
utility and community development system users.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Did you finish?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yes, thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Is the nature of the GIS support that
you're providing such that it will -- it provides a service which will
result in cost reductions for other departments?
MR. AXELROD: Yes, sir. The--
CHAIRMAN COYLE: In what ways?
MR. AXELROD: It actually makes information more easily
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June 15, 2005
available. Where staff spent research time in a lot of cases to get
information, now the GIS system makes that more available. If I
could give you an example. We found that in a number of data bases
throughout the County, customer records were also annotated with
Commissioner district, okay? So if there were to be a redistricting of
any case, there would need to be changes in many data bases
throughout the County.
What happens now is we have a spatial way of showing
Commission districts, so now the address points that relate to those
customers just flow into the Commission districts. If there was a
change in boundaries -- and this goes for zoning or anything else,
those things would just flow out without having to be independently
changed within each application that we have across the County.
And again, we're seeing the traction with the GIS system start to
take off right now. The infrastructure is complete. It's a matter now of
getting the business processes that were manual before converted to
using this automation.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Did you expect any substantial increases
in the future as a result of increased utilization, or do you think it's
going to taper off?
MR. AXELROD: What we're seeing now is this will be pretty
stable. What we did see this year was extra demands, so there are
extra licenses and license fees, which carry maintenance associated
with them across -- I believe there were 35 extra licenses this year for
some of the more advanced users. We might see more of that in the
future, but generally I think the operating cost will be pretty stable.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you. Now, let's switch to another
category .
Insurance and health care insurance. It shows about a $15
million increase over last year. Our current running rate for this
current year is actually less than budget. But we're forecasting a
substantial increase over our current running rate. And I'd like to
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June 15, 2005
understand why.
MR. WALKER: Jeff Walker, Risk Management Director.
What has occurred, Commissioner -- Mr. Chairman, I'm sorry--
is that what we have seen is an improvement in our claims experience.
And the rates that were budgeted in the previous fiscal year and this
fiscal year have actually exceeded the claims experience need.
So what we -- there were two issues there. One was that we had
to meet a department of insurance funding requirement to make the
fund comply with state insurance requirements. Our goal was to do
that by the end of '06. We did that by this summer. So we're a couple
-- year or two ahead of that schedule. That's one thing.
The other is, from the standpoint of trying to keep costs level
over several budget years, what we have decided to do is to take that
good claims experience and use it to offset rate increases, so that the
budget remains stable.
What we did in the '06 budget is we are using some of those
reserves to keep our costs down. And we actually decreased the
allocated premium by six percent in '06.
So the increase you're seeing in that budget is an increase in
reserves, not operating expenses, due to improved claims experience.
And those will be used to offset future rates.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that's a good news item. I mean, if
we're holding down our claims for our insurance policy by having a
County nurse -- and we're going to have a nurse and a half here, if you
approve the expanded position that's there, because it's turned out to
be a really good program that saves us almost a million dollars a year,
because they use that nurse versus going to an emergency room or
whatnot. And our wellness program is taking off. That's good news.
And so the claim history is less than what we had budgeted. And
so we're trying to hold that down. And as you know, in previous years
the increases in our health insurance as far as to our employees has
been significant. And in some years their CO LA increase has been
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June 15, 2005
used based on increases in their medical program. So it's a good news
item. And if they're holding their claims down, then it shouldn't be
driving our health insurance fees through the roof. So there's some
savings for everybody here in this particular area.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I guess I just don't understand it. But it's
a $15 million increase in cost.
MR. WALKER: Actually, it's not.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, tell me--
MR. WALKER: In terms of costs that are allocated to the
various departments, in other words, let's for example say in the Board
of Commissioners budget for health care, those rates actually went
down six percent in the '06 budget.
What you're seeing in my budget is really that good claims
experience being retained in the form of reserves from actually the '04
budget and the '05 budget, the improvement in that claims experience.
And so what we're actually doing is decreasing the rate in '06 in
the aggregate of about a million, two. And those are real dollars that
are allocated to department budgets of participating departments and
agencies. That rate went down six percent.
So we budgeted a rate, we came in below it. That differential,
we're going to hold in reserve so that if our claims experience does
either deteriorate or we can use that to offset future rate increases.
Because the trend nationally is still about 12 percent. Fortunately
we're nowhere near that because of a lot of things we've done
internally among the staff to try to keep our cost down.
So what we're trying to do is manage that program and take more
of a long-term look at it and use those reserves to help us keep our
costs level. I hope that makes sense.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, if you could get your attention to
Page C-45. And Mike's going to help a little bit here.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: I'll try to simplify this for you. But I do
understand your direct question, Commissioner Coyle. On C-45, this
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June 15, 2005
is the detail of the Workers' Compensation fund.
And your questions specifically from the C-l page was, you
know, we had a budget of 5.8. Our actual expenditures are about 2.3,
but we're budgeting 5.8 again. Why are we budgeting 5.8 if our
ongoing expenses are only 2.3. A very legitimate question.
What you see in essence is the reserves that are required by
actuaries for our self-insured plans to be held in place. Those -- we
don't plan on spending those unless you see some abnormal activity.
And actual claims are running about where we budgeted them. If
claims were at a million 850 in forecast, we would have a million
dollars less than to carry over on the revenue side, and our reserves
would have been reduced by a million dollars.
So what you see here again is that actuarial claim requirement
that was budgeted at 3.6 in essence being re-budgeted at 3.6 in the
subsequent fiscal year.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You're just using this as an example,
because this is not what I was talking about, right? I'm talking about
MR. MUDD: C-43.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: We're going to get to --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- $38 million versus $21 million or $23
million.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: That's in the group --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's what I'm really talking about.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: We're on Page C-43 for that example. You
had an adopted budget of 31, call it $31.9 million in the group health
insurance fund, of which approximately $22 million was budgeted for
claims expense. $3.8 million was a reserve for health claims, and
we've been under a program that -- a negotiated agreement with the
state who monitors all self-insurance programs, we've been in catch-
up mode.
You will recall about two years ago, mid year we were doing
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June 15, 2005
budget amendments from all the operating funds, because the claims
experience was so adverse in that year that we were actually in danger
of running out of money. And Jeff worked out a remediation plan
with the state regulators who monitor our plan on a recovery mode.
Yes, our actual expenditures forecast are $23.1 million. Next
year we're budgeting 38.5. Based on the actuarial study, we're
expecting claims to increase to $21.7 million. That differential largely
in part because of good claims experience. We're spending $3.4
million less in claims than were budgeted this year. That's rolling over
into our fund balance and appropriated as a reserve next year.
Our actuarial requirements estimated is about $7 million. So we
are above our actuarial requirement for this plan, which, you know,
strength in your self-insurance plan is not a bad thing in and of itself.
And what Jeff has recommended to the County Manager is that
that extra reserve be used to offset the need for future rate increases,
again, claims that kind of run in cycles. You have a couple of good
years and then just the general age of our workforce and the people
that are available to work in Collier County tends to be geared toward
a higher age bracket. And frankly, as you age, you tend to need more
health services.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I will --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Can I try to simplify this somewhat?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. And one other thing I will say to you and
that is the reserve amount that sits there in '05, '06.
A previous County Manager once gave a premium holiday for a
whole year, okay, to the folks, and it brought reserves down and they
had real troubles. And I joked with the previous finance director, I
said premium what? I said that will be a cold day someplace. And I
was referring to Dante's inferno.
And so the -- what I was trying to get at is that that's not the way
to do business. When all of a sudden that reserve fund's up there, you
just don't blow it all and give everybody a free holiday as far as their
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June 15, 2005
premiums are concerned. That's not right. And what it does is it
really gets you in trouble. So this has been an ongoing dilemma for us.
Again, Mike mentioned to you, two years ago we were three million
in the hole. And so this --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: All right. As I understand it, and you tell
me if I'm wrong. I'm struggling with your accounting logic here.
You have accumulated a reserve that is far greater than you think
you will need this year because you think that sometime in the future
premiums will increase and you want to smooth out those premium
increases. Have I got it right so far?
MR. WALKER: That's right, Commissioner.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Absolutely.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. And in order to do that, you're
taking a larger portion of this year's general funds in order to do that
than you otherwise would require.
MR. WALKER: No.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Right?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: But I believe it's mandated by the
State, too.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: No, it's way beyond what's mandated by
the State, I think.
MS. PRICE: We are over what's mandated by the State. And
what we did was try to level out the costs so we don't have peaks and
spikes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: The important consideration here is that
it won't be spent unless it has to be spent --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- if there is a higher claims history for
next year.
MS. PRICE: That is correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. And if you do not expect that
higher claims history next year, you will roll that reserve over into the
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June 15, 2005
following year and hopefully not take as big a chunk of the general
fund revenue from revenues next year, right?
MS. PRICE: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: So there's no loss to taxpayers, but it is--
it is a safe but strange procedure. But okay, I understand it.
Just as long as it's not going to be spent unless there is
unfavorable claims history or unpredictable claims history in the
future.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: That is set aside solely to pay future group
health claims in this program and for nothing else.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: It's a rainy day.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Absolutely.
MR. WALKER: I would promise the Commission that that's
how those funds will be used and for nothing else.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And if we have a problem with a need
for reserves in some other category, we can move these funds to that
category, if they're not needed here. Is that true?
MR. WALKER: That -- I would agree with you, Mr. Chairman,
that that is an option that you have. What we have tried to do is to
think strategically two, three, four years down the road so that we can
keep our health budget at more of a level state rather than seeing
spikes of 30 percent, 20 percent, even 10 percent. But that certainly is
an option that the Board has.
Obviously the only caveat I would place upon that is you do have
to meet your department of insurance requirements.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I understand that part, yeah.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: And Jeff does evaluate the rates on an
annual basis. And obviously if our claims experience continues on
and the wellness program generates some additional benefits to the
plan itself, that would be taken into consideration in the health rate
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June 15,2005
that would be budgeted in fiscal year '07 a year from now as well, and
could theoretically be reduced if the claims were continuing on this --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I hope you see my concern. We're
locking away money that we don't currently need in anticipation of
some event that might not occur. And that's okay, because you're
being safe. But if those events don't occur and you've gotten more
reserve than the state requires and your future projections don't
anticipate an extraordinary increase, those funds are locked away. We
could use them on something perhaps more important to the County
and to the taxpayers of Collier County . We have that flexibility . We
can transfer that money, if we need to do it, based on changing
priorities, right? Everybody understands?
MR. WALKER: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. All right, then I'm okay.
MR. WALKER: I only have one other thing to say, which is
important.
Health care costs are very cyclical. And it would not take very
much for two or three million dollars to disappear within a period of a
month or two. That's really what happened to us about three years
ago. So I just want to point that out that you have good times and then
you can have some really bad times. And so that's just for edification
purposes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, thank you very much. I think
we've covered it.
Commissioner Henning?
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, one thing we haven't covered and I
didn't lay it out clearly, this is the last year to get us to 80/20. So your
'06 budget is at 80 percent government funded, 20 percent employee
funded as far as the County Manager's agency is concerned. And I
believe the Clerk and the supervisor of elections has got that same
plan.
So we over the last five years have gone down, increased the
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June 15, 2005
employees share of the health benefits by two percent a year over the
last five years. And we went from a 90/10 split where the government
was paying 90 percent of the health insurance program and the
employees were paying 10, to an 80/20 split. And we promised the
Board that we would do that and we would take that under, and I will
say the '06 budget is -- we got to that level that we promised you five
years ago that we would be at.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Thank you very much.
And Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I'm ready to go to expanded
services. But I don't know if we answered all the other questions.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I just wanted to add one thing, if
you don't mind.
And you're paying this ahead of time. You actually didn't have
this projected until actually 2006, right, but you wanted to just catch
up in advance, is that it?
MR. WALKER: Yes. Commissioner, when we were going
through particularly bad claims experience, you have to produce
actuarial studies that reflect that. And we had to set rates at levels that
anticipated that that trend would continue. So that's how we budgeted
for it.
Fortunately our claims experience modified, it improved, and
we've been able to actual decrease our rate as a result of that. So I
hope I'm answering your question.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But what you said was actually you
took like two years and put it into this year, right?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: State reserve.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So that you're there already, you
don't have to --
MR. WALKER: Yes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- worry about catching up --
MR. WALKER: Absolutely, yes, ma'am. Yes, ma'am.
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June 15, 2005
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning, did you defer to
Commissioner Fiala and still have a question, or --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah, I just -- we have some
expended services and the Administrative Services, and I just had
some questions on that. I didn't know if we were going to -- no, no, it
was good to stay on that topic.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: One last question, and I do
agree that it's good business sense to keep a contingency, the
contingency that we have in dollars and cents in our insurance fund.
In the case of the worst scenario, how long would that last us? What's
that bill for? Does it last for like six months, three months, two
months?
MR. WALKER: Well, we've set a reserve requirement of about
$7 million, okay? We're about 11, a little over 11 and a half,
thereabouts.
I will tell you that if our claims experience deteriorated, just like
I said, I mean, in the period of two or three months you can see your
claims experience double. It's not difficult to do that.
Now, we do have a very good reinsurance program in place now
that wasn't in place a couple of years ago. But even at that, even if
you exceeded your anticipated claims expense, you'd have to still
incur about a million and a half dollars more before you got into the
excess carrier's money. So there still is a need for a cushion there to
be financially secure.
I guess, Commissioner, what I'm saying, is it's not difficult to eat
up what looks like a lot of money. And that's the reason that we need
to continue to pursue aggressive plan management, aggressive
wellness programs. Our average age is about 48 years old in this
organization. So, you know, we've got train wrecks that we need to be
ready for.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I hope when you're referring to
train wrecks, you're not talking about the people that are over 48.
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June 15, 2005
MR. WALKER: No, no, no, absolutely not. I'm one of those, so
I'm -- I may be the train wreck.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That only includes these two.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You're looking at about 300
years of wisdom.
MR. WALKER: That's absolutely right.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, you could easily have -- a couple
years ago we had two preemies that came on Board. I'm not talking
about 48-year-old people, I'm talking about a problem with birth.
And, you know, the kids, they're real healthy today, and I'm glad of it.
But when you do preemies, it costs a lot of money, because you've got
incubators and it's an intense period of time.
You know, you could run into a double or quadruple bypass,
okay, for somebody that maybe is over 48; somebody could be 34 and
have that. You can't predict that. That kind of happens. And when it
does, you get a whopping bill, and it goes against -- it basically is
taken out of this --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And in all honesty, we have a
number of County employees that are on the payroll for one reason,
and that's for the insurance benefits.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning, back to you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Did you want to go line by line
(sic) on the expanded services or just questions, Commissioner?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Go ahead and take your questions and
we'll see where it leads us.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You have electrician for the new
jails, expanded?
MR. CAMP: For the record, Skip Camp.
Yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: How do you build a new facility
and request a professional position to -- I would guess replace new
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June 15, 2005
light switches or add new light switches or whatever? I mean, I don't
understand. Maybe can you help me with that.
MR. CAMP: Yeah, it's twofold. One is that there are -- in a new
facility you have all kinds of what I'll call warranty items that we'll
take care of right away and back charge the contractor.
But you also have -- the more important thing is the overall
square foot increases. And the jail is the biggest user. Right now we
won't have a dedicated person in the jail, for instance. He'll be for the
entire old jail and the new jail. Your old jail is a 20-year old electrical
intensive nightmare. So it's for -- the new square feet justifies the
position, but it's also for the entire jail and for the entire County also.
His primary responsibility, though, will be for the jail, both the old
and the new.
And also, you know, when we ask for new positions on these
new facilities, they're all prorated for the amount of time that they're
actually going to be on line.
There was another point I was going to make. It will come back
to me in a minute.
MR. MUDD: One of the things that bothers me a little bit, when
I went through and I drilled Mr. Camp about these particular items for
the people for the jail, I said, why can't you get an outside electrician
to go do that? And then his response is, yeah, we can go get an outside
electrician, but it takes one of our employees to guide him around
through jail because he can't be on his own. And so I'm going, well,
I'm burning a body in bringing an outside contractor in that could be
working someplace, so I'm kind of -- it's costing us dollars to get the
electrician in, but it's also costing us the employee time in order to be
the guide for the electrician, to make sure -- and oh, by the way, our
employee has to be certified by the Sheriffs Office in order to enter
the jail. So it's kind of a double-edged sword. You're paying double
duty if you're doing it that way.
MR. CAMP: Absolutely.
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June 15, 2005
There's two things there: One, one of our electricians has to be
with a contract electrician. And Commissioners, you can imagine,
most of what we do now in facilities is contracted out.
And number two, they also have to know where the panels are
and all the feeds and all that. So we use a lot of contractual services.
Unfortunately, we still have to have a skeletal electrical staff to show
those contractors around and escort them.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You'll have to do that with a
new employee anyways, correct?
MR. CAMP: Well, the new employee will come on relatively
quick. And quite honestly we'll use a veteran. We'll just rotate him.
A veteran will be in the jail, because it's so high intense, and then we'll
use the new electrician for some of the less intensive facilities, the
community center or something like that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The -- so we have a, I think
what you coined, a wiring nightmare over at the old jail?
MR. CAMP: Well, it's -- you know, as you can imagine over 20
or 30, in this case over 20 years, things happen. And we have to
change the original electrical architecture, if you will, based on the
current needs.
That building originally, incidentally, was very computer
intensive as it relates to the doors opening and closing. That has all
been redone for operational purposes. So we have a lot of in-house
institutional knowledge that a general electrician would not have.
When an electrician comes to your home, he doesn't really know
where the electrical panel is until you show him. And if you've made
changes over the years, he wouldn't know those changes either. Those
are the kind of issues we have, especially in the jail.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: His mode of transportation is
golf cart.
MR. CAMP: For on campus, yes. We try not to use vehicles if
we can get away with a golf cart. The problem is most of the times
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June 15, 2005
electricians and plumbers work out of their vehicles. So if it's on
campus and we can get away with it, we'll use a golf cart, because
they're, you know, less than half the cost. Otherwise, we try to put a
person in a vehicle so that we can use them off campus, if we have to.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And you have a vehicle for this
person, because it says he's going to be for the Immokalee Jail and the
Naples Jail.
MR. CAMP: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. And a lot of your
expansions are costed out? I notice that custodial maintenance for the
new facilities.
MR. CAMP: Yes, most of our services now, the majority of
what we do is contractual services. And we do that on a task-by-task
basis.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Any other questions?
Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: The question was answered.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, thank you.
Any other questions by Commissioners?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Do we have any public speakers on this, Mr.
Ochs?
MS. FILSON: No, sir.
MR. MUDD: Do you wanted to talk about admin. service
capital? Commissioners, do you need a briefing on that? I think you
need to talk about that a little bit.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yes, I do.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, that's the last two pages in that
section.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Yes. It follows that --
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June 15, 2005
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Beyond the chartreuse divider.
MS. PRICE: Beyond the chartreuse paper.
I'm going to defer to the department directors to address those.
Barry, if you would start on information technology?
MR. AXELROD: All right. We have a variety of capital
projects. They're basically driven by infrastructure needs or
departmental applications. Some of them are agency wide
applications.
I don't really have a presentation on this. If there's any questions
on anything in there that's not clear, I'd be happy to answer them.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Which one of these are applicable to GIS
support? Any at all?
MR. AXELROD: In an indirect way. Like I said, the GIS
capital proj ect is over, all right, so the capital investment in GIS is
completed. Things like, you know, Microsoft licenses which are
there, fiber expansion of our network, which are there, you know,
support all of our applications, it makes GIS available to our remote
facilities in a more responsive manner. So at that level, yes, but
otherwise it's just another application at this point.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: So if you have to license or purchase
additional software packages, those are really treated as operational
expenses rather than capital expenditures?
MR. AXELROD: After the initial investment. We include --
when we implement a new proj ect, the initial license loading, if you
will, is included in that capital expense. But after it's what we call
stable in production, where it's been there and it's in use, if there's
additional users that come on Board, they will pay for those licenses,
but not as a capital cost.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. All right.
And so at least here you have not identified any that are
specifically related to GIS support that you're --
MR. AXELROD: In a lot of those cases, they'll be in other
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June 15, 2005
people's budgets.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I see.
MR. AXELROD: In my department, we're covered within my
budget. But as other business processes come on line, usually they'll
be from the rest of the agency. They will have license costs to bear,
and it will come out of their budgets.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And so that should appear in their capital
expenditures.
MR. AXELROD: Or operating expenses.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Or operating expenses. Okay, thank you.
MR. MUDD: That brings us to facilities management.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I have a question on the software.
Is that -- does that mean we're getting updates in new software?
MR. AXELROD: You're referring to the enterprise agreement
line --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes.
MR. AXELROD: -- item? Yes, last year we entered into an
enterprise agreement with Microsoft which covers a broad variety of
software work station operating system in the office suite that we use,
plus a whole variety of infrastructure software. And there's a -- they
spread the license cost over three years, and then after that it reverts
down to maintenance. So again, there will be a component of this that
will show up in our operating expenses year after next.
And for that, we get upgrades of all of the things that we have
licensed under this agreement, so we will not be paying extra for new
operating systems, new data base systems, new office suites as we go
into the future. But it will show up as an operating expense that will
cover those things going on in the future.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: The other item that I see here is AC
repairs. That looks like it's going up. Are we replacing AC systems?
MR. CAMP: That's correct. Throughout your over 600
buildings, we have a spreadsheet that they all get replaced "X" number
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June 15, 2005
of years.
What we do, though, some, for whatever reason, maybe it's in an
air conditioned environment, their life expectancy is a little longer.
But then some of the other ones that we expected to last longer fail.
So that's what that is.
And we feel that's going to stabilize in about two or three years,
but it continues to go up right now.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: The other question I have is the
sewer upgrades and complex upgrades.
MR. CAMP: That's correct, that's budged this year. We're
working --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Stormwater issues out here?
MR. CAMP: Sewer. Especially with the new jail coming on
line.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No allocation for the courthouse
annex. Or was that last year?
MR. CAMP: That's last year.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: At what height? Is that the
maximum height that we expected, or --
MR. CAMP: The proposal on the table for this next year is to go
ahead and shell in the upper floors. That makes economical sense.
You're actually funded currently for the bottom three floors and the
fourth floor shell.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. But next year's budget, if
I hear you correctly, you're going to ask for the whole thing just to --
MR. CAMP: The upper floors shelled.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, that's on the capital page, Page capital 2,
and you'll see where it says courthouse annex, and you'll see requested
13 million. That's basically to go on the fifth, sixth and seventh floors
in order to shell them.
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June 15, 2005
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh, I should have seen that, 566
percent.
MR. CAMP: Commissioners, that is one of the things that has
served you well over the -- at least the years I've been here when you
shelled this floor twice in two different decades, when you shelled the
courthouse fourth floor, when you shelled the health building that has
served this Commission very, very well. Especially at today's dollars
versus when you actually -- and you don't have to redo all the civil
work, the landscaping and the sidewalks and the streets down the road.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, when we -- I don't mean you going
back and forth between Skip and I, get a sore neck.
When we took a look at this, originally it had come in at three
floors, and I asked the question last year, well, how -- when you go up
and do another floor on this thing, how the people on the third floor --
well, we have to move them. I mean, you just moved them in, you're
going to move them out because you're doing a fourth floor or the fifth
floor? They said, yeah, because it's too noisy.
So with the money that was available, we went with a four-story
first three floors were going to be done, and we'd shell the fourth so
we'd at least have the buffer.
This year I asked -- I guess I'm getting smarter as the years go on.
I asked Mr. Camp, how long is that fourth floor going to last? And he
said, as soon as the building's done, two years later I'm going to be in
here looking for the fifth, sixth and seventh. And I go, wait a minute,
I just put the roof on this thing at four stories. Now I'm going to have
to go five, six and seven and build another roof and tear the new roof
out in order to do the other? He says, well, that's the way the growth
thing's going now.
You heard the state attorney this morning saying he's running out
of space and he's on the fifth and sixth floor of this courthouse annex.
And I'm going, that's an interesting concept.
So I've already got folks that are asking for more space because
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June 15, 2005
they're starting to live on top of each other, so I'm going, you know, it
isn't prudent that if we're going to start this construction that we only
going to four and as soon as we're done two years later I'm taking off
the roof again and then going up to seven.
I said, let's be smart, how much is it going to cost? He said, it
will be an additional $13 million. And I said, well, this is within that
.33 mils that we have for the capital program. That's where you're
seeing most of it. There's a little bit of parks that's out of this fund.
But in this particular case I said, fine, we'll do capital pap -- we'll do
commercial paper, excuse me, and we'll take out a loan for about five
years or so in order to fund that. Hopefully we'll get some relief from
the government building impact fee. But the revenues on that
particular impact fee are nowhere close to what's needed. So it's going
to be a little bit of an ad valorem drain. But we'll do it in such a way
that if the impact fees become available, it can be used to payoff that
debt on that commercial paper.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Just put some blue tarps over the fourth
floor and then you can expand it anytime you'd like.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Charlotte County's worked well
with that.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's right, Charlotte County's been
doing real well with that for a year.
MR. MUDD: The last news reports, it doesn't look like they
were doing too good in this last rain storm.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioners Henning, do you have
any other questions?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I have a question concerning the local
area and watt area and fiber optic installation. Does the County get to
participate in the technology incentive program when we install
technology features in buildings, new buildings or retrofit buildings?
MR. MUDD: Sir--
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June 15, 2005
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Is there any benefit to our participation?
MR. MUDD: From having the County pay the County, which is
already -- that doesn't make a lot of sense, but if we're able to get
federal or state dollars, because we do that, we will apply for those
particular grants in order to bring that forward.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Well, that's what I had in mind. Not the
County side, if we can get some federal grants or state grants, that
would be great.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, we try to do that. And that's why we have
a grants manager, Marlene Ford -- where are you at? She's right there.
And she's doing a great job.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Why doesn't it make sense to
take advantage of the broad band expansion?
MR. MUDD: Because the -- because in this particular case, ad
valorem dollars are paying for this wide area expansion and land. If
you went and applied for that $25,000 increment, you're taking it
away from a fund category that's supplied by the general fund. So
what we would be doing is moving dollars out in order to move
dollars back in again. So it would just be --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, all you would be doing is
saving money from the general fund and taking it from another fund.
MR. MUDD: No, that $2 million that you have for economic
initiatives and incentives are basically funded by the general fund.
And what we do every year --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: It's an allocation.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: It's an allocation of money.
And somebody's going to apply for it. We're using the existing
dollars, everybody else is using allocated dollars. I don't understand
why we don't use it.
MS. PRICE: It's my recollection that in order to qualify for that,
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June 15, 2005
you'd also have to be creating new high-tech jobs based on--
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Don't tell Barry that.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: We do that every year. We're creating
new high-tech jobs here. But nevertheless --
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, part of the ordinance says that you
also have to show your ad valorem tax bill in order to get it over a
three-year period of time. It was basically set up --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Very well. Any other questions?
(N 0 response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: It looks like we're finished, unless the
County Manager has other information you think we need to have.
MR. MUDD: No, sir, I think you basically covered that.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thanks.
MR. MUDD: How's our court reporter doing?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah, I think we need a break. It's been
an hour and a half now. Let's take a 10-minute break and we'll be back
here at 10:36.
(Brief recess.)
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, please take your seats.
Mr. Chairman, you have a hot mic.
The next item we're following along our agenda today --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Hold it. Can you do something with that
mic? Turn that thing off.
PUBLIC SERVICES DIVISION
MR. MUDD: The next item is Public Services Division. And
you'll find the Public Services Division budget starting on Page D-l.
And Marla Ramsey, the Administrator for Public Services, will lead
off.
MR. RAMSEY: Good morning, Commissioners.
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June 15, 2005
First I'd like to do some introductions, in case you may not know
everyone that sits at the table. We'll start here and work our way
down.
MS. KRUMBINE: I'm Marcie Krumbine, Extensions.
MS. CASTORENA: Margo Castorena, Domestic Animal
Services.
MR. WILLIAMS: Barry Williams, Human Services.
MR. JAMRO: Ron Jamro, Museum Director.
MR. SMITH: Mardo Smith, Parks and Recreation.
MR. MEZZATESTA: Joe Mezzatessta, Health Department.
MR. RAMSEY: Also in the first row in the back I have Marilyn
Matthes, who's with the library, and I have Peter Kraley with Veterans
Services.
Commissioners, as a department, we have followed your budget
guidelines, except for one exception, and that was the DAS overtime
budget that you heard a little bit earlier this morning. We're about
$33,000 over in our overtime there. But when you look at the
accumulative of the division itself, we are $190,000 under our
maximum on that line item as a division itself.
What I'd like to do is that the departments in and of themselves
all have some unfunded requests and some expanded elements, and
there's also some speakers, I understand. And I wanted to go division
-- department by department and I wanted to start with the extension
services, and let them tell you a little bit about what they've got on
their list as an expended, as well as what they might have as an
unfunded request that wasn't involved and allow you to ask some
questions. And I know in this case the extension service has a couple
of speakers.
If that's okay with you, I'll turn it over to Marcie.
MS. KRUMBINE: Okay, Commissioners, I'm working on Page
D-6. And I want to draw your attention to our expanded position
request for $30,000 for a multi-County agricultural agent. And I'm not
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June 15, 2005
going to speak any further on that, because we do have some industry
representatives that are going to speak, and they are the experts on it,
so I'll give the floor to them.
But I'd like to draw your attention to our unfunded requirement.
This is our second year of request for a marine agent. And if you'll
indulge me, I want to take you on a little trip. And we're going to go
to the beach. What better way to go to the beach but to use a
Naples/Marco Island/Everglades beach bag. Pretty cool, huh? Got to
go with me here.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Were you a teacher in your previous
life?
MS. KRUMBINE: Well, I'm a teacher now.
And I'm going to wear some sunglasses, because it's a beautiful
day and it's going to be bright and cheery.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Always is.
MS. KRUMBINE: Because we live in Collier County, right?
Some sun screen. And if I want to go out in the boat, I want to
make sure I have a hat. So here I go to the beach and I'm ready to go.
There's only one problem. When I get there, it's not because I can't
park or find a parking space, but I can't get to the beach because it's no
longer environmentally presentable to be there.
Commissioners, do you know that on the west coast of Florida
we are the only County that does not have a marine agent? If you
look at the lovely reading material that I gave you to of course take
with us on the beach. If you go to Page 27, you'll see a map of
Florida. And if you look on the west coast, the only County that stands
out green is Collier County, because this is an agent position that has
not been funded.
A marine agent is a joint funded position. We're asking for
41,200 from Collier County, and the rest is being paid by the
University of Florida with sea grant money from the federal N.O.A.A.
They'll been contributing over 52,000 for it.
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June 15, 2005
We feel that educating Collier County citizens about their coastal
environment is essential to protecting our ocean resources for the
future of sustainability, and so we can go to the beach, we can boat,
we can fish.
The extension agent position is twofold: One is an investment in
coastal and marine education, and the second is really tapping into a
network of university based researchers that will bear on coastal
problems.
And of course last week or the week before we had pages and
pages in the Naples Daily News of a conference that was just
happening locally right on the Gulf of Mexico and the issue.
And so if you look on Page 6, there's a nice little pie chart of how
this position -- what this position does. There are -- 20 percent of it, it
goes to educating the community, 21 percent to the scientific and
professionals. Industry is a quarter of the activities that are planned.
And so on behalf of extension we are just encouraging you to
fund this position. It would be housed at Rookery Bay. And it's going
to also work in conjunction with the Florida Gulf Coast University.
So you've got a lot of partnerships that are coming together on the
federal, state and local resources and expertise.
It makes great business sense. It's a sound investment. It
partners with the money that we're already spending. We're putting
millions of dollars into beach nourishment and other things, so why
not have the education so that the citizens of Collier County know
how to use the resources properly. And then you can join me at the
beach. Thanks.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I don't want to give anybody the
-- or anybody to have the impression that we don't -- there is no
education of natural resources in Collier County. Maybe just not in
your department.
Now, I know our natural resources department educates at our
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June 15, 2005
boat ramps about sea grasses and manatee. I know that the marine
industry educates about safety. I know that Jack Wert educates on
echo systems.
So, you know, I look at it as do we want to expand it to another
agency to do some more education. I know the City of Naples is also
doing that.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Well, there are a number of people.
Conservancy, Rookery Bay. Florida Gulf Coast University is
committed to establishing the marine research facility at Rookery Bay.
Our parks and recreations staff, I thought, to conduct programs. I
don't know why we don't -- yeah, we have programs. Maybe the
problem is consolidating them or coordinating them better, I don't
know. Marla, what's your take on that?
MR. RAMSEY: My personal take on that is that we do have a
lot of people that are teaching various segments of it. But we
probably don't have the fishery side of it covered, including the reefs,
as well as the oyster beds and some of the agricultural elements that
are starting to come into place in our area.
And when I talked with Gary Litton with Rookery Bay and the
gentleman out of Florida Gulf Coast, they thought that this was one
level of expertise that we were missing. And maybe we have other
levels, but they thought that one person that could help coordinate all
that, especially in the aqua farm element of it, was essential for this
community.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, I think this is something
that's greatly needed here in Collier County. And I think you brought
up a couple of good points and that was the marine recreation and
fisheries. And I really think that we've been cutting ourselves short. I
think we need to look at the whole estuary system. And this is part of
the function of the marine agent. And especially since it's tied to the
University of Florida and Gulf Coast University, I think it benefits not
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June 15, 2005
only the commercial aspect of it, but I think it also would benefit
greatly the pleasure fishing, the charter fishing people, too, in knowing
what's -- understand a better idea of what's going on here in the Gulf
area.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, I'd like to echo what
Commissioner Halas just said. I can understand the concern.
Commissioner Henning was also right in the fact that we do have a
number of agencies that provide an educational service, but I can see
that they specialize in one or two things. The Conservancy is very big
on the sea turtles. We have the Audubon that works with migratory
birds and does a lot of work around Marco Island.
This is something that would be a collaborative effort probably to
bring all the entities together. I'm especially interested on the
commercial aspect. As you know, we've got clam farming taking
place in Everglades City and Goodland. It's going to be a cooperative
effort. And the County's offering some assistance to it, but I think
we're falling a little short when we're relying on the state to be able to
help, but I know they're undermanned to be able to do the function,
and this might be just the catalyst we need to be able to keep this
going in sustainable industry, so I'm supportive.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Marla, what can you cut from
your budget to -- if the Board wants to fulfill this unfunded request?
MR. RAMSEY: Well, I'd have to take a look at that for you. I
did send a letter to the university, asking them to fund two existing
positions to a higher -- to a level as they do with some of the others,
because we felt that the state could give us a little more support on the
4- Hag. position, as well as the consumer product position, which is
dealing with educational elements here in the community.
With some funding from them, I think then that you would see a
wash in this area here. I'm not sure that they're going to fund those two
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June 15, 2005
positions though, at this point in time.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So we want to make that as a
condition?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Not me.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. But let me ask a question here.
This marine agent position is going to do what?
MS. KRUMBINE: I included a job description for you in your
reading material. So you're looking at educational programs for
marine and natural resource education, a focus on fisheries and
industries, including boating --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I understand that. But is this marine
agent going to formulate and teach these programs, or is the marine
agent going to coordinate with all of the people who currently teach
similar programs in Collier County? Is it going to be a coordinated
effort, or are we just deciding that what everybody else is doing is not
adequate and we're going to go do it ourselves?
And my other question is, why should that be done through
extension services rather than through parks and recreation?
MS. KRUMBINE: I could try to answer both of those questions.
First of all, extension agents operate with a local advisory
committee, and the advisory committee looks at what's being done in
the community so we don't duplicate services, and then looks at areas
that are needed, as fishing, boating marine, that area. So they'll focus
on programs that aren't being done but then connect with and
cooperate with those that are being done, perhaps adding additional
resources and the expertise at the university level and the research
base that the universities, all the public universities and also some
private research facilities are going to bring to bear for this. So they
could add those resources to programs that are currently being focus --
functioning right now.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You know, my preference would be to
collect that information first before we make a decision. You know,
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June 15, 2005
I'd like to see who is doing what in Collier County; what they're
focusing on, what they're doing, how the programs are developed and
administered, and then decide how we can bring them all together in
some coordinated way and decide whether or not that should be done
by a position that is an extension service position or if it's an addition
to the fundamental parks and recreation staff. And, you know, I'd like
to have that information first before I decide on funding somebody's --
you know, another body.
MS. KRUMBINE: And I would like to add that one of the
reasons to connect it with extension is because it's also being funded at
the university level. So you get that $52,000 that you're getting from
the university to add to the position, so it's not strictly just County
money.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. RAMSEY: Commissioner, we can provide you with that
information in a wrap-up, if you would wish us to. And I'll talk a little
bit more with the University of -- Gulf Coast University, as well as
Rookery Bay.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And the Conservancy.
MR. RAMSEY: And the Conservancy.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And the Marine Industries Association.
MR. RAMSEY: Urn-hum. I know that the--
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And the City of Naples.
MR. RAMSEY: The Rookery Bay was very interested in this
particular position, which I thought was a little bit of a surprise,
because I thought they would be more of a conflict. But they
embraced this and are willing to give I guess office space at no cost.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And the park rangers. Park rangers run
programs, too.
MR. RAMSEY: Yeah, that's correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: So at least for me, I'd like to have that.
But other Commissioners will have a different opinion, and
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June 15, 2005
Commissioner Halas wants to talk.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes. One of the other things that
this would do is it would be a coordination of an effort where the
marine agent would work with MOAT in regards to one of the
problems that we incur here every year, and that's red tide. So that's
another function of the marine agent. Because what the resources of
MOAT and also the Florida -- University of Florida, they have quite a
data bank.
And talking with one of our neighbors to the north, Lee County
has had this for a number of years, and has found that this has been
very beneficial in regards to addressing issues of their concerns. And
their marine agent's been working very closely in regards to problems
that they're incurring at the present time on the Caloosahatchee River.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I don't see that in the job
description.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Well, I think that's the reason we need to
clarify this probably some more. We really need to understand where
it goes. And the Commissioners have differing opinions on what we
think you ought to be doing.
So if you come back with a report to us, then we can make a final
decision before the approval of final cut.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think it's a very beneficial
position.
MS. FILSON: Mr. Chairman?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yes, ma'am.
MS. FILSON: I have three speakers on this issue.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. I've got two more Commissioners
who want to speak first.
Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: My question's been answered, thank
you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, thank you.
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June 15, 2005
Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think that was from a previous
time.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And then let's take the three speakers.
MS. FILSON: Tim Nance. He'll be followed by Jason
Schiveler.
MR. NANCE: Good morning, Commissioners. My name is Tim
Nance. I work with Gargiulo, which is a Collier County based
producer of fresh market tomatoes in Florida and.in the United States.
I would like to thank the Public Services administration, and I'd
like to thank the Commission for consideration of really what is a very
small expanded services item in your budget, but that is the multi
County agent, which would be an agent that would help ensure that
technology is going to be received by the agribusiness industry in
Collier County, together with Lee County, Charlotte County, Glades
County and Hendry County.
The industry very much appreciates this support. And as a plug
for the University of Florida, the Commission should understand that
the University of Florida is the agribusiness window to technology.
And that's what's going to support us in the future years.
Collier County and Southwest Florida as a whole has taken on a
very much expanded importance as far as perishable fresh market
vegetable production is concerned, and those industries have declined
in south Dade County and the lower East Coast.
So basically between the months of November and April each
year, Southwest Florida produces almost all of our perishable
vegetable commodities that are available in the United States.
So I wanted to thank Public Services Administrator Ramsey and
yourself for consideration on this and thank you very much for your
support.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Jason Shiveler. He'll be
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June 15, 2005
followed by Dallas Townsand.
MR. SHIVELER: Good morning, Commissioners. My name is
Jason Shiveler. I work with 6L's Packing and 6L's Farms.
I too would like to thank you for your support and just show a
continued support for the extension service in Collier County, as well
as other counties in Florida and all up the eastern seaboard of the
United States.
6L's Packing, we grow a large number of acreage of fresh
vegetables and different products. And to reiterate what Tim had
mentioned, the extension service offers us a valuable link to the
university and other industries as far as technology to solve our
problems, keep us up to date on the government regulations that
continue to come down upon our industry, and it's a very valuable tool
for us to continue to make an impact on the economic status in
vegetable production. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you.
MS. FILSON: Your final speaker is Dallas Townsand.
MR. TOWNSAND: Good morning, Commissioners. Certainly
appreciate the opportunity to make a few remarks here on behalf of
the extension service.
I am actually representing Dorlash (phonetic) Ranch. My wife
and I own a small grove and cattle herd, but I'm also representing the
Collier County Cattlemen's Association.
I wear a lot of hats. One of them, I am a retired extension agent.
So I'm fully familiar with what the Collier County extension service
does here. And, you know, I'd like to just go on record as supporting
not just this component here, although I am representing agriculture
today.
That multi-County extension agent program is a new concept in
this area, but we feel like it's going to be a very efficient mechanism to
provide the greatest expertise to these industries that we can possibly
do.
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June 15, 2005
And as Tim and Jay both shared with you, this area's going to be
more important as the east coast gets built out into urbanization as
opposed to agricultural production.
I'd like to also thank Marla Ramsey and Jim Mudd for their
guidance. We're not familiar with County governmental processes,
and we appreciate them guiding us through this process and getting
this into the budget.
And just I'll close by just saying that the industry of Collier
County contributes nearly 400 million to your annual economy, and
the industry of Southwest Florida contributes almost 1.3 billion. So
we do have a very important agriculture industry here. And we would
like to thank you again for putting this funding into the budget.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you.
MS. FILSON: That's your final speaker on this issue, Mr.
Chairman.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Questions from Commissioners?
Commissioner Halas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: This is funded in the -- put in the
budget this year; is that correct?
MR. RAMSEY: Yes, Commissioner. We have it in as an
expanded -- as a contracted service.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Any other questions about the
primary budget before we go to capital budget for public service?
MR. MUDD: Are you doing directors by director, Marla?
MR. RAMSEY: Yes, I was.
MR. MUDD: Then you need to --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: We've got a lot more to go then.
MR. MUDD: You need to pick it up.
MR. RAMSEY: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I still want to hear about their
budget, not just your unfunded requests. You got some expanded
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June 15, 2005
positions.
MR. RAMSEY: They most definitely would -- that's what we're
doing is we're talking about the expanded requests as well as
unfunded, and allowing you opportunity to ask questions.
The next area that we have is the Domestic Animal Services, and
she has some expanded that she would like to share with you, as well
as probably some good news.
MS. CASTORENA: Good morning, Commissioners, my name
is Margo Casterina, I'm the Director of Domestic Animal Services.
As Marla requested, I direct you to Page D-12, and the expanded
FY '05, '06.
The expanded request was for $11,300, and this is to purchase
radios for communications for our shelter technicians.
Weare requesting five communications radios at a cost of a dear
$2,100 each. The reason is that at this moment we do not have a
mechanism for communications between the shelter technicians and
the mainstay of Domestic Animal Services or the Animal Control
officers.
We believe that this is a health and safety issue because the fact
that many times our shelter technicians are working alone in buildings
with potentially dangerous animals.
We have had in the past situations where the shelter technician
has literally been pinned by an animal or has had to, you know,
quickly defend themselves by an aggressive animal when they're
cleaning or moving the animal.
Weare asking for five -- these radios will also be used for
communications with the Sheriffs office and for hurricane
preparedness and in communication with the EOC's. These radios
allow us to go to a mutual channel that will allow us communications
County-wide.
As far as unfunded requirements, we are looking to add a new
shelter technician. Currently we are greeting approximately 2,700
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'm .,.,__,_._,~~ ,"'"_
June 15, 2005
visitors to the shelter per month. That averages out about 300 persons
per day.
On a shelter technician, we have really increased the
requirements on our staff. Not only must they do animal handling,
cleaning, they must also greet customers. We do adoption counseling,
we do return to owners in which owners are looking for their animals.
Weare requesting them to do lab testing, fecals on animals that are
being -- that are going to our adoption kennels. We require that they
do vaccination, micro-chipping.
Our new computer system, Chameleon, which is a database that
has recently been installed at DAS also requires that they expand their
computer skills so that we know what medical treatments have been
given to the animals.
Lastly, we ask that they also perform euthanasia as well as
cremations for both -- this is for private animals that are brought to the
shelter.
To date, our inventory of animals is 431. We are at 125 percent
of capacity. Right now our kennel attendants -- like I said, we have
10. However, we have not added to the number of kennel attendants
since the year 2000 . We have added Animal Control officers, which
increases our impounds and our customer services, our activities that
we extend to the public; however, we have not increased our kennel
staff since the year 2000.
The next unfunded requirement is for a fiscal technician. This
fiscal technician, we are looking to create a position in which we can
move our services down to the level that we need them.
Domestic Animal Services has nothing but working supervisors
and working managers. This includes all of our customer service
representatives and their supervisor, who is an administrative assistant.
The administrative assistant acts as the supervisor. She does bank
reconciliations, she does deposits, revenue accounting, customer
services, and when we were short of staff, she also does customer
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June 15, 2005
service work, meeting and greeting people, performing adoptions,
return to owners, et cetera.
We really need to get the leadership at the supervisory level so
that we can create the organization that Collier County needs. We
need to address the policies and the infrastructure of the organization
to be successful.
Anything else, sir?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Questions from Commissioners? Yes,
we have Commissioner Halas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Oh, that's from the last time.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: That's from the last time.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, no questions from
Commissioners.
MR. MUDD: Marla, who's next.
MR. RAMSEY: Human services. Barry?
MR. WILLIAMS: Commissioners, good morning. For the
record, Barry Williams, Human Services Director.
If I could draw your attention to Page D-16, I have two expanded
services I wanted to mention. The first one is $25,000 for office
furniture, and the purpose is, we have in our offices a rather large
office that we're seeking to carve up into three offices. We have the
need for additional office space.
The office renovations are actually budgeted for this summer and
will occur, but what we're looking for is this amount to actually put
the furniture in the offices for next fall. So the 25,000 comes from
that.
The client co-pay is the next item. If you look and see, it's not
necessarily an amount that would be a hit to the general fund but it's
an amount of money, $10,000, that we anticipate in collection of
co-pays that we would ask people who come to the social services
program and seek assistance for their medical bills or prescription
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June 15, 2005
meds, we're asking that folks pay a portion, a very small portion, but
important amount towards the cost of the health care. And so that
$10,000 reflects what we anticipate that we will raise next year.
Those are the two expanded services that we're looking at.
The last thing, if I may, just to mention to you is the unfunded
request. And you'll find that on Page D-l 7. The unfunded request
that we're looking for is to work with an organization in town called
Physician Led Access Network of Collier County. And this group is
comprised of the major health care providers in Collier County.
And simply, what the mission of the group is is to solicit and
receive donated health care from the variety of folks in town that
provide health care; both the lavatories, specialty physicians, the
hospitals. And through this donated health care, what this unfunded
request would do would fund a position that would coordinate the
connecting people who are at 101 to 150 percent of federal poverty
guidelines to needed health care.
So the program itself, the position, the cost of the position, 96
percent of the cost of this position would be paid for by community
development block grant funds for next year. The hit to the general
fund would be four percent, or roughly $2,200 additional.
So for $2,200, you get a position that's going to help people
connect to free donated health care in our community.
So I'll stop there and ask if you have any questions about those
items.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Barry, I don't understand, you're saying a
total cost for this request is $58,100. And all of the personnel costs
are going to be covered by grant?
MR. WILLIAMS: Ninety-six percent of that amount will be
covered by the community development block grant.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Still doesn't add up for me. There's
$58,100, right?
MR. WILLIAMS: Yes, sir.
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June 15, 2005
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Total. For personnel services and for
capital. Now, how much of that is actually going to be paid by
general funds?
MR. WILLIAMS: $2,200.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Only $2,200?
MR. WILLIAMS: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. That's not two percent of58,100.
That's my only problem.
MR. WILLIAMS: I did quick math while I was waiting, and I
got 96 per -- 55.9 at 96 percent. So my math may be a little skewed.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You said 98 percent before, didn't you?
MR. WILLIAMS: I thought I said 96.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Maybe I just heard 98. But nevertheless,
okay, it's going to cost us $2,200, right?
MR. WILLIAMS: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Sounds like a bargain to me.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. If you look at Page A-I0, and we're
going to go through these UFRs at the end, okay, and you're hearing
about them now. And we'll go through them at the end and we'll
figure out what the Board wants to do.
But what I've tried to do on A-I0, if you go to this human
services department and you look at patient coordinator, you'll see net
cost -- offsetting revenue, 55.9, net cost, $2,200.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: See, I've tried to lay that out for you so that you
can see it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Mr. Williams, I don't see any in
expanded service about your explanation for -- you're going to take a
bigger space and cut it up into three sections. So what kind of
furnishes are you going to be putting in there?
MR. WILLIAMS: Computers, desks, file cabinets. The usual --
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June 15, 2005
we got those figures from facilities, and they gave us the numbers that
we needed to equip an office.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I don't see any additional
personnel, so what you're telling me is your existing personnel doesn't
have computers, a desk, file cabinet?
MR. WILLIAMS : We have one position -- this patient
coordinator position, we anticipate that position being one of the
offices.
We actually have a position now that a person has a laptop
computer that they share an office with, another one of our staff, so we
anticipate that person being in another of the three offices.
And then we have another person that at no cost to the County,
it's a senior employment program, that provides a person 55 and older
to work at our facility to do administrative support. We currently have
her in the hallway. So we had envisioned, with cutting up this office
into three, not really an office, per se, but a cubicle for her to kind of
get her out of the mainstream of the flow of the office.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay, thanks.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, I kind of assume that if
you don't break this up, the next thing you'll be doing is using the
elevator for an office.
I just wanted to make sure that the physician led access network
of Collier County, that we got a little mention in there for them. This
is something that came a number of years ago when three original
Commissioners were sitting on this Commission. When we approved
the Horizon Health Clinic and it was that committee and it grew into
this particular thing. The directions we got from the Commission and
the community in general is get the private sector involved, have them
pick up the load. It shouldn't become an item that the taxpayers of
Collier County should have to carry on their back.
And Barry and a number of other people, Dr. Crawford, banded
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June 15, 2005
together and they came up with a wonderful concept that they
imported from Carolina, was it?
MR. WILLIAMS: Yes, sir, Ashville, North Carolina.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Right. And they put it together
in Collier County and it is working absolutely wonderful, at no cost to
the taxpayers -- very little cost.
MR. WILLIAMS: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. RAMSEY: And if I can move now down to I think parks is
the next one that has an item that they'd like to address.
MR. SMITH: For the record, again, Murdo Smith, Collier
County Parks and Recreation.
I would like to take you to Page 41 for our first of four expanded
requests. The first expanded request we have is for the North Collier
Regional Park. The department is anticipating the opening of the
North Collier Regional Park in May of2006.
The department has performed a reorganization to accomplish the
opening and operation of the facility in a physically responsible way.
The result is needed for an additional 46.1 FTE's. The total expanded
request for the phase-in for the first year is approximately 2.2 million,
with a revenue of an estimated 1.5 million.
I'd like to now take you to Page 42, Commissioners. We have a
couple expanded requests dealing with beach parking. One was to
increase the fee from $4.00 to $5.00. And the other one was to do a
fee of $20 per a two-year permit. But that will be addressed later on
in the report that we issued at the back of the budget package for you.
There's another expanded request for approximately $4,200 to
purchase an additional sailboat for the Collier County sailing program,
which runs at Sugden Regional Park. There is a generated revenue of
approximately $2,500 to offset the cost of that boat.
We have two unfunded requests in the 001 fund. One is to
provide four part-time attendants for the Vanderbilt parking garage,
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June 15, 2005
which will be opening in February of this year. And revenues received
for the garage will offset the cost of those.
We have another expanded, which is at Sugden Regional Park, is
to operate a water-ski instruction program at that facility.
What I'd like now to go to is Page 45, Commissioners. And on
Page 45, we have two additional unfunded requirements for the 111
fund. One as senior field supervisor to serve as a liaison between the
parks and recreation department and the Collier County School
District. This position will manage several interlocal agreements that
govern reciprocal use of facilities between the school Board and the
County. That also will deal with maintenance of neighborhood parks
and the school parks or facilities that we operate for maintenance and
programs.
Another unfunded request that we're looking at is a program
leader position for Eagle Lakes Community Park to run programs and
leagues. This expense will be partially offset by revenue.
The next page I'd like you to turn to is Page 47, and that is the
Golden Gate Community Center. There's a small increase here, and
that was due to the increase of indirect costs going back into the
center, and it resulted in a small tax increase. But the community
center advisory Board has approved that tax increase.
And what I'd like to do now, Commissioners, is go to the beach
report, which is at the back of your package. It's the last -- I believe
it's the last three pages. And I'll run through that quickly.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And sir, when you say the back
of the package --
MR. RAMSEY: Of our tab is Public Services. And just before
the transportation service tab, the first three pages prior to that is --
this is the report that you requested that we bring back during the
budget process at our workshop the other day, laying out a number of
different alternatives as to funding opportunities. And I think we've
laid out about 12 different options at this location.
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June 15, 2005
MR. SMITH: Do you want me to read through?
MS. FILSON: And Mr. Chairman, I have one speaker on this
issue, when you're ready.
MR. RAMSEY: Go ahead, Murdo.
MR. SMITH: Okay. The operating expenses for the beach
access process (sic) were per the Board's direction that came out of the
June 7th workshop. We have included a package of the expanded
request and address six priority beach access projects.
The information includes a number of variables associated with
the fee user options. The last page shows a matrix of the possible
combination.
Staff is recommending option three, which includes the lowest
fee for a Keewaydin vessel shuttle and a $5.00 universal beach
parking fee. The universal beach parking fee would do away
completely with the beach sticker program.
The County's obligation to provide free beach access has become
the expectation of the public would be met instead through a vehicular
shuttle system (sic). The introductory vehicle shuttle is proposed for
Vanderbilt Beach, but staff fully expects to expand the service to
additional beach locations in the future.
Under the recommendation of -- we have projected parking fee
revenue at 792,000, a savings of 400,000 in remittances to the City of
Naples for the reciprocal beach parking program and operating
expenses of 525,000, for a total net revenue of 667,000. This money
could be used for future beach access.
The Commission recognizes that none of these proj ects are
feasible without some capital outlay. The capital outlay of the cost
was approximately $18,700,000.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Murdo, I'm a little confused. Could you
give me the bottom line on your recommendations once again.
MR. SMITH: Okay. The recommendations are for -- is option
three.
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June 15, 2005
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Option three on?
MR. SMITH: On the last page.
MR. RAMSEY: Second to the last page.
MR. MUDD: Second to the last page.
MR. SMITH: Second to the last page.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, I got it.
MR. SMITH: And the second choice is option --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's the Keewaydin shuttle and
universal parking.
MR. SMITH: Correct. And the second option would be option
12.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. RAMSEY: Commissioners, what staff tried to do was
determine what would be the most economical cost to do the
programming that we talked about it. And there was about a $400,000
operating budget shortfall that we needed to come up with.
And as you can see, if we do Keewaydin shuttle and the parking
permit and just continue with our parking permit at $20, we would be
short of our operating element there. If we made it a $30 option
instead, we would be about 460,000. So you still have some
opportunity to tweak these permits, whether they be parking fees or
permit fees.
And you had also asked us what our funding element could be in
our last page of beach access on the capital side of it. Our $1.3
million that we have available in the TDC allocation, if we bonded it
for 20 years, we would come up with about $15 million in usable
funding. If we did it for 10 years, it would be about nine million, five.
And you can see what -- the cost to do it. There's at the very bottom
20-year bond would actually cost us $10,730,000 in interest, or a
10-year bond would be $3,460,000 interest over and above.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: But your alternative is really resulting in
a quarter million dollar loss for the Keewaydin shuttle, right? At nine
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June 15, 2005
dollars, you're projecting a quarter of a million dollar loss. I'm
wondering why you would price it to guarantee a loss.
MR. RAMSEY: Well, from my perspective, I think that we
didn't feel that a break-even number of$30 per person to go over to
the beach was -- no one was going to pay that. So we picked
something we thought that, you know, an adult would pay to go over
to the island. Nine dollars seemed to be kind of the break point. So
doing the shuttle back and forth at that -- that and the number of
people that we could send over, which is a hundred and what -- 100
people per day, 176 days out of the year, those are our numbers that
we came out with.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You see what that does to you, it
encourages you to take fewer people, because you don't lose as much
money if you take fewer people, right? If you take 75 passengers a
day, you're only going to lose $6,200, right? Is that what it says?
MR. RAMSEY: Only if I charge them $30.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Oh, okay. Okay, I understand.
MR. RAMSEY: There's a $30 fee on the top of it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I got it. I got it.
So the way you solve that is to take more people.
MR. RAMSEY: Take more people.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Right?
MR. RAMSEY: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Can you take more people, more than
100 people a day, with the equipment that you are forecasting here?
MR. RAMSEY: I think that 100 people a day on a trip of about
-- a boat of about 40 per, you're never going to fill it. So I think that
it's about an hour round trip over an eight-hour period. That's 100,
maybe 150 max on one boat.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: One boat, okay. Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, the only thing I'd mention to you,
and I don't mean to get in with staff recommendations, I just wanted to
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June 15, 2005
make sure you understand another dimension to the user fee options.
If you talk about a universal parking fee, there's going to be some
issues with the City of Naples. Because, you know, you put quarters
in their meters. And so what -- if it's $5.00 parking fee all over the
place and it's only a couple of quarters or how long I can feed them in
the City of Naples, you might be driving an awful lot of people to the
City of Naples to go to the beach. And I'm not talking about more
than their fair share, okay? And so that's something to be -- that we
need to think about.
I also believe that the city would have to change their metering in
some way in order to capture that particular cost for parking outside of
the meters. They would have to install more whatever to try to recoup
that $400,000 that they'd no longer be getting. So that's an issue. And
it has to be some kind of agreement.
But I just make sure you know that for ease of operation in that
between those communities, I would say that number 12 would come
out as the leader of the pack as far as that's concerned. If you add that
dimension to it, and you only look at it in that aspect. And that's all I
have to say on this matter.
MR. RAMSEY: The meter fee over at the city is $1.00 an hour.
Just so you know. It's 25 cents for 15 minutes. So it's $1.00 an hour
to park at their location. And I think currently our $400,000 is
offsetting what they would normally get in a meter if a beach parking
car was not sitting in it.
I mean, that's the gist of it. That's not the formula for it, but that's
the gist of it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Well, could we reach agreement
that if the Board selects one of these, you will at least coordinate with
the City of Naples to work out--
MR. RAMSEY: Most definitely.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- the details?
MR. RAMSEY: Most definitely.
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June 15, 2005
I would also mention that there is $400,000 sitting in our budget
right now that's being utilized against our expanded numbers for this
beach parking element of it.
So we have 400,000 sitting in there right now. And if you pull
this out to use this expansion for this new stuff, we would need to fill
that void.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: All right. Any other questions? A lot of
questions.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: There's four of us waiting.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, my first thing was, and I was
just going to echo about what Jim Mudd said, but I was going to go a
step further. I felt that by deciding on a universal parking, we're going
to lose the relationship we've had with the city.
I know Commissioner Halas and Commissioner Coletta have said
they want to keep the parking permits free. And by choosing
universal parking, we lose that ability to do that.
Secondly, I wanted to say that I feel that there should be some
type of a parking fee available to those people who come down just a
couple months a year or two weeks a year or whatever, but don't get to
have a beach parking sticker, there should be something available to
them. So I was just going to comment, my choice would be number
12.
My second was a question to Murdo. I didn't see anyplace in
here about the little children's water park that I've been waiting five
years for. It took four years to -- four years to get it permitted for this
little dancing park in the East Naples Eagle Lakes Community Park.
And we've been able to get a $53.8 million water park permitted in
that time and half built, and I'm still waiting.
MR. SMITH: Commissioners, we have that out for bid. The
bids have come back and we're reviewing the bids right now to come
up with a recommendation as to how we proceed with the project.
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June 15, 2005
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So I have been told that it would be
open. Are we going to get this thing open? I mean, it's been a long
time. I mean, I think it's been five years since I started working on
this, and we still don't have a place for these children who have no
swimming pools to play in.
MR. SMITH: We'll be making a recommendation to the Board
shortly on the contractor to do that project. I don't believe it's this next
Board meeting, but it might be the Board meeting after.
MR. RAMSEY: Commissioner, just to let you know, that the
numbers came in over double what we had --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, maybe that's because we put it
off for so many years.
MR. RAMSEY: Well--
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I'm sorry, I don't mean to --
MR. RAMSEY: -- the funding just came -- you know, the
funding's in the budget for, you know, a little over $400,000. And the
budget came in to do this at over $900,000, and so we're having to --
and we only had one bid that came in. You know, there's a number of
issues that have come into play, and small projects are harder to get
done than large projects, based upon the economy of scale.
So we are definitely looking at what our alternatives are in order
to get the water park done first.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, I certainly hope we can take
some money, maybe from some other pocket and make sure that that
thing goes through. I'd hate to see it waiting another couple of years.
But thank you, I'm done.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Stay out of my pocket.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No, I don't want to get in your
pocket. I think that there's plenty there someplace to pay for it.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I have other questions
about what was presented from parks and rec., but I think you want to
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June 15, 2005
stay on the beach issue, Commissioner?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Not necessarily. I'm leaving it up to
these other two Commissioners.
Your questions are about what, beach?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Beach.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: All right. How about--
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Why don't we just stay on that?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: All right.
How about you, your questions are on beach?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, wait a minute.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You had your time.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Your time's up.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The concern I have -- I don't
think there's any perfect solution. I don't know which is worse. And
when we talk about fees, if we offer a general parking fee, who are we
really servicing, our visitors or our residents? Because if we offer a
general parking fee, it's first come, first serve. So we're really creating
another problem.
And then the beach parking stickers, I see so many out-of-state
cars with them.
MR. RAMSEY: Yes, Commissioner, as long as they have
property here, they can put it on an out-of-state car.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Some of them don't have property
here and they've got' em.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Mine was stolen off my car. Really.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, they steal them off the cars.
I had to replace mine.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: There should be a penalty for that. If
you let them be stolen, you should have to pay twice.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's an excuse. Oh, my
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June 15, 2005
relatives are coming down, take my sticker, I'll just say it was stolen.
No, I'm just kidding. Just kidding.
I don't know, it's a problem, and I have concerns about it. I'm not
sure what will work.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, I'd like to go back to this
same issue, and I really -- I'm probably going to be in the minority on
this, but I do think that our residents should get this as a benefit for
living here, paying taxes and being here.
Now, if we need to adjust it, maybe what we want to do is go for
our full-time residents and recognize those people as special. But I
don't know, that's questionable. I think that might even be more
problematic. But I wouldn't be opposed even raising the fee from
$4.00 all the way to $6.00 for those people who want to enter the
different garages or parking areas that don't have the stickers to help
offset the cost.
But I think it's important that we recognize the fact that our
residents that are here deserve certain benefits, over and above what
we would expect the general public to get. And I kind of hope that this
Commission, when we get down to the end, that we recognize that our
residents stand out special in our minds and we're going to try to make
it work for them. So I guess that means I'm done.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You're finished.
Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes, you got an awful lot of
emphasis here on Keewaydin. Did we end of up Purchasing any
property at Keewaydin Island yet?
MR. RAMSEY: I believe that real property is in the process of
doing that right now. And that was one of our five elements that you
asked us to go forward on, so those are the proj ects that I have listed.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. And so we'll be able to
permit a dock in that general area?
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June 15, 2005
MR. RAMSEY: I believe there's already a dock permitted in the
piece of property that we're looking to purchase.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. The other thing is that my
feeling on beach permits, if people so desire to have a beach parking
sticker, I think it should be like a user fee. I think that was brought up
in the beach and boat workshop. Just like when you have a boat, you
have to pay for a sticker on your boat, which is registration.
So if people would like to go, I think that there should be a user
fee on it. And I think that would help offset some of the expel1ses that
we're going to incur here.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, we're fortunate enough
that we have some recurring funds that can operate and help fund
more acquisition of beach access and run a free beach pass or
whatever you want to call it.
So I think we all have commented on this, and I'd like to move
forward. Or you haven't commented on it yet.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I haven't. And I was going to take just a
moment before Commissioner Coletta has another shot at it. I keep
banging his fingers every time he reaches for that button.
But, you know, I think there are ways that we can accommodate
our citizens and make sure that we offer a range of opportunities, so
that for some people there's no charge at all. And those are the people
who can be shuttled to the beaches. If they wanted to park in a remote
lot somewhere, maybe at our North Naples Community Park, if there's
space there, if they were to park somewhere, or even here in the
government center and be bussed to the beach, there's no charge.
But if we've built a parking facility for space and you want to
take your car to the beach and park it, just like at the airport, you pay
for it. And if we had the stickers, we could give our residents a price
break on it. Because they could get -- buy the stickers, they could have
unlimited parking for a very, very low amount of money, and then the
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June 15, 2005
visitors would pay the full ticket for parking in those parking
structures.
So I think that kind of structure, fee structure, permits us to serve
the public and provide our residents an advantage over those who visit
here just sometime during the year. Recognizing that the people who
use the parking facilities are the people who should have to pay for the
parking and maintain the parking facilities.
So I think there's a good program for doing all those things, and I
don't know that what I've just said conflicts with what your
recommendations are.
MR. RAMSEY: No, Commissioner, I believe that what you're
saying is that you provide a sticker at $20.00 for two years and a $5.00
fee or $6.00 fee or whatever at the beach locations for those that don't
have it, and everyone is paying something.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah.
MR. RAMSEY: And then if you want shuttle.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And those people who don't want to pay
can take the shuttle. And that gets them to the beach free.
Does that make sense? Do you see a problem with that, Murdo?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: He's not going to make the final
decision.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah, I know.
Commissioner Coletta is next.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: He is?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yes, he is next.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you.
You're getting back to something -- you're covering it a little bit
more logically than we were before. We got to recognize that the
residents of this County deserve certain benefits over and above the
general public that comes wandering in from all over the world.
One of the things I wouldn't have a problem with, I do recognize
that Keewaydin Island is a very expensive venture, and here we have
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June 15, 2005
an enhance beach experience for people, and that should carry a price
tag on it that we couldn't possibly cover by a pass, free pass to allow
people to use it. That is separate and above everything else, just like I
believe the parking garage that you use over there, you have to pay to
get into that even if you've got a beach sticker now?
MR. RAMSEY: No. Well, not currently. Currently it's $5.00. It
would be $5.00, according to our budget.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: What is it now?
MR. RAMSEY: $4.00.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: If you got a beach sticker?
MR. RAMSEY: Free.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay, I would like it to remain
free for those people that have a beach sticker and get them closer to
the beach. The non-residents can go ahead and park outside and get
bussed in for free, if you want to make it free, but I'd rather charge
them a couple dollars, three or $4.00 to be able to come in from some
remote location.
I mean, I'm here to provide services, number one, for the
residents of Collier County, and number two, for everybody else in the
world.
MR. RAMSEY: So if I understand what you're saying is you'd
like to see the shuttle have a fee on it if they're not a Collier County
resident?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I would -- if they're not a Collier
County resident, I'd like to see even the shuttle have a --
MR. RAMSEY: Have a fee.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- charge on it. You know, and
the Collier County resident's free. It's the price that you pay all year
long for paying our sales taxes, paying our ad valorem taxes, being
here to make the whole thing work, either as a retiree contributing to
the economy or as a worker making the whole County function. This
is a little benefit that they get and I don't want to take it away from
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June 15, 2005
them. If anything, I'd like to enhance it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Where are you going to get the
money?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah. You've got to have money
somewhere.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: From every other district.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah, that's the problem.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: You can't get something for
nothing, you know?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It's right here. Just go ahead and
raise the other fees a little bit.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning, do you have
something to add?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You -- not to get too far off the
subject, but we have about a $7 million slush fund this year?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Slush fund?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, not slush fund, funds that
are not --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Was that slush or flush?
MR. MUDD: No, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- not encumbered?
MR. MUDD: Sir, there's $7.8 million of which 6.7 came from
the County Manager, based on the budget. And that's there. And I
would suggest have these conversations and get an idea in the
dialogue, and then when we get to the unfinanced requirement list,
we'll go over that again and I'll bring up this beach issue and we'll
come to resolution when I have all the administrators and the separate
directors here and we'll go over that process and see what you want to
do. I believe that's the most prudent. And this way you'll get the
whole idea on the entire budget and see what's there. We have some
other outstandings that are out there right now. We have a zoo that we
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June 15, 2005
haven't got the final word yet on the appraisal. And I will tell you that
I have not seen an appraisal come in where the ad valorem millage
that was voted on the referendum will pay for it, okay? And so that's
something that we need to consider.
Did I let the cat out of the bag? I hope not, but I think everybody
speculated on that out there and we're trying to get an independent
appraiser to come in and take a look at the three that we have to figure
out if there's any errors in anyone of them.
So we're trying to take a look at that, and that's something else
the Board has to consider in the process.
But you're right, Commissioner Henning, you do have $7.8
million --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thanks for answering the
question.
MR. MUDD: -- on the 001 and you do have, Commissioner,
$991,000 in the 111.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right.
Can I go back?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You can, if you'd like.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh, yes.
Page 41, your expanded positions. You have eight maintenance
workers?
MR. SMITH: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And they cut grass and trim
bushes?
MR. SMITH: And landscape also, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And maintain the landscape?
MR. SMITH: Right. And the athletic fields. There's eight
soccer fields, five softball fields and about 100 acres worth of
landscaping and grass mowing.
MR. RAMSEY: And 100 acres with a preserve.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And you got a request -- I'm just
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June 15, 2005
trying to pull it all together on this. On your capital you have four
eight riding lawnmowers. I'm not sure if it's four riding lawnmowers
or eight lawnmowers. On Page 45, on the top.
MR. SMITH: Yes, sir, what that is is replacement parts for the
existing 111 fund that we have right now. Replacements through
FI eet.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So these are not new, these are
MR. RAMSEY: These are the replacements.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- replacing.
MR. RAMSEY: That's correct.
MR. SMITH: Correct. This equipment is replacement, it is not
an expanded request.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay, how are you going to --
are you going to give these eight maintenance workers any
equipment?
MR. SMITH: Yes, sir. That will be going through the project
for the park. The monies for equipment is in the park funds for that.
MR. RAMSEY: We'll use impact fees, sir, to purchase the
equipment.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh, okay. Well, that makes
sense.
Has the Board ever took a look at outsourcing the maintenance of
the fields and the parks?
MR. RAMSEY : We have. As a matter of fact, in our next
budget we do anticipate to outsource the neighborhood parks, because
it's basically a mow-and-go kind of situation.
With our normal fields, we have so much athletic turf in there
that it's -- we really need the accountability of a staff person in that
particular one to do it. But we are looking at outsourcing our
neighborhood parks.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And your feeling is a contractor
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June 15,2005
wouldn't be held accountable on the fields?
MR. RAMSEY: Well, we have had contracted services come in
and do pesticides and fertilizer applications, and they do not come in a
timely manner. And I have lost two fields due to contracted services
that cost me 40,000 per field to resod. So I'm a little burnt on the
contracted service on that regard.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, it didn't cost you, you
went after the contractor, I hope.
MR. RAMSEY : Not technically, sir. There was insurance
elements in it.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What does a -- on the expanded
persons, what does the journeyman do?
MR. SMITH: The journeyman is a person who's going to be in
charge of all the pumps and so forth at the water park facility at North
Collier Regional Park.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: A pump -- the pumps?
MR. SMITH: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. I'm sorry.
MR. SMITH: We have about 21 pumps that will be running that
facility .
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And then the customer service,
that's somebody at the desk to help people, to guide them and
scheduling and --
MR. SMITH: Correct, sir.
MR. RAMSEY: Registrations, et cetera.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Child care worker? You got one
full-time, two part-time. What is --
MR. RAMSEY: Those are babysitters, basically. When you
work out, we provide that service, and then there's a fee for that
servIce.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. And what does a crew
leader do?
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June 15, 2005
MR. RAMSEY: Crew leader supervises a crew of maintenance,
in some regards five or six guys/gals, that are responsible for
landscape and turf.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh.
MR. RAMSEY: He or she's a working crew leader.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Is that -- how many acres are we
talking about?
MR. RAMSEY: There's 80 acres of development on this park
site and then 100 acres or so of preserve.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Where is that?
MR. RAMSEY: Excuse me?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Where is that?
MR. RAMSEY: This is--
COMMISSIONER HENNING: North Collier Regional.
MR. RAMSEY: -- North Collier Regional.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Is that really necessary to crew
leaders to oversee --
MR. RAMSEY: We actually have three areas at the North
Collier. One is the soccer facility which has eight soccer fields.
Which if you look at them in acreage, they're about three acres per
field. And then the softball complex has five, and again about three
acres per field. And of course they do lining and all the prep work on
the fields themselves.
And then there's the landscaping element, as well as the
preserves. And the common grounds in that area. And we will
normally have one crew leader and four or five guys in a 30-acre park.
So I think we're pretty prudent in this site, actually, with our numbers.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Hm. Okay.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: On Page -- I'm sorry, go ahead.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No, why don't you come back,
if you don't mind? Go ahead.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: D-45, you have an unfunded request.
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June 15, 2005
One of the functions of this person, a full-time program leader, is to
maintain ball-fields at school sites. Tell me a little bit about that.
Don't the schools maintain their ball-fields?
MR. RAMSEY: No, sir. We've got interlocal agreements at
Sable Palm, Osceola, Corkscrew Elementary , Avalon, that we have
shared facilities where we have made improvements to those facilities.
We have put in the irrigation and the lighting and whatnot. And we
use those fields from 3:30 on; all weekends and during the summer
they become our fields. And we do all of the maintenance on those
fields, which is about $400,000 worth of maintenance cost to the
County to maintain those fields.
The benefit is, is that we didn't have to purchase the fields or the
land in order to do it, so it's a good win-win between the facilities so
we don't have to buy additional lands in order to provide facilities --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: So the school doesn't have a
maintenance responsibility at all?
MR. RAMSEY : Not at those locations, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, thank you.
Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I just wanted to point out, I did
have that marked. That's part of your angst on the Bill 360?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: It calls for local County
governments to work with the schools to try to locate facilities.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: As if we haven't been doing that, right?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I think it's good to
emphasize --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yes, it is.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- and maybe that's -- I'm not
sure if that's one good thing or not about that bill.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I think it is. Yes, I think it is. That's one
good thing.
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June 15, 2005
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, can I write that down?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yes, you can write that down.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think that's the end of my
questions, Commissioner.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. I would sure like to get this
finished up by noon. There's no way we're going to finish this budget
thing this week --
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, we will.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- the way we're going.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, folks, quit asking--
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Let's go.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: -- questions and we can move
along at combat speed.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's right. If you guys wouldn't ask so
many questions, we'd be all right.
Okay, we're going to take public comment at the end of this
entire department, once we finish, okay?
How many public speakers do you have for this entire
department?
MS. FILSON: One.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: One. Okay, then give me --let's go to
the next one. Is it Ron?
MR. RAMSEY: Well, actually, sir, unless you have questions
from Ron, he doesn't have any expended or unfunded request, and
neither --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Why not?
MR. MUDD: Sir, Ron -- I'm going to help you out a little bit,
okay?
MR. JAMRO: All right.
MR. MUDD: He came forward with his five-year plan to get
past this backlog of maintenance that he has on museums. In this
particular budget, he has monies to -- full monies to bring the Naples
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June 15, 2005
Depot up to speed, plus $300,000 in order to get at Roberts Ranch at
that expanded that you saw last year. That's in there. So there's about
$550,000 in his budget to get at.
Two maintenance issues, big ones, capital projects. Then next
year from my capital side of the house, I'll start giving him around 500
to $550,000 for the next five years, and then we'll get over the hump
on that $3 million worth of backlog.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: So Ron's okay.
MR. JAMRO: I'm great.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: He should get a bonus for that.
MR. MUDD: No, sir, I should get a bonus. You don't know how
long I had to work with this guy to get that budget right.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I think Ron should get the bonus.
MR. JAMRO: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: So maybe you can play baseball instead of soccer.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Do you have a question?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, I just want to say that I'm
glad that we're finally getting on Board here to fund the museums. I
think this has been something that's been long overdue, and I believe
we have something like $2.7 million in capital outlays that need to be
addressed on the museums. So I'm glad that the County Manager
realizes the importance of all these museums, too. They're a great
learning place for young children.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's why it's taking so long, we have
these speeches that people are making.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I didn't say a word.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Who's next?
MR. RAMSEY: The health department has one staff position,
but it doesn't fall into our staffing requirement. But maybe Joe might
want to comment on it, what that position does for him.
MR. MEZZA TEST A: Good morning, Commissioners -- it's still
morning -- Joe Mesatesta, sitting in for Dr. Koulfer.
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June 15, 2005
And I would like to commend the Commissioners, too, for the
partnership that we have with the County and the Commissioners
between the state and the County.
I get a lot of opportunities to go around the state and talk to other
business managers, and, I mean, some of the problems they have are
unbelievable compared to how smooth it runs here. And I thank you
for that.
We have requested a position for a registered nurse, or funding
for a registered nurse. We actually need three positions: A certified
nursing assistant and a senior Clerk and the registered nurse in order to
service our adult health. For communicable disease we have both the
infectious and the non-infectious. We'd like to give the infectious
immediate attention and we'd like to take the wait time down to two
weeks for the non-infectious.
We're asking the County for the 43, nine for the registered nurse,
and we'll be asking the state to fund the other two positions.
And that's it, unless there's any questions.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Any questions by Commissioners?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Marla, you want to hit your capital, or have you
already done that?
MR. RAMSEY: No, I don't believe we have done it, although it's
quite quick, I think.
MR. MUDD: Go ahead.
MR. RAMSEY: The projects that we have on the -- two projects
that we have in the library right now are to do some design of both the
Golden Gate expansion, as well as the south library.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Is that Commissioner Fiala's library?
MR. RAMSEY: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good. Let's call it Commissioner Fiala's
library .
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June 15, 2005
MR. RAMSEY: Okay. Commissioner Fiala's library. Okay.
So those are the two projects underneath the library themselves.
Parks and Recreation has some additional funding, too. And if
you can turn to -- where's the list on that -- capital six, I believe, and
you will see the list of various projects there. And unless you have
some comment for me on them, I think they kind of speak for
themselves. Most of them are ongoing projects: Margood, Goodland,
Orangetree Park, et cetera, some of those that we've been working on
for quite some time. Just like Eagle Lakes, Commissioner.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Now, of course the beach access capital
projects are not included there. Are you going to cover those
separately, or have we already done that?
MR. RAMSEY: We've already done that, yes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. So you think you've got good
enough guidance on beach access capital then, right?
MR. RAMSEY: No, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: No, you don't.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, we will come back during the UFR
list --
MR. RAMSEY: That's correct.
MR. MUDD: -- and we need a decision on are you going to do
stickers, are you going to pay fees, how you want that done, so that we
can put that program together.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, good.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I will let you know that ad valorem
dollars that are on capital six come out of that .33 mils. That's for
capital programs that you have out there. Just so you know, I basically
control that .33. They come in from facilities, IT, parks, and we work
that plus the debt service on past loans that we've had to take out in
order to build buildings and thing like that.
MR. RAMSEY: I might mention on there that you may not have
caught the Everglades City tennis courts. We've been working with
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June 15, 2005
Everglades City to improve their recreational elements down there,
because it's the County-wide facility being utilized inside the city and
this is 50 percent of the cost of that.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Any questions by Commissioners?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I don't hear any.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, if we could take that public
speaker then?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: That's completes --
MS. FILSON: Actually, I have two now. The first one is Wizard
of 1. He will be followed by William Poteet.
WIZARD OF I: Commissioners, greetings.
Real name's Gerald K. Davidson, better known as the legendary
Dr. Was, and now the Wizard of 1.
As you can see, I don't like your big stacks idea. It's just another
tax. Any way you cut it up, it's another way of -- it's just a tax. We
don't need another beach tax, period. And that's a jerks thing. You're
not really jerks. You're just politicians.
I would like to comment about the beach. I go down to the beach
a lot. Talking about erosion, down here we have this erosion problem.
I also majored in geology, so I know a little bit about erosion.
You got to stop this ridiculous dumping of sand on the beach.
I'd like to get an estimate from you about how many millions of
dollars we've poured of sand on that beach, okay? How many
millions of dollars have we spent on the beach, and how many more
millions of dollars are we going to pay to put sand on the beach?
What we need to do --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: We put rocks on the beach.
WIZARD OF I: Okay. The rocks. Rocks on the beach.
But anyhow, what we need to do is -- one of my favorite trees, by
the way, was chopped down up at Seagate. There's an Australian
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Pine. How many people been up to Seagate? Well, the number one
tree out there that's been there for about 50 years, somebody took a
chainsaw. It was doing a marvelous job of fighting the ocean. Just
what you guys want on beach and renourishment. Anyhow, it was
over 50 years old and it was cut down by somebody with a chainsaw.
That's the type of sentinel trees we need out there. If you're
going to renourish the beach, let's get some trees out there, let's get
more mangroves, let's get more sea oats and so on.
The Panhandle has huge beaches. We just don't have them down
here. So you've got to stop this ridiculous use of -- misuse of tax
dollars. And for the homeowners that live down there that are worried
about it, they're rich enough to live down there, you take your chances
with this ocean, you take care of your own beach front; don't ask the
taxpayers to pay for it.
And talking about parking, if you're going to charge quarters and
so on down at the pier in different places, let's put some change
machines down there. Did it ever occur to you that people come down
there, they might -- they could go somewhere, right there in the
parking lot they ought to have a $5, $10 change machine. So let's get
some change machines down there.
Another thing, did you know that you're not allowed to change
your clothes and put your bathing suit on in the local -- on the pier
down there? Did you know there's a rule against that? That's a
violation of law. One of your Ordinances down there. I'd suggest you
have a place down there and you take down that ridiculous statement
down there so you can have a place to change clothes. So that's
another thing.
Now, beach access, beach access --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Your time has expired, sir.
WIZARD OF I: Okay. I'd like to close by saying that beach
access is a real important thing, and you need to protect it, especially
along Gordon Drive. You need to go back and get some of the beach
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June 15, 2005
access you used to have at Gordon back and reestablish them for
public good, let walk in or park their bikes and so on.
Thank you. And stop wasting our money.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is William Poteet.
MR. POTEET: Good morning, Commissioners. My name is Bill
Poteet and I'm here representing the Golden Gate Area Civic
Association.
And the civic association just asked me to remind you that we
need our library expanded. We've been waiting for four years right
now, and every year it comes up it's going to be expanded, but then it
comes down to how we're going to do it and it's all a question of
funding. So at this time during funding we ask you to put the
necessary funds aside and make sure that we get the library.
If you look statistically, our library is the busiest of all the small
libraries in the County. The majority -- or not the majority but a great
number of our users at the library are pedestrian, so it's not like we can
just pick this thing up and then go to the North Naples Regional
Library and use the services there. Our kids need to be able to walk
from their schools and get to the library.
So we just ask you to fund it. And thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Now, where do we stand on the funding
of those two libraries, Mr. Poteet's library and Commissioner Fiala's
library?
MS. KRUMBINE: They're both on the list for design right now
and we have them in a 10- year spreadsheet that will allow us to use
the impact fees, which hopefully you will improve (sic) as an increase
at the next Board meeting to build them both.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You said 10 years.
MR. MUDD: Capital-3 report has got the library impact fees and
a particular chart that sits on there. It asks some questions -- that
Golden Gate Library, a 1 ,200-square- foot structure to be built next to
the existing library. We've received a $500,000, grant that's at the#
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bottom of the page.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: What page are you on?
MR. MUDD: I'm on Page Capital-3.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: At the back.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: A lime green color.
MR. MUDD: A green page in the Public Services, capital.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, that's not going to fund
the projected 12,000 square feet at that library.
MR. MUDD: Not the total cost, but that's what's in the '06
budget. And then the construction costs will come after that, sir.
MS. KRUMBINE: We will be bonding the impact fee in order to
develop both of those libraries.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That was supposed to be
constructed this year; am I correct?
MS. KRUMBINE: Well, every time we talk about construction,
a lot of times they think that's when we're going to open it. But the
construction time is, you know, a 12-month to an 18-month process.
And because we had an ad valorem shortfall when we originally were
going to tear down the old building there and put in one new facility,
we had to come up with Plan B, which is the 12,000-square-foot
expansion, and leave the existing one in place. And now I think we
have enough funds to do both of them.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh, okay.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Everybody all set? We're
breaking for recess. Thank you very much. We'll be back here at
1 :02. .
(A lunch recess was taken.).
TRANSPORTATION SERVICES
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you very much,
County Manager, and I presume we're going to Transportation
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Services.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. We're going to transportation.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Mr. Feder, you have three minutes.
MR. FEDER: Mr. Chairman and Commissioners, we'll try to do
it in two.
What I wanted to do is first of all note to you that we're
continuing to implement our program. We appreciate all the efforts of
the Board to make sure that we've been funded. The road building
program is still on track and there's been an awful lot of that prior to
catch-up after the last four years, and we'll continue to move forward.
Trans providership is up. The roads are landscaped. We're
meeting an awful lot of the demands. We've got our traffic operations
signal, the first phase, done. Second phase is a computerized signal
system across the pilot on Pine Ridge Road should be completed by
the end of this year. So we've got an awful lot of good things
happening here in transportation, and we appreciate your support.
What we presented to you is a budget. We took strongly your
values into account. Basically in our budget, transportation with 2.2
percent over current services, that being predominantly things
outside of our control.
You do have three expanded items here in the budget. One
million for limerock conversion to paved, about 76,700 in traffic
operations.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Which page are you on, Norm?
MR. FEDER: What I'm doing is giving you a very quick
overvIew.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: All right. Okay.
MR. FEDER: Very quick overview.
You've got one position in traffic operations relative to signals
with major emphasis that you asked us and we placed there and then
lastly 525,000 as an expanded item to convert from potable to
reclaimed water in our landscape medians.
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June 15, 2005
So other than those three items which represent the other 3.7 of
our total 5.9 percent budget, we're within the budget guidance, as I
said, in 2.2 on the current programs and a total of 5.9. We've
expanded those three major items.
As Jim pointed out, we pulled some of the items back, and
we're actually minus 1.1 percent when you take out a couple of errors,
and that's what I'd like to focus on.
In our budget you've got a number of positions that have
moved around between the departments within the division; however,
there's only one increase in position that's being requested here, and
that's the one in traffic ops.
So essentially we've maintained our position load, but we have
moved a few positions around so you'll seeing some areas where
you see the budget going up there in the general fund in the area of
support and operations, and then you'll see a decrease in other parts of
the departments in the budget areas, and that's basically a position
move, but the total count remains the same with one addition.
The other thing that I'll point out to you, and we're going to
discuss some on the transportation disadvantage. I know we had a
discussion at the Board meeting yesterday.
Weare looking as we go to try and combine both the transit
CAT system and TD for efficiencies and being able to coordinate trips
between the two. We're also looking at trying to do bench marking,
looking at what our best practice is out there. We realize that this is an
important service to the community, that it's one that has already
increased quite a bit in cost, and we're real concerned that we're very,
very careful about how we try to control those costs while we continue
to provide quality services to that portion of the community that needs
it. So we'll talk some on that, and I'll ask Diane to talk a little bit on
that. I'll tell you our landscaping shows an increase, but, again, that is
consistent with the massive landscape plan that has kicked in, and I
think the medians are showing the value of that.
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June 15, 2005
Landscaping means not only increased property values to the
community, traffic calming for the roadways and an amenity that is
truly a quality of life issue here in Collier County.
The traffic ops, you see some minor changes. Some of it's
preparing for storm events, getting supplies and materials, part of it's
increases in electricity, and then you also have two positions, one that
has moved into that group internally during the year and one that we're
requesting as an expanded.
You also have, in road and bridge, replacement equipment.
All of that is consistent with fleet specifications for replacement,
maintaining those, especially as they start to get older and have more
costs to maintain than to buy new and work with.
You also have, as I said, one million here in the budget for the
limerock conversion. We're also requesting under UFR your
consideration of the second million so we can go two million a year
towards trying to address that hundred plus miles of unpaved roads
that we have in the County, and the importance of that is it's costing us
more on quarterly maintenance, basically going in, grading and
addressing them.
And the nature of the complaints that come out, because no
matter what you do in those four times a year, if it's the dry season,
they're dusty; if it's the wet season, you're getting holes in them. It's
not a very good service to be -- it's mainly issues that came out of the
old provision when we took over all the roadways from the GAC, but
we have them as well, as was noted here within the urban portion of
the County.
That's sort of the major areas that have some changes. I think
you know everybody here on staff, but I will introduce them.
I do want to have Ricardo at the end cover some on storm water,
and it was your efforts in establishing storm water utility with .15
mills which covers not only his projects but also all the staffing. He's
done some outstanding work and some good projects coming through,
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and we're spending the money and spending it wisely.
Bob Tipton will give anything you have on traffic
operations. Diane Flagg, of course, will hit TD and then you can ask
about transit and roads. Sharon Newman who will make sure I don't
say anything wrong is our chief fiscal person. John Vilet is your
superintendent of road and bridges. And Gene Calvert at the end of
the table has been your interim director or engineer in construction
management. I do want to take this opportunity, and I appreciate your
indulgence, to note the fine job he's done as interim.
Very shortly in the middle of July we have a new director
coming on Board. Ashay, and goes as Jay, will be here, and I will be
introducing him to you in mid July. He comes from Connecticut.
Worked with the Connecticut Department of Transportation and the
last 17 years in the private sector. An awful lot of good experience
coupled with what Gene and what he's done with the staff and another
position that we're looking to hire. You'll have an outstanding team
maintained in engineering construction management. And, again, I
want to particularly note the job that Gene did in not losing the beat as
we went from our current position to having a new director officially
on Board.
So that being said, I'll ask, first of all, probably Diane if she
will give you a little bit about the TD, which is primarily where we
had seen costs, a little bit on landscaping, ask Bob to tell you where
you are in traffic operations and John a little bit on maintenance.
Be very brief. We'll go into the capital program if you'd like,
and we'd like to cover storm water but--
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Let's just take a quick break right
before you go into capital programs and get some questions about
operating --
MR. FEDER: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- budgets and then we'll go into
capital.
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June 15, 2005
MR. FEDER: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Go ahead.
MS. FLAGG: Good afternoon, Commissioners. On page
E-12 it's a breakdown of the Transportation Disadvantaged Program.
Again, this is a fully contracted program.
We made the decision based upon the experience of not only
our contractor coming to us saying that they couldn't contain the cost
but also looking around the state and the other agencies that are also
experiencing the same situation of where agencies have actually --
contractors have come back to the Commission two and three times
asking for rate increases just within one year.
So what we've decided to do is for the first time, and we've put
out a request for proposal, to combine Collier Area Transit and the
Transportation Disadvantaged into a single gatekeeper, and the
purpose of trying it this way is to see if we can get the contractors to
better contain the cost by having one gate that the community walks
through and getting more people on the Collier Area Transit system
which is far less expensive to operate than that door-to-door service of
Transportation Disadvantaged.
So recognizing, though, after looking at the actual cost it takes
to run the Transportation Disadvantaged system, we're going to
recognize the carry-forward from this program.
The additional funding for this program requested for next
year from general fund is 419,500, and that number is coming from
based upon the actual cost analysis that we did of what it actually
takes to run the program.
Again, if we are successful in the cost containment by
combining the two systems, it will be totally bid dependent, and but
we're hoping with this cost that we'll be able to keep these contractors
within the budget with this additional 419 towards the program.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Diane, do these costs reflect the
increased cost that the Board of County Commissioners approved for
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this program?
MS. FLAGG: That's what these costs are, yes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: They have been updated to include --
MS. FLAGG: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- that decision?
And you're talking about combining them under a single
division. Will the gatekeeper be a subcontractor or are we going to try
to do this ourselves?
MS. FLAGG: It's all contracted out. It's still both programs
are fully contracted out.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: What incentive is there to see more
people served through our transit system as opposed to the TD?
MS. FLAGG: The incentive will be is that the way that we
write the contract is going to dictate that their greater incentive will
be to transport the majority of folks on CAT because they're going to
be limited to the amount of dollars that they're going to receive for the
door-to-door service which is in the Transportation Disadvantaged
side.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's a very good idea by the way.
MS. FLAGG: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I think you've done a good job
thinking that through. It would be good if we could collect
information -- I'm not sure you can historically, but you can start
doing it in the future -- as to how many of the people who receive the
door-to-door service really require the door-to-door service because of
their disability.
MS. FLAGG: Right. And we will be collecting that data.
We've included that requirement in the RFP requirement so when we
get the bids in they have acknowledged that they will be required to
collect that information.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good. Thank you.
Commissioner Halas.
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COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'm surprised you brought forth
that there were other counties that have been experiencing the same
problem.
What's the -- what's the ground problem? What's the existing
problem that causes this situation?
MS. FLAGG: It's the costs are escalating for fuel, and with
TD service it's a door-to-door service so the fuel is an increase plus
you're putting so many thousands of miles on the vehicles so the
vehicle maintenance continues, those costs continue to increase.
Across the state they've experienced these large increases to
insurance, and also the TD Commission, which actually through this
last legislative session was completely revamped, but prior to that the
TD Commission was holding the reimbursement rates down low so
even though their actual costs were exceeding what it -- what they
were getting in terms of reimbursement.
So through this last legislative session, the legislature
recognized that they have 20 plus TD Commissioners. They're taking
it down to less than ten and they're completely revamping it, taking
off all the special interest groups off the Commission.
So we're expecting to see, with that change plus the changes
that we're making, we're expecting to see some real improvement, not
only in Collier but all these other communities that are experiencing
difficulty with the TD program.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So what you're telling me, this is
another State mandate pushed down to the counties.
MS. FLAGG: The State TD Commission dictates the rates for
reimbursement, yes.
MR. FEDER: Commissioner, you're correct, but I think what
we're looking at doing gets to the heart.
When Transportation Disadvantaged was formulated and as it's
gone forward, it's been very separate from transit-providing services.
It's very specialized, and it is specialized in certain clientele. It has to
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June 15, 2005
be extremely specialized, but in doing that different program as they
cut separately many trips that possibly could have been handled in a
more efficient manner than the very, very specialized TD end up
getting handled there.
So that's a lot of what we're trying to get at. I think that what
you're seeing in other counties whether they're taking it internally or
gone to a single as we're proposing. So I think that's part of the
answer to your question.
It's very specialized services. It has to be for a portion of the
population, but there's some that can be well served under the less
expensive, more traditional transit services.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, if you might for the record just
for a second remember yesterday when Ms. Flagg was talking about
the program. The program services economically disadvantaged and
handicapped, and if you can get the economically disadvantaged to
take the CAT, then you can start cutting back on the program costs.
This program was big before we had CAT, and I don't believe we've
had a great enough movement in that one category toward the
Collier Area Transit system.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Good idea.
Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes.
Just so I fully understand, we're talking about cutting into --
servicing those people with our CAT system that are physically able,
to be able to get to a bus stop where they have a bus stop within a
reasonable distance of their house and still providing the
disadvantaged service for the special pickups?
MS. FLAGG: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: We would be doing that or
we'd be contracting that out?
MS. FLAGG: It's all contracted out. CAT's contracted out and
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June 15, 2005
the TD's contracted out.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Will it be contracted out
through our CAT system?
MS. FLAGG: Well, the gatekeeper, under the proposed RP, is
that they can subcontract, but they're going to be responsible for the
total contract. So if they want to -- whoever gets the bid for the transit
system, they can subcontract out all or a portion of the care transit, but
they're going to be responsible.
See, right now we have to work with three different
contractors, and it's -- you know, when you're working with three
different contractors, there's not what I would like to see this complete
fluidness in terms of which route, which system the patients ride,
individuals ride.
So what -- by putting it under a single gatekeeper, it's, in
effect, one system. The community -- it'll be an invisible system
behind that one door. They'll walk through that one door and then be
placed on a system based upon their capability to get to a bus stop. If
they can get to a bus stop and they're physically capable, they'll be
assigned to CAT. If they're outside of the CAT route, then they'll be
scheduled for the door-to-door service.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Any other questions? Okay. Let's
proceed. Thank you.
MR. FEDER: I will open it to any of the other directors if they
want to cover some more. As I said, our program is structured to go
within the guidance. I think it's fairly straightforward.
I think a few items -- of course we'd like to open to any
questions, but if any of the other directors have something more to
cover than what I've covered already before we open it for questions.
MS. FLAGG: I just was going to go over landscape with you
real quick. There is on page E-15 in your packet, or, excuse me,
E-16,there is an unfunded request, and the reason it was submitted as
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June 15, 2005
unfunded is we were just getting in the bids for the landscape
maintenance.
We now have had the bids, and the section -- we broke out
irrigation because we were trying to analyze where the costs are
coming in for landscape maintenance to see if we can continue to
reduce those costs because our commitment to you when we brought
you the landscape master plan back in 2003 is that we were going to
contract out all the maintenance, but we would reevaluate to see if it
was less expensive to do something in-house.
We've had a full year plus of reevaluating the irrigation bids.
Ifwe contract out irrigation, the inspection came in 245 percent higher
than doing it in-house, and the repairs for irrigation came in two to
three times higher.
So, in effect, in one year we would save $300,000 if we hired
an in-house irrigation crew, and the first year cost for the irrigation
crew is 25,000 for a vehicle and 89,600 for the crew itself. So the
recurring cost is 89,600, and I just wanted to bring that to your
attention.
MR. FEDER: Again, that's under our -- we'll hold any
questions that you have on that when we go to the unfunded list.
Are there any questions for us on the operating budget?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: With respect to your plans to convert
the irrigation of the medians to free-use water, give me an idea as to
the magnitude of that conversion, and I'm talking about in terms of
gallons of water used each day. That should have a positive impact
upon costs for Collier County government, and I'm trying to get some
understanding as to whether or not it will be significant.
MS. FLAGG: These costs that you see in here, the 500,000
for the conversion, is just for the infrastructure to do the conversion,
but once that's done the cost savings is -- I believe it's less than a third
from potable to reuse so the continuing long-term costs are
significantly decreased because you're not paying for that potable rate.
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And in terms of landscape segments, it's thousands of gallons
that these landscape medians utilize for water. So what this
recommendation is, is to spend that one-time cost and then in all
subsequent years you're saving a substantial amount of money in your
water cost.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You're actually paying for water?
MR. FEDER: Yes, sir. We have to pay in either case.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah.
MR. FEDER: And we're paying for the infrastructure to bring
the reuse to the medians.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Good. Thank you very much.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, you must remember Mr.
DeLony is an enterprise fund.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yes, I understand.
MR. MUDD: And it doesn't make a difference who you are,
he charges you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah. Good. That's the way it should
be. He should charge Norm a lot of money for those irrigated
medians.
MR. FEDER: I assure you, he does.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good.
Any other questions, Commissioners?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I was looking at the list for storm
water. It looks to me like the storm water department's got quite an
aggressive schedule here. Maybe you can enlighten us a little bit on
this.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: With particular emphasis on the
Halderman Creek dredging proj ect.
MR. VALERA: We're working on that project now.
Currently going to iron out some details to obtain the DP permit and --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Address Commissioner Halas.
MR. VALERA: Commissioner Halas, what page were you
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looking at?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Capital 15. There was a
description of each of the projects that were recommended.
MR. VALERA: Yes. We have a menu here of several
proj ects throughout the County. Most of them were in the books for a
little while and were either waiting for permits or additional funds,
and we have been pushing forward to get them built.
Right now these are all capital, and I can jump in and mention
in 20 seconds what the capital -- the progress is.
For the '05 we've started with approximately $7 million, which
was our goal. This far we've encumbered $5.27 million in POs, and
yesterday you-all approved $1.2 million that brings us to 6.5 which is
93 percent of our goal. So we still have three months, three and a half
months to go with seven percent to achieve the hundred percent.
MR. FEDER: Commissioner, I think it sounds strange to say
our goal is to spend money. The Board gave us .15 mills under the
utility for storm water.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Right.
MR. FEDER: And one of the major concerns was that there
was a lot of studying and restudying done but not projects, and
Ricardo has done an outstanding job, along with his staff, to bring
proj ects forward.
We've seen the results of that throughout the County. There's
more coming. So while it sounds like the goal is to spend money.
Our goal is good projects. And that list that you have there is a very
aggressIve program.
It's also taking large projects like, let's say the Gordon River
project, and breaking them down to a lot of individual projects. We
get in, get them done and get moving rather than continuing to study it
and making it bigger, and study it some more and make it bigger
agaIn.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, these are the issues that
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have been around for over 30 years, and they haven't been addressed
so now they're finally getting down to --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I'll second that. Boy, it's
wonderful to have you on Board.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And the other thing is the GPS
network. Are you affiliated with IT on this?
MR. VALERA: Yes, we're partnering with IT to make it not
only wireless but internet accessible.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So you're turning in the service
from IT, then, I take it, right?
MR. VALERA: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: This is money that you're going
to be giving back to IT?
MR. VALERA: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That was a big discussion.
MR. VALERA: In part, yes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You're showing a budget amount for
FY 06 of $250,000 for the Halderman Creek dredging, and, of course,
you can't do that for $250,000.
Where is the rest of the money for the proj ect?
MR. VALERA: Yes. We -- right now this project has --let's
see real quick -- Halderman Creek has $857,000 that we haven't been
able to encumber due to permitting, and we are adding extra money
which will bring it to about 1.5 million; however, we will still need
more money to do the dredging.
The cost estimate that came in from the consultant is about two
and a half million to $3 million.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: It's about three times what it was from
the start of this project.
MR. VALERA: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: It keeps getting more and more
expensive as we keep delaying it --
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MR. VALERA: Delaying it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- longer and longer and longer.
MR. VALERA: Right.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: What is the holdup now?
MR. VALERA: Okay. We -- at the time that we took
command of this, the project lacked a lot of permits. Now we have
the local government permit, the Collier County permit, and we also
are in the process of obtaining the DEP.
What we need to do is to submit an updated agreement with
the developer that has the land for the disposal of the material, and
upon receiving that we should be getting the DEP permit and the
quote subsequently so I believe it would be reasonably safe to say
that once those things come in to place, we should have a permit
within the next three months.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. And now will you begin
construction in the next three months?
MR. VALERA: Right. Right away, as soon as we get the
permits, we will start developing. We will, of course, have to
request -- go in and request quotes, bids, I'm sorry, and award the
contract through the normal process.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You're telling me that the rainy season
doesn't have any bearing on when you start this?
MR. VALERA: Actually, the rainy season -- it depends on the
type of equipment that the companies have. Some of them require
more water to bigger barges, others can work with shallower levels.
BMPs have to be set in place, best management practices, to avoid a
wash of erosion so it can be done either way.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: My concern was that in the past when
we talked about this and we were going to use Mr. Antaramian's
property to permit the dredge material to dry out, I was told that you
couldn't do that during the rainy season because it wouldn't dry out, it
would wash, it would erode back into the streams and the canals. So it
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appears to me, if that was correct, we're not going to really start this
project until maybe October or later.
MR. VALERA: No, it can be done. It is a little bit more
challenging during rainy season, you have to contend with another
element, and it is difficult or it is more challenging to get the material
dry, but it's a sand material and our experiences have shown that the
material dries out pretty well and it doesn't contain a lot of fine --
MR. MUDD: Organic.
MR. VALERA: -- organics, nor --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Heavy metals?
MR. VALERA: Yeah, 200 mills or smaller particles so there's
not a lot of turbidity generated from that, clays or that type of
materials.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: We've taken samplings so we should
know what --
MR. VALERA: Yes. Correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- the quality of the materials should
be.
MR. VALERA: Correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Now, we've had two agreements with
Mr. Antaramian, and they both apparently expired because we have
delayed in getting this project going.
What leads you to believe that Mr. Antaramian really wants to
negotiate.
MR. VALERA: Right now I can't really tell you if he is
willing to negotiate or not, but what I've heard lately was that he wants
51 units of density -- I'm not sure if it's 51 per acre or 51 on his tract --
in order to say, "Yes, I will provide a storage area."
So I really don't know what the details are. I can get back
with you on that, though. I know that our project manager's
diligently working on that, but Community Development Services is
working on that.
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June 15, 2005
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I think we would be doing ourselves
and Mr. Antaramian a big favor if we just found an alternative.
MR. VALERA: Site.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah, because I think not only have
we delayed in our efforts to get this proj ect going for the people who
depend upon it, I think we've delayed Mr. Antaramian in what he
wants to do.
MR. VALERA: Okay.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: He agreed to contribute, I think, over a
quarter of a million dollars funding for this project at one point in time
if we'd get it done.
N ow we're almost a year and a half beyond that point, and we
made a commitment to him that we'd do this and we didn't do it, and it
is very disturbing that we keep running into these problems, and I'd
just like to understand what we can do right now ourselves to proceed
with this proj ect and get it done as quickly and as inexpensively as
possible.
MR. VALERA: I understand.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And if that means that we try to haul it
off somewhere else, then that's what it means.
MR. VALERA: Okay.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. VALERA: Will do. Note taken.
Commissioner Coy Ie, one of the biggest challenges we have is
the regulatory and environmental rules. So as time progresses, the
challenges increase as well, but we have a strong belief that we should
be able to obtain the permits very soon. That's the feedback we're
getting from the Department of Environmental Protection.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: But you won't get those -- it won't do
you any good unless you've got a place --
MR. VALERA: That is correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- to put the spoil.
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MR. VALERA: That is correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's the problem. And if the City of
Naples is contemplating beginning a dredging project, and it's my
understanding they're going to put the spoil on the Naples landfill, I
don't know if that's possible, but that seems to be what they're going
to do, maybe we can have a similar arrangement.
MR. VALERA: Yes. We have negotiated or discussed
already with the Waste Management and Mr. DeLony's team and
we've done some sampling, and they are willing to accept certain
portions that pass the test which is a good portion of it for daily cover.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Halas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I've got a couple of questions.
I'm looking over the list there. I don't see anything scheduled for
Palm River, Naples Park or Willoughby Acres, in those three areas
that are older communities in District 2, and that's some issues that
have been there for a long period of time so I would hope that we can
get something of that nature on the radar screen so we can start
addressing that.
The other thing that we need to look at too is the Cocohatchee
River. After it ceases to be the responsibility of the South Florida
Water Management, then it becomes the responsibility of the
County, and I believe that we need to also look at that because it's
silting and in some areas pretty rapidly.
MR. VALERA: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So have you looked at any of
that?
MR. VALERA: Yes. Yes. We have three general capital
projects throughout the County which are now called the Storm Water
Slope Maintenance Program, the Conveyance Improvements Program
and the Storm Sewer Improvement Program, which is County-wide,
allows us to start funding small items around the County.
Specifically in the Palm River we just invested about three
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June 15, 2005
quarters of a million dollars. Almost complete in the Palm River area.
We've replaced a few storm sewers along several of those roads, and
also in the Willoughby Acres we have a consultant finalizing the
design now and we also have a couple of finalized plans which will go
out for bid here shortly, within the next 14 days, for improvements in
the Ibis Way and south of Imperial Golf Estates.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Thank you very much.
MR. VALERA: Thank you, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Any other questions?
MR. FEDER: Mr. Chairman, any questions on the
transportation capital, obviously as well as operating, maintenance or
anything else?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: No.
MR. FEDER: We appreciate your time.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Mr. Feder and his department, his division, will
be followed by Community Development and Environmental
Services.
(Whereupon the Department of Community Development and
Environmental Services took the table.)
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT/ ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
MR. MUDD: Mr. Schmitt, you have the floor.
MR. SCHMITT: Yes. We still have lots of directors, and I
still have one missing who stepped out. I need another chair.
Good afternoon, Commissioners. For the record, I'm Joe
Schmitt, your Community Development and Environmental Services
Division administrator.
With me today from my left to right, actually my left to right,
Denny Baker who's my Director of Financial Administration and
Housing, Randy Cohen, he's sitting in as Comprehensive Planning --
.
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June 15, 2005
Comprehensive Planning Department, Ms. Susan Murray, and
Susan now is in the back coming up. Susan is the -- your director for
the Department of Zoning and Land Development Review. Phil
Lorenz, Director of Environmental Services Department; Bill
Hammond, Director of Building Review and Permitting Department
Michelle Arnold, Code Enforcement Department; D.E. Wallace,
Director ofCDES Operations Department; and Tom Kuck, Director of
Engineering Services.
I'd first also like to recognize Gary Mullee, he's my manager
for the CDES Financial Administration Budget Office, and Mark
Isackson. I want to recognize Mark and Gary for their great work in
helping my team put this budget together.
Before you today is a $53.3 million budget that will provide
the needed funding for the County to continue to do many things. I
have a large division, as you well know, effective performance,
effective and professional enforcement of the Collier County
comprehensive growth management plan and land development code
along with enforcing community character and the quality
development standards that we have in Collier County, compliance of
the construction standards as defined in the Florida Building Code,
preservation, criteria to protect wildlife and habitat as described in
existing federal, state and local laws, promoting opportunities for
affordable housing as well as improving the quality of life for those
less fortunate in our community through the efficient and effective
implementation of the Community Development Block Rent Program
and the State Housing Initiative Partnership Program, funding for
economic development, enforcement for the collection and
management of all impact fees and a continuation of the Conservation
Collier program and lastly, certainly but not least, but this is just an
overview, regulatory oversight of cable franchises and the independent
water sewer districts in Collier County.
I wish to point out and you're certainly aware the
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June 15, 2005
preponderance of the funding of this budget comes from fee revenue
and other external sources of either tax or grant revenue to fund many
of the enterprise programs in my organization.
The principal demand for ad valorem funds primarily come
from code enforcement. We worked hard to reduce the overall demand
by --in the division on the general fund down to only 5.2 percent or
$3.71 million.
I direct your attention to the division summary on page F-2 of
your book, but also I handed out a read-ahead. Hopefully you-all got
that, and that was a simple small booklet. It should have got to you.
What I attempted to do is basically summarize many of the
things in our budget. I'd point out that there's been a 40.4 percent
increase in fee revenue primarily due to the increased demand for
servIces.
I'd like to point out that I'm taking cost savings measures.
There is an internal reorganization. I'm reducing my number of
departments from 8 to 7 by combining the activities of my Operations
Department into my Financial Administration and Housing resulting
in approximately $60,000 savings in personnel costs.
We're going to continue to fund from our fee revenues, our
Hanson business software migration program, and that's identified in
your capital program which we certainly can discuss. We're projected
to go live with that in November, but certainly the most striking
request is my request for additional FTE.
On page 5 of that handout I layout the overall request, that's
13 expanded and identified in this budget and 9 additional FTE that
we certainly have the revenue to fund and support but is above budget
guidance.
I note the three additional -- there are three additional FTE as
unfunded based on previous Board direction or requests from some of
your Board, appointed advisory Boards and committees. That's one
FTE in Code Enforcement to enforce the Vehicle for Hire Program
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June 15, 2005
and two FTE in my Environmental Services Department, one to
assume the overall management and control of all beach and coastal
zone management activities, that person was identified as the Coastal
Zone Manager, and one environmental specialist that's identified to
manage the Habitat Conservation Program, that is if you chose to go
with that program later this year.
I can review certainly the FTEs from the last three years, but
the last two years have been fairly austere. I think certainly, as I said,
the most striking is going to be the request for FTE.
And in your booklet, I direct your attention to page 6. I
attempted in page 6 just to summarize what's happening in the
industry, and this is just one example where at -- that's 6 of your -- that
handout, page 6 of the handout.
This is just one example I need to highlight for the additional
FTE, and at the top of the page your building director, Mr. Hammond,
notes that the acceptable standard of performance to assure sustained
quality enforcement of the Florida Building Code is the average of 24
inspections per inspector per day, that's on-site inspections. Twenty
four inspectors or inspections per day per inspector.
We're projected to go beyond that. In fact, in your book it
notes that we're at 32, and I certainly over last year or so have been
providing in my weekly reports, and I'd like to note that we've been
averaging 26 and up to almost 34 inspections per day per inspector,
and we anticipate we're going to go higher than that.
N either I nor the building director can assure you that we can
adequately continue to enforce the Building Code at the rate that we
are trying to provide service today to our customers. And, in fact, I
may have to limit inspections to 30 inspections per day per inspector.
Anything beyond that I really feel that I'm putting at risk this County's
ability to enforce the Florida Building Code, and I'll be glad to talk
about that in detail on how our inspectors work. I think the other thing
that's most striking in that page is when you look down the middle of
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June 15, 2005
the page you look at the comparison of similar staffs between Collier,
Lee and Palm Beach Counties. And we often hear of the great service
that one gets from either Palm Beach County or Lee County, and you
can see the striking difference in the number of permitting techs. And
this is an aggregate, it's simply an aggregate of the various staffs. That
certainly would indicate that there are permitting techs waiting for
customers to walk in the front door; that's certainly not the case in
community development.
And with that, that is briefly my introduction and highlights. I
would just now like to defer briefly to each of my directors to make
one or two salient remarks in regards to their budget, their expanded
positions, and then we're open to any questions you may have on the
budget.
Unfortunately -- so if I could simply turn to each director,
then, and I'll start with Denny Baker, Financial Administration and
Housing. Any opening comments?
MR. BAKER: Yes. In the read-ahead, if you would turn over
to page 8. The Financial Administration and Housing Department is
listed at the top. My increase on a budget-to-budget basis for my
department is $347,000, an increase of 10 percent.
If I remove the two one-time items, the update to the
consolidated impact fee ordinance of$135,000 and one transfer into
my area, which is Mr. Wallace's position, of $69,000, excuse me
$64,000, that gives me a four and a half percent increase in my
department of $148,000.
In the bottom right-hand corner of that box, you'll see that the
budget guidance was 5.4 percent and my increase in personnel costs is
5.2, operating was 3.9, my increase is 3 percent so I am within budget
guidelines.
I have no expanded FTEs and only one UFR in the ADC area,
which we can discuss later.
MR. SCHMITT: Randy, Comprehensive Planning.
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June 15, 2005
MR. COHEN: Just some brief comments. Randy Cohen,
Comprehensive Planning.
If you turn to page F -26 of your book, you'll note that there's
no additional FTEs proposed in Comprehensive Planning in fiscal year
2003,2004. We had 15. We dropped that down to 14 last year and
it's going to remain at 14 as well too.
We are well below budget guidance. We are at 1.6 percent.
The one thing we do anticipate during this year is the changeover of a
principal planner position to an economist to be consistent with the
Florida statutes and actually promulgating fiscal impact review at a
higher level, and with that I'll entertain any questions.
MR. SCHMITT: Susan.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Who is first?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I think Henning is first.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No, I wasn't first.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: All right. Commissioner Halas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes.
MR. SCHMITT: Do we want to present each department
separately or do we want to go through all of them, highlight first?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: They've got their lights on right now
so I'm going to let them talk.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'm a little concerned at the
amount of inspections that we do with the personnel that we have
presently and I'm concerned that maybe we're not giving adequate
time, excuse me, for the inspectors that go out to the sites. I can't
believe that when you rough out a house that an inspector's got enough
time to walk through the whole structure, make sure that all the
reinforcements are put in place for hurricane standards, and then when
it comes to plumbing and electrical to go through a 6,000 square foot
house and check each one of the areas where there's outlets or major
distribution boxes that come in and also when they do the insulation.
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June 15, 2005
After a contractor comes in and fills the house with insulation,
you've got to have someone come through to check the attic and
check the walls, outer walls and everything else, and I'm surprised that
we can get through that -- this many inspections in a day and they're
done in a top-notch order.
I think that we owe that to the citizens so I'm hoping that we
can address the issues there.
MR. SCHMITT: I'll turn to my building director where we
can address -- as we noted; I have both expanded positions that are
within the budget guidance and those that are above budget guidance.
And when I say that, they're not unfunded requirements because I
have the revenue now to support these positions. I just need your
authorization to hire the people.
The workload is there, the demand is there, and I know
members of the industry are here to talk about this specifically
because, given the rate of inspections I have and the few inspectors
that I have, I'm going to -- it looks like I will have to go to a two-day
call in.
Right now you can call in today for an inspection tomorrow.
That's the way it operates in Collier County, it's been operating, and
I'll turn to Bill if you want to make any comments on that.
MR. HAMMOND: For the record, Bill Hammond. I'm your
director of Building Review and Permitting and also I serve as your
building official for Collier County.
And you hit on the very salient points, Commissioner, that
we're at the point where we're having deep concerns and reservations
about and a trained inspector's ability to technically provide those
provision inspections. That is the salient point, yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I know in my particular area that
I represent we've got a multitude of site plan problems and also
setback problems so I think this is very important that these are
addressed early on so they can be taken care of so it doesn't become ai
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real problem.
MR. HAMMOND: As well, yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I'll wait until the end.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. I just wanted to ask you:
From all of these figures, when I read them yesterday and again
looking at them today, I think you're operating at a dangerously low
level of employees.
I mean, you don't have enough to operate and function
properly, and I'm just hoping to see that you add more and rather
quickly. I don't know how that you can perform the job and get an
excellent rating if you don't have enough people to support the effort.
MR. SCHMITT: I would appreciate -- I appreciate that
comment. I'm looking for that support today so that we can staff and
meet the demand that's being placed upon us.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Halas, go ahead.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: In most of the positions that
would be funded, we already have the revenue in place; is that
correct?
MR. SCHMITT: Commissioner, yes. Two years ago I
separated the fees, created two separate fees. I don't want to get into
the history of that, but I created zoning and land review fees and then
the building permit fees. We're there.
A year and a half ago I was in crisis in regards to meeting
payroll, to meet the plan review payroll demand that I had. We raised
fees there, but I also lowered fees in the Building Permit Department,
lowered fees but raised the construction valuation table so that's kind
of -- I lowered the fees, but I raised the valuation tables and fees are
paid based on the construction value, but right now the volume that's
coming in the front door, the workload that's coming in the front door
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I have more than enough revenue to meet --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Good.
MR. SCHMITT: -- to support the requests that we're asking
for. In fact, if I do them staffed at this position, and that's your call, I
will reduce fees because my carry-over is becoming quite high and I'll
have to reduce fees.
And what the industry has expressed, and you have a letter
from the Development Services Advisory Committee basically
expressing the same thing, that was in the cover of both your budget
and, of course, it's from the -- it's in the book I gave you, they're
expressing the fact that just hire the staff. You don't -- you've got the
fees and hire the staff and so you can provide the services, and that's
what the industry is expressing as well.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I couldn't agree more with
Commissioner Fiala and Commissioner Halas, you know, that you
need the people to make this work. This is one department where we
charge a user's fee up front --
MR. SCHMITT: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- and services are expected,
and they're expected to be produced in a reasonable period of time.
And if we try to cut back, the only thing we're going to do is hurt
ourselves, and it's not a question of we're going to have to dip into the
general funding to cover it. All we have to do is realign the actual
cost with the cost of doing business.
When you get ready to grow your department, hopefully
during the business cycle, this budget cycle, you come up with a plan
that shows how you can get the best use out of the people that you
need and how many more people you need to be able to accomplish
the job in a reasonable fashion.
You've got probably one of the hardest jobs in the whole
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County. It's never been an easy one dealing with the building industry
and permitting and the code enforcement and that.
I don't envy you at all, and any way I can help as a
Commissioner, and I'm sure my fellow Commissioners will agree, to
make that job easier, I stand ready to do it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I couldn't disagree more. I've got the
hardest job in the County.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You sit next to me.
MR. SCHMITT: I would agree with you, but I'd like to switch
with you some day, just for a day.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I've got to tell you something
right now; I'm going to tell the whole world. The only reason he does
as good as he does is because I'm here whispering in his ear what to do
next.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's true.
Can I speak now?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No. It's Commissioner Halas's
turn.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I really don't have a problem with the
staff increases. You know, I think you're wise to ask for them in order
to achieve the level of service that is expected by your customers, but
I need to have some assurance that we're going to see an improvement
in performance and service to the customers, and I hope you'll be able
to show us what performance levels and standards you can achieve
and maintain if you get these people.
Now, I would -- I was being facetious earlier, but
Commissioner Coletta is right. You have more stuff going on in your
division than anybody else in government. And if you look at the kind
of stuff we're doing, it ranges from financial administration and
housing, cable TV franchising, you've got the FEMA map issues to
deal with, you've got code enforcement, CRA support, particularly for
the Immokalee area, zoning and land development review,
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environmental review, building review and permitting, utility
regulation.
Now, I can't for the life of me understand why we've got so
much of this stuff consolidated in this one division, you know. There
are things that I think you need to concentrate on, and I believe we
ought to do something that's a little imaginative that might include
creating another organizational element and spinning off some of
these other things and permitting you to concentrate on those really
important code enforcement, land development, zoning issues and
permitting and take some of these other things and put them
somewhere else and see if we can't narrow the span of management
control here because I think it really is quite diverse and I don't know
how anybody can spread themselves that widely to deal with these
. .
Issues In a proper manner.
But you are largely fee driven in a number of cases so I don't
really care too much about how many people you get because you're
saying they're covered by fees, but it's unfair to charge people fees if
you're not giving them the services, and I think we can all say
generally that we don't have a really happy group of clients and what
we'd like to do is make sure that if we grant these increases that people
are getting what they pay for.
And if you can give us some assurances that we'll achieve or
establish and achieve some performance levels, it would make me
really, really happy.
MR. SCHMITT: Commissioner, I need to respond honestly to
that so you understand.
Yes, I agree with you, but to be frank with you what I'm asking
for is just keeping my -- this is just keeping my head above water.
This Board over the last three years has put a lot of additional
work upon my staff that never was put on this division in previous
Boards, LDC reviews, and LDC amendments. We've been through
very, very dynamic reviews, analysis and enforcement of growth
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management amendments, rural fringe, rural lands, you know all the
whole history behind that, and then put on to that listed species,
manatee protection review.
So these are the kind of things that certainly come from the
Board. Coupled with that the parcels that are being developed in
Collier County today are the ones that were passed over four and five
years ago because they were too hard, too costly and too hard, and
now it's economically feasible for a developer to come in and look at
those sights, but those are the sites that were environmentally
sensitive, either 90, 95 percent of wetlands or some other type of
reasons why they passed over them five years ago, but now they're
coming and those are the sites they want to develop, and that comes
with a lot of baggage coupled with the changes in the environmental
reviews certainly is what's frustrated the industry, the LDC
amendments and the changes and the dynamic pace.
And the last thing is probably the thing I don't want to
overlook is the other customers we serve, and that's the rest of the
citizens of Collier County, in ensuring that the codes are enforced to
protect because that's what zoning is, to protect the property values of
the existing neighborhoods. '
And more and more of the involvement today, every project
involves -- we have a constituents' pros and cons, you know, and
there's a lot of public involvement and the public comes in and
reviews plans so, yes, I hear what you're saying.
My intent is to do that, but there are also a lot of other external
demands that are placed upon many -- all the departments above and
beyond simply the review process. It's the whole other aspect that I
believe this Board is looking for us to do as well and to keep that
balance.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Did we lose our mic system, Jim?
MR. MUDD: Yeah, we lost the mic system, yeah.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Can you hear us back there?
Page 11 7
June 15, 2005
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that's what happens when you
send Leo back there to work with the technical stuff.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: You've got to get that
electrician.
MR. MUDD: That's it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You're okay?
THE REPORTER: Yes.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's exactly what I was alluding to
when I was talking about the span of activities you have to be
involved in, and I know that we've loaded a lot of stuff on you. And
I'm just suggesting maybe we get a little imaginative and see if we
can't, through organizational alignment, trade off some of the
workload and see if we can't solve some of these things by permitting
some of you to focus exclusively on certain things and not being
burdened on a lot of others.
And if -- I'm not going to try to reorganize you today, but I
would at least ask that perhaps the County Manager, if you could take
a look at it if the other Commissioners would agree, it might be
helpful, but Commissioner Halas has a question.
MR. SCHMITT: Commissioner, just one piece on that. Also,
much of the work that we do, I do depend on other departments and
divisions, certainly handling work with transportation.
Transportation review is heavily involved in every land use
petition and in every site plan, as well as utilities, parks and rec. So
there are -- this is -- I'm just kind of the hub of the wheel so to speak
because the rest of those all come in.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Tell me, why is cable TV
franchising part of one of your responsibilities?
MR. SCHMITT: That's a good question. That's only one
person.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Why is FEMA land use maps one of
your responsibilities?
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MR. SCHMITT: I can't answer that.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: He took on the responsibility.
MR. SCHMITT: I took on the responsibility.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Why is financial administration and
affordable housing one of your responsibilities? I think Denny does a
great job, but why is it one of your responsibilities? Okay. Do you
see what I'm getting at?
MR. SCHMITT: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: So, you know, that's just something
I'm throwing out.
MR. MUDD: I have it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. All right. You got it so we
don't need to debate it anymore. Okay.
Commissioner Halas, did you have a chance to finish your
question --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: No, I didn't.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- before I jumped in?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I just wanted to interject that I
think some of the responsibility falls on the Board of County
Commissioners. In the last couple of years we've cut the budget really
close and there was positions that were asked for, but we took it upon
ourselves not to give them the resources needed in this area mainly
because of the fact that, as Joe related to earlier, that he wasn't able to
really justify it because he didn't have the revenue.
Now that he's basically revamped the department and looked at
all the fees and everything else, now is the time for us to address this
issue and basically make sure that he's got the tools in hand so that we
can go proceed at a rapid pace here and hopefully take care of the
customers out there in Collier County.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I have several questions.
Last year you asked for code enforcement officers. Did you
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ask for planners, inspectors or the like that we did not fund?
MR. SCHMITT: Commissioner, in '03 I asked for and
received 21 new FTE. In '04, based on budget guidance and through
some internal reorganization, made up and shifted and added to those
staffs but did not add anybody in '04. In '05 I was given five FTE, two
in code enforcement to support the special master program and one in
engineering and then two additional FTE for the property maintenance
program.
But to answer your question: As far as the rest of that, I stayed
within budget guidance. This year --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You didn't ask. You didn't
receIve.
MR. SCHMITT: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. That's the answer to
my question.
MR. SCHMITT: I did it through some internal reorganization
and using spaces, but I did not come in and ask above the budget.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So the Board hadn't cut your
positions --
MR. SCHMITT: No. No.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- or didn't allocate positions?
You stated about the lands being developed now that are wetlands.
They're less desirable because the price is there now. It was my
understanding that we don't deal with isolated wetlands. I thought the
Corps and the DEP handle that.
MR. SCHMITT: My comment was directed on the fact that
areas that were predominantly -- were wetlands or other areas
developers are now going in to develop.
Yes, we're still responsible for the review, environmental
review, but certainly they have to have their 404 permit from the
Corps of Engineers and their South Florida Water Management
permit, but we're still responsible to do the oversight and review in
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accordance with the standards we have in our land development code,
but they still are required to get permits. They don't get the permits
for that from me. There's additional requirements our land
development code places upon them.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So if it's a triple review, state,
federal and local, and it sounds like something the Board passed, I
would like to know more about it.
I think all being Republicans we don't believe in more
government. I want to move on.
You said there's citizen review in the process. What do you
mean by that?
MR. SCHMITT: Oftentimes a planner -- you've directed this,
that we now have the neighborhood information meetings. We've
been doing that for two years. We just added this last LDC cycle now,
neighborhood information meetings for planned amendments as well.
That was directed by the Board, recommended by your Planning
Commission, and now it's been amended and adopted.
But as Ms. Murray can highlight, every planner, either from
initial process through the neighborhood information meetings, but
planners will be contacted by citizens saying, "I want to come in and
see what this development's going to look like," and we have to sit
down and go over the plans with them. And Susan if you want to
highlight that.
MS. MURRAY: Please, because I've been here eight and a
half years so I've kind of seen both sides of the story and I've seen the
changes over time. I've been with you-all for about four years now
and I was with the previous Board for about four years. When I first
started here, there was very little public involvement, and, as Joe
noted, you increased the span of public notice which, you know, as a
planner that's a good thing.
I mean, the population has increased here dramatically. As Joe
pointed out, you're now starting to see more development of infill
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parcels. Well, an infill parcel is generally one that's surrounded by
development that exists already. And back when we were doing some
major re-zonings in the '90s or, yeah, late '90s, mid to late '90s, there
was very little public involvement.
We didn't get the number of phone calls that we get. We didn't
get the number of people we get walking in our door asking to see
plans. We didn't have neighborhood information meetings.
Now every time you have a rezoning, conditional use of
variance, even people are affected, they're interested. They want to
know what's going on. They want to meet with a planner. They want
to read the plans. They want to be kept in the loop as to the schedule.
There is -- we also expanded our notification requirements so a lot
more people are made aware of some of these projects.
Our planners spend an enormous amount of time helping and
educating the public outside of the public hearing process so that they
can be informed citizens when they come to the public hearing and
speak in front of you, and that is completely different from when I
first started here eight years ago where there was very select public
involvement.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Let me expand upon some of
the things that Commissioner Coyle said about efficiencies and
dealing with things that has nothing to do with community
development.
If it is fair to charge a person asking for service for a meeting,
is it fair to charge the public for that same service?
Is it fair to direct people to the neighborhood information
meetings or the minutes instead of taking the time of planners, which
planners are there to review plans. I'm just talking about efficiencies.
MS. MURRAY: I think that's an organizational issue.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I agree.
MS. MURRAY: One thing to think of and one of the reasons
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why we implemented the fee for the meetings, and it has its good
points and its bad, but we were trying to increase efficiency because
what we found was happening was a lot of the applicants were coming
in and spending an awful lot of staff time reviewing projects sitting
around a table either before or during the submittal.
They spent an awful lot of staff time debating code
interpretations, and right or wrong they certainly have the right to do
that. I'm not disputing that, but it was kind of a win/lose situation.
They had nothing to lose by coming in and talking to us and
trying to achieve, if they disagreed with our interpretation of the code,
providing they achieve the objective that they were getting paid by the
-- their customer to do. They were charged, their customer, for that
meeting, no doubt.
We spent an enormous amount of time sitting around in
meetings under those circumstances instead of reviewing plans, and
that was the balance we sought to strike was we felt that if it was
important enough to the customer that they needed to come in and talk
with us, that's fine, I mean that's what we're there for, but we needed
to ensure that we were also serving the customer that was already in
the door, that already had their plans, that had already paid their fees
and they were proceeding through the process as it was designed.
And like I said, there's good and bad about that.
I think from a time standpoint, it's been relatively effective.
Unfortunately, sometimes it tends to squash communication,
face-to-face communication, which I think is probably one of the more
effective forms of communication when you're dealing with
complicated land use issues.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: County Manager, I didn't get
my answer, my question answered. I don't need an answer now, but I
don't want to be blown over, but I do want to move on.
MR. SCHMITT: That's a policy decision, Commissioner
Henning. I was going to say, Susan gave the answer, but the answer
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to charge the public would have to come from this Board.
MS . MURRAY: I'm sorry. I didn't understand the question.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: We didn't even address the
public coming in and taking planners. We addressed professionals
coming in and taking our planners' time.
MR. SCHMITT: Right. That's correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I didn't ask that. I just asked
if it was fair for one side being charged for taking up time and the
other side not, that's -- that was my question.
MS. MURRAY: I'm sorry. I apologize for that,
Commissioner.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I want to move on.
MR. SCHMITT: That's something I can't answer. That's a
policy decision.
MS. MURRAY: Yeah, that's really a Board decision.
MR. SCHMITT: If this Board wants to direct us to charge the
public, we'll implement a fee to do so.
MS. MURRAY: Typically you don't do that, but if that's your
policy guidance then we can certainly look at that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The next thing is --
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, if I could just interrupt a minute.
Excuse me, please.
When you say it's a policy issue, it is a policy issue. I mean, if
the Commissioner says he gets a phone call or she gets a phone call
and they have a constituent that has a question about a particular
zoning, they'll call staff and say please get with that petitioner in order
to answer their questions on whatever. Okay.
Now, that planner is fee based on salary, and if you want to
have a salary or you want to tell that petitioner to go to the
neighborhood information meeting to get your questions answered, if
that's what the Board's desire is, it's kind of informal in order to do
that, but we can implement that particular policy.
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I mean, I'm not too sure that's where you wanted to go when
you started the neighborhood information meeting when you
wanted to get people involved in zoning and to know what's going on
in their neighborhood.
It becomes more and more of a challenge because, you know,
we laugh about it a little bit between the staff. We start talking about
the tyranny of the last lot and that's infill. I've got mine. It might be
160 floors, but I'm not too sure I want that last one to be 160 floors. I
have mine. I'm not too sure I want it to be just like mine. I want it to
be a little bit different. I want it to look a lot better in my
neighborhood, and that's what it boils down to.
And the reason it's the last lot is because that lot was hard to
develop in the first place because it had some kind of problem with
it, may it be an environmental, may it be a funny looking side of a
zone, you know, it didn't look like a square, it looked more like a
triangle, and you get those particular issues so you're getting more and
more input and dialogue with that community.
And, Commissioner, you're right, it's not fair if you're going to
charge one side a fee to pay a salary for a particular item where they
think it's going to be a dedicated service and yet that person is being
diverted maybe to another particular issue by someone that isn't
paying the fee.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I have some other questions.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Go ahead.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thanks.
The work that comes in the review side, it goes to a typist,
somebody who sends it out, and when it comes from the planner and
goes back to the client it goes to the typist, we type it and send it off;
is that correct?
MS. MURRAY: It depends on what type ofproject you're
talking about, Commissioner. I'll use site development plans as an
example because that's an administrative process. It comes in and it's
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reviewed for sufficiency and it is also entered into the computer
system.
Once it's deemed sufficient, it's then routed to I think there's
approximately 13 reviewers, all of which are not in CDES to review
the site plan and then it goes through the typical --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What about building permits?
Do they --
MR. HAMMOND: On a building permit normally, you know,
Commissioner, an application will come in with an approved site
development plan and then it'll come across the counter and it'll come
in with enough sets of plans to get simultaneous review from six
departments and then it'll go into a sequential review at that point.
Once that review is completed, then a letter is developed and
forwarded to --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Do you have sufficient
staffing in that?
MR. HAMMOND: Part of what we're asking for is some more
permit technicians and reviewers to handle that business volume to
take care of those.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Shop it around?
MR. HAMMOND: Some of it's -- most of it is the reviewers
doing the actual technical review and then just a couple of the people
to handle the volume itself.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The Hanson System I think
we've got -- I think the last go-around was like $2 million for the
Hanson system and now we have -- sorry. I lost it. What I see here,
it would lead you to think that the Hanson system won't work with
Windows XP.
MR. SCHMITT: We're upgrading throughout the County to
Windows XP.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I'm sorry.
MR. SCHMITT: We're upgrading throughout the County to
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June 15, 2005
Windows XP and, yes, there is a functional problem with Hanson and
Windows XP which we've been absolutely assured that that will be
corrected because it has to run with Windows XP, and I'll ask Denny
if he wants to cover that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: There's only a request. Is that
a consultant issue?
MR. SCHMITT: Oh, absolutely. They're fully responsible for
that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And I, like everybody else,
don't have a problem with providing enough resources to do your job.
I just think -- with all County government I think it should be
efficient, also efficiencies.
And you have one unfunded request and that's the code
enforcement for vehicles for hire.
MR. SCHMITT: Actually, there are two unfunded requests,
one FTE, the vehicle for hire position.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That one I just would like to
say: I don't know about the other Commissioners, but I've been
contacted by the industry and we have some scabs coming into the
community and doing business and here we're regulating the taxis but
we can't regulate the scabs, and I think it's worthy of providing
services to an industry that we're charging for those services to make
sure that we have enough so they can do their job.
It's here somewhere, Commissioner.
MR. SCHMITT: Yes, it's--
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So I would be supportive of
that position.
MS. ARNOLD: It's identified on page 5 of the handout, the
handout you received. It's for one investigator for enhanced
enforcement of that vehicle for hire industry.
And the Commissioner is absolutely right. We have support
not only from the public vehicle advisory committee, but the
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June 15, 2005
industry themselves because we are getting companies coming in from
other counties that are not being regulated and they're cutting their
prices, and it's affecting our local industries so they are definitely in
support of this added position.
MR. SCHMITT: Page F-56 of your budget book as well is an
unfunded requirement.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So they're not even screened or
anything, are they?
MS. ARNOLD: No, they're not. They're coming in -- for an
example, you know, our -- the proms and those types of things we get
a lot of calls from the local industry saying that they've lost jobs
because people are coming in from Miami and cutting their prices
substantially and taking away their business so we would like to have
a concentrated effort on that so that we can, you know, ensure that
those folks that are doing business in here are reviewed from a safety
perspective and doing adequate background checks so that our citizens
are protected and also to protect the industry itself.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I just want to talk about when
we get to the capital or the MST in the general fund.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Commissioner Halas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'll wait until later.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. What I would like to see come
out of this is a -- when we get down to approving or disapproving
additional staff, I would like to understand the impact upon internal
operations and service improvements so that if I can see a
commitment to see the current review times and goals and then with
the additional staff see what you're going to be able to improve as a
result.
And, Joe, you said that you weren't asking for enough people
to really improve much. You were asking for people -- just enough
people to just keep your head above water.
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I guess I would like to see what it would take in terms of staff
to achieve standards of performance that are generally acceptable.
Okay. Can we do that?
Okay. Commissioner Halas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I looked at the three counties
that are in the handout that were given to us. When I look at the
amount of applicants that we processed, 39,515, and I look at the
number of plan reviewers of seven versus Palm Beach which had
36,000 applicants and it has 24 plan reviewers.
To me I think that for the amount of workload that's being
placed upon the staff at this point in time I really can't see where we
can really fault him for what's taking place. Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe
I'm all wet, but when I look at these numbers, obviously numbers can
lie too, but I have a hard time with this.
Our neighboring County, Lee County, had 36,000 permit
applications and we look at the number of plan reviewers and that was
19. We're down to seven and, you know, that tells a story. I think that
we're -- either we're very, very efficient or we have a tremendously
overworked staff.
And I know there's some of my Commissioners that feel that
they're not handling this in a manner that's quick enough for the
industry. Hopefully if we put more people on, then we might be down
to a number of plan reviewers of maybe four and the efficiency will go
up, but I've got to say that I know we've been kind of harsh on them,
but when you look at the overall statistics I think we've done pretty
well.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You know, I want to make sure we
understand that -- my comments. I don't think the other comments of
the Commissioners are necessarily directed at trying to help
specifically one segment of the population or the County over another.
There are a number of circumstances when people like those
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June 15, 2005
sitting in this room go in to pull a permit to do something, to put up a
storage shed in the backyard, that turns into an absolute nightmare. It
takes a long, long time, and I'll be happy to share with you the
blow-by-blow details of one that I'm familiar with. Not me
personally, but one that I'm familiar with, and it's not good and it's the
process that I'm trying to deal with. And I'm not trying to criticize
individuals. I'm looking for ways to make our government more
efficient. If that happens to help a developer, so what, you know,
they're people and voters too, but I'm looking at this from a process
standpoint.
When a person comes in and submits a plan and it is a
reasonably complete plan and they're told exactly what they are
supposed to do and they do exactly what they are told to do and they
come back and they're told it's wrong and they've got to go back again
two or three times, it is an intolerable situation.
So, you know, I won't dwell on that, but I will shortly provide
you, if you wish, a blow-by-blow description of an actual occurrence
of somebody in our office who went through a nightmare with our
building department and permitting, and that happens a lot. And I'm
not going to spend a day complaining because I know the people work
hard. The staff works hard. I think all of you do a really good job.
The problem is that maybe you don't have the tools to do the job that
you're being asked to do, like the numbers of people. And if you
want to ask for more people, I would encourage you to do so, but
please tell us how you're going to improve the process with them.
You know, it's -- don't try to just sneak by. I mean, that's not the right
term. Don't try to just barely make it.
If you're just trying to keep your head above water, tell us what
you really need to make it better because everybody does deserve
accurate and consistent answers and good service no matter who they
are, and so that's all we're trying to achieve I think. We're not trying
to grind you into the ground about this or anything.
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"-,"-_."."."...__._-----~"'-_._,...,- -
June 15, 2005
Commissioner Fiala or Henning, who was first? Ladies first.
Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Have you had much of a
turnover there?
MR. SCHMITT: Yes. One of the problems I am having is
retaining staff, mainly because once the staff gets trained they're
much more valuable to the industry and I can't compete salary wise.
I would defer to Ms. Murray, and she can certainly tell you
she's lost three planners here. It takes probably a year, probably two
years to get a planner --
MS. MURRAY: Principal Planner.
MR. SCHMITT: -- Principal Planner up to speed, and
certainly they're valuable to the industry. I'm talking about on the
street, any of the firms. It's absolutely incredible from the standpoint
of them knowing the system and then they're being recruited away.
We've lost two recently in Environmental Review. They go
from Code Enforcement to Environmental Review until we wear them
off at the knees and then they go out the front door. It's a tough job.
And Bill's had turnover. You've lost two reviewers in probably the
last eight months, if I recall, and same way with Comprehensive
Planning.
Go ahead.
MR. HAMMOND: We've actually -- excuse me. In the last
five months we've actually, out of 14 employees, we've lost two
planning techs, two principal planners and on a certain day we're
going to be losing another senior planner so out of 14 we've lost five
in the last four months.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Where are they going, do you know?
MR. HAMMOND: Some to the private sector, some to other
professions, but a lot of times it involves monetary reasons,
sometimes it's commuting reasons. One was an employee that was
commuting to Cape Coral so a variety of reasons.
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CHAIRMAN COYLE: Sure. I understand. Commissioner
Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I know there's a problem
when the public is asked to do what only Christ can do by putting in a
landscape buffer across the middle of a lake. I know it's a problem
when the government agency provides plant materials for a landscape
buffer and a plan reviewer says, "No. We don't want that particular
one plant there, you have to have another one. We want this type of
tree." I just think that's -- isn't what we directed. When you give
choices and those choices are taken away to a certain plant material, I
think we've got a problem. So, you know, I know part of the problem
is staffing, but I think part of the problem is with the review.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I never realized the situation
got that complicated with personnel. This is the first time I was aware
of the fact that not only -- we're asking for more positions for you and
you're having a hard time keeping the ones filled because of economic
reasons.
We had the same problem back about four years ago with the
Sheriffs Department. Remember how it was nothing but training
grounds for other Counties? The Florida Department -- just
everybody and their brother would come there and get the training,
and then they would leave after a short time. It was a revolving door.
Obviously when market conditions are such that we can't retain
competent help, then we have to do something to adjust it. I mean, as
soon as you get someone -- it probably takes a year for somebody to
get up to the point where they're really in tuned to our personal codes
and understanding who it is that they have to go to and how to make
things fly. And if they're here less than a year, we have to keep
repeating the process. It's got to be as effective and efficient as
possible.
But, again, I'm going to go back to what I said the first time I
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spoke about an hour ago regarding the fact that this is fee driven. This
is paid for by the industry, paid by the industry by the same people
that are taking the people away from us, you know, when we get them
trained.
I think we need to take a look at the whole structure. I mean,
how much of a difference is there between the pay that Collier
County pays and what the outside elements are paying out there that
are taking the people away from us? Are we talking about a pay
difference of 5 percent, 10 percent, 30 percent or is it higher? I really
would like to know.
MS. MURRAY: I'd say based on, you know, the situations
I've had with my staff, anywhere from 15 to, yeah, 25 percent.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Say it again. 15 to what?
MS. MURRAY: 15 to 25 percent. I think that's what Randy's
experienced too.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: But remember the benefits of being
employed here. Where else can anybody sit before the County
Commissioners for hours and talk with them?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And then actually nothing--
they don't say anything at all, just go back and forth.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yeah, that's worth something.
We're going to take a break.
(A brief recess was taken.)
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, if you'll please take your
seats.
Mr. Chairman, Mr. Halas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Are there any other
further questions in regards to where we left off prior to the break?
MR. SCHMITT: Commissioner, if I could at least direct the
attention. I've got three UFRs that need to be addressed. One of them
-- two of them are on page F-43. Those are -- sorry. F-44. It's the
unfunded request.
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One was directed from your Beach Committee, and that was to
create this position called a Coastal Zone Manager, CZM. We can talk
about in detail what that entails, but that was a recommendation from
one of your committees. The other is also on there, the habitat
conservation plan. It's an unfunded requirement that is certainly
predicated or at least dependent on where you want to go with this
HCP.
You know we have to come back to you with a proposal. Our
projected date was sometime in September. Due to the delays in
forming the committee and getting that before the Board, the rehearing
that you had asked for just in this past Board meeting yesterday
appointed the HCP committee so--
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Right.
MR. SCHMITT: -- we're not in any position to make that
recommendation. We can continue to list that as an unfunded
requirement and come back later in the year as an unbudgeted request
or just leave it. I'm looking for your guidance.
But the other one we're certainly -- we can talk about is the
Coastal Zone Manager. That would be a person that, I believe, was
recommended, and maybe Mr. Mudd can talk more about that, but it
was put under my request simply from the relationship as far as
Environmental Services and consolidating some of the Environmental
Services' coastal reviews. It would also involve the -- most of the
activities forward of the coastal zone or the -- what am I thinking of?
Coastal construction. Thank you. I lost the word.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Beach management.
MR. SCHMITT: This would be beach manager primarily as
well. All the beach functions, could possibly be the renourishment,
whether that stays or not.
MR. MUDD: Basically, the Coastal Advisory Committee
talked about having somebody that would do inlets besides just the
beach. It seems like that our present project manager, Mr. McAlpin,
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and before that it was Mr. Huvel, the concentration has been, over the
years, basically on beach renourishment. It hasn't been in inlet
management and those particular things, and they were basically
saying we needed a more holistic approach to the entire 36 miles of
our coastline, and that was their recommendation. I told them I'd get it
on the budget, but I couldn't tell them if it was going to be above the
fund line.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Could these responsibilities be
also handled with a marine agent? We discussed that earlier this
morning with Parks and Rec.
MR. SCHMITT: No, that's a different function.
MR. HAMMOND: No. The marine agent really would be
working with -- for IFIS, the university extension system, working
both on educational components but also research, and what they do is
they would do, for instance, research on fisheries or agriculture or
habitat or maybe boating studies for manatees, but they would be
basically providing that kind of technical detail information.
The Coastal Zone Manager position would basically be a very
high-level position of being responsible for consolidating a lot of the
coastal zone functions that occur in a variety of different places, right
now County government, and also have that ability to look a little bit
longer down the road in terms of some strategic planning as to where
certain items, certain programs ought to be moving for the coastal
zone. Thank you.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Thank you.
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I think that's another
example Mr. Halas brought up is the TDC funds. This is where this is
going to be coming from, TDC funds and -- no?
MR. MUDD: No, sir, because it goes beyond the beach
restoration and what's allowed by the certain pennies that we
require. It's deeper inland.
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When you get there, the majority of that will be funded by the
general fund.
MR. HAMMOND: Initially, you may look at just in terms of
personnel that you might be 75 percent tourist development tax and 25
percent 111, but it will have the opportunity if that program were to go
further beyond it. It would mean it would get more closer to the 50/50
mIX.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And what was the
recommendation of the --
MR. HAMMOND: Tourist development.
MR. MUDD: Sir, this request came from the Coastal
Advisory Committee. It did not go in front of the Tourist
Development Council because at that juncture they basically -- the cap
basically said, "Here's the need that we have for a position for the
County." At that juncture, we hadn't figured out the exact
percentages.
Bill and I have been dialoguing between each other just
seconds ago about how much would be funded by the TDC or how
much would be funded by the general fund.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: But still an allocation is going
to come from the --
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- TDC, and I think the
ordinance states that any funding request needs to go before the TDC.
So why don't we hold off on this until we get recommendations from
the TDC.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Because I think this is a
broader picture of inlet management, coastal management, and I think
we need to have a little bit more dialogue before we say yeah or nay.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Anybody have any
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disagreement on that?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: No.
MR. SCHMITT: The only other UFR I'd like to address is on
page F -15, and that is the additional money for the EDC marketing.
As noted, the County's portion of the EDC, the County's
payment of the EDC, comes out of my budget as well, and that's on
page F-15, $416,000. And Ms. Nemecek is here also to talk, if you
wish.
The additional $273,000 that's being identified as UFR, that
would be added to that piece of the budget and identified on your
sheet for marketing promotion efforts.
If you have any questions, I would have to defer to Tammie.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I will say that on your particular
page for Ms. Nemecek, and that was on page F-15 and it's under
finance requirement 0506, and it basically talks about officials
representing the EDC are requesting that the County contribute
$273,500.
If you look at that request on the UFR list that's over on the
general tab, you'll notice that the request is for $164,500, and that
request has been reduced because, as you remember, there were
monies on the UFR list for '05 and you approved partial for the EDC
as far as that marketing is concerned, and that partial has helped
reduce that original request. This was written before you approved
that on May 24th so--
CHAIRMAN COYLE: So what is the net?
MR. MUDD: The net he's asking for is $164,500.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I bet you'd rather have the 273,
wouldn't you?
MS. NEMECEK: Whatever the Board desires.
MR. MUDD: I thought I'd bring that to the Board's attention.
Commissioners, the other thing I'd like to bring to your
attention is in the book that Mr. Schmitt gave you. And I was going
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through and I was counting. You saw me rifling through the pages
looking at the UFR list, and for some strange reason I couldn't find
nine positions, but now I know what happened to the nine positions.
I bring your attention to the overhead. If you'll look at it, it
says 13 expanded, but he's got nine FTE that are funded but beyond
guidance and then the three positions that are in your book, and what I
need to do this evening is to go and work those particular cost figures
up -- I've got it on a scratch page right now -- work those particular
figures up and update your un-financed requirement tab sheet, those
two pages that I have for you, okay, and give you justification for
them in that sheet, but they're missing nine, okay, and the nine
positions that he says are funded but beyond guidance are five
inspectors for building review, one engineering tech in engineering
and zoning and land development, two planners and one admin
assistant. That's a total of nine. So we're missing those nine positions.
You saw that in the read-ahead that Mr. Schmitt gave you.
I was rifling through trying to find out where they were on the
UFR list, and now I understand. We're having a little semantics issue.
They're really un-financed requirements.
He's got them funded in his, either his 113 or 131; however,
based on a private hold FTE to 25, he's got nine positions that he can
fund that he needs, and I believe that gets down to Commissioner
Coyle's question about just enough to tread water versus, you know,
getting enough breath so you can actually swim, and I believe that's
where those nine positions are.
We'll get you that information and we'll have that -- hopefully
have that discussion tomorrow afternoon.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Very good. Thank you. Any further
questions? Okay.
MS. FILSON: We have three speakers.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Three speakers. Okay. Let's hear
them.
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MS. FILSON: The first one is Al Zicheola who will be
followed by Tammie Nemecek.
MR. ZICHEOLA: For the record, Al Zicheola here today for
CBIA.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Your mic's not on.
MR. ZICHEOLA: Is that on?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: There seems to be something with the
connection there. No, both of them are off.
MR. MUDD: Lee, give him your mic.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: How about the hands.
MR. MUDD: Testing.
There you go.
MR. ZICHEOLA: For the record, Al Zicheola, vice president
CBIA, here today to speak to you -- and, by the way, thank you for
the opportunity to speak to you here today. Basically, we're here as an
industry representative as the industry support shows requests for
more people.
Recently we have had a study that we've been able to take a
look at regarding levels of service. And to avoid any possible cause
and effect type situation when we're talking about improving levels of
service if more people are needed, and I think that's fairly obvious and
we would wholeheartedly support CDES in that request.
I had a couple of others points, in listening to this discussion,
I'd like to make in general, but first and foremost we're here to support
that request for those additional people.
I would like to thank Commissioner Coyle for your comments.
We likewise, the industry likewise, would say we'd like to know how
the level of service is going to be improved. Right now there is a
crisis in the service. We believe that part of that are personnel wise
and part of it isn't.
But if a blueprint could be laid out that would show how we
could improve the level of service, we would even be twice as strong
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behind this request. And if there were more positions that were
needed, we could even support those provided they're funded, which
leads me to some of my other issues.
One of them, however, the charges that were referred to, to
visit with a planner. We pay now to meet with a County official, and
I've always had a problem with that, and the points Mr. Henning made
that perhaps we should charge the public who wants to come in and sit
down and talk about it are entirely appropriate.
It's a little one-sided for a developer or an applicant to go
through all of the -- jump over all the hurdles necessary to prepare a
plan and bring it in to be approved, have to pay for the privilege of
meeting with someone that we pay, whose salary we pay, is a little bit
one-sided for some -- anybody can walk in off the street and see the
plans and raise questions and objections, and I think that's a little bit
one-sided.
And if the objections are valid, they should be willing to pay
for the privilege to talk to that planner like we do, and I think there's
an issue of fairness there that needs to be addressed, and I thank you
for your time in mentioning it.
Mr. Mudd's comments further are well placed. They lead to
that. Everybody wants to close the door behind them, and we have yet
to -- we also have to deal with those issues. When those people do not
have to pay for the same privilege we do for access, that's a problem.
May I have just one minute extra?
I'd just like to comment that Ms. Susan Murray's comments
earlier about the abuse of the meetings with planners, I will tell you
that I do business in a lot of counties in the State of Florida and
everywhere else I go they encourage those meetings and want you to
have those meetings.
I'm a little confused how a preconstruction meeting can be
pointed to as a problem. You can't have it both ways, all right. If
you have a problem with the consultants and their plans and the
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quality of their drawings, yet you don't want to meet them in
advance to look at those things and try to -- I submit to you, there's
cause and effect. If you meet with them and express your concerns,
they'll get better and that's why most jurisdictions like that.
Again, we just want to see the level of service improve. We
wholeheartedly support this. I would like to say we have tremendous
confidence in Joe Schmitt's integrity and Bill Hammond's integrity
and the good people that work there, but we do need an improvement
in the LOS and we're willing to pay for that. In fact, we have.
I submit to you we haven't paid too much. If we've got a
surplus of money to pay for these positions, I'm glad we do, but I
think there's evidence we might have been paying a little bit too
quickly up front before, but I'm glad the money's there to fund them.
We support it and we support their efforts here. Thank you so much.
MS. FILSON: Next speaker is Tammie Nemecek.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: With respect to charging the public,
AI, I can assure you there are a couple of members of the public I
would like to charge to come in and meet with me, but that's not you.
I'm not directing that at you.
MR. ZICHEOLA: Commissioner, if they have something to
say, they should say it, but they should be under the same rules that
we are. That's my only point.
MS. MURRAY: May I make a brief comment, Mr. Chairman,
just to clarify some things, and I appreciate Al coming and speaking
before you.
First of all, we do staff a front counter planner desk and we
don't charge people to walk up. We have two planners full time,
8:00 to 5:00. Any member of the public or any petitioner can walk in
and get information that way. There's no charge for that. We do
issue permits over the counter and there are charges for those minor
permits.
We also hold -- have required pre-application meetings prior to
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the submittal of a project. There is a $500 fee that is refundable when
the project is submitted. It's credited to the account. Those meetings
are critical to outline the proposed proj ect and any issues, and all the
departments that are involved in the review attend those meetings or
they are supposed to.
We've relaxed our meeting charge program in that we do
provide meetings free of charge for certain types of projects, for
example PUDs. We found that continuous dialogue with applicants is
beneficial to both parties and the same with the site plans; however,
when it starts to get to where you have to have two and three and four
meetings, there's a problem.
And maybe there is a problem just beyond that we need to
look at a little bit more closely, but I think from the standpoint of
reducing the number of what I would call excessive meetings, it's been
successful. Maybe we need to tweak them a little bit, and we have in
that we've provided three meetings, but it's kind of like we either
review the plans --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I'm going to start charging you for
your time here.
MS. MURRAY: For what?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: For your time. Your three minutes
have expired.
MS. FILSON: Your next speaker is Tammie Nemecek. She'll
be followed by Bill Spinelli.
MS. NEMECEK: Good afternoon,Mr. Chairman,
Commissioners. I would like to lend my support to the Community
Image and Economic Development Council in Collier County and I
would like to also lend my support to Joe Schmitt and his request for
these additional staff members.
I think that through our public/private partnership we have a
unique perspective on the permitting process in Collier County related
directly to the businesses that we're working to help expand as well as
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recruit to the community, and with that comes a fast track regulatory
process that was put in place in October 1 st of 1997. And we work
quite closely with the staff at CDES, Joe and Susan and Denny and
Amy Patterson, as well as a lot of the planning reviewers in both the
land side as well as the building permit side.
And what we find is that the level of service is severely
hindered by the number of reviews that are demanded by the staff
that's there and that at certain times when you have a staff that -- a
staff person that's in charge of reviewing a plan and they happen to go
on vacation, that you don't have enough staff to support that and so
that planning will sit there and wait for that staff person to come back.
We fully support the additional staff members, especially
working with Joe and knowing that the funds are there. That makes it
even more exciting to hear that we can fund this with that -- those
funds that are still there.
And our hope at the end of the day is that when we're talking
to this, about locating here in Collier County, that we can effectively
say that they have a predetermined time frame for getting those
permits reviewed because when they come to Collier County they
have certainty on the process.
I talked to a prospect this morning that wants to flee Maine
because of the taxation woes that they're feeling up there in their
software company and he wants to be in his facility by October. Can I
confirm that he can be in his facility by October?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Which year?
MS. NEMECEK: Yeah. And those are the day-to-day
conversations that we have with businesses. They are interested in
that certainty in the process. And, again, we're looking at this from
both the public sector as well as the private sector, and what I've seen
is a willingness to come to the table from both sides and see how we
can work through this and make some improvement.
And I really commend Joe and Jim and the rest of the staff at
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CDES in working with us on this and the Commissioners in helping us
to fund these positions and give Joe what he needs in order to be
successful.
On the other side of the house is our unfunded request for
marketing, and I'd like to thank the Board for funding this year's
marketing dollars that are going towards doing our marketing research
initiative for the Florida Trade Corps.
These funds that are coming in for nèxt year will be to
implement those marketing initiatives which will be a wide range of
opportunities with regards to direct marketing trade shows, trade
missions, looking at -- working with site selection consultants, having
more visible EDC in Collier County at the state level with Enterprise
Florida so that we can get our name out there and know that we are
here to serve businesses and we want businesses to locate here, we
want businesses to expand here. So I think these dollars are going to
be well spent for the community and to get our name out there and
know that we want businesses to locate here and expand here.
So, again, I thank you very much for your efforts in making
this community diversified with its economy. It's a long haul for us.
It's not something that's going to happen tomorrow, but it's so exciting,
with Ava Maria that was approved yesterday, to see some of these
things start to come around. And we're seeing lots more excitement in
eastern Collier County, and we hope for many more good things to
come.
So thank you very much and, again, thank you to Joe because
he is -- does have one of the hardest jobs in Collier County, and we do
thank him for all his efforts to make this better. Thank you.
MS. FILSON: Your final speaker is Bill Spinelli.
MR. SPINELLI: Thank you, Commissioners.
I just want to say a couple of brief things. I was very glad to
hear all the conversation from the staff and from the Commissioners
about some of the things we can all think about.
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We talked about efficiency, we talked about -- there was some
skepticism as to whether we would really get some results. I want to
introduce performance.
I think the money is there when we came to an agreement a
couple years ago on how we were going to restructure the fees so that
we could properly create the service, and there's times where we'd like
to be efficient and we want to use a hybrid type car that gets a million
miles a gallon but there's other times when we need to put our foot on
the accelerator and get some performance. And so by adding these
staff positions, I think it's going to allow them to further perform.
I'm not sure that the 13 is enough plus adding the nine on top is
enough -- plus the other nine on top is enough, but I might propose to
think about -- in a few minutes time the Commissioners came up with
some interesting ideas. I've seen situations where a private/public
type partnership in some type of a committee that can work under the
direction of somebody on your staff try and come up with some
recommendations and create some performance objectives.
If we are going to hire some more people and allocate some
more dollars to this, the dollars that are already there, what exactly are
our goals and what can the Commission hold the group accountable to
try and achieve so they know it got what it paid for? Just a thought,
okay. So please give some thought to that. Thanks.
MR. SPINELLI: That was your final speaker.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Although the Board members
individually get questions or frustration from the public about how
government is run or not running and that, it's really the County
Manager's responsibility to make sure that it's run well. So I hope
some of the responses that the public has got can realize that, that it's
really the County Manager who you need to respond to.
About the budget, the community developments, one is for
PUD monitoring. I don't know much about that program or the
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backlog that you have in there, but I went to one of the president's
meetings and don't --I'm not sure -- in my opinion, I guess I should
say, it's none of the County's business whether two fire districts
merge.
I mean, I just don't -- if it's about PUD monitoring or about
County government, I think that's good. But if we're going to try to
take on the whole world and give the public information, maybe we
ought to let public relations do that instead of community
development.
You've got your hands full, and I do think you need to kind of
take a look at --try to take some of those responsibilities away from
you so you can concentrate on the core of your operation. I don't
know if the Commissioners had a chance to take a look at the EDC's
report that the university did, the exit pole from the people using the
fast track system. I will never do it here in Collier County again.
So why would we want to spend more money on promoting
Southwest Florida if we have that perception?
My perspective, before we do any promoting, if that's really
our goal, then let's fix it to be successful.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's definitely food for
thought. I'm not too sure whose responsibility it would fall on, whose
shoulder. The ultimate responsibility falls on this Commission.
The County Manager takes direction from us. If he isn't, I'm
sure we'd take him to task for it. So far his biggest difficulty is to try
to decipher what we're saying, you know. The message is kind of
mixed.
I'd like to befriend the position of stepping in to try to
encourage fire districts to merge, stepping in at times to do such
things as encouraging the school system to put school nursing in place.
We've been effective on a number of directions that have
probably been outside the normal realm of Collier County
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Commission or Commissioners, and is it negative? No. I think it's
been a plus. You know, we've weighed in on different issues all the
time. We lobby our state and our federal elected officials for all sorts
of reasons. We get involved in other issues.
I do think that we have to keep our composure on this if we go
through the process and concentrate on what we're here for, and that's
to work with the budget and to try to make what we have go the
furthest direction possible to give the very best possible service that
we can provide. That wasn't meant to be a put-down in any way on
the suggestions you made, Mr. Henning.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Any other questions?
No. Okay. I think we're finished. Thank you very.
PUBLIC UTILITIES DIVISION
MR. MUDD: The next division to present is Public Utilities.
MS. DeLONY: Good afternoon, Commissioners.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Good afternoon.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Good afternoon.
Jim, if you'd be so kind to maybe introduce the people.
MR. DeLONY: What I'll do is I'll ask them to present their
name and who they are as they speak to you, if that's all right with
you.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes, sir.
MR. DeLONY: For the record, Jim DeLony, Public Utilities
Administrator.
For Public Utilities Division's FY06 division operating budget.
It is in compliance with the County Manager's guides.
Now, within the division there are three departments, as
briefed by the County Manager earlier this morning, that have
exceeded the budget guides. These would be the Financial
Operations Department, the Wastewater Department and our Solid
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Waste Fund 470.
The directors of these departments, who will introduce
themselves as they speak today, are prepared to discuss these
specifics.
With regard to division overtime, we're not, as a division, in
compliance with the budget guides of 4 percent of salaries. We have
budgeted in this budget an overtime budget of 5.2 percent of our
budgeted salaries representing scheduled absences, vacation coverage
and event-based scheduled time for emergency responses.
The directors of the Water Department, the Wastewater
Department and Financial Operations Departments are here, and they
will provide specifics of our overtime requirements as reflected in this
budget.
We have nine unfunded positions for which we are requesting
approval, five in the Water Department and four in the Wastewater
Department, and, again, we will cover those specifics as part of the
directors provide information to their specific project budgets.
With that, I'm ready for your questions, and if not we'll begin
each department's presentation.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Are there any questions from the
Commissioners?
I'd like to proceed, then, please.
MR. DeLONY: Thank you. Mr. Smith.
MR. SMITH: Yes. Good afternoon, Commissioners. My
name's Ray Smith, Director of Pollution Control Department, for the
record.
The budget that I'll be talking about is Pollution Control
Department budget which begins on G-3, page G-3, and extending
through G-8.
Bottom line is this: We are in compliance with the County
Manager's budget guidelines. We remain millage neutral. We meet
the overtime budget guidelines presented and we also -- our operating
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expenses remain within those guidelines, and I'm prepared to answer
any questions you all may have.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Are there any questions from the
Commissioners?
Proceed.
MR. WIDES: Commissioners, good afternoon. Tom Wides,
Operations Director from the Public Utilities areas. I'd like to cover
two areas for you with this discussion.
Number one, if you turn to page G-ll. G-ll is the discussion
related to the administration cost center in the division. Bottom line, it
is within the budget compliance as far as the County Manager's
guidance with an 8.4 percent decrease in funding.
I really have no other discussion there unless you have any
specific questions.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Questions, Commissioner?
MR. WIDES: Okay. If I may, please turn to page G-15. Page
G-15 represents the financial operations budget for FY06.
As you see, if you look at the budget closely, you'll see the
appropriations are noted as 8.7 percent which does, on its own,
exceed the County Manager's budget guidance; however, if I can point
you to two items in that cost center.
One of them is the indirect cost reimbursement for services
from other areas, and that represented a 21.9 percent increase. The
other one is payment in lieu of property taxes. This is kept -- these
two items are captured in my department for the entire division. And
if I remove the effect of what I consider these as being
nondiscretionary, if I remove the effect of those, we are within 3.5
percent which is well within the guidance of the County Manager's
intent.
Before I go on, we would like to talk to overtime. But before
we get to that, if you have any questions in this cost center.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Questions?
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No.
MR. WIDES: Okay. At this point the other item that Mr.
DeLony noted was that, in fact, the overtime for our department is not
in compliance with the County Manager's intent. However, what you
should be aware of is brought up in my area is the utility billing and
customer service area, and I'd like to ask John Yonkosky to speak to
you for a few moments about his scheduled and unscheduled
overtime needs. John.
MR. YONKOSKY: Thank you, Tom.
Good afternoon, Commissioners. John Yonkosky, Utility
Customer Service Director.
The overtime per guidance with this budget is $66,480. The
overtime that we're requesting is $100,100, that's a $33,000
difference.
One of the things that we do is provide a service to customers.
When we actually turn a meter off for nonpayment, we turn the meter
off for nonpayment. The people that turn them off and turn them
on, their normal work hours are 6:30 to 3:30 every day, but we keep
the office hours open until 5:30 and quite a few times people will
come in at 5:30 to make the payment, and they want their water turned
on.
And in your ordinance -- they want their water that night, and
in your ordinance you have a $100 fee for turning on water meters in
an overtime basis. They request it and are willing to pay, and we do
that. So $25,000 of that $33,000, it pays for itself.
There are approximately 50 people every week that come in to
pay after the 3:30 -- after the meter reader's left, and they want to pay
the $100. We charge them for it and then we go ahead and send --
keep somebody there on staff to turn that water back on for them. So
that pays for itself, that over time does.
The second element of overtime deals with the -- during
season we actually bring people in, demand a telephone and provide
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customer service on Saturdays. There's approximately $9,000 in the
budget in overtime for that. That is not funded, but it is a customer
service. It's a level of service issue.
MR. WIDES: Commissioners, on behalf of John, any
questions on the overtime?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Apparently not
MR. WIDES: Thank you. At this point we'd like to turn it
over to, I believe, Mr. Roy Anderson for the Engineering
Department.
MR. ANDERSON: Yes. Thank you, Tom.
Good afternoon, Commissioners. Roy Anderson, Director of
Public Utilities Engineering, and I'll be presenting our budget for our
department this year.
I'm pleased to report that we -- our increase from '05 to '06 is
within the County Manager's guidance and also I'm pleased to report
that our use of overtime is well within the County Manager's
guidance.
If there are any questions, I'd be happy to take them at this
time. If not, we can move on.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioners, any questions?
You're doing a really good job. Just keep doing it.
MR. ANDERSON: Okay. I'd like it turn it over to Paul
Mattausch, the Director of Water.
MR. MATTAUSCH: Commissioners, for the record, Paul
Mattausch, Director of the Water Department. I'll be presenting the
Water Department Operations budget.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Are you responsible for the rain too?
MR. MATTAUSCH: You know, I wish I could say yes, but I
really can't do that.
The budget is found on pages G- 20 through G- 24 . Water
Department provides administrative support, water treatment, water
distribution and lavatory services for customers for nearly 49,000r
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service connections to the County's public water supply system.
The Water Department remains 100 percent in compliance
with all applicable rules and regulations and, as you know very well
from our weekly reports to you that you read every week, we also met
the demand this season.
On page G-22 the proposed budget is $19,618,900 including
two expanded service requests. The budget meets the FY06 budget
guidance for discretionary expenditures; however, as you heard this
morning from Mr. Mudd, it does not meet the budget guidance for
overtime.
Regarding overtime, the Water Department is a 24-hour-a-day,
7-day-a-week utilities and, as such, we're required to maintain
certified staffing around the clock in our water treatment facilities and
we must respond immediately to interruptions in water service. And
as Mr. Mudd so well pointed out this morning, those 2:00 a.m. water
main breaks on US 41 have a significant impact to our overtime
budget.
The Water Department requested budget does not include a
request for any additional positions within that $19.6 million. It does,
however, include nearly $700,000, in fact $698,900, in contractual
services cost to do certain compliance-related and/or inherently
governmental services and functions.
Please turn, if you would, to the unfunded requirements
section on page G-24. On G-24 you see five positions, five FTEs
listed there, to do that contractual work internally at a cost of
$324,000 rather than the $698,900 that it would cost us to do those
same services contractually.
By adding the five FTEs we have a net savings of $374,000 --
$374,500. The budget will decrease, actually, from the 19.6 million
that I pointed out earlier to $19,244,400. These positions are funded
in the current user rates.
These positions will allow us to maintain our current level of
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services that we provide to our customers and the approval of these
positions will allow the Water Department to remain in compliance
with Florida Administrative Code 62555 which is the regulation that
governs the operation of your water utility.
At this time I'd request your approval to include these positions
in the Water Department budget, and I would be glad to answer any
questions that you may have.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Any questions?
This is what happens when you adhere to budget guidelines,
you don't get many questions. Okay. So thank you.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir. Mr. Cheatham.
MR. MATTAUSCH: Excuse me.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You're on a roll.
MR. MATTAUSCH: I have the fun job of presenting three
cost centers to you. The second of these cost centers, so I don't get
interrupted again here, is the Operations Center budget script. The
Operations Center is found on page G-25. The next page.
The Operations Center is located in the Industrial Park east of
Airport Road between Progress and Mercantile Avenue. It provides a
consolidated location for the operations of utility billing and customer
service, John's group, water distribution, locates operations and
wastewater administration of the Public Utilities Division.
The water distribution section is currently, as we speak today,
in the midst of moving into those newly renovated facilities. The
FY06 budget request is in the amount of $174,200. The operating
budget includes expenditures for electricity, trash collection, water
and sewer service from the City of Naples, expenses related to the
upkeep and maintenance of the building and for operating supplies.
Because this is a new facility, these expenditures are estimates
based on experience with facilities of similar size and type.
The budget meets the FY06 budget guidance for both
operating expenditures and overtime, and I would be glad to field any
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questions related to the Operations Center fund.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: No questions.
MR. MATTAUSCH: Okay. Again, one additional, and that is
the Goodland Water District Fund (441) which is found on pages
G-26 and G-27.
The Goodland Water District budget provides for a clean,
reliable and safe source of drinking water for approximately 500
service connections in the Goodland Water District. The budget
provides for the operation, maintenance and capital improvements of
the facilities of the Goodland Water District.
On page G-26 you will find the $586,000 FY06 budget.
Operating expenses total to $420,500, $50,000 as capital related and is
for minor capital projects and reserves amount to $116,100. The
budget meets the FY06 budget guidance for both operating
expenditures and overtime, and I'd be glad to field any questions.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yes, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, I don't have any. You guys
are doing such a good job, you know.
MR. MATTAUSCH: Hearing no questions, Mr. Cheatham,
the Wastewater Director, is next.
MR. CHEATHAM: Thank you, Paul.
Commissioners, for the record, my name is Joseph Cheatham,
Wastewater Director. Will you please report to pages G-28 through
G- 34 in your book, and you'll have the wastewater section there in
front of you.
The Wastewater Division's budget is driven by growth. We've
expanded our system by 19 miles of flush and forced mains with over
ten additional lift stations we've added this year and we're growing at a
rate of about 7 percent as far as increase in capacity, approximately
2,500 new connections per year.
As you know, the department expanded both the facilities now
to 40.1 MTD wastewater capacity, and I'm proud to report, as Paul
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reported, that we are in compliance with the FDEP 2001 consent order
and that we have been in compliance for 500 days at both facilities.
Pages G-31 and 32 of your book you'll see our budget
numbers.
MR. DeLONY: Excuse me, Joe. Is it 500 or 700?
MR. CHEATHAM: Well, we had 700 at one plant and we had
300 at the other plant so --
MR. DeLONY: Averaging five?
MR. CHEATHAM: I'm averaging 500.
Okay. On pages G-31 and 32 you'll see our budget numbers.
You'll see the Wastewater Department has proposed in the fiscal year
of2006 a current budget of$18,39,400. In addition, we're requesting
by request for expanded services totaling $270,600.
The budget does not meet the County Manager's guidance on
discretionary spending. Right now we're at 4.4 percent. The guidance
is 3.9. We're.5 percent over the discretionary spending guidance at a
cost of $29,300, and of I'm prepared to say where those numbers are.
And also, as in Paul's -- Water Department we're not in compliance
with the guidance on overtime.
The Wastewater Department's fiscal year budget includes
$352,800 for overtime. The guidance is $215,000. Primary reasons
for the overtime is because of the Florida Administrative Code that
requires two operators on for shifts 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and
we have to cover vacation and sick leave replacement. Also we have
to cover events that happen to us, like forced main breaks and lift
station outages. And as Paul mentioned about water main breaks, we
also have a number of forced main breaks we have to respond to 24
hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days out of the year. And if you turn
to page G-34, you'll see our request for four unfunded FTEs. The
Wastewater Department does not -- budget does not include a request
for additional positions, but we had included $442,000 in contractual
services to meet our compliance related -- inherent government
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services we are in compliance with.
By adding the four additional FTEs we're asking for at a cost
of $204,000, we could save the rate payers 238,000. I propose to you
that we add these four unfunded positions to reduce the budget by
$238,000.
The four positions would be in the area of maintenance for
locates, North County water reclamation facility reuse as well as in the
Collections Department.
That concludes my presentation. I'm open for any questions.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioners?
No questions.
MR. CHEATHAM: I turn it over now to George Yilmaz.
MR. YILMAZ: Good afternoon, Commissioners. For the
record, George Yilmaz, Solid Waste Director.
In addressing fiscal year '06 budget, please turn to pages G-36
through G-44, and our mission statement of our department is stated
on page G-37.
Turning to pages G-37 and 38, Florida Solid Waste Disposal
Plan, our proposed budget does not meet with County Manager's
policy primarily due to consulting fees for the pre storm planning for
hurricane debris staging sites at the amount of $55,000 which
represents 5.9 percent of discretionary increase. However, the
proposed budget does meet with overtime budget guidelines as well
as -- I'm pleased to report that there is no expanded request for fiscal
year '06. We'll be able to operate our current service level with the
current funding we have.
Our proposed budget is designed to continue to fulfill
requirements of AUIR, continue to stay in compliance with no
complaints through prudent environmental risk management and meet
the demand in our collection, processing, recycling and disposal
infrastructure.
If you have no questions, I will now turn the budget discussion
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to John Yonkosky for our solid waste special assessments for the
mandatory trash collection fund summarized on page G-44.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I have one question.
MR. YILMAZ: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: In regards to the debris removal
after Hurricane Charlie, aren't those funds going to be reimbursed
from FEMA or not?
MR. YILMAZ: Big portion of it anticipated to be reimbursed,
SIr, yes.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So we haven't got a check yet
from them, huh?
MR. YILMAZ: We haven't got a check yet; however, we have
the due diligence in place. We anticipate that we will receive flood
reimbursements from FEMA.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Thank you.
MR. YILMAZ: You're welcome.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, only about $12,000 of what was
spent during that hurricane, because of gated communities, are
probably not going to be reimbursed, but we're trying. And we'll have
to discuss a gated community approach if and when we ever get
ourselves hit by a hurricane because FEMA will not reimburse us for
anything that's behind a gate and so we're going to have to talk to
those folks about getting it out to the curb in front of their particular
gated community in order to -- or to get it out during their regular
pick-up days in order to get it resolved.
I know if we have a lot of trees down that becomes very
difficult and it gets a little unsightly so we're going to have to work
out -- and Mr. DeLony's actively looking at that because of some of
the FEMA requirements.
MR. DeLONY: Sir, I'd like to take this offline with you
individually and maybe at Board direction or your request for that and
direction from Mr. Mudd come back to the Board with Mr. Summers
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at another time and maybe talk to you in terms of details with regard
to this.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Appreciate that. Thank
you.
MR. YONKOSKY: For the record, again, my name is John
Y onkosky. The proposed budget for your mandatory program is on
page G-43, if I can direct you to G-43.
The budget is $16,085,400. This is not in compliance with
your budget guidance. This represents an 18.3 or $2.491 million
increase over the FY05 budget.
The proposed budget has three key drivers in it, and I would
like to spend just a couple of minutes talking to you about those
drivers. It's a 64-gallon recycling cart is one of the major drivers,
customer growth with anticipated 4,500 new customers this year in the
program and the consumer price index for the landfill management for
the disposal site.
The 18 or the $2,491,000 includes growth and that represents
$680,000 or 27 percent of this increase is due to growth.
The new cart program has a value of$1,062,000 or 42 percent
of the increase. Disposal, the 3.5 percent increase, is $348,000 and
represents 14 percent increase. Reserves are going up $296,000 which
represents 11.9.
So the major drivers growth at 27 percent, carts at 42 percent
and disposal at 14 percent.
The recommended collection rates of the special assessment
for FY06 are on page G-44. And if I can direct your attention to page
G-44, you can see that for the first time we've got two different rates.
District 1, the rate that has the carts, is 153,070 and District 2
is 144,026. The District 2 has a 3.92 percent increase over last year
and the District 1 has a 9.52 percent increase and that includes the
carts.
Even after the inclusion of this 9.52 percent increase in District
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1 and 2.79 percent increase in District 2, I would like to direct you to
the screen. You can see Collier County is on the downside of the
middle part with the high element increase of the $154. If you take
that cart out, you can -- just the increase in the cart, you can see that
we are down to next to the very lowest one, yet Collier County has the
highest level of service of any of these counties, and I just wanted to
point that out to you. And the -- Collier County maintains the highest
level of service in the State of Florida for the dollars that it pays, and
that's all that my presentation is.
If you have any questions, I'll be glad to answer them at this
time.
If there are no questions, I'd like to turn it back to Mr. Wides
for the debt service.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Just a minute. District 1, is that
in Immokalee area and District 2 is --
MR. YONKOSKY: Other way.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: It's the other way around?
MR. YONKOSKY: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Thank you.
DEBT SERVICE
MR. WIDES: Commissioners, Tom Wides again for the
record.
If I can take you to page G-35, this is the public -- this is the
portrayal of the Public Utilities Debt Service. To boil this page down
for you, the key thing that I'd like to portray to you today is that for
the year FY06 the total external financing is going to be
approximately $225.6 million. Now, if you look on this page, you will
see 7 -- down near the middle you'll see loan proceeds of 76.9 that
flows through this fund. That is for a State revolving fund, financing
and also for the commercial paper financing.
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There is another debt component that doesn't actually appear
here because it doesn't run through this fund and that is for a balance
of about $148 million and that will be revenue bond financing.
So, again, this page portrays about 76 million, 77 million, and
there's an additional 148 million that will also be borrowed for a total
of225.6 for the year and that primarily is to fund our large capital
program.
May I entertain any questions?
Thank you.
At this point I turn it over to Roy Anderson to talk about that
capital project program I just mentioned.
MR. ANDERSON : Yes. Again, for the record, Roy
Anderson, Engineering Director.
The capital budget for water and wastewater is found on the
sheet that's called Capital 1 and it extends through sheet Capital 19
towards the end of your book.
On Capital 1 our requested budget for new capital projects this
year is $69,450,000 and these projects are necessary to meet demand,
improve reliability and comply with our consent orders.
In terms of solid waste, solid waste capital programs are shown
on capital -- page Capital 19, and it can be seen on that sheet on page
Capital 19 that our total expenditure in new projects this year for solid
waste will be $6.0 million.
Basically, that concludes my presentation. I'd be happy to
entertain any questions if you have any on capital proj ects. If there are
none, I'd be happy to turn it back over to Jim DeLony to provide a
wrap-up of our overall budget presentation.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: No questions.
MR. DeLONY: With that, that includes our budget
presentation.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta has a question.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir.
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COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. I was wondering about
the retention of employees. How is your department doing?
MR. DeLONY: Sir, we run through an attrition rate
somewhere between 5 and 8 percent turnover just normal attrition in
the firm. This morning we have about 26 open positions of the 350
some odd that we have available to us for hiring through this year's
budget. This would be the '05 budget.
So beyond the attrition rate, right now we've got some critical
vacancies that we've maintained in a project management function.
We've got a couple of retirements that we've had, key retirements. I'll
admit to you today that one of the members of this delivery team
sitting in front of you will not be here the next time we appear. Raise
your hand, Mr. Cheatham.
Mr. Cheatham has been attracted to the siren song of the City
of Tallahassee, and we wish him well.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Why?
MR. DeLONY: So this is all part of the evolu -- yeah, why
would anybody go to Tallahassee. I happen to agree with you, and
we've talked about it extensively, but the bottom line --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Have you been dealing with
MR. DeLONY: That's where we're at for this morning, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's a good place for him.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: They actually lured him there?
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir, they did. Yes, ma'am, they did. The
key of it is that, and Mrs. Merick can speak to this much more
succinctly than me in terms of the overall picture, the bottom line of it,
we are seeing some turnover and we're seeing some long-term
absences or long-term duration to hire some critical staff.
I'm sure each of these directors have a story of woe they would
tell you, but we are maintaining as best we can.
Weare working aggressively with the HR Department and
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with the manager's office to ensure that we provide competitive
salaries, competitive benefits and a wonderful place to work, and that's
where we're at this afternoon and I hope I've answered your question.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: More or less you did. The
percentage that you're running, has this been standard for quite a few
years, about the same percentage, or is it peaking?
MR. DeLONY: I would tell you that over the last three years
that I've been here, sir, we've gone up and down. We've had as few as
12 vacancies and as many as 36 vacancies with very little difference
in terms of overall strength of the organization. So that's about where
it is.
I think we average somewhere between 5 and 8 percent just in
normal attrition and then we'll peak to somewhere between 12 to 15
percent just given the facts of life and people making second decisions
about staying here or working somewhere else other than Collier
County .
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir. I just want to dovetail on that.
We're receiving competition, as all businesses do, for the critical
skilled folks that we have and we're also seeing challenges in getting
entry-level employees, folks that are not making, you know, much
more than $30,000 a year to come to work for us, but we have a
competitive benefits program that we continue to attract some of those
folks, but right now that's where we're at.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Obviously even though you
are short employees the public acceptance rate for which you have to
offer is quite high so am I wrong or am I putting this in a way that's --
I hope it isn't offensive what I'm saying.
I haven't heard any complaints, very few complaints from the
public out there about the services that you provide in general.
MR. DeLONY: Sir, I think we're doing an outstanding job
meeting demand as well as being in compliance and the customers,
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yes, SIr.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It doesn't seem that your 5
percent, 7 percent attrition rate is having an undesired effect at this
point.
MR. DeLONY: Well, if I may, and I don't want to extend this
any longer, but certainly, you know, we're going make -- we're going
to do the things we need to do to serve the customer, and some of the
tools that I have at our disposal to do that is the great staff that we
have and training that great staff. What this budget represents is
utilization of overtime so we can extend it.
John spoke to you today about his ability to provide a level of
service, but we do that through overtime and with overtime -- this
overtime budget I think we can do that as well as make up for some of
those shortages through that attrition that we spoke to earlier. Mr.
Mudd spoke to that in his presentation this morning.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Any other questions?
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yeah.
Mr. Cheatham had some UFRs for positions. That's not a
journal fund or 111 fund, and I didn't know if it was appropriate just
to handle that now.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good.
MR. MUDD: Sir, you can do both of those. There's a total of
nine positions that are unfinanced requirement.
Sometimes when you have budget guidance and you say keep
to 25, sometimes there's some decisions I can't make that would make
sense. If I had nine positions to give, I would have given them to Mr.
DeLony and the fact that in every particular case the contractual effort
in order to perform the work for him in his budget is more than what
those positions would cost on an annual basis totally burdened.
Mr. Mattausch mentioned to you some $600,000 worth of
contractual is in his budget. If he had the five positions, he could
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bring that in for something around 324 and save around $300,000 in
this budget.
Mr. Cheatham mentioned that there were four to the tune of
about $420,000 to contractual, and if you brought those four people
on it would be around $200,000 totally burdened and he would save
money in the budget.
So there's around a half million dollars worth of savings that
you could make and cut the budget, and the budget would actually go
down because he wouldn't have contract those particular positions and
he could hire them.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Let's do it.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yeah, I think so.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah.
MS. FIALA: Can we just motion?
MR. MUDD: Yes, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So moved.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Seconded.
MR. MUDD: What I need to have -- the next reviewer, if you
don't have anymore questions for Mr. DeLony, is debt service and
Mike will talk about that.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You have guidance, right?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, I have guidance.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's all you need.
MR. DeLONY: Okay. We're done.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thanks for such great service.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thanks for adhering to the budget
guidelines, that's important.
MR. OCHS: The next section that we'll discuss is debt
service. That is on page H -1. There's a debt service tab in your budget
binders, Commissioners.
Debt service represents principal and interest payments and
outstanding bond issues that the Board has previously approved.
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Overall, the total appropriations for debt service increase 30.3 percent,
and there's actually some logic beyond why that is.
You have essentially three new issues. Looking from the top,
the fourth item down, there was a 2005 sales tax bond issue that was
approved this year and your ongoing debt service is $9.6 million and
there were no appropriations in the adopted FY05 budget. That was,
again, for the courthouse annex, the parking garage, the Arthrex
building and the like.
A few lines down further, Conservation Collier Fund 272 is the
general obligation bond that was issued this year by the Board with
ongoing debt service of approximately $4.7 million. And, I'm sorry, I
skipped over Caribbean Gardens' general obligation debt. We placed
the -- at this point the worst-case scenario of a .15 mill tax levy and
that would generate the total net appropriations of $8.7 million.
So the sum of those three is essentially the explanation for the
increase going from 43.6 million in the adopted '05 budget to $56.8
million.
Again, there is really no discretion here as the bulk -- with the
exception of the Caribbean Gardens. The bulk of the remaining
balance of funds represents bonds that have already been issued.
One thing that is not included that will be added is the debt
service associated with the gas tax bond issue. We haven't officially
closed on that. We'll be getting a final debt service schedule within
a matter of weeks on that so we'll need to incorporate that into a debt
service budget as well for that bond issue.
We've been fortunate, as well, over the last year . We've been
in the bond market, and Collier County paper is very well regarded in
the marketplace and we're also fortunate that we've been in the
marketplace at a time when market rates have been at or near record
low levels so that's been a plus for us as well.
That concludes the debt service presentation. If there are no
questions, then I would move on to Management Offices.
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MANAGEMENT OFFICES
MR. MUDD: And if I can get all those folks to come on up.
The management offices, you have Board-related costs, the
County Manager, the Office Management budget, the Tourism
Department, Communication, Customer Relations, Emergency
Management, and you have some grants, Division of Forestry -- I
didn't know we did that, but we have something for Division of
Forestry -- the Medical Examiner and Emergency Medical Services,
along with Pelican Bay Services, Collier County fire, Isles of Capri,
Ochopee and the Goodland Fire District.
MR.OCHS: I'll start initially on page I-2, the County
Manager's budget. There's an overall 4.9 percent increase. There are
no expanded service requests. Under the Board-related cost section,
that has a large percentage increase of 205 percent, but that includes
$200,000 for the -- a federal lobbyist that Mr. Mudd had alluded to
earlier.
MR. MUDD: Federal and state. They're both combined with
that figure of $200,000.
MR.OCHS: That explains the large increase there. Obviously
with our storm water program as well, Mr. Mudd is hoping to
capitalize on that to generate some grant dollars as match for capital
proj ects in the storm water area.
Office management budget, there's an increase of 5.2 percent.
There are no expanded service requests.
And that would bring us, then, to the Tourism Department.
Overall there's a decrease of 19.5 percent due to reductions in carry-
forward and fund balance in the promotions area as well as the
emergency appropriations that the Board approved expenditures for.
And I'll let Mr. Wert speak to the expanded service request that is
proposed.
MR. WERT: Okay. Thank you, Commissioners. Good
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afternoon. A little more time today maybe than yesterday. Maybe.
We do have two expanded positions. Actually, one expanded
position. It's two permanent part-time people, support for sales and
marketing and also support for public relations.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: What page are you on, Jack?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes, what page?
MR. WERT: I-I0. I-I0 begins our section. And those two
part-time positions --
MR. MUDD: That's at the bottom ofI-13, the last paragraph
expanded FY05, 06. Go ahead, Jack.
MR. WERT: Thank you.
And those two positions were recommended by the Tourist
Development Council. Actually, they recommended two full-time
positions which is truly what we would like to see this year.
We think we'll have a better chance of recruiting if those are
full-time positions, but overall that is -- we're not asking them for any
other positions in our budget.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, my rationale for telling Jack to
do part time is to bring them on, see what they give as far as
additional efficiencies to the office and to his advertising campaign in
trying to hold his cost down a little bit.
One of the things that he didn't mention that I want to bring to
your attention because I believe it's going to be important is on page
I-I0, okay. And this is one of my pet peeves with Jack because you
have a TDC disaster recovery, and I'm on the one, two three, the
fourth line down under Tourism Department where it says 196.
You have a 91 percent change in -- we had an adopted budget
at '04/'05 of $852,000. I believe that your emergency advertising fund
from a manager perspective needs to be anywhere from a million to a
million five, and that's what you need to have in your particular pocket
in case you have an emergency. And because of the four hurricanes
prior, during and just a little bit after and again through this particular
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season, that particular fund is down to $73,000.
Why do I mention it to you? I want to bring it to your
attention because I asked Jack. I said, "Okay, now you got it. Now,
how are you going to fill it back up again?" and that gets to be a bit of
a dilemma.
He says, "Well, boss."
I said, "Listen, man, you drew it down. Now you've got to
figure out how to get the money back in."
One of the things that you were going to talk about here in the
relatively near future, and I don't know if it's been through the TDC on
the fourth penny yet.
MR. WERT: Coming back next month.
MR. MUDD: But I talked to Jack. I said, "Look it. If they're
going to do a fourth penny, you do that whole fourth penny on
advertising. You talk about your staff operating expenses out of your
percentage of the third penny, or whatever you want to call it, and
then you devote money to fill this particular obligation. And when it's
filled to 1.5, the additional dollars you can break down between beach
renourishment and beach access, whatever the Board desires," I said,
"but try to keep it simple, but you've got to have some kind of a
mechanism to fill this back up again."
I threw it to Jack. He still doesn't have an answer based on a
three-penny approach yet, but one of the reasons I'm trying to hold
down costs is you've got to figure out how you get that emergency
fund back up again. That's all I have.
MR. WERT: We will certainly look at whatever surpluses we
might have at the end of this fiscal year. Certainly we can look at that
to use some of it to replenish that fund. About 220,000 of that reserve
is committed to hurricane disaster this year and, of course, the balance
that we've taken it down is that $500,000 that we're putting toward the
summer advertising.
So it is important and I certainly concur with Mr. Mudd that
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we really do need to bring that fund back up and have a dedicated
way to keep it there in the future like we've done on the beach side.
We have beach dollars every year that we put toward
catastrophic reserves so we always have that dedicated source.
The rest of our plan, as Mr. Mudd indicated, is pretty much a
flat budget. Because we spent our carry forward this year, it won't
be as much in the coming year.
So the proposal on the fourth percent when it comes back to
you hopefully in July, that may be a way that we can -- to get at and
deal with this problem.
I can tell you right now we are having meetings this week,
have had several already with the hotel community, and they will
come back, then, with a recommendation and that will pretty much
decide how we go with that proposal.
And if you have any further questions on my budget, I'd be
happy to answer them.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I think we'll take a ten-minute break.
(A brief recess was taken.)
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, please take your seats.
Mr. Chairman, Commissioners, you have a hot mic.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: We're back in session.
MR. MUDD: I think you're finished with --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta would like to
make a commercial announcement.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, yes. I just -- at 5:00 I'm
going to have to leave. I arranged a legislative -- post-legislative
session for Senator Bullard in Immokalee. Since I'm the one that
arranged it and have to make the introductions, it might be appropriate
for me to be there. So if I suddenly at 5 :00 depart this room, it's not
because of anything that anyone said. I want you to know that.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You can -- you feel free to leave any
time you want to.
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June 15, 2005
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Don't forget, if you're leaving at
5:00 you're going to get into rush hour traffic.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's right, you should leave now.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It's normally a 45-minute drive,
and I know the fast way there.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay, good.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think we're advertised for 5:00,
from 9:00 to 5:00.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So we have to shut down at 5:00
anyways and continue on tomorrow.
MR. MUDD: Sir, Mr. Wert was done presenting, sir, and we're
into communications and customer relations, unless you have any
questions for tourism.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I don't. Anybody else?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Nobody else does.
So it's John Torre.
MR. TORRE: Good afternoon, Commissioners. John Torre,
director of communications and customer relations.
My budget can be found on Pages I-15, 16 and 17.
The budget I submitted was within your budget guidance, and so
-- and I have no expanded services requested. So if you have any
questions, I'll be happy to answer them.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Questions?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Gee, that was easy.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good job, John.
MR. MUDD: John, your budget's actually decreasing, correct?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Yes, it is.
MR. TORRE: Correct.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Down 3.3 percent. So good job, John,
keep up the good work.
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MR. MUDD: Commissioner, not that he's losing service, he's --
better estimates on -- he's had a year on station. Last year he
mentioned to you that he put estimates in based on his staffs input.
He thought they might be a little bit high. He'd know better this year.
He knows better this year and he knows what he's paying, and that's
why his budget is down.
MR. TORRE: And we had a chance to track over 12 months to
see precisely where we need to increase and decrease. Overall we
came in lower.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Now, that's one of the rules we follow,
don't ever believe the staff.
MR. TORRE: I've learned that too.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good.
MR. MUDD: Sir, that brings to Emergency Management, and
that's Mr. Dan Summers.
MR. SUMMERS: Commissioners, good afternoon. Dan
Summers, Director of the Bureau of Emergency Services and
Emergency Management.
For the sake of your time constraint, if I can make a few concise
summary remarks for the various divisions.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: What page, Dan?
MR. SUMMERS: Well, I'm going to -- if you -- emergency--
I'm going to give you about six organizations to discuss. You can
begin -- my summary remarks will begin EM; Emergency
Management starts on I -19.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. SUMMERS: Couple of summary remarks, please. And
again, first of all let me introduce Darcy Waldron from Emergency
Management; Chief Rod Rodriguez, Isle of Capri; Jeff Page, Chief of
EMS. Chief Paul Wilson had a situation and I've excused him today.
He could not be here.
Couple of opening remarks, please. The efforts of the Bureau
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and the Department of Emergency Management this year had a
record-breaking year, receiving over 700,000 in competitive grants.
We have modernized our fire service fleet and gained efficiencies in
reducing maintenance costs and helped to contribute towards lower
insurance service organization ratings for our homeowners. We've
also reduced the size of our fire fleet.
I also want to mention to you something that's hot off the press
yesterday. Collier County Emergency Management won a National
Association of County, NAACO, award for innovation for our disaster
response units. And that is the result of the direct effort of Joe Frazier
and Jim Von Rinteln in our office related to our disaster response
units. So we're real proud of that effort. It was a team effort, and
those two guys led the way. And there's a copy of that award that we
received yesterday.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well deserved.
MR. SUMMERS: Thank you. We're real proud of them.
Just a couple of things to mention to you. I'm going to share with
you several sections or departments that are under the bureau. That
includes Emergency Management, the miscellaneous grants, division
of forestry, medical examiner -- and you don't have to turn pages yet
because I'm going to summarize those things for you -- Emergency
Medical Services and med flight, Collier County Fire District, Isle of
Capri Fire District, Ochopee Fire, and the Goodland/Horr's Fire
District.
To save you some time and indicate that the budget guidance was
followed within the time constraints, I thought this would yield some
extra time.
The organizations that are within budget guidance, of course
miscellaneous grants, that's a revenue. Division of Forestry, that's
called a cooperator's agreement and we pay forestry a set amount
almost every year and that provides us support from Forestry for fire
service, aerial fire operations.
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Our medical examiner is within budget guidance. They do a fine
job there. And that is a contractual arrangement with the District 12
Medical Examiners, LLC.
Collier County Fire District, which is a -- those funds are
apportioned out accordingly to the service agencies. And med flight.
Emergency medical services is also within budget guidance for
discretionary. The change there will be over time.
Couple of highlights. Isle of Capri again is within budget
guidance. They've worked hard to address manning, inspections and
clerical support with job bank personnel. And as you know, they've
had a big jump this year with ad valorem.
Ochopee Fire Control is within budget guidance for operations.
There are only very minor salary impacts as a result of this new
collective bargaining agreement which was completed a few months
ago. And again, no direct impact on -- no direct operational impact on
general fund from either one of these organizations.
There is some reserves there that part of those organizations --
and I encourage those reserves to remain intact, either from
FEMA-related disaster reimbursement issues, and also some early
phase programming discussion that we're having for some station
needs and coverage needs at Port of the Isles.
Let me see if you have any questions up to this point. I have just
a few more summary remarks.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So at this point in time how does
our reserves look for the long haul, for the next, let's say, 12 months?
Hopefully we won't have anything reoccurring like we had last year.
MR. SUMMERS: I can only address the reserves related to the
divisions within Emergency Management bureau. And the big
concern there is obviously the fire districts. Our EMS reserve as it
relates to a disaster, I would have to ask Mike for some assistance on
that because it is general fund.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Our reserves are in good shape. General
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fund are as good as they've been. Utilities has adequate reserves.
Overall, I'd say we're fine.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, and if you remember correctly,
and it's one thing I whispered in Mike's ear, I said it's probably --
we've got a better status on reserves in the '05 budget than we ever had
before.
And I want to take you back a little bit. When we did the
unfinanced requirement list for '05, every time we had somebody that
came in for reserves, we deducted it from that amount of money, and
we were running a tally as we were going along.
So when you finally allocated the money for '05 unfinanced
requirements, it, the amount that you allocated, any reserve
expenditures were reduced (sic) from that UFR. We had never done
that in the past. I mean -- and so I would say right now you probably
have all your reserves that you started with that you allocated in your
budget. And that's unheard of since I've been here, so -- well, we did
that.
I asked Mike to do that because the UFR list was going as long as
it was to make sure that those were tallied and we didn't get ourselves
in trouble in case we did have a bad emergency manage -- we had a
bad season, okay?
MR. SUMMERS: Commissioners, I'd like to compliment Mike
and his staff, because we worked immediately after the storm to get a
handle on FEMA disaster reimbursement and, although our claims are
no comparison to Charlotte and Lee, we're well ahead of the curve
with FEMA reimbursements.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. Could you give me a little
more detail about Port of the Isles and the plans --
MR. SUMMERS: There is a committee there, the community
association committee, that has come forth. They are interacting with
Chief Paul Wilson on the early phases of coming up, maybe, withi
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some -- a site. We're talking about staffing, we're talking about the
service that they are looking for. So we're having community
discussions.
We have no formal proposal to the County Manager yet, but we
are looking at options and we want hopefully to try to bring something
that could be financially doable in the immediate future.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Possibly as things start to
progress you might be able to keep me appraised of it?
MR. SUMMERS: Sir, we certainly will. And the dialogue with
that community association has just been excellent.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Great.
MR. SUMMERS: So we are working in partnership to bring
some options to you for discussion.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, we also -- while that dialogue was
going on, and Dan brought it to my attention, I said hey, you know,
you're talking about a fire district that's at four mil.
And I said, you know, with that assessed value that they just had
of 45 percent, you might have an opportunity to take that millage
down. And then we got into the other fire station issue.
But if you wanted to talk about their increased millage or their
assessed value, you could bring that millage rate down to about 3.5 if
they wanted to and still have enough monies coming in where they
don't have a reduction in their budget.
But now they're talking about a new fire station, a new engine,
new personnel, and when you do that it's probably not a time to reduce
that millage rate because your assessed value went up.
So I bring it to your attention. It's not something that's lost on us.
We're asking those questions both ways and trying to find out what
that advisory Board is wanting to do so that we don't miss any
opportunity. If you're going to reduce the millage rate, you need to
declare it and relatively soon. So we need to ask them those questions
and what they want to do with that increase in revenue that was kind
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of unexpected for them.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you.
MR. SUMMERS: The remaining two outstanding issues, one is
Emergency Management related to our request for half of a full-time
equivalent position. The position that is held by Jim Von Rinteln in
our office has been funded at a 50-50 ratio between County general
fund and Emergency Management, what we call pass-through
assistance money from state and FEMA for the past five years.
Jim's mission critical to our office. This is one of the -- and we
also would like to have the opportunity to use our Emergency
Management assistant's money in the true desire in which that
legislation was intended, and that's to build capability with supplies
and equipment.
So you'll notice that we did not ask for any additional disaster
response units next year. And we go through a very painful
accounting situation to try to move EM, Emergency Management,
assistance money into staffing roles. So we're asking you to please
pick up that FTE, that half FTE.
Critical issues for that is that that position works to help us deal
with the operation, maintenance and development of the shelter
management programs, hazardous materials incident. And right now,
Commissioners, we're staring down the barrel this year of over a
million dollars in competitive FEMA mitigation grants. And this is
where -- one of the areas that Jim works as a result of the '04 hurricane
season. So we stand in opportunity by having a program person there,
not only to help me in the EOC and to help me in the field, but to
really take advantage of some FEMA mitigation grants to help work
on our structural retrofit and improve our shelters.
Our other activity is replacement vehicles and one expansion
vehicle this year. The disaster response units, the trailers, we actually
work on those and move them around just about every day. We need
high wheel clearance vehicles.
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I ran into that situation when I was out at 3 :00 a.m. in the
morning with Charley that went through, and I was out patrolling
North Naples area looking for possibly issuing a flash flood warning.
So we have asked to replace instead of a compact car to a
medium duty SUV, and also add or replace our light duty Jeep with a
heavier duty SUV so we can safely tow our equipment.
We're gaining capability but we are -- and we're doing that with
non-motorized vehicles, our light trailers that provide portable
lighting, our generators that we have forthcoming under a rental
arrangement. We need to have the assets for those additional vehicles
to pull that.
And to be real honest with you, in Emergency Management the
towing type SUV is just stock equipment, just because that's the way
we do business.
So that sort of hits the high points. I'll be glad to talk about EMS
-- oh, pardon me, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Halas has a question.
MR. SUMMERS: I'm sorry. I looked down.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I was looking at your game plan
here, and under your UFR list you have a full-time Emergency
Management coordinator, and you say to be dedicated to homeland
security. Could you elaborate a little bit on that? Since I felt that the
Sheriff took care of the homeland security. But maybe you can give us
some -- shed some more light on this.
MR. SUMMERS: Yes, sir. Thank you. The homeland security
staple is the new threshold since 911 for Emergency Management and
law enforcement. The Sheriffs perspective in homeland security is
that criminal element. The border -- the border patrol, the border
interface, the potential threats to do harm to the community.
My job in homeland security is prevention and vulnerability
analysis. What can I do to assist the other departments to eliminate
vulnerability, work with them in their water treatment plants, for
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June 15, 2005
example, where there are areas of safety. Where can I build additional
safety programming related to homeland security at the hospitals as
we deal with hazardous materials?
Where law enforcement is dealing with crisis, Emergency
Management's homeland security is consequence management. What
is the secondary event related to any emergency situation or homeland
-- threat on homeland security.
That program, which we got initiated with some grant monies,
has just been invaluable in the areas that we've been able to do. And
the homeland security function in Emergency Management since 9-11
will never go away. That new vulnerability twist will always be there,
and so we certainly put that UFR request with you today.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, Mr. Summers. Just a
suggestion. I wanted to say it now because I know if I waited until
after the meeting I'd probably forget this with running out the door.
The County Commission has one vehicle at their disposal that
would probably fit in neatly into your inventory at the time of a
disaster. It's a Ford Explorer, and it's even got the four-wheel drive
little adapter inside of it, so I'm sure that we, through the County
Manager's office, could make arrangements for you to get a set of
keys at the time that --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Why don't we just give it to
him?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I believe that's where that vehicle
came from originally, was from Emergency Management.
MR. SUMMERS: Yes, that was an original--
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: They should be able to use it at
the time of emergency. I'm sure we could find our own ways to get
around. If we gave it to him, Commissioner Henning, we'd have to
replace it and I don't know if that would be a wise idea. This has got
about 60,000 miles on it, probably get another five years of service out
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of it at the rate we use it.
MR. SUMMERS: We are -- thank you, sir. We would love to
investigate that opportunity. Our challenge, of course, is having
something that is pretty rugged in terms of towing but also has the
utility. And we can tow these trailers. We have to be careful about
stopping them because they're quite heavy with the Explorer frame.
We do -- in a disaster, we pull every spare car from fleet or
pickup in, and again, it's reassigned either by personnel or by mission
from the EOC. So just getting some daily capability -- and when we
respond to the wildfires, one person can't do that anymore to, one, to
support incident command and have a second person who's working
with me to address the community impacts and relocation.
So what I think you're not used to seeing is a little more field
response from Emergency Management, and that's certainly what I
concentrate on, because we're not going to be here operating on small
events in a vacuum in the EOC. I have to be out there to support the
community and support the incident responder until it becomes big
enough to activate the EOC.
I'm ready to shift gears to emergency medical services. And I
have just a few comments, and then any particulars for Jeff Page.
I want to -- if you'll pardon the medical pun, EMS is alive and
well. We're head and shoulders above the challenges associated with
rising health care. Emergency medical services is a health care
delivery component, and all of us know what the rising health care
costs are like today.
I want to tell you that we've worked very hard to clarify the
overtime-related issues. And again, this is an area where we're outside
your budget guidance related to overtime.
And as you know, I think you have been down the discussion of
comparing apples and oranges between law enforcement overtime and
emergency medical services' duty cycle of a 24 by seven organization,
understanding that we have to deal with fair labor standard acts among
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other things.
There are four significant points related to emergency medical
services this year. EMS has not had a growth unit in five years. Our
AUIR now requires this growth unit, and that is being submitted to
you.
About 60 percent of our operating expenses are attributable to
non-controllable costs, such as rent, insurance of all forms, et cetera.
Peak demand this year was a real challenge during season, with
hospitals being at capacity and extended wait times at emergency
departments to transfer patients to ER beds.
Please recognize that emergency medical services is again in the
same boat as health care delivery . Various trade publications put
annual increase in health cost operations between 11 and 16 percent.
We're much closer to the seven percent mark in our area.
Understanding that we have one of the nationally recognized EMS
systems, one of the best resuscitation rates in the country, and we have
all done -- we have done that in a very efficient and professional
manner.
If you have any questions particularly for Mr. Page, I'll defer to
him at this time. That's all my remarks.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The overtime is controlled by
contract negotiations; am I correct? Is this above and beyond?
MR. PAGE: Well, there's a number of overtime issues. Some--
when you have a 24/7 shop, vacation requests, sick leave, those type
of leave requests, we have about 42,000 hours a year that we have to
cover. So rather than down units based on the amount of sick leave,
we backfill those positions.
Some of the things we are doing, though, to control that overtime
down is increase the number of job bank employees we have. These
are EMTs primarily that come in and fill in regular hours to fill those
vacanCIes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The request for overtime, does it
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coincide with the union contract?
MR. PAGE: Well, it's mostly under the federal labor standard
where any time over 40 hours we have to pay the overtime.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right. And that's part of the
contract --
MR. PAGE: Correct.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: -- too. So we're okay.
MR. PAGE: Yes, absolutely.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: We're not trying to give
something that is not being asked.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. What I've asked -- I asked Jeff and Dan
to do is, the stuff that's contractually obligated, okay, in the union
contract, we don't call it overtime, okay, it's mandatory pay. It's based
on that contract and it's how they work. And that's what we
negotiated.
What I asked Mr. Page to do is to control that in '04. That
900,000 worth of discretionary overtime has nothing to do with the
union contract. And that's where I was -- that's where he is still not
meeting the guidance at two times two percent. He's a little bit over.
And you want to talk about figures. Go ahead, if you would,
Jeff.
MR. PAGE: Sure.
MR. MUDD: Show them on which page.
MR. PAGE: The pages for emergency medical services run from
I-32 through I-37.
My personnel services are 5.97 percent. This includes the six
FTEs that we've asked for, for the additional life support unit.
The increase over the FY '05 less the expansion unit is 3.2
percent. So it's 14,490, 200 -- I'm sorry, 14,490,200 for FY '06 versus
our 14,036,700 for FY '05.
One of the things the manager did ask is that we look for -- when
you have these special events like we commonly do for golfing events,
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things of these nature, that requires overtime to cover that event, it's a
dedicated unit. We're looking at following what the Sheriff utilizes
where these contracted events would actually pay for the personnel
costs associated with that so that there is no overtime, it's actually
coming out of the revenue generated from covering that event and
actually backfilled back into the personnel line items.
So we're hoping to see a reduction there and see how that goes
this year.
As I mentioned, job bank employees, increasing the number of
those employees should also help reduce the overtime.
And of course we've also included some additional training
software, which will reduce the amount of overtime for training that
occurs off duty. So we think that actually will provide training on
duty for both EMS and fire fighters this year.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: How much was your overtime?
MR. PAGE: For FY '05?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: And how much are you budgeting for
FY '06?
MR. PAGE: Again, you have to remember that in this year's
budget for FY '06 we're calculating the scheduled overtime into the
regular personnel line item for regular salaries.
But if you're asking for the actual totals -- Mike, I might need a
little help here.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Why don't you just give it to me
later. What I would be interested in is the total amount of overtime
and the total number of employees receiving it.
MR. PAGE: And the total number of employees receiving
overtime? The overtime is restricted to just the bargaining unit
personnel and billing group and pilots.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Just tell me the number. And I'd like the
same information for your forecast, your budget for '05 -- or '06, fiscal
year '06.
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Any other questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, let's go on.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, Mr. Page did mention that he has
six personnel on expanded because he has an expanded unit that's
coming on Board, and that's in keeping with our A UIR in that process.
Dan, back to you.
MR. SUMMERS: Commissioners, that concludes my remarks
on the EMS and Emergency Management and the other --
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Excuse me, Jim. One other thing we need
to mention just quickly. We budgeted for a rate increase, and that's
elaborated on Page I-34 in EMS. Jeff does that annually, consistent
with looking at what our competitors do, what the market will bear,
and also bearing in mind that he's trying to minimize the hit to the
general fund. And the general fund goes from $10.9 million support
in '05 to roughly 9.2 million in fiscal year '06.
So part of the additional reserve and, you know, the manager
being under his allocation in terms of transfer to EMS is because of
the growth in the fee-based revenue that this budget is built upon. So
we wanted to make that clear.
And Jeff, I believe you've already taken this to the Board.
MR. PAGE: Yes, it was approved yesterday.
MR. SUMMERS: The rate increase was approved.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: So this budget is consistent with the fee
increase that Jeff brought to you yesterday.
MR. MUDD: As Mike gets prepared for Pelican Bay -- Dan,
you're done, right?
MR. SUMMERS: I'm done. If you want to caution -- the fire
districts, the Goodland District is one that you need to be aware that
we have some -- Mike, you want to talk about Goodland/Horr's, just
for a minute?
MR. MUDD: Goodland district and Horr's Island's, on I-58, your
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last page before the little red page that says management offices
capital. It went down by 19.3 percent, and the reason for that is
because Horr's annexed to the City of Marco Island and is no longer
part of this particular MSTU.
And, you know, I brought it up, I said has anybody taken into
account that Horr's Island's gone, or is the city taxing them and then
we're taxing them on this one too? So we got that resolved.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: The City of Marco has requested a two mil
-- they've been providing fire service for $56,000 for the last three or
four years. Obviously, Horr's Island is no longer a part of this MSTU.
The tax levy last year was just shy of a half a mil. They have
requested a two mil tax levy for fiscal year '06 as the contracted
payment to cover Goodland.
So obviously we're going to be negotiating with the City of
Marco Island. There's no requirement that the City of Marco Island
actually be the provider. Obviously, from a proximity standpoint they
are physically located closest to Goodland, but, you know, if that's
their bottom line position we'll explore other options up to and
including looking at Isle of Capri or another district serving them
hopefully at less. Obviously, Isle's millage is one and a half, it would
be less than the two mils that is being currently requested at least.
But again, that was their opening salvo. We're hopeful to come to
some agreement and minimize the cost to the Goodland residents,
obviously.
MR. SUMMERS: That's all I have. Thank you, Commissioners.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Thank you very much, Dan.
PELICAN BAY MANAGEMENT OFFICES
MR. MUDD: Brings us to Pelican Bay, Mike.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: I'll cover Pelican Bay. There are
representatives from Pelican Bay here. Unfortunately Mr. Ward had a
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hearing that was a conflict.
Essentially, the Pelican Bay budget is scoured greatly by the
MSTU advisory committee within Pelican Bay, and they have
reviewed and approved the budget that is before you today.
On Page I-39, I guess I'll just comment on a few key notes.
Under revenue, the assessment revenue adopted in fiscal year '05 was
$2.5 million. The recommended assessment level in '06 is $546,500.
They've opted this year to use some of their reserves and bleed
down their fund balance rather than assessing. And I think they'll
reevaluate once a final determination is made whether not they would
be annexed into the City of Naples. I think that's a fair
characterization of where the advisory committee is at this point, but
-- so with that again, the advisory committee has voted officially to
support this budget. It's gone through a number of changes. We've
incorporated them as we went along. There are no new positions, no
expanded services.
But from a payment standpoint, from the cost to the individual
taxpayer or ratepayer in Pelican Bay, the big thing for '06 would be
the reduction in the assessments. And that was a policy decision that
they've made at this point in time.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes. They -- a couple of
representatives that I meet with monthly said that this is the way that
they wanted to address the funds that were sitting in reserve. And I
told them that I didn't think this was a good way to go, but obviously
this is what they're planning to do. So I -- and I mean this just in jest,
I said I hope you guys don't end up with rope burns.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, if you don't have any questions on
Pelican Bay, that completes the management offices.
The capital program has a lot to do with beach renourishment and
all those projects that they normally see. So we've seen that numerous
times, that process. If you have any questions on the capital program
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we'll-- Mike and I will be prepared to answer those questions.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I don't see any questions.
COUNTY ATTORNEY'S OFFICE
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to the County
Attorney's office.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Now, must we complete all this by 5:00?
MR. SMYKOWSKI: No.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, we're going to do pretty good. I
think you're going to pretty well be done by 5:00.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I was done two hours ago.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, we still have Friday.
MR. MUDD: David?
MR. WEIGEL: Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman and
Commissioners. David Weigel for the County Attorney Office.
In 1992, Chairman Burt Saunders placed the municipal code
responsibility with the office of the County Attorney. And what we
have, then, thereafter is a recurring but not annual fiscal requirement.
And unfortunately, this is one of the years where there is a fiscal
requirement. You may see it there on Pages J -6 through J -9, where
we, to keep the contract current and the service up to snuff, are
requiring a $10,000 input in that regard.
Additionally, pursuant to the Article 5 legislation this past year,
both the state attorney and the public defender office provide a service
to the County for the enforcement of County ordinances by and in
contractual nature. $20,000 to each of those agencies is agreed upon
by those agencies and the County. And again, it's been placed with
the County Attorney's office. It's a new expenditure based upon the
legislation of just last year.
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June 15, 2005
So that increases our budget to that extent.
As you know, we're a relatively small office in the sense that we
don't grow significantly over a period of time. But this past April you
did approve two positions to our office which both we are thankful for
as well as the client's agency to receive that service, which would be
the community development services division.
Our funding for those positions is ostensibly nearly entirely the
permit and fee application type fees, with little to no ad valorem
consequence.
As you can see, on J-6 or 7 -- let's see -- pardon me, on J-7 and 8
that we are significant -- have significant revenues both from the risk
management department and from community development services,
again, 258,000, which is non ad valorem revenue to us which
otherwise would be paid for at taxpayer expense. So we're very proud
of that relationship and service we provide.
If one were to extract the municipal code and the state attorney
office costs, our percent increase is small but over the five percent.
If one were to take out the $16,300 I believe we have put in there
for temporary services due to two employees who will be going on
maternity leave, we would meet the five percent goal of the budget
request for this year.
If you have any questions, I'd certainly look forward to
answering them.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Questions, Commissioners?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: No questions.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us --
MR. WEIGEL: Thank you very much.
MR. MUDD: Thank you, David.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
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June 15, 2005
Brings us to the Board of County Commissioners. And we have
the Bayshore Gateway Triangle CRA. Mr. David Jackson is here.
And the Airport Authority operations, if we could just bring
everybody up from the table, that would be great. And we'll handle
them each on its own.
MS. FILSON: Okay. Would you like me to go first, since I'm--
MR. MUDD: Oh, I'm sorry. Ms. Filson, I didn't mean -- I didn't
want to make you last. That's normally the heated debate item with
Sue, so I don't know if we want to lay that spark on now or we want to
wait until these other two people get finished before we go in there
and figure out who has the biggest travel budget.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Let's get Sue finished here.
MS. FILSON: Okay. I have increased one, two, three, four, five
line items in my budget this year, and only one of those was under my
control, and that was office supplies due to the cartridges for the
printers.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: What page are you on, Sue?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: J-12, I think.
MS. FILSON: J-13. I mean -- I'm sorry, J-3. However, I'm
reading off my line item budget. And I was just letting you know
which items. And three of the items that I increased were due to the
County car for the gas increases and maintenance and so forth.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's Commissioner --
MS. FILSON: But my line item budget--
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's me.
MS. FILSON: My line item budget is not in the budget book.
I'm just letting you know which items I increased.
The $600 from the -- for the office supplies, the others all relate
to the County vehicle.
And the largest one, $1,100 is F AC dues, which I have no control
over, and that went from $26,600 to 27,700.
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June 15, 2005
Do you have any questions?
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Any questions, anybody?
MS. FILSON: And of course, the travel I left at 4,000. If you
wanted to increase that, I will leave that up to the Board.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Where do we stand on that travel?
MS. FILSON: Each Commissioner is allotted $4,000.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I know that, yes.
MS. FILSON: Your balances, you mean?
Well, I know that a couple of Commissioners gave another
Commissioner some of their allotment. I can give you the total of
each person's expenditures as of 6/13. District 1 is $2,930.32. That is
your available total, okay.
And the available total for District 2 is $977.12.
District 3 is $2,497.42.
District 4 is $1,988.57. And I believe you gave a large chunk and
so did District 3.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's to District 2.
MS. FILSON: And District 5 -- District 5's available total is
$889.44.
But I do have expenditures that I haven't received checks for that
are pending.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So what you're saying is that over
all our expenditures have gone up. Do you think that we should have a
cushion of $1 ,000 each in our -- in the travel budget?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No.
MS. FILSON: That's not my decision.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: It means that Commissioners should start
living within their budgets --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: -- just like all the other departments do.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Good. I'll do that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, we can always keep
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June 15, 2005
coming back. And I -- this last year I really didn't travel much to
Tallahassee. I had quite a few commitments I had to take care of
locally. But next year I hope to take quite a few trips, and when I
reach the end of the budget, if there's an interest on the part of the
Commission to share what they have and if they're not going to use it,
then we'll talk about it at that time.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I think we always have enough in the
aggregate. And if we have surpluses in one, we can share them.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: The problem is that
Commissioner Halas, unlike myself, is embarrassed to come and beg
you people --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You don't have to beg. We were happy
to give you the money.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I know it. I'm just picking on
you.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's not a problem.
MS. FILSON: And one other item I want to mention while I'm
on my budget is, I've been requested to purchase a time/date stamp for
the office. And because it's such a large ticket item, I wanted to get
word approval. It's going to be like over $500.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: What is a time/date?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It tells you the time that comes
in the office. Lately we've getting communiques from different
departments after we get the agenda. And, in fact I had one that came
in at 8: lOin the morning on Tuesday. And so I just ~- what I'm trying
to do is hold staff accountable for getting the stuff in to our agenda in
proper time so that we as Commissioners have time to go through it.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Why don't we save the
taxpayers' money and just say we have a deadline of Friday at 5 :00
p.m.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, obviously, it hasn't worked--
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I'm going to help you a little bit
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June 15, 2005
better than that, okay? My next staff meeting, based on the Ave Maria
experience that we just went through, basically, when that thing hits
the printer on Wednesday afternoon, that's it. If there's something you
forgot or there's something new that gets added, it's continued to the
next meeting.
And we're going to solve that problem, because I'm a little bit
embarrassed for the staff and for maybe some outside folks that gave
us some late information. And my apologies for that, because it came
in fast and furious to me and I was doing the same thing you were
doing, what the heck is this?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And we'd already read everything
that we'd gotten in the first place. And then how were we supposed to
MR. MUDD: Yes, ma'am. And it makes it very difficult.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: You spend all weekend reading that stuff
and then at the last minute you get something that changes. Yeah, it's
-- let's do that, okay.
MR. MUDD: Sir, I'm going to resolve that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You just saved $500.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's a promise, right?
MR. MUDD: That's a promise.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Ifit doesn't work, we're going to
have a time/date --
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, it's going to be continued, okay.
And I'm going to tell you right now, I'm not going to take another one
if it doesn't go to the printer and it's not right, it's continued to the next
item.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: If it doesn't work, we make him pay for
the date stamp.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, good.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So you saved $500. Goodjob.
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June 15, 2005
COMMISSIONER FIALA: You know, if that will make people
toe the line a little bit.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
Are you done, Ms. Filson?
MS. FILSON: I'm finished unless you have any other questions.
MR. MUDD: Okay, Mr. Jackson.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Thank you, Sue.
Hi, David, how are you doing?
MR. JACKSON: David Jackson, the CRA Board's executive
director.
On May 11 th when the Bayshore Gateway Advisory Board met
with the CRA Board, they had a joint workshop in which you may
find familiar is this document that we gave you as a read-ahead, and
we talked about the budget.
Commissioner Coyle, you were not there. We gave you a back
brief the next week and we talked about what was going on.
In there was our budget. And you saw what we had in there and
there was some discussion, several points that several of you had
about what was going on in that part of the budget.
And in there it was to flush out the personnel services, the
operations expenses, and also to put in about 74 percent of the total
revenues available to the CRA into capital improvements. And we're
still holding to that, and that's what our budget shows.
We gave our information to the management office and they put
it into their format, and that's the format that's in your books, which is
the same numbers just arranged differently.
And in there we had asked for two expanded positions. And the
expanded position discussion was, they are placeholders, they are
planning ahead for the future. There's no intent right now to fully staff
those positions. But when they are needed we'll come back to the
CRA Board, request permission and go out and advertise for the
positions as needed so they're fully staffed up and we don't have to go
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June 15, 2005
back and do a budget amendment for that way. And if they never hire
one then it rolls back over into the fund for the next one.
In the thing that has changed that -- from the last time I spoke
with the CRA Board and you as the holders and the ones that are
accountable for the CRA trust fund, which sits with the Board of
County Commissioners, the thing that has happened is that our TIF
revenue increase over last year's increase is $354,800. So we're up
about 29 percent in TIF revenues over last year.
Also, the thing that's a little different is the -- what we got from
the tax office and the property appraiser's office, we had a budget for
about a million six for revenues. However, with the June numbers that
have come in here, we have an increase of $122,141 more than what
we had programmed for. It just so happens that that $122,141 more
than covers the cost of those two expanded positions. So essentially,
we actually can fund through the unexpected revenues the two
positions and have more money in the capital improvements.
That's all I have for there, unless you have a specific questions.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Mr. Jackson, just to let you know, on July
1 st we'll get the final certified taxable value from the property
appraiser, so we will be making a final change based on that final
value. He gave us a preliminary number on June 1 for budget
planning purposes, so your numbers will change one more time.
Typically, they would move in a positive direction as they update the
final tax roll prior to certification.
MR. JACKSON: Right. And we are fully well funded to do all
the projects that we project to do. And we have a couple capital
projects that we're going to fund this year or early into, after first fiscal
year 1 October.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good. Thank you, David.
No questions by Commissioners?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Anything else?
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June 15, 2005
MR. JACKSON: No, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good job.
AIRPORT AUTHORITY
MR. MUDD: Going to the Airport Authority. And Ms. Cook
will present this particular item. I will tell you that it's been a pleasure
working on this budget with Ms. Cook. It -- and I've gone through a
lot of these before where it's been like pulling teeth to try to figure out
what's going on.
She has downsized her staff, she's combined operations. She's
done some very positive things for the Airport Authority since she's
come on Board, and I will tell you after she's done doing her operating
budget, we'll go to the capital side of the house, and any person that
you can do, that you can use ad valorem for $371,000 and they can
leverage 2.8 million in grant money, that's a good investment. And
that's the first time it's been that forthcoming in this particular thing.
So I will tell you, from a County Manager's side of the house it's
been a pleasure to put this budget with the Airport Authority.
Ms. Cook?
MS. COOK: Thank you very much. Theresa Cook with the
Airport Authority. And that's pretty much my budget as Mr. Mudd
has explained.
But we're looking at a budget transfer of $594,000. It's a slight
reduction of about 5,800. And we did eliminate two positions. And
that's pretty much -- we've stayed within the guidelines of the request.
If you have any questions on the --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I'm showing 589,000.
MS. COOK: Yes, you are. Okay. Change that number to
589,000. Mine is a little bit different.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MS. COOK: There might have been some miscommunication in
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June 15, 2005
the last few minutes.
MR. MUDD: Your administration is at 589. It's a minus 13.2
percent. That's on Page J-15.
MS. COOK: I'd given the wrong numbers.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: All right. So you have met all the
budget guidance. You have actually trimmed total staff. You've
become more efficient. You're operating better with less money.
MS. COOK: We believe we are. We're trying to reorganize and
operate more efficiently.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. If you'd take a look at most of her
increase on her budget is basically -- is basically on Immokalee
Regional Airport, all the air parks basically have an increased fuel
budget. Fuel's going up, so that has a tendency to skew her
percentages.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: But that's all offset by higher revenue,
too, so that's all good.
Okay. Any other questions?
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I bring your attention to the blue
page that's in Airport Authority capital. And what I was alluding to
just a moment ago, and there's explanations on all her projects on
Capital-2, what I was alluding to, if you take a look on Capital-l
where it says total project expenditure, you'll see FY '06 grant funding
for 2.82 -- $2,852,600, general fund match of $371,600, for a total '06
requested budget of $3,224,200.
And one of the things before I'd even put my imprimatur on this
budget was, I made her a promise that if the grants don't come, she
doesn't spend that general fund money for anything different. And she
said, Roger, out, and she would return it.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay, now, once again we need to
emphasize although the budget is for $3,221,000, the general fund
commitment is only for $371,000. So you're leveraging those funds
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June 15, 2005
quite a lot, okay.
MS. COOK: A little over 10 percent.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. It's a pretty good investment. This
investment is one of the better ones outside of the health department,
as far as one of the better deals in our budget.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: What's that, like 900 percent on
your investment? Not bad.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Just about.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Job well done.
MS. COOK: Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Good. Thank you.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think it's the -- our investment
and the Airport Authority's investment to bring a fiscal conservative
manager to the helm. And running a good airport, too.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You betcha. That's right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And it's 5:03.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that --
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Could I remind you of something, that
when the time when we were discussing exercising a little more
control over what happened at the airport, people were predicting
doom and gloom getting the Board of County Commissioners more
closely involved in airport operations, and they were telling us it's
none of your business, stay away from it. And since we have
developed a closer relationship with the Airport Authority and we
have begun to demand greater efficiency and cost savings, that's
exactly what has happened, and we have wonderful business
opportunities out there, things are really looking good. And thank you
very much.
MS. COOK: Thank you very much. I believe in strong
communication.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: The other thing is, we didn't have
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June 15, 2005
to get rid of an airport.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: That's right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, that's so true.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I believe the discussions about the
Everglades City Airport are still in negotiations. They have a new
attorney for the city and I believe they'll be coming forward with some
kind of an offer, I believe, in the future. I don't know what that is yet,
but --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, if they're concerned about
$1,000 for an MPO, I'm sure--
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Not going to be a big offer, is it.
MR. MUDD: Sir, this concludes today's basic budget hearing.
Tomorrow we start at 9:00 with the constitutional officers.
Commissioners, I would like to just get your opinion. I believe
you'll be finished with constitutional officers in the morning. If you'd
like to do the wrap-up in the afternoon on Thursday for an hour or so,
we could pretty much free up your Friday, is what I believe.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: I think that would be great. Now, I will
have to leave here probably about 4:20 in the afternoon because the
memorial service for Mayor Bonnie MacKenzie is at 5:00.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I believe you'll be out of here by
3:00.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Just so we can plan for that and
we can make sure that nothing interferes with that.
MR. MUDD: If we go longer than 3 :00, sir, we just break off
and we'll do it Friday then.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: But I don't believe -- I believe we can do the
wrap-up within an hour, an hour and a half and we're done.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. Good.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And we can leave our books here,
nobody will clean them off, right?
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June 15, 2005
MR. MUDD: That's right, ma'am.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Okay. We're all set?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN COYLE: Any other questions or comments by
Commissioners?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN COYLE: We're adjourned.
*****
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 5 :05 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARDS(S) OF
SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS CONTROL
~w.C+
FRED COYLE, Chairman
ATTEST:
DWIGHT E~,ßROCK, CLERK
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