Agenda 06/10/2008 Item #12A
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 1 of 45
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
That the Board of County Commissioners considers a proposal from the Developer
of Pebblebrooke, to be memorialized in a Developer Agreement, to buffer and
otherwise mitigate the impact of the two-story building on the adjoining residential
neighborhood, in exchange for resolving any dispute the County may presently have
with respect to both this building and the Stevie Tomato lawsuit.
OBJECTIVE: 'That the Board of County Commissioners considers a proposal from the
Developer of Pebblebrooke, to be memorialized in a Developer Agreement, to buffer and
otherwise mitigate the impact of the two-story building on the adjoining residential
neighborhood, in exchange for resolving any dispute the County may presently have with
respect to this building.
CONSIDERATIONS: The Richland PUD (pebblebrooke) issues have appeared before
this Board several times. As background, I have attached a December 7, 2007 report
from Mr. Farese which sets forth the material facts (although his conclusions I do not
necessarily agree with). As set forth in Mr. Farese's report, there are two primary issues
arising from this PUD. The first involves a two-story commercial building which adjoins
the Pebblebrooke residential neighborhood. The second involves the Stevie Tomato's
Restaurant and Sports Bar.
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These issues last came before this Board February 26, 2008. A copy of the transcript is
attached.
With respect to the two story building, the Developer engaged a landscape architect, and
in keeping with the February 26 discussion with the Board, met with the Pebblebrooke
residents on at a Town Hall Meeting on March 24, 2008, to discuss ways of mitigating
the two story building's impact on the residential community. The result of that meeting
is a proposed agreement, which if acceptable to the Board would be memorialized by a
Developer's Agreement. A copy of the proposed draft Developer's Agreement is
attached to this Executive Summary. Briefly stated, the highlights of the proposed
Agreement are as follows:
Landscape Buffer: The Developer would install, at Developer's
expense, a landscape buffer. The Landscape Buffer will provide at least
90% opacity to screen the Building. This buffer shall occur above the
existing 8 foot concrete fence and extend vertically to a height of over 26
feet. Unless adverse growing conditions beyond the control of Developer
occur, this will mean that at least 90% of the building will be covered after
two years.
Preserve Buffer: The Developer would install a landscape buffer
within the area designated in the PUD as "Preserve."
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Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 2 of 45
Developer would install an opacity film on Building's south-side
second floor windows: The Opaque Film would be installed at the time
any spaces are leased on the south side second floor and would remain in
place until the Landscape Buffer has achieved the height and opacity
standards set forth, at which time the Opaque Film may be removed.
Developer would extend the existing 8 foot concrete wall along the
west side of the Building 175 feet north on the property line to the north
side of the existing dumpster enclosure.
In exchange, the Developer is asking that the County finds that the Developer had
a vested right to construct the Building with two stories and at the height so constructed,
that the County is estopped from asserting the contrary in any proceeding, and that the
County will take no legislative or administrative action, such as a rezoning or amendment
of the PUD, that would make the Building a nonconforming use or in any other way
prevent its reconstruction and/or repair in the event it is damaged or destroyed. The
Developer is also asking that the County dismiss Developer as a party to that case
pending in the Circuit Court for Collier County entitled Collier County v. Pebble Page,
Inc. d/b/a Stevie Tomato's Snorts PlIIZe Bar & GrilL and DAD Development Corporation,
Case No. 08-1872-CA (the "Lawsuit"), and will not refile any action against Developer
based on the same cause of action as alleged in the Lawsuit. The County Attorney Office
has difficulties with this last request, as we believe that the Developer may be an
indispensible party to the Stevie Tomato's lawsuit, and if deemed indispensible by the
Court, the suit would be subject to dismissaL
With respect to the Stevie Tomato issue, I am advised that Stevie Tomato's has
installed a sound barrier around the outside seating area, which they claim has greatly
reduced the noise to the community. Should the Developer's proposal be accepted, the
extension of the sound wall and increased buffering in the Preserve area should also
result in some reduction in noise to the community. Counsel for Stevie Tomato's has
indicated to the undersigned that they would like to address the Board following the
Developer's presentation.
FISCAL IMPACT: There is no fiscal impact associated with this Executive Summary.
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GROWTH MANAGEMENT IMP ACT: There is no Growth Management Impact
associated with this Executive Summary.
RECOMMENDATION: That the Board of County Commissioners considers a
proposal from the Developer of Pebblebrooke, to be memorialized in a Developer
Agreement, to buffer and otherwise mitigate the impact of the two-story building on the
adjoining residential neighborhood, in exchange for resolving any dispute the County
may presently have with respect to this both this building and the Stevie Tomato's
lawsuit..
Submitted by: Jeffrey A. Klatzkow, County Attorney
Page 1 of 1
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 3 of 45
COLLIER COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Item Number:
Item Summary:
12A
This item to be heard at 2:00 p.m. That the Board of County Commissioners considers a
proposal from the Developer of Pebblebrooke, to be memorialized in a Developer
Agreement to buffer and otherwise mitigate the impact of the two-story building on the
adjOIning residential neighborhood, in exchange for resolving any dispute the County may
presently have with respect to both this building and the Stevie Tomato lawsuit.
Meeting Date:
6/10/200890000 AM
Prepared By
Jeff Klatzkow
Assistant County Attorney
Date
County Attorney
County Attorney Office
5/29/20088:11 :24 AM
Approved By
Jeff Klatzkow
Assistant County Attorney
Date
County Attorney
County Attorney Office
5/29/20089:31 AM
Approved By
OMS Coordinator
OMS Coordinator
Date
('
,
County Manager's Office
Office of Management & Budget
5/30/2008 9:46 AM
Approved By
Mark Isackson
Budget Analyst
Date
County Manager's Office
Office of Management & Budget
6/1/20081:16 PM
Approved By
James V. Mudd
County Manager
Date
Board of County
Commissioners
County Manager's Office
612/200812:45 PM
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file://C:\AgendaTest\Export\ 1 09-June%20 1 0,%202008\ 12.%20COUNTY%20A TTORNEY%... 6/4/2008
ROBINS. KAPLAN. MILLElZ & CIRESI. ..1
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Agenda Item iblfu42JAof 45
January 15:'2008
SUITE 20 age 0
'11 FI PTH ^ VENUE SOUTH
NAPLES. FL 3tl02-66!8
TEL: 23\1-00-7010 fAX:239.2I3.1970
www.rkmc.(:om
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ATTOR.NEYS AT LAW
LAWRENCE A. FARESE
Board Certified CIvil Trial I....,,-er
Board Ctrtiraed BUllaw Utizatiou uwyer
Certined ClrnU Co.rt Mcdialor
239-213-19'13
LAFartst@rkmc.com
December 7, 2007
RECEIVEO
OFFICE OF THE COUNTY MANAGER
HAND DELIVERY
DEe G 7 2D07
ACTION
Commissioner Frank Halas
Commissioner Jim Coletta
Commissioner Fred W, Coyle
Commissioner Donna Fiala
Commissioner Tom Henning
Board of County Commissioners
3301 East Tamiami Trail
Naples, Florida 34112
Re: Richland PUD cPebblebrooke) I aide Cypress PUD Investigation
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Dear Commissioners:
We have been asked by David Weigel, County Attorney, to undertake the investigation
requested by the Board of County Commissioners ("BCC") into the following matters: (i) the
approval process for the Richland PUD (pebblebrooke), including the approval of the site
development plan for the Pebblebrooke Plaza in Pebblebrooke Commercial Phase IV and the
pennitting of Stevie Tomato's restaurant; and (ii) the permitting of 17 residences that appear to
encroach upon a 25-foot setback from a nature preserve within the aide Cypress PUD,
particularly the Grider residence. Our investigation has included a review of the public records
and files maintained by the County, particularly those of its Community Development and
Environmental Services Division ("CDES"), meeting minutes and video tapes, and personal
interviews with David Weigel, Jeff Klatzkow, and Mwjorie Student of the Collier County
Attorney's Office; Patrick White, fonnerly of the Collier County Attorney's Office; Jim Mudd,
Collier County Manager; Joe Schmitt, CDES Director; Susan Murray Istenes, Director of
Zoning; Ross Gochenaur, Plarming Manager; Ray Bellows, Zoning Manager; John Houldsworth,
Senior Engineer; Michael Sawyer, Senior Plarmer; Angel Tarpley, Planning Technician; Karen
Bishop ofPMS, Inc.; Craig Grider, Esq. and Richard Yovanovich, Esq. ofGoodlette, Coleman &
Johnson; Clay Brooker, Esq.; Bob Delaney of Stock Development; Diane Ebert of aide Cypress
Homeowners Association; Carole Kolflat, and others. The following will summarize our
findings and conclusions based on our investigation.
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IT LAN T A' B 0 S TON LOS A N G f L E 5, M I Ii N SA" 0 II S IN A P L E 51 S A I
NT PAUL.WASHlliGTOJ.l,O C
Agenda Item No. 12A
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I. Ricbland (pebblebrooke) POO
The Richland POO consists of approximately 150 acres located on the southwest corner
of Immokalee Road and Collier Boulevard (951). The Richland POO was originally approved
on February 13, 1996 (Ordinance No. 96.03), The POO Ordinance was repealed on June 10,
1997, and replaced by Ordinance No. 97-27. The POO consisted of commercial, residential, and
preserve tracts.
On September 24, 2001, the then current owner of the commercial property, Kenco
Development, Inc., through its agent, Karen Bishop of PMS, Inc., filed an application seeking to
repeal the then current Richland POO and adopt a new POO for the purpose of reducing the
residential area by approximately 3.2 acres and increasing the commercial area by approximately
3.2 acres by extending Ihe commercial tract southward along Collier Boulevard (See Exhibit A).
Chahram Badamtchian of CDES was assigned as the Principal Planner for the POO Amendment
(pOOA-200I-AR-1494).
Chahram Badamtchian was terminated from his employment on or about December 14,
2001. At that time, the approximately 35 projects over which Mr. Badamtchian had primary
responsibility as the County Planner were reassigned to the existing members of staff, who
already had full work loads. The Richland POO amendment application was assigned to Ray
Bellows of CDES. Mr. Bellows was very busy with other projects at that time, and was also
going through a divorce.
Prior to his termination, Mr. Badamtchian prepared a Staff Summary Report to the
Collier County Planning Commission ("CCPe'') in preparation for its meeting of January 17,
2002. Mr. Bellows ultimately signed the report for Mr. Badamtchian but had little time to
review the report or PUD before its submission to the CCPC. Mr. Bellows does not recall
making any changes to Mr. Badamtchian's Staff Report or the amended POO document prior to
its submission to the CCPC on or about January 9, 2002.
The Staff Report dated January 3, 2002 states that the "POO contains all of the
recommendations of reviewing staff" and concludes with the recommendation that the CCPC
forward a petition (0 the BCC with a recommendation for approval. The proposed Amended
POO reduced the residential acreage from 128+/- to 125+/-, and increased the commercial
acreage from 21.2 acres (0 25 acres; reduced the total number of residential units from 650 to
400 units; provided for landscaping in Section 2.19 of the POO to be in accordance with the
Collier County Land Development Code ("LDC"), with no special provisions for a buffer
between the commercial and residential tracts; provided in Section 4.2 for a maximum of 25+/-
acres of Community Commercial Uses without any limitation on square footage of commercial
space; provided in Section 4-5G a maximum building height of 50 feet (50') (consistent with the
height limitation in the then current POO document for the remaining commercial space); and
Agenda Item No. 12A
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Agenda Item f 45
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provided in Section 4-4 for a variety of permitted commercial uses and structures (consistent
with the uses and structures permitted by the previous PUD).
Of significance is that the proposed Pun Amendment included within the list of
permitted uses "Eating and Drinking Places," as defined in Standard Industry Classification
("SIC") Codes 5812 and 5813 published by the United States Department of Labor. SIC Code
5812 applies to "Eating Places" and is defmed as: "Establishments primarily engaged in the
retail sale of prepared food and drinks for on-premise or immediate consumption." SIC Code
5812 provides a list of examples of "Eating Places," which includes "restaurants." SIC Code
5813 defines "Drinking Places" as: "Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of
alcoholic drinks, such as beer, ale, wine, and liquor, for consumption on premises. The sale of
food frequently accounts for a substantial portion of the receipts of these establishments," SIC
Code 5813 includes a list of examples of drinking places such as bars, beer gardens, beer taverns,
cocktail lounges, nightclubs, saloons, and wine bars.
CCPC Aooroval
The RicWand PUD Amendment went before the CCPC at its meeting of January 17,
2002. Matjorie Student, the Assistant County Attorney who had been assigned to review the
Richland Pun Amendment, was not in attendance at this meeting due to a previous commiIment
to attend a land use seminar in the Orlando area. Assistant County Attorney Patrick White
attended the CCPC meeting in her place. Also present at the meeting was Susan Murray Istenes,
as well as other members of CDES, including Ray Bellows who made the staff presentation to
the CCPC. Karen Bishop ofPMS, Inc. made the presentation on behalf of the applicant
At the January 17, 2002 CCPC meeting, Ms. Bishop submitted to the CCPC conceptual
plans for a 3D-foot buffer between the proposed additional commercial acreage and the
residential boundary line to the Pebblebrooke Subdivision to the south. lbis conceptual plan.
which later became Exhibit B to the approved and recorded Richland Pun Amendment, is
attached hereto as Exhibit B. The self-entitled "Pebblebrooke Lakes Conceptual 30' Buffer
Plan" was prepared on January 16, 2002 (according to the face of the document), which was the
day before the CCPC meeting. It is doubtful that staff had much time, if any, to review the
conceptual plan before its presentation to the CCPC on January 17. The CCPC saw the
conceptual plan for the first time during the applicant's presentation at the meeting.
The Conceptual Plan showed a 3D-foot Type "B" Buffer with vegetation and a six-foot
wall on top of a landscaped berm along the southern boundary of the commercial acreage. It also
showed a two-story commercial building of only 18 feet in height set back an additional number
of feet from the 3D-foot buffer. However, this additional setback (if it was intended) is not called
out in measurements on the conceptual plan nor in the text of the pun. Nor is the height of the
berm specified on the conceptual plan or the PUD. Karen Bishop orally described the berm to
the cepe as having a "3 to I slope," such that the berm would be three to four feet high at its
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peak. A 6-foot wall on top of Ihe berm would result in a height above grade of eight to ten feet.
However, Ihese specifications were not described in writing in Ihe proposed PUD document, and
were not specified on Ihe conceptual plan.
Several public speakers from Ihe neighboring Pebblebrooke Subdivision expressed
concern to Ihe CCPC concerning building heights and anticipated uses, The minutes reflect that
several members of Ihe CCPC expressed similar concerns regarding building heights, maximum
square footage of commercial space, and permitted uses. Of particular concern 10 several
Commissioners was Ihe desire to eliminate "Drinking Places" (SIC Code 5813) as a permitted
use due to noise concerns of Ihe neighboring residents. As a result, several agreements were
made on Ihe record by Ihe owner's representative. One specific agreement was Ihe reduction of
permissible commercial structures from two stories to one story wiIhin Ihe 3.2 acres abutting Ihe
Pebblebrooke Subdivision. The owner's representative was asked:
COMMISSIONER BUDD: How about Ihe request that buildings
located within the area of the 3.2 acres be limited to single story,
Ihe commercial buildings?
MS. BISHOP: That's fine.
Another agreement was that trash dumpsters would be located outside the 3.2 acres:
COMMISSIONER BUDD: There is a request that Ihe dumpsters
be located outside the 3.2 acres that is going to become
commercial. Is Ihat acceptable?
MS. BISHOP: I believe Ihat's acceptable....
Another agreement was the elimination of several more intense commercial uses from Ihe
list of permitted uses. However, the owner's agent did not agree to eliminate "Drinking Places,"
suggesting instead Ihat noise could be regulated by existing noise ordinances.
After the close of the public hearing, Commissioner Budd made a motion (amended to
incorporate suggestions by oIher Commissioners) Ihat Petition PUD-2001-AR-14694 be
approved and forwarded to the BCC wiIh a recommendation for approval with specific
modifications and recommendations, including: (i) buffers 10 be located outside Ihe 3.2 acre
commercial rezone; (ii) buildings within the 3.2 acre commercial rezone to be limited to a single
stOry; (iii) a revised list of permitted uses as agreed 10 by the owner's agent, (iv) commercial
space to be capped at 231,000 square feet; and (v) SIC Code 5813 "Drinking Places" to be struck
as an acceptable use. After a second to the motion, Ihe following discussion occurred on the
question of drinking establishments:
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CHAIRMAN ABERNATHY: ...well, I will discuss. I think that
eliminating the drinking establishments is being unduly fussy. I
think they should be allowed and dealt with as it exists. There is
hardly a place in one of these activity centers that does not have
someplace where somebody can watch a football game and have a
couple of beers. I don't drink myself, but I think other people
should not be presumed to create a nuisance just because they have
a drink. So I object on that basis.
COMMISSIONER ADELSTEIN: Mr. Chairman, so do I. I don't
think it's our position to put something like that in. And I
personally would like to see it removed.
COMMISSIONER YOUNG: I would too. I think if you are
having dinner you might like a glass of wine,
COMMISSIONER STRAIN: That doesn't apply. The restaurants
already have that. These are strictly taverns and saloons and things
like thai. My concern is not that people drink; thai is a disruptive
element to a neighborhood. I am sure these people don't want to
have to go through having monitors put out there at certain times
of the day or night to see if they have decibel levels and then
challenge it through county staff. That's why I am suggesting this,
And that's my reason, It has nothing to do with people's morals,
They can do what they wani.
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COMMISSIONER MIDNEY: I will agree. Restaurants would be
permitted and people can drink at the restaurants,
COMMISSIONER RICHARDSON: Mr. Chair, maybe you can
just take a consensus question on just that one issue.
CHAIRMAN ABERNATHY: How many people are going to
oppose this motion as long as the drinking establishments
prohibition is in it?
COMMISSIONER ADELSTEIN: As long as restaurants are
approved, that's fine with me.
CHAIRMAN ABERNATHY: I may be the Lone Ranger then. I
don't know. Do you want non-restaurant type of alcohol serving
establishments?
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COMMISSIONER YOUNG: I think as long as restaurants -
CHAIRMAN ABERNA1HY: So we have two. I think the motion
can carry. I call the question. All in favor.
(Unanimous response.)
CHAIRMAN ABERNA1HY: Opposed?
Mr. Wolfley had a conflict, so he abstained.
MR. BUDD: The motion carries?
CHAIRMAN ABERNA 1HY: The motion carries....
It was the practice of the CDES at this point in time to have staff revise an applicant's
PUD document to reflect the staff's recommendations and/or agreements reached with the
applicant regarding language modifications. In addition, if there were recommendations by the
CCPC which conflicted with staff recommendations, the differences were to be specifically
pointed out to the BCC in executive summaries and hearing presentations. Some of the changes
agreed to by the applicant at the CCPC meeting were incorporated by staff into the draft PUD
document. For example, a 30-foot Type "B" Buffer was added to Section 2-19 Landscaping; a
maximum of 231,000 square feet (gross floor area) of community commercial was added to
Section 4.4-2; and SIC Code 5813 was removed as a permitted use in Section 4-4. However,
some agreements made at the cepc meeting did not find their way into a revised PUD
document. The most significant omission was the concept of reducing the maximum height of
commercial buildings from two stories to one story. Ray Bellows admits that he missed this
point while taking notes at the cepe meeting. He did not have the benefit of reviewing CCPC
minutes before making the changes to the PUD document and presenting it to the Bee.
Bee Aooroval
The Richland PUD Amendment was set as Agenda Item 8D for the February 12, 2002
meeting of the Bee, On or about February 4, 2002, an Executive Summary prepared by Ray
Bellows was submitted 10 the BCC along with the revised draft of the proposed PUD document.
With regard to building heights, the Executive Summary provides:
Lastly, since the maximum building height is currently 50 feet
within the Commercial tract, staff has recommended that the
maximum building height be limited to two stories for a maximum
building height of 35 feet for any structure within 60 feet of a
residential tract.
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The Executive Summary advised the BCC that the CCPC had approved the Petition by a
vote of 7 to 0 with a recommendation of approv;a1 subject to revising the list of permitted uses to
eliminate some of the more intense uses, a mBljimum square footage of 231,000 square feet for
the commercial area, and other conditions not pertinent to this investigation. However, the
summary made no mention of the CCPC's stipulation reducing the building height from two
stories to one story due to the staff oversight mentioned above. The Executive Summary
concludes with a recommendation for approval of the PUD document that "has been amended to
reflect the. ..recommendations by the Planning Commission as supported by staff,"
The specific revisions to the draft PUD document made by staff following the CCPC
meeting for presentation to the BCC included the fol1owing:
2-19 LANDSCAPING
Landscaping shal1 be in accordance with Article 2,
Divisions 2.4 and 2.8 of the Collier County Land
Development Code, as amended. In addition. a 30-foot
Tyoe "B" Buffer shall be orovided alon2 the tract boundarY
line seoaratin2 the commercial and residential land use
tracts. (See Exhibit "B,,) This buffer shall contain a 6-foot
tall ore-cast concrete wall alon2 the entire buffer.
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4-4 PERMITTED USES AND STRUCTURES
No building or structure or part thereof, shall be erected,
altered or used, or land used, in whole or in part, for other
than the following:
A. Permitted Principal Uses and Structures,..
10) Eating and Drinking Places (Groups 5812~)
4-6 Development Standards
G. Maximum height: fifty feet (50') and not 10 exceed
two stories for commercial structures within 60 feet of the
residential tract boundary line.
Note that the maximum height provision is inConsistent with the CCPe's motion to limit
building heights from two stories to one story. It also is inconsistent with the Executive
Summary indicating that staff had recommended a maximwn building height of 35 feet not to
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exceed two stories for any structure within 60 feet of a Residential Tract, whereas the proposed
POO document refers to a maximum height of 50 feet.
Finally, a provision was added to Section 4-6 dealing with commercial trash dumpsters as
follows:
J, Commercial trash dumpsters shall be located or placed
within 100 feet of anY residential tract boundarv line.
We assume this was a scrivener's error and that the provision was intended to prohibit dumpsters
within 100 feet of any residential tract boundary. The language is also inconsistent with the
agreement reached with the applicant at the CCPC meeting not to have any commercial trash
dumpsters within the added 3.2 acres of commercial property.
The Richland POO rezone petition was heard at the February 12, 2002 BCC meeting.
Ray Bellows made the staff presentation. Karen Bishop presented on behalf of the applicant.
Attorney Richard Y ovanovich attended as the attorney for the applicant, but only on a
transportation concurrency issue which became moot at the meeting. Mr. Y ovanovich was not
present at the previous CCPC meeting and had no involvement in the preparation of the POO
document. MaJjorie Student and David Weigel were present from the County Attorney's Office.
There were no public speakers.
Mr, Bellows advised the BCC of the results of the CCPC meeting, and pointed out that
changes were made to the document to eliminate some commercial uses and to provide for a
landscape buffer including a 6- foot wall with a vegetative berm as shown on Exhibit B to the
POO document. Mr. Bellows misstated the result of the building height discussion at the CCPC
level as follows:
Staff was also recommending that the building heights be
restricted. And that came up in the Planning Commission, that we
limit the building heights to 35 feet for any structure within 60 feet
of the residential-tract boundary line. That is -- it came up during
the planning commission meeting.
Staffis recommending approval.
A number of County staff who were involved with this petition for a variety of reasons
attended both the CCPC and BCC meetings. No one corrected Mr. Bellows' misstatement at the
hearing or pointed out to the BCC that in fact the CCPC had recommended a reduction in
building height from two stories to one story. The owner's agent, Karen Bishop, did not correct
the misstatement either. She has advised us that she did not review the staff report or the revised
PUD document carefully prior to the BCC hearing, believing that everything had been changed
as agreed. She also did not realize the inconsistency between staffs recommendation and the
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agreement reached with the CCPC. To add to the confusion, the conceptual plan which became
Exhibit B to the PUD was not revised by the applicant to show a one story building instead of a
two story building. Staff had no ability to revise this conceptual drawing; this was the owner's
responsibility. As a result of all of this, the BCC was not told of the CCPC's recommendation on
building heights, either orally or in writing. The BCC was presented only with staffs
recommendation that building heights be limited to two stories not exceeding 35 feet in height.
Commissioner Henning made a motion that the BCC approve the application to rezone
the Richland PUD "with staff stipulations, Planning Commission stipulations" except for the
number of square feet dealing with the capacity and the elimination of two other commercial
uses, specifically United States personal service use and "any other comparable use" as
determined by the Planning Services Director. The motion carried 5 to O.
Chairman James A. Coletta signed Ordinance No. 02-07 on February 12, 2002.
Thereafter, the PUD document was edited by MBljorie Student of the County Attorney's Office
and Karen Bishop to "clean up" some "little things." Still the conflicts nOfed above were not
corrected or called to the attention of the BCC. The Ordinance and PUD document were
approved as to form and legal sufficiency by MBljorie M. Student. On February 20, 2002, the
Ordinance was filed with the Department of State. The Ordinance was amended on April 8,
2003 to correct a "scrivener's error" in Section 6-4, paragraph 8, to provide that the
responsibility to maintain a gate between the residential and commercial tracts was that of the
residential property owners, instead of the commercial property owner. No other amendments
have been made 10 the PUD since that time.
...
SDP Aooroval for Pebblebrooke Commercial Phase IV
On February 28, 2002 (about two weeks after the rezone was approved), Kenco
Development, mc, sold the commercial tract to DAD Development Corp., a DeAngelis Diamond
entity. On June 10, 2004, DAD Development Corp. submitted a Site Development Plan
Application for Pebblebrooke Commercial Phase IV, which included the commercial property
that was added by the PUD Amendment. The project was assigned to Ross Gochenaur, Planning
Manager.
The SDP referenced building height as "MAXIMUM HEIGHT FIFTY FEET (50') AND
NOT TO EXCEED TWO STORIES FOR COMMERCIAL STRUCTURES WITHIN 60 FEET
OF THE RESIDENTIAL TRACT BOUNDARY LINE," which was consistent with the PUD
document as recorded. The SDP showed a two story retaiVmedical office building with a height
of 29', 4" on the southernmosl portion of the commercial property adjacent to the Pebblebrooke
residential subdivision. It further showed a 30-foot buffer between the commercial property line
and the exterior wall of the proposed two-story building. The SDP did not call for an additional
setback beyond the 3D-foot buffer as depicted on Exhibil B 10 the PUD. Because the side
setback requirement in the PUD was only 10 feet and 30 feet was provided. and because the
(
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Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Agenda Iter1"i'li!Ie ~of 45
January f5: 2008
Page 10 of 34
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PUD document did not specifY any additional setback beyond the 30-foot buffer, Mr. Gochenaur
did not believe that he had any basis to require setback beyond the 30-foot buffer area. In
addition, Mr. Gochenaur has explained that a five foot sidewalk and underground utilities shown
on the SOP within the 30-foot buffer area are considered permissible within buffers.
With regard to the height of buildings, Mr. Gochenaur noted on his checklist
2nd review: an error in PUD Ord. 02-07 indicates the height of
buildings abutting the residential tract boundary is 2 stories or 50
ft. It should be 2 stories or 35ft. A Scrivener's Error will correct
this, but please change the required height in table to reflect 35
rather than 50.
Mr. Gochenaur does not recall how he knew in 2004 that building heights in this area of
the development were to be restricted to 35 feet rather than 50, other than the fact that 35 feet is
typical for a two story building. He was not aware of the discussion at the CCPC level two years
earlier to limit building heights to one story, and it is not the practice of the planning managers to
research meeting minutes or verifY that the language of PUD document is consistent with actions
taken at BCC or ccpe meetings while reviewing an SOP application. In any event, the
"scrivener's error" in the PUD document reducing maximum building height from 50 to 35 was
never corrected, nor was the SDP table changed to reflect this height as suggested in Mr.
Gochenaur's review notes. He does not recall why. That notwithstanding, the actual height of
the proposed two story building shown on the SDP was less than 30 feet. Because this building
height was below the maximwn height provided in the language of the PUD docwnent (with or
without the correction of the "scrivener's error" to 35 feet), the SOP was approved by staff on
December 6, 2004.
Regarding the landscape buffer, the plans presented at pre-application meetings
apparently did not show a berm. Michael Sawyer, the County's landscape reviewer at the time,
entered a comment on his checklist after the first review as follows:
,.
[.
Reference site plan sheet 11 of 15 Section A-A. Revise this cross
section to meet PUD exhibit "B". Specifically, the section does
not include the "Landscape Berm" as illustrated. Note that the 6
foot wall/fence must be located at the top of the berm.
To address this comment, sheet II of 15 was revised to show a berm, with a six-foot
landscape wall centered on top of the berm (See Exhibit C). Height dimensions for the berm are
not specified on the drawing, but there is reference to a 10-1 slope starting at 5 feet from the
property line, which would result in a berm of only about one foot The drawing shows that the
top of the "berm" is actually below the floor slab of the building. This is not consistent with the
conceptual 30-foot buffer plan attached as Exhibit B to the PUD, which shows a berm higher
Agenda Item No. 12A
Ji\~2008
Agenda Ite']l> . f 45
January , 8
Page 11 of 34
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Board of County Commissioners
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than the floor slab of the commercial building, although again no dimensions were specified.
Without having dimensions specified either in the language of the PUD document or Exhibit B
to the PUD document, Mr. Sawyer did not feel that he had a basis to reject the revised drawing
showing a berm of some degree on sheet 11 of 15.
As built, there is a drainage swale between the commercial building and a small berm
under the landscape wall. (See photographs attached as Exhibit D). The wall itself appears to be
closer to 8 feet in height rather than 6, resulting in a Iota! height close to that shown on Exhibit B
to the PUD. However, the landscape buffer is dwarfed by the two story commercial building set
back 30 feet from the property line (See Exhibit E),
Stevie Tomato's Sports Page
The Building Permit for the two story and one story commercial buildings within the
rezoned commercial property was issued on January 10, 2005, and Certificates of Occupancy
were issued on February 28, 2006. In September 2005, Stevie Tomato's Sports Page submitted
an application for a permit to build out a restaurant in the southernmost portion of the one story
building within the Pebblebrooke Center, Stevie Tomato's is commonly known as a "sports
bar," but has a full menu of items for lunch and dinner. According to the company's counsel,
Clay Brooker, more than half of its revenue is generated from food sales as opposed to beverage
sales. Its Occupational License issued by Collier County is under the classification of
"Restaurant." Restaurants, including those with liquor licenses, are a permitted use under
Section 4-4 of the Richland PUD. Because Stevie Tomato's is a restaurant (as well as a sports
bar), a permit was issued by staff as being consistent with zoning regulations, Outdoor seating
was approved as an insubstantial change to the Pebblebrooke Center SDP. Outdoor seating and
bar areas for restaurants are typically considered by staff as an accessory use to the principal use
of a restaurant.
~
The existence of Stevie Tomato's at the southern end of the Pebblebrooke Center close to
neighboring residences in the Pebblebrooke Subdivision, particularly the noise generated from
the outdoor bar and seating area which is open until 2:00 a.m., has caused numerous complaints
from the neighboring property owners. The BCC viewed portions of a videotape made by a
residential property owner at its September 25, 2007 meeting, which speaks volumes in support
of the neighbors' concerns. It is clear from the minutes of the CCPC meeting of January 12,
2002, that disruptive noise was a concern to the Commission which led to the elimination of
"Drinking Places" as defined in SIC Code 5813 as a permitted use. However, outdoor
restaurants and bars associated therewith were not prohibited, either at the CCPC or BCC levels,
or in the approved PUD. Nor is there any restriction in the PUD as to where, within the
commercial property, such uses may exist.
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Agenda Item No. 12A
Ji\e 1~2008
Agenda Iterp> f 45
January , 8
Page 12 of 34
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Board of County Commissioners
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Conclusions
Based on our investigation, we have concluded the following:
1. The approval of two story commercial buildings in the RicWand PUD rezone
resulted from human error and failure of co=unication. The cepe clearly wanted the building
height reduced to one story. The applicant agreed. However, this agreement was not carried
forward by staff in its Executive Summary to the Bee or in the PUD document presented to the
Bee. As a result, the BCe approved a PUD document allowing two story structures (up to 35
feel as discussed but 50 feet as written), withoul any knowledge that the eepe had
recommended and the applicant had agreed otherwise.
2. There is no evidence that staff intentionally misled the BCC, or failed to correct
the PUD document on purpose as a "favor" to a developer or due to any improper influence, and
we do not find that any such misconduct occurred in this case,
3. Staffs error was compounded by the applicant's failure to: (i) confmn that the
applicant's agreements with the eepe were properly reflected in a revised PUD document;
(ii) revise the conceptual plan to reflect a one story co=ercial building as opposed to a two
story commercial building, and (iii) correct staff's presentation to the BCe regarding the ecpe's
recommendations regarding building heights. The successor developer, which acquired the
property shortly after the rezone was approved, was not a party to any agreements made between
the applicant and the CCPC and proceeded with development as permitted by the PUD document
actually recorded.
4. We find no fault on the part of staff in approving the SDP based on the PUD
document as recorded, A two story structure was specifically allowed by the text of the PUD
document, and Exhibit B to the PUD showed a two story commercial building. The PUD
document required a 30- foot setback or buffer from the property line (which is greater than the
10-foot side yard setback otherwise allowed by the PUD), and this was what was permitted. The
drawing on Exhibit B showed the building being set back further from the 30-foot buffer area,
but no dimensions were specified. When a conceptual drawing is inconsistent with the language
of a PUD document, staff follows the express language of the document, and this is what
,.occurred in this case.
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5. The "berm" as built is not the 3 to 4 foot berm discussed at the CCPC meeting or
shown on Exhibit B to the PUD, Again, however, no dimensions are specified for the height of
the berm either in the language of the PUD document or on the conceptual plan. It is suggested
that if dimensions of berms are important at the planning level (as they appear to have been in
this case), such dimensions should be specified in the language of the PUD document.
6. Although the result to Pebblebrooke residents is intolerable, we find no fault on
the part of staff in approving the permit for the construction of Stevie Tomato's. Although the
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Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Agenda Ilerp:llffi" ~:jfuf 45
January Pf.-2008
Page 13 of 34
Board of County Commissioners
December 7, 2007
Page 13
CCPC tried to eliminate noise typically associated with a "bar" or "tavern," eliminating SIC
Code 5813 was not sufficient to prohibit a use such as Stevie Tomato's which operates a
restaurant and bar permitted by SIC Code 5812. In our opinion, a sports bar does not fit neatly
within either of these SIC codes. If sports bars are intended to be prohibited, express language to
this effect should be included in the PUD document rather than reference to the SIC codes.
7, There is no evidence to suggest that the SDP approval or building permits issued
in this case violated established practices or were the result of any "special favors" or improper
influences on the part of any party,
II. OIde Cypress POO
The aide Cypress PUD was approved by the BCC on April 27, 1999, Ordinance
No. 99-27. This approval resulted from a petition to rezone 500 acres of land off of Immokalee
Road, east of 1-75, formerly known as the Woodlands PUD, to a residential and golf course
community known as aIde Cypress. The applicant for the rezone petition was aIde Cypress
Development, Ltd., a company then owned in part by Paul Hardy.
The aide Cypress PUD contained 176.2 acres dedicated as a Nature Preserve and
Wildlife Sanctuary. Those preserve areas were platted as Tract A in aide Cypress Unit One,
approved by the BCC on April 13, 1999. The original plat showed "TRACT A
CONSERVATION (D.E.)" (Drainage Easement) along with golf course tracts and large tracts
for "Future Development." (See for example Exhibit F).
On June 22, I 999, the BCC approved a replat of Tracts 2 and 3 (Future Development
Tracts) as aide Cypress Unit Two, which created 70 single-family building lots on Wild Orchid
Court and Treeline Drive. On August 3, 1999, the BCC approved a replat of Tract 5 (Future
Development Tract) as aide Cypress Unit Three, which created 55 single-family building lots on
Lone Pine Lane. Both replats (Unit Two and Unit Three) showed Tract A and referenced the
Plat Book and Page numbers for aIde Cypress Unit One where Tract A adjoined the bnilding
lots. (See for example Exhibit G.) However, the replats did not label Tract A as a conservation
or preserve area.
The rear yard and side yard setback requirements for the residential units are set forth in
the Development Standards, Section 7.05 of the PUD document. For single family detached
dwellings, the PUD required a front yard setback of 25 feet; a side yard set back of 5 feet; and a
rear yard selback of 20 feet for principal structures and 10 feet for accessory uses. On
September 12, 2000, the BCC approved an amendment to the aide Cypress PUD, Ordinance No.
2000-53, to correct a scrivener's error in Section 7.05 so as to provide that "accessory uses such
as pool enclosures may be attached to principal uses and accessorv uses mav be set back five (5)
feet from side or rear properlY lines."
gen e .
June 10, 2008
Page 17 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries, 3-2; Commissioner
Halas and Commissioner Coyle dissenting.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I hope you --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: We're moving on. We're moving on.
We've got a four o'clock time certain. It's 4:30.
Item #12A
DISCUSSION REGARDING THE RICHLAND PUD
(PEBBLEBROOKE) - MOTION TO SEEK LEGAL ACTION TO
CLOSE THE BAR AREA AT STEVIE TOMATO'S - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: You have a four o'clock time certain. This is item
12A. It's a discussion regarding the Richland PUD, Pebblebrooke. I
believe Mr. Klatzkow is going to present.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: How many public speakers do we
have?
MS. FILSON: Six.
MR. KLATZKOW: We had everything set up but the power
outage took it out, so it's going to take just a minute.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Are we still under power outage?
MR. MUDD: Yes. I haven't been -- I have been updated
otherwise since the last time. The state had a little bit of a blurb as far
as power grid is concerned, and there's still sections of this county and
other places in the state that do not have electricity.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: We're stilI on generators, right?
~. MR. MUDD: We are, yes, ma'am. I haven't seen it click off yet.
MS. FILSON: I have seven speakers now, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: County Manager, you might want to
ask your staff if there's any other PowerPoint presentations they need
to pull up and start working on that.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. Next break I'll get it back up on the
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June 10, 2008
Page 18 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
machine so it's there, but I --
MR. KLA TZKOW: JeffKlatzkow, for the record. County
Attorney's Office.
This is coming back at a request of the board. This is a discussion
on Pebblebrooke, and I will be seeking board direction on this.
What I have on the monitor is the website for Stevie Tomato's at
Pebblebrooke. I figured they can describe themselves better than I
describe them. It's more fair, I think, of what Stevie Tomato's is.
Two issues in Pebblebrooke. The first is Stevie Tomato's and the
second is this two-story building, and I'd like to talk about Stevie
Tomato's first.
The Planning Commission had an extensive discussion with
respect to this project, and they were very cognizant that this was
being built adjacent to a residential neighborhood. And what they said
was, we're okay with restaurants where somebody could sit down and
have a glass of wine, but we just don't want any drinking
establishments here.
And that was codified into the PUD ordinance as follows: It
says, eating and drinking places, group 5812 only. Now, I'm talking a
little -- we're going to have to get into a little zoning here. But what
we do in our PUD's is refer to standard industrial codes so that people
will know what uses they can and cannot do.
And the standard industrial codes that we use is a 1987 book, a
Standard Industrial Classification Manual is -- in the LDC. It's how
we defme what uses can be done.
And what you see is that the standard industrial code manual
breaks down these businesses in two types of places. One is an eating
place and one is a drinking place. And you'll see that sports bar isn't
in anyone of them, okay.
What they say about a drinking place is the sale of food
frequently accounts for a substantial portion of the receipts of these
establishments. So we're just not talking about a traditional bar where
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Agenda Item NO.1 A
June 10, 2008
Page 19 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
you go to drink. You're allowed to eat there and get your chicken
wings and hamburgers and everything else.
If you can get the -- now, if you look at the pictures that are
flowing through their own website, I see one picture of a bar after the
other. The picture up there currently is their outdoor seating area. A
better picture, which I took Sunday morning, is this one.
It has been staffs position -- and I'm not going to say it's an
unreasonable position. But it's staffs position that this is a seating
area that's accessory to the restaurant use. Another person could argue
that this is an outdoor bar.
It is dominated by the bar. There are TVs running around. My
experience there -- and I do live in the neighborhood -- is that people
come here and they drink and they watch sporting events and they
smoke. That's why it's outdoors. It doesn't overlook the ocean, it
doesn't overlook a park. It overlooks predominantly a parking area.
But the attraction isn't the view. The attraction is you can sit down
and have a beer and you can smoke, which is why there are no walls
around it. And we have many other establishments in town that are
going the same way.
And the question I have for the Board is, if we're going to
approach this as a restaurant who has, as a secondary use, this drinking
area, then at that point in time there's nothing else for us to do. It is
what it is and the neighborhood will have to live with it.
If it's the Board's feeling that what we have here is an outdoor
bar, then we have a different issue. And one approach to take would
be to authorize the County Attorney's Office to bring suit to shut down
that bar as in violation of the PUD ordinance.
Now, if! can go back to their own website, just to look at the
calendar of events of what they have. What you typically see at
Stevie Tomato's is during the day they are a restaurant. They have kid
specials during the day, they have a roast pork loin special, but the
place converts at night from a predominantly restaurant use to a bar
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Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 20 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
use.
They have Monday night football, they'll have Texas hold 'em
tournaments. They have late night happy hours. They've got the
specials on the Bud Lights and bottles.
And as you go through the calendar, it's the same thing week
after week. During the day they're a restaurant, and during the
evening they're a bar. So the argument would be if we took this to
court, is that you were permitted in your zoning ordinance or your
PUD to be a restaurant. You are not permitted to be a bar. What you
are is a hybrid. You're both, okay. During the day you're a restaurant
and at night you're a bar.
I don't believe that it is the restaurant activities that the people in
Pebblebrooke are protesting. I think it's the bar activities they're
protesting. I think it's -- and Commissioner Henning and I were at a
homeowner association meeting, and I think it's the drunks that leave
there at two a.m. that are bothering the commWlity, and I think it's the
people in the outdoor seating arejll :00 p.m., 1 :30, drinking and
talking loudly that are bothering the community. And that's the
portion of the business that we would target.
Again, if you feel this is predominantly a restaurant which has an
accessory use as a bar, then that's the end of it. But if you feel that
what this is is both a bar and a restaurant and you want us to close
down the bar, then I'd ask you to direct the COWlty Attorney's Office
to bring suit.
Now, I am not going to tell you that we are going to be
successful in this suit. I think: this, quite frankly, is a coin flip. I
Googled these two SIC codes. Half the sport codes -- half the sports
bars in this COWltry consider themselves restaurants and half the sports
bars in this country consider themselves bars. It's -- it could go either
way. But if you want this thing closed down, that's how we're going to
do it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
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June 10, 2008
Page 21 of 45
February 26-27,2008
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah. We may have a difficult
time, especially if they can prove that 50 percent of their income is by
the sales of food.
I think another avenue that we need to address -- and I've been
basically preaching to the choir -- and that is, if we come up with a
stringent noise ordinance, that will put a stop to it real quick. With the
noise ordinance that encompasses the -- where the sound carries over
into people's homes, inside the homes, in their back yards.
I think if we have a -- I'm hoping that we come forth with an
LDC amendment with a stiffer noise ordinance that it will address this,
and I think you'll see the television sets and everything else disappear
out there because they'll be cited many times.
But when you look at somebody that has a restaurant, I
understand where you're coming here, but I think you might run into
some -- it's going to be interesting to see how this turns out, because if
;-- they can prove they're 50 percent or more, even during the bar times,
it would be considered bar times.
MR. KLATZKOW: Sir, it would be a good defense. I don't
think: it's the dispositive. Under the SIC codes, you're allowed to be a
bar with the substantial proceeds of food use. What I would argue is
that they're a hybrid. During the day they're a restaurant, at night they
were a bar. Your zoning says you can be a restaurant, but you can't be
a bar. They're both.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. I say, let's shut down the bar.
If they want to become a restaurant, that's fme.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I go along with it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Cormnissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLEITA: Yeah. And I'd like to see that,
too. I have similar concerns that Commissioner Halas brought up.
What is substantial? You know, no one's defined that. Commissioner
Halas said 50 percent - or 51 percent or more, but I don't know where
you got that number. It could be 60, 70, 80.
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Page 22 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That's staffs interpretation. Can you
put up the SIC code and explain that to the Board of Commissioners
again, please.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank: you, Commissioner
Henning. What am I supposed to be looking at?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, up above you've got SIC code
5812, which is restaurant, and then you have below that 5813, so we
just need to zoom into it. 5813 is a drinking place. And if you just
read what is highlighted.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Oh, okay. So 5812 is what's
allowed. 5813 is not allowed.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And so that's -- food frequently
accounts for a substantial portion of the receipts of these
establishments.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yep. That's a bar.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: One thing that I found to be
very curious was the fact that they have down there on the menu
something about an acoustic dinner? What's that?
MR. KLATZKOW: Well--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It's a loud happy hour.
MR. KLATZKOW: They do do live shows there, or they have
live entertainment there. That could be that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. And the only other thing,
you know, with the great discussion that we're having, do we know if
the owners of the establishment have done anything recently or are
planning to do anything? Are they here to be represented to be able to
tell us what their plans are?
MR. KLATZKOW: I believe they are here, but I will tell you
that we have had a deafening silence from them on this issue from day
one. The owner of the shopping center -- and I'll get into this a little
later -- has been very cooperative with us. Stevie Tomato's has not.
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Page 23 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Go ahead.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Was that a motion you made earlier
about proceeding with closing down the bar?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah, that's my motion.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'll second it.
MR. KLATZKOW: Just for clarification, I could bring a cause
of action just on the outdoor bar or I could bring in a cause of action
for both the outdoor bar and as well as the indoor bar. It's both.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You see the thing, a normal restaurant
doesn't have the hours of operation that a sports bar has. You know,
you do have some anomalies out there with Waffle House or
something like that, but that is not a place where they serve liquor.
Those are to serve the people who get up damn early in the morning or
the people who leave Stevie Tomato's to get something to eat.
It needs to be a restaurant. The hours need to be defmed. It
needs -- that's it. Stop the bar practice.
MR. KLATZKOW: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Inside bar or outside bar?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All over. What I'm saying,
inside/outside hours. It's supposed to be a restaurant, and most of
those go to -- I don't know. I mean, I usually go --
MR. MUDD: A lot -- during the week, a lot quit serving at nine
o'clock, and then on the weekends, because it's high season, they
might go to 10:30, max, 11 o'clock before it closes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I'm not going to call the motion
because we have --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'll second that motion.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And you did. We have --
MR. KLATZKOW: There are speakers.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: We have a whole bunch of speakers.
Now, the next issue--
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June 10, 2008
Page 24 of 45
February 26-27,2008
MR. KLATZKOW: Now the second issue. The second issue is
the two-story building. And the developer is here. I don't lmow if you
want to see his presentation.
The original idea was that we were going to show the
presentation to the people of Pebblebrooke first. The presentation was
only completed just a few days ago, so we never had the opportunity.
They're here now to show it to you if you'd like to see it, or we
can wait.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: What do you want to do? You want to
see it?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Sure.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay, go ahead.
It still needs to be presented to the restaurant -- the residents. It
can't be done in this type of a setting.
MR. KLATZKOW: Mr. Pickworth?
MR. MUDD: Do you want to use the overhead, do you want to
use the computer?
MR. PICKWORTH: We have several drawings, so I guess that
would be what we need.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Mr. Pickworth, thank: you.
MR. PICKWORTH: Good afternoon, Commissioners. I'm Don
Pickworth. I represent DAD development, which owns the shopping
center.
They acquired the shopping center after the zoning actions --
which have formed the basis of the concerns about the two-story
building -- had taken place.
In fact, to clarify some information that has been promulgated
that some -- a good bit of which is not exactly correct, DAD entered
into a contract to purchase this property. The contract provided that
the previous owner would -- it basically provided that the property
would have an additional number of square feet of commercial
authorized, and it was the responsibility of the previous attorney to
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February 26-27, 2008
obtain that.
There was nothing in the contract, no condition about number of
stories or any of that. That was not an issue for these purchasers.
They wanted to know that they could build a number of square feet of
commercial that they would be able to build.
It was the responsibility of the previous owner to obtain the
zoning using his consultants and at his expense. He went through the
process. We were not part of or aware of all of this. You know, all
this talk about an agreement for one story at the Planning Commission
and all of that, we were not part of any of that.
After the board had taken its final action on the PUD and the
PUD was signed, we received a letter from the previous owner saying,
basically, the condition of the contract has been fulfilled. Here's the
PUD which shows you can build the number of square feet of
commercial which you contracted to be able to build. Let's set a
closing, so we closed on the property.
In fact, the -- had no idea there was an issue of two stories until
really long after the building was built; really not too long ago was the
first time that issue had come up. The owner has the -- obviously the
awareness of Stevie Tomato situation has been around for a long time.
And they have met with representatives of the county on that.
They either funded entirely or a substantial part -- the previous noise
study that was done, so they've taken part in that. But now the
two-story building issue has arisen.
And so from the standpoint of DAD Development, the question
is, how can we find a way to move on from there?
Obviously the building is not going to be voluntarily tom down
or anything like that because their position is that that building was
totally lawfully built.
But we have engaged the services of a landscape architect to see
what could be done to adequately screen, through landscaping, the
two-story building.
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Page 26 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
And we have -- and again, it's -- these -- there's probably a few
details that we still need to work out. We just found out late last week
that we'd be able to do some enhanced planting in that preserve which
would help screen off one end of the building, so we very quickly
showed some prospective plantings in there. So we're still -- we're
still working on that.
But I think you can see on the drawings what we're basically
planning to do, which is to provide a heavy landscape screen
alongside of the building. You can see that. It then wraps around the
end of the building, and those plantings at the end of the building
there, those are actually going to be in the preserve.
As you may know, there was a fIre in there some time ago. It got
pretty torn up by the fIre department, and so it's not -- it doesn't -- the
preserve itself is not very thick in there, so the idea would be to plant
some native species in there which would act asa vegetative screen
for two or three homes that are located - they would otherwise be able
to look through the preserve and see that building.
We had thought -- and I understand this is still going to be done.
We certainly are looking forward -- we thought we were going to have
a second meeting with the people in Pebblebrooke, and we certainly
look forward to such a meeting where we can kind of go through all
these things in as much detail as anyone wants to as far as exactly
what's being done.
But I just wanted to give you an overview of what -- of what
we're ready to commit to do. There's also going to be a -- I think one
of the drawings may show a concrete wall- did you show that?
MR. MUDD: This one?
MR. PICKWORTH: Yes, yes. Okay. You see that concrete
wall, and then that's the preserve right behind it, and those are the
enhanced plantings that would be in the preserve.
I guess -- I'll certainly answer any questions, but I wanted to let
you know the direction we're going. And, you know, we look forward
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Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 27 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
to, you know, further interface with the residents of Pebble brooke, to
move this along.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you, Mr. Pickworth.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I would like to thank you for being
so cooperative. It's our understanding from the County Attorney that
you have been very cooperative in trying to address the residents'
concerns. I think that's very good. I appreciate that.
MR. PICKWORTH: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. I just want to mention that the
board gave directions to see if there's any kind of resolution to this
outside of going to court, and DAD was very responsive to that.
But, again, that -- residents haven't seen that. But I just wanted to
clarify what the board's direction was, okay?
Okay. Let's call up the public speakers.
MS. FILSON: We have seven speakers, Mr. Chairman. The first
one is Adam Cohen. He'll be followed by Walter Bruno. And ifl can
have the second speaker please come up.
Okay. Go ahead.
MR. COHEN: My name's Adam Cohen, and I live at 298 Spider
Lily Lane in Pebblebrooke.
I'm here just to implore the commission to institute the scrivener's
error. I do not believe that any kind of mitigation through plant life or
walls can bring back our quality oflife, could bring back - you know,
we've -- you know, we've got quite a few homes that are for sale in our
development now, just about everybody does.
We've got folks driving down there, driving that -- when they see
that wall right there, they see that wall, renters will not come any
further and they turn around and leave, you know. So I'm just
imploring you all to do the right thing, go back to the PUD that was
supposed to be instituted.
I
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Agenda Item No:17A~~
June 10, 2008
Page 28 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
We've got more than just a two-story building. First of all, it's too
close, too close to the homes that are right up against it. That's
unacceptable. It's unacceptable for many -- nwnber of reasons.
There's dwnpsters every day being -- and I believe one of the
other speakers has a video of that -- of dwnpsters at all hours of the
day and morning being dwnped, and these folks -- we're talking 30
feet. It's very loud. I mean, I'm not even 30 feet. I'm across the street
and I hear it. These folks are being woken every single day.
And I do appreciate the -- Stevie Tomato's, the way that's being
handled, but that's not the only issue. The issue is, somebody made a
mistake, and it seems like the residents of Pebblebrooke are the only
ones being accountable for it. And that's just my opinion. Thanks.
MS. FILSON: Walter Bruno. He'll be followed by Angela
Joseph.
MR. BRUNO: Walter Bruno, 288 Spider Lily Lane. The last
time we were here, I think it was Ms. Fiala, had questioned if there's
problems still with noise. We have a short DVD to play that will
show you there's still problems, and a major ongoing problem is the
dwnpster collection, 5:00, 5:30 in the morning.
Again, like I say, I also feel that the scrivener's error needs to go
through so that any sort of negotiations over this property can begin in
earnest.
(The DVD is now being played.)
MR. BRUNO: That's 5:30, 5:40. And there's a shot from a
resident's patio. I think he is about 200 feet away.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You want to say something,
Commissioner?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think this is a good example of
why we need a stiffer noise ordinance, and not only just in this
neighborhood, but there's going to be other locations throughout the
county, and that's why -- I know there's other communities that have
addressed a stiffer noise ordinance because the people do need relief.
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February 26-27, 2008
MR. BRUNO: Have they thought of the --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, we know the bar--
MR. BRUNO: Also, there was a provision, it's supposed to be
part of the PUD, I believe, that the garbage disposal be handled off
site, which I have no idea how they'd do it, but that was supposed to
be in the original PUD that was approved, and also one of the things
that never made it in. You know, I think we need the scrivener's error.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: May we have a copy of that DVD,
Troy.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Angela Joseph. She'll be
followed by Greg Rearden.
MS. JOSEPH: Good afternoon. Angela Joseph, 281 Spider Lily
Lane in Pebblebrooke. And I'd like to say I regret having to be here,
number one, because as citizens we trusted that years ago this would
be settled.
My issue, obviously, I am the home directly behind the wall. I'm
the closest property there. It's 28 feet from my property line, and I had
the second-story windows that looked into my home. And I can show
pictures of that.
But to keep it short -- I know there are a lot of people that have to
talk. In viewing -- trying to do research and viewing things here, on
your web site says, that the commission, your obligation is providing
services to protect the health, safety, welfare, and quality oflife of the
citizens of Collier County.
I came across the organizational chart of the COW1ty, wanting to
go -- where do we go from here? We're not happy with how things are
gomg.
Who does the COW1ty answer to? Can you tell me, Mr. Henning,
who the top of the organizational chart is? Us, the citizens by your
display? I see you responding to corporations and developers and
businesses and not to us.
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Page 30 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I could remove my motion.
MS. JOSEPH: A corporation -- a corporation is not a citizen, as
far as I understand. Correct me if I'm wrong. But if things had been
handled the way we were promised, the original meeting years ago, I
would not have had to postpone meeting my family in grief right now
for the loss of a member of my family because this is so important to
handle. I shouldn't have to be here right now. I want not to have to
deal with -- and I don't know. Can this be viewed?
MR. MUDD: Sure, if you give it to me.
MS. JOSEPH: The first picture was my home and the privacy I
had on my patio. Yeah, we all agree, that wasn't going to stay.
Then I had to go from that to this. And excuse me a minute. My
mind is elsewhere, obviously.
I don't know if that can be projected. But what you will see now
is what I have to view now every morning. Excuse me for the time,
but you have to see this. And now you're asking me to go through, in
that little bit of 28 feet what is going to take -- and yes, developer, I
thank you for all the efforts you've taken to try and come up with a
solution. I am -- I am pleased with the efforts, but I don't want to have
to live through that.
Imagine behind me, living through now again, from all of that
you saw, now you're going to dig up and you're going to put walls and
trees and how close that is to my pool, and what will that do.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You're going to have to wrap it.
MS. JOSEPH: Thank you. I just want to know, what will that do
to my property. I want a scrivener's error, I want answers. I don't
want to have to live through it, and I've spoken that before, and I thank:
you for your time.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Greg Rearden. He'll be
followed by Kim Kish.
MR. REARDEN: Hi. My name is Greg Rearden. I live at 297
Page 221
Agenda Item No. 1LA
June 10, 2008
Page 31 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
Spider Lily. We've had meetings before on the issues, and you know
the issues are noise. You know the issues are the two-story building.
I know that there are efforts being made to try and rectify the
problem. I understand some landscaping mayor may not do the trick;
however, I do wish that you would make a motion to close the bar,
stop the liquor inside and out, because I'm five doors down from the
bar, can look right into the back of the bar and hear nothing but
screaming, yelling.
And you've seen the video before, all of you have, and today's
video. It's very loud. We can't even go outside. If we have company,
we can't go out on the lanai, have any privacy.
Our lives really, we feel like, are being, little by little, day by
day, just been affected by the noise. I really feel sorry for the lady
that has to live there, you know, next to the building, but I also feel
sorry for the person that lives directly behind Stevie Tomato's and
listens -- even that person that took that video is even three or four
doors down. There is even some closer that can hear the noise even
louder.
You know what you get when you start doing the drinking and
the motorcycles and the horn blowing. And there's one truck up there
that has some kind of big train sound that you can hear from a half a
mile away. It's very loud, and our homes -- even with my TV on
inside my house, I still hear the noise.
I personally believe that the only way you're going to be able to
solve the noise is to put up a big wall behind the building, do all kinds
of landscaping to try and do that. But as far as where the building's
concerned, you know, I'm asking for scrivener's errors as well to
implement some of the mistakes that have been made by the county
and/or the inspectors, code inspectors, whomever they may be. Thank
you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MS. FILSON: Kim Kish. She'll be followed by Jeri Buehler.
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A~~IIJd I t~I" Nu. 12A I
June 10, 2008
Page 32 of 45
February 26-27,2008
MS. KISH: Hi, again. I want you to know I'm on fIrst name
basis with all of my sheriff deputies within the 951/Immokalee area.
The point I wanted to make tonight is that the entire issue, if you
can continue to refuse to put forth a vote for the scrivener's error that
your own staff report shows and recommends and the continued lack
of oversight by many within this cmmty, including Mr. Weigel who
was the attorney during this entire period that allowed this issue to
come to fruition (sic), you are, in essence, saying that the Planning
Commission and its recommendations and its very existence are
irrelevant and unnecessary, that each board member here in the future
can make decisions regardless of the will of the people, the set laws,
and the regulations, that you and you alone will be the deciding factor.
I don't believe this is your intent. For you to try to put forth an
argument that a lawsuit will last for many years is something that will
have to be handled, but not at the expense of the people who trusted
. you to speak for us and protect us. The only choice is to call for and
approve a scrivener's error posthaste.
The consequences of the poor oversight of staff in allowing a
developer's agent -- and I think this is the biggest point on this issue--
that the developer's agent was allowed to clean up and sit with staff
and remove the words "no" and "not allowed" and that came forth for
you to vote on is, perhaps -- you know, it will be a test between your
attorney, the developer, the builder, and the bar owner, but not our
problem. We were here first. Thanks.
MS. FILSON: Jeri Buehler. She'll be followed by Clay Brooker.
MS. BUEHLER: Good evening. I'm Jeri Buehler and I live at
389 Sweetbay Lane, and I live at roughs of the building.
And we sat here a couple years ago in front of the county
commissioners. We didn't even know that the property was being sold
out. We were told that there were going to be more homes back there.
So much to my dismay, we all came, and the developer not only
sold the PUD, the P-U-D - we sat here, we asked that a tavern not go
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June 10, 2008
Page 33 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
in. We didn't mind a restaurant that served wine and beer -- that's an
issue of its own -- but not a restaurant that close to our homes.
The other point was that the building was to be 60 feet from my
lot line. The building is 30 feet from my lot line. When DeAngeles
Diamond was footing it, I went out and said to the man, oh, that's the
wall, correct?
No, ma'am, that's the building. I talked to John DeAngeles
personally. My husband called him. I called, I went down.
Then the wall is 15 feet from my building, from my house. Then
I'm watching the wall go up, not just a one story, but a very intrusive
two-story building that everyone that drives down my street says, my
gosh, Jeri, what happened? Who allowed this? I want a scrivener's
error.
I am rather flabbergasted that the county commissioners, that we
elect, don't drive out and see what's going on in their county, our
county. And as a taxpayer, I depend on you, Commissioners, all of
you, and I'm very disappointed.
And I'm sorry that the man that has come to own this didn't do all
of his due diligence to fmd out what was going on, because we did
complain. A lot of tears, a lot of aggravation.
I asked John DeAngeles where he lived, ifhe would like that
building behind his home.
I want to sell my house some day. To be honest with you, I will
never get out of it what I originally decided.
We -- we're on a dead-end. I have a handicapped daughter,
Christina, who's 32 years of age. We built there so that she could ride
her bike to Publix.
CfWRMAN HENNING: You have to wrap it up, please.
MS. BUEHLER: All right. I just want you to do what's right by
us. Thank you.
CfWRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MS. FILSON : Your final speaker is Clay Brooker.
Page 224
Agellda 1",,"I~u. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 34 of 45
February 26-27,2008
MR. BROOKER: Good afternoon, Commissioners. My name is
Clay Brooker. I'm with the law firm ofCheffy, Passidomo, Wilson, &
Johnson. I appear before you on behalf of the Stevie Tomato's
establishment.
First off I'd like to comment a little bit on the comment by Mr.
Klatzkow that we've -- there's been nothing but deafening silence from
us. That is untrue. We had no notice of today's discussion item on the
agenda. We found out about it yesterday. Apparently DAD
Development Corpomtion was given notice, but we weren't.
Upon finding out about it, I tried to call Mr. Klatzkow. No one
knew where he was, so I sent an email to him. The response I got was
silence.
I've been in touch with Commissioner Henning since the
beginning on this. On September 25,2007, we appeared before you.
We offered a sound barrier at that time.
On January 10th, a neighborhood meeting was held.
Commissioner Henning was in attendance. I was in attendance. Mr.
Klatzkow was in attendance. My client was in attendance.
We participated and offered sound attenuating shutters at that
meeting. We offered to close them every day at seven p.m. That
meeting ended with an agreement to follow up with a second
neighborhood meeting. I don't know where the status of that is. No
one's told me anything about when the date of that meeting is going to
occur. But we're ready to participate again whenever that meeting is
called.
The dumpster is not us. We don't control the timing of it. It's for
the entire shopping center, so that can't be blamed on Stevie Tomato's.
As far as whether we're permitted under the PUD, your own
zoning director investigated this matter the end of last year and she
wrote, I quote, Stevie Tomato's is correctly classified under SIC code
number 5812 as a restaurant. The outdoor seating bar area is correctly
considered an accessory use to the principle use of the restaurant, not
Page 225
gen a tem o.
June 10, 2008
Page 35 of 45
February 26-27,2008
unlike the indoor bar.
The restaurant use, including the outdoor bar seating area, was
properly and appropriately permitted by staff under the restaurant uses
as defined under SIC code 5812 by the PUD, end quote. The revenues
at Steve Tomato's in tenus offood far exceed 51 percent.
The sound attenuating shutters we've offered time and time again.
Although no one seems to want to take us up on the offer, they are
going up anyway next week.
We have responded, and what we suggest is to expedite the
resolutions that have been offered to you, from our standpoint for
months, from DAD's standpoint, they showed some on their -- plans
for landscaping and a wall today.
I suggest we expedite these resolutions prior to filing a suit which
your own attorney gives you, at best, a 50/50 shot of winning.
One last sentence. When clients come into my office and ask to
go to court and I tell them that there's a 50/50 shot, my advice is, never
go to court on a 50/50 shot of winning; reach a resolution. And we
believe we've offered a reasonable one.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. My wife and I went out to
dinner on Friday night across the street in the Vineyards, and - Italian
restaurant. It has a bar in there. And they're very busy, so we choose
to eat over there, and it's nothing like what we've seen on that video.
It was quite a pleasant experience.
And I know they don't stay open till two o'clock in the morning,
one o'clock in the morning, I bet you they close the doors at 10 p.m.,
maybe 11. I don't know.
There is a difference between a restaurant and a bar, and
somebody needs to infonu your staff what the difference is. Very
clear.
And these errors that keep on happening is just overwhelming,
whether it be a setback, a bar, or whatever. And the only person that
we have accountable is the County Manager.
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Agerrcla1iem I~o. ILA ~
June 10, 2008
Page 36 of 45
February 26-27, 2008
But I think we have the ability to do budget amendments, and I'm
almost that close to taking a budget amendment to positions in your
organization. This has to change.
Y '?
es, SIr,
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. A couple of points here.
I went online to look up about Stevie Tomato's, and it's classified
numerous times online as a bar. Just to point it out to you, something
that I did. I went to the Yellow Pages, and I couldn't fmd anything
there that indicated whether it was a bar or a restaurant. It was listed
under restaurants.
But ifI may address Mr. Klatzkow,
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Please.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Sir, I'm a little bit disturbed.
When you were in my office the other day, I asked you if there'd been
any communications taking place and that I heard something about
sound shutters, and I asked you what you knew of it, and you said, no,
there's been nothing,
Have they -- what they just said, is that not true or is it true, that
they had contact --
MR. KLATZKOW: They have been talking about sound
shutters for, I can't tell you how long, and I've never seen them come
up. Now they're saying we're putting them up. I think it's -- maybe a
coincidence, but maybe it's because of this meeting right here.
What I will tell you is those sound shutters; I don't think it's
going to make a heck of a difference.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, that's fme. It's just that
when you were in my office, you didn't give me all the information I
was hoping to get so I can move forward on it. What I'm hearing from
them here is that there is an effort going underway. I wished you told
me at that time that you had these discussions. Nothing happened --
MR. KLATZKOW: If you remember, sir, Mr. Mudd came to
you sometime ago with a permit on this issue for the shutters, I don't
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June 10, 2008
Page 37 of 45
February 26-27,2008
know, six months ago, nine months ago already, it's been.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: November.
MR. MUDD: It was November, September.
MR. KLATZKOW: November sometime. They're still not
there.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. A little more detail in the
explanation would have helped tremendously.
I still support your motion, Commissioner Henning.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Any further discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saymg aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
I COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
~ COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
I . CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any opposed?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries, 4-1, Commissioner
Halas against the motion. Okay.
Do we need a break?
We're going to take a 1 O-minute break and get back to the five
o'clock time certain.
(A brief recess was had.)
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, if you'd please take your
seat.
Mr. Chairman, Commissioners, you have a hot mike.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The next item is 10 -- which is it, 10
MS. FILSON: lOF.
Item #lOF
/',
Page 228
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 38 of 45
DEVELOPER AGREEMENT
THIS DEVELOPER AGREEMENT (hereinafter referred to as the "Agreement") is made
and entered into this of , 2008, by and between DAD Development Corp., a
Florida corporation, whose address is 2375 Tamiami Trail North, Suite 210, Naples, Florida
("Developer"), and COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA, a political subdivision of the State of
Florida (hereinafter referred to as "County
R Eel TAL S:
WHEREAS, the County, by and through its Board of County Commissioners (the
"Board"), makes the following findings and determinations:
Developer is the owner of certain developed lands within the unincorporated area
of Collier County, Florida described on Exhibit A attached hereto (the "Property")
There is a two-story building located at 15205 Collier Boulevard, Naples, Florida
which is within the Property (the "Building")
The Building was constructed pursuant to county permits issued in 2005 and
received its Certificate of Occupancy on March 29, 2006.
The Property is within the lands covered by a Planned Unit Development known
as the "Richland Planned Unit Development Ordinance", enacted as an ordinance
by the County on February 12, 2002 as Ordinance No. 02-07 (the "PUD").
The PUD repealed and superseded Ordinance 97-27, and, among other things,
changed the permitted uses on certain lands within the PUD, including the
Property, from residential to commercial.
The application for the PUD was filed in October, 2001 by the owner of the
Property at that time, Kenco Dcvelopment, Inc. by Kenco's agent.
The Developer was not involved in the processing of the application for the PUD
and was not aware of inconsistencies in the recommendations of the Collier
County Planning Commission and the County staff regarding, among other things,
the maximum number of stories allowed on buildings within the Property.
The Developer purchased the Property subsequent to the adoption of the PUD
without knowledge of the aforementioned inconsistencies and relied in good faith
on the express terms of the PUD.
WHEREAS, the Board has been advised that there is uncertainty as to a favorable
outcome if the County seeks judicial remedies against Developer; and
WHEREAS, the County has determined that the interests of the citizens of Collier
County, including the citizens residing in the residential portions of the Richland PUD will be
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 39 of 45
better served by an agreement between the Developer and the County Wlder which the Developer
is required to take specified remedial actions; and
WHEREAS, the Developer is willing to take the remedial actions set forth in this
Agreement if the Developer is assured by the terms of this Agreement that the COWlty will not
seek judicial remedies that would require the Developer to demolish the second floor of the
Building or be barred from using the second floor of the Building or that the COWlty will not
seek to enact any legislation or take any other action that would make the Building a non-
conforming use or interfere with the use of the Building, including its second storey, as permitted
by the PUD; and
WHEREAS, after reasoned consideration, the Board finds and reaffirms that this
Agreement is consistent with both the public interest and with the comprehensive plan.
WIT N E SSE T H:
('
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of Ten Dollars ($10.00) and other good and
valuable consideration exchanged amongst the parties the receipt of which is acknowledged by
each Party, and in consideration of the benefits to be obtained by each of the parties by each
party's compliance with the covenants contained herein, the parties agree as follows:
I. All of the above RECITALS are true and correct and are hereby expressly incorporated
herein by reference as if set forth fully below.
2. The Developer will take the following actions (the "Remedial Actions") at the time and
in the manner specified herein:
A. Landscape Buffer: The Developer will install, at Developer's expense, a
landscape buffer (the "Landscape Buffer") within those areas shown on the drawing attached
hereto as Exhibit B entitled "Overall Site Concept Plan". The Landscape Buffer will meet the
following criteria and specifications:
The Landscape Buffer will provide at least 90% opacity to screen the Building. This buffer shall
occur above the existing 8 foot concrete fence and extend vertically to a height of over 26 feet.
Unless adverse growing conditions beyond the control of Developer occur, this will mean that at
least 90% of the building will be covered after two years.
The proposed planting as designed will install Areca Palms of at least 16feet in height, planted
approximately 10 feet on center, starting 35 feet west ofthe western edge of the Building,
extending the full length of the Building to a point that is at least 100 feet east ofthe east comer
of the Building.
/--,~
In addition, 2 rows of Cabbage palms planted 10 tol2 feet on center (per row). These trees shall
be planted with a clear trunk height of approximately 16 feet to 21 feet (which equals 21 feet to
Page 2 of7
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 40 of 45
26 feet overall height). These Cabbage palms will be planted with the fronds removed, as is
consistent w/ Landscape standards, as this dramatically increases the survival rate of the trees. It
is expected that these Cabbage palm trees should be fully leafed out in 24 months.
It is understood that this buffer will be fertilized and maintained on a consistent basis to ensure
the long term success and survival of the buffer.
It is also understood that, as with any living product, inherent risks may exist that include acts of
God, such as hurricanes and/or freezes or other events that are beyond Ihe control of the
developer, and that such occurrences may prevent or delay the development of the Landscape
Buffer to the size and opacity specified. The Developer shall take such steps as are prudent,
reasonable, and in accordance with customary landscape installation and maintenance procedures
in this area. Any damage that may occur to the buffer will be repaired as effectively as possible,
but additional time may need to be allowed to allow the buffer to repair any damage.
B. Preserve Buffer: The Developer will install a landscape buffer within the area
designated in the PUD as "Preserve" at the location marked as such in the drawing attached
hereto as Exhibit B (the "Preserve Buffer"). The Preserve Buffcr will meet the following criteria
and specifications:
Three rows of Saba I Palms as follows: (I) a front row of 10 trees with II' ct and 16' oa; (2) a
middle row of 10 trees with 16' ct and 21 ' oa; (3) a rear row of 11 trees with 21' ct and 26' oa;
Thence going to two rows at the point shown in the drawing, consisting of Sabal Palms as
follows: (I) a front row of8 trees with 10' ct and 15' oa; (2) a rear row of 8 trees with 15' ct and
21' oa.
C. Opacity film on Building's south-side second floor windows: Until such time as
the Landscape Buffer has grown to the height and opacity standards set forth herein, the
Developer shall install an opaque window film ("Opaque Film") on the Building's second floor
windows as follows:
(i) The Opaque Film shall be installed at the time any spaces are leased on the
south side second floor and shall remain in place until the Landscape Buffer has achieved the
height and opacity standards set forth, at which time the Opaque Film may be removed.
(ii) The Opaque Film shall be of sufficient opacity to prevent persons in the
second floor spaces from clearly observing the residences on Spider Lily Lane.
(iii) The Opaque Film need not be installed on the windows of any unleased
second floor spaces so long as such spaces are locked and access is under the control of the
Developer.
D. Extension of wall on west side of Building: Developer shall extend the existing 8
foot concrete wall along the west side of the Building] 75 feet north on the property line to the
north side of the existing dumpster enclosure.
Page 3 of7
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 41 of 45
E. The Developer shall begin construction of the wall and installation of the buffers
within 60 days from receipts of all necessary permits and approvals, following the Effective Date
as defined herein.
F. Resolution of disputes over achievement of opacity standards: In the event the
County shall determine that the opacity standards for the Landscape Buffer have not been met,
after being advised in writing by a professional landscape architect (LSA) to such effect, the
County shall so notify the Developer in writing and the Developer shall have 30 days to take
appropriate corrective actions, or the Developer shall dispute the County's determination by the
written opinion of an LSA. In such event, the two LSA's shall attempt to resolve the dispute,
and if unable, shall jointly select a third LSA, whose decision shall be binding.
3. The County agrees as follows:
A. The County finds, determines and acknowledges that the Developer has and had a
vested right to construct the Building with two stories and at the height so constructed and that
the County is estopped from asserting the contrary in any proceeding.
('
B. That the County will take no legislative or administrative action, such as, but not
limited to, a rezoning or amendment of the PUD that would make the Building a nonconforming
use or in any other way prevent its reconstruction and/or repair in the event it is damaged or
destroyed.
C. That the Remedial Actions adequately address and mitigate all adverse impacts of
the Building, if any, on the surrounding residential properties.
4. This Agreement shall not be construed or characterized as a development agreement
under the Florida Local Government Development Agreement Act.
5. The burdens of this Agreement shall be binding upon, and the benefits of this Agreement
shall inure to, all successors in interest to the parties to this Agreement.
6, In the event state or federal laws are enacted after the execution of this Agreement, which
are applicable to and preclude in whole or in part the parties' compliance with the terms of this
Agreement, then in such event this Agreement shall be modi fied or revoked as is necessary to
comply with such laws, in a manner which best reflects the intent of this Agreement.
7. Except as otherwise provided herein, this Agreement shall only be amended by mutual
written consent of the parties hereto or by their successors in interest. All notices and other
communications required or permitted hereunder shall be in writing and shall be scnt by Certified
Mail, return receipt requested, or by a nationally recognized overnight delivery service, and
addressed as follows:
...-..
To County:
Board of County Commissioners
Page 4 on
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 42 of 45
Attn: County Manager
Harmon Turner Building
3301 Tamiami Trail East
Naples, FL 341 12
Phone: (239) 252-4010
To Developer:
DAD Development Corp.
2375 Tamiami Trail North, Suite 210
Naples, FL 34103
Phone: (239) 643-1429
Notice shall be deemed to have been given on the next successive business day to the date of the
courier waybill if sent by nationally recognized overnight delivery service.
8. Disputes: Disputes concerning the achievement of the height or opacity standards for the
Landscape Buffer or the Preserve Buffer shall be resolved in the manner set forth in paragraph 2.
For all other disputes under this Agreement, the parties shall first use the County's then-current
Alternative Dispute Resolution Procedure. Following the conclusion of this procedure, either
party may file an action for injunctive relief in the Circuit Court of Collier County to enforce the
terms of this Agreement, said remedy being cumulative with any and all other remedies available
to the parties for the enforcement of this Agreement.
9. Dismissal of Developer from Lawsuit: The County shall dismiss Developer as a party to
that case pending in the Circuit Court for Collier County entitled Collier County v. Pebble Page,
Inc. d/b/a Stevie Tomato's Sports Page Bar & Grill, and DAD Development Corporation, Case
No. 08-1872-CA (the "Lawsuit"), and will not refile any action against Developer based on the
same cause of action as alleged the Lawsuit.
10. Effective Date: This Agreement shall be executed by both parties following Board
approval of this Agreement, but shall become effective ("Effective Date") only after the County
has filed a notice of dismissal in the Lawsuit.
REMAINDER OF P AGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
SIGNATURE PAGES TO FOLLOW
Page 5 of7
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 43 of 45
Attest: Dwight Brock
Clerk of Board
Board of County Commissioners
By:
Tom Henning, Chairman
Deputy Clerk
Approved as to form and legality:
Jeffery A. Klatzkow
County Attorney
DAD Development Corporation
By:
Ray DeAngelis, President
r
,'-
Page 6 of7
Agenda Item No. 12A
June 10, 2008
Page 44 of 45
Exhibit A
Tract 1, Pebblebrooke Commercial Phase IV, according to the Plat thereof recorded at Plat Book
41, Pages 93 and 94, Public Records of Collier County, Florida
Page 7 of7
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