BCC Minutes 06/23/2006 B (Budget Workshop)
June 23, 2006
BUDGET MEETING
OF THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Naples, FL
June 23, 2006
LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Board of County
Commissioners in and for the County of Collier, and also acting as the
Board of Zoning Appeals and as the governing board( s) of such
special districts as have been created according to law and having
conducted business herein, met on this date at 9:00 a.m. in BUDGET
WORKSHOP SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex,
East Naples, Florida, with the following members present:
CHAIRMAN:
Frank Halas
Jim Coletta
Tom Henning
Donna Fiala
Fred Coy Ie
ALSO PRESENT:
Jim Mudd, County Administrator
David C. Weigel, County Attorney
Page 1
NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING
Notice is hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Collier
County will conduct Budget Workshops on Thursday, June 22, 2006, Friday,
June 23, 2006 and Mondal' June 26, 2006 at 9:00 a.m. Workshops will be
held in the Boardroom, 3T Floor, W. Harmon Turner Building, Collier
County Government Center, 330 I East Tamiami Trail, Naples, Florida to
hear the following:
COLLIER COUNTY GOVERNMENT
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
FY 2007 BUDGET WORKSHOP SCHEDULE
Thursday, June 22, 2006 - 9:00 a.m.
General Overview
Courts and Related Agencies (State Attorney and Public Defender)
Airport Authority
Administrative Services
Transportation Services
Public Utilities
Public Services
Community Development
Debt Service
Management Offices (Pelican Bay)
County Attorney
BCC
Friday, June 23, 2006 - 9:00 a.m.
Constitutional Officers:
Elections
Property Appraiser
Clerk of Courts
Sheriff
Preliminary UFR Discussion
1 :00 p.m. Public Comment
Monday, June 26, 2006 - 9:00 a.m.
Wrap-up (if required)
June 23, 2006
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, please take your seats. Mr.
Chairman, you have a hot mic.
(Commissioner Coyle is not in the boardroom.)
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
We're out of recess. We're continuing on yesterday's budget for 2007.
At this time we're going to take something a little out of order.
We're supposed to start off with the constitutional officers but county
attorney David Weigel has other commitments so we want to go ahead
and take David Weigel and then we'll get back onto, with the
constitutional officers.
David.
MR. MUDD: Commissioners, if you go to your Board of County
Commissioners tab and you go to Page lOin that tab you have Mr.
Weigel's budget.
MR. WEIGEL: Thank you, Mr. Chairman and commissioners. I
guess at this point I would say if you have any questions I look
forward to respond to any questions. As you can see we have
endeavored to stay well within the guidance instructions from the
county manager's report, office.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Are there any questions from my fellow
commissioners on this?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HALAS: David, I guess you did a great job.
Thank you very much for the presentation.
MR. WEIGEL: I thank you very much, and thank you for the
bump in early in the schedule.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Commissioners, that will bring us to where we --
Mr. Chairman, I told you it would be kind of quick.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Two minutes.
SUPERVISOR OF ELECTIONS
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June 23, 2006
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. We start now with the constitutional
officers. And the first constitutional officer this morning is the
supervisor of elections, Ms. Jennifer Edwards.
MS. EDWARDS: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Good morning, Jen.
MS. EDWARDS: Good morning.
MR. MUDD: If you go to constitutional officer tab, go to Page 6
and you have the supervisor of elections budget.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
MS. EDWARDS: Good morning, commissioners. And I too
have stayed under your broad cap, and if you have any questions of
our budget at this time I will answer them.
( Commissioner Coyle is now present in the
boardroom. )
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Are there any questions from the
commissioners in regards to the supervisor of elections budget?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I would just like to say that the
supervisor of elections is one of those people who always stays within
the guidelines, most of the time, and always does a good job with her
budget.
MS. EDWARDS: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Fiala. Your light was on.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, was it?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Good morning.
MS. EDWARDS: Morning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yesterday -- no, I'm sorry, it
was Wednesday we had a discussion about your training center.
MS. EDWARDS: Uh-huh.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Is there a need to have that full
time or is that just going to be seasonal, election time?
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June 23, 2006
MS. EDWARDS: I understand that you are talking about our
new location that the county manager has located for us in the Golden
Gate Community Park facility.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Yes, ma'am.
MS. EDWARDS: Yes, we will be using that full-time. We not
only are training over a thousand poll workers for our elections but we
also hold focus group meetings with our coworkers and do our own
internal training in that facility.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Maybe you could get together
with me offline and give me a synopsis of how many days a week or
how many hours a year or something like that that you anticipate.
MS. EDWARDS: Is there another use that you have in mind for
it, because at the beginning of this process we had talked about
sharing it with the parks and rec department. But then I think that
because of scheduling issues, that became questionable. So, I'll be
glad to work with others.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, the original intent was for
park use. And I think it's appropriate to try to make it
multi-functional, for different uses. I just didn't realize there was a
need for full time training.
MS. EDWARDS: When we had the discussion with the parks
and rec staff, the response that we got from them was, well, you all
need it so much we just aren't going to be able to schedule there. So
that was their response. We'll be glad to work with them and see if
there are some times when we are not using it that they can use it and
make it multi-use.
But as I always say as we go through discussions with the county
manager, we're always looking for additional space. So if we could
ever get one large building where we can have everything in one place
that would be the perfect situation for the elections office.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: What do you anticipate as the growth
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June 23, 2006
rate for your organization?
MS. EDWARDS: You talking about staff?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yes. Is your staffpretty much geared to
what the growth rate of the county is?
MS. EDWARDS: Yes, it is. I have been in office six years. We
have had three new positions during that time. And what we find in
our office is hiring temporary staff is much more effective because we
don't have a large number of staff that aren't as busy at different parts
of the cycles, election cycles.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Jennifer, could you take just a
minute and tell us about citizen involvement, how you're using them
in this coming election, how people could get involved, if they'd like
to, with the elections office. And also if you could tell us about early
voting.
MS. EDWARDS: Well, early voting will be at eight locations
this year. In the past we had seven locations. We've added one.
We've added the library on Central. We'll also be using the Golden
Gate library, the Orange Blossom library, the Immokalee library, the
city hall in Naples and the city hall in Everglades City. That's the
eight.
The hours will be 10:30 to 6:30. We've asked that we change the
hours because we think that's more convenient for the voters,
especially the evening. And we will begin that on August the 21 st and
it will go up through Saturday before the elections.
We, of course, are always looking for new poll workers, and we
have a program called Adopt A Precinct that has been very successful.
And we also have a new program this year called the Diplomatic
Corps, and that is a program in which we have over 40 individuals
who are doing voter outreach. And we've already begun that program.
F or example, we're at one of the local banks, Bank of America, every
Monday doing voter registration and voter outreach.
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June 23, 2006
So we're always looking for people that want to come into our
office and be a part of our team to do voter outreach in the
community. All they have to do is give us a call, 774-8450, and we'll
be glad to put them to work.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any other questions in regards --
pertaining to the budget?
Seeing none, thank you very, very much.
MS. EDWARDS: Thank you.
PROPERTY APPRAISER
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, the next constitutional officer on
the agenda is the property appraiser.
(Commissioner Coyle has left the boardroom.)
MR. SMYKOWSKl: I will cover that. For the record, Michael
Smykowski. We're on Page 4, the Property Appraiser's budget.
Overall, he has a 6 percent budget increase so he is well within
the guidelines. He does have three expanded position requests for
customer service representatives. Currently there is one position at the
satellite facility in Golden Gate, and what Mr. Skinner is proposing to
do is to have two staff members at Golden Gate and two at the North
Naples Government Services Center.
So that has opened recently and we've already seen a fairly
strong turnout in terms of number of customers walking through the
door. Obviously, in season that will probably even pick up to a
greater degree once people figure out they can transact a lot of
business on the north end of the county without having to make the
trek all the way down Airport Road to the main government center
campus. So his proposal is to have two staff members at each of the
satellite facilities.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Are there any questions? Okay.
Hearing none, we'll move on to the next one.
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CLERK OF COURTS
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, the next constitutional officer is
the clerk of courts.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: It begins on Page 12 in your constitutional
officer tab.
MR. BROCK: Good morning, commissioners. If you have any
questions we'll be more than happy to answer them.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Are there any questions? I had submitted
a letter to you and I haven't gotten anything back on that yet.
MR. BROCK: Weare in the process of trying to assimilate the
information. Once we do that and go through it, we'll be more than
happy to give it to you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Will that show up as a reflection on the
budget adjustment or anything?
MR. BROCK: No.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: No. Okay. Are there any other
questions? Seeing none, you did a great job.
MR. BROCK: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: The next one is the sheriff.
DEBT SERVICE
MR. MUDD: The next constitutional officer is the sheriff. And
I'm going to ask Leo Ochs to make a phone call to figure out where
the sheriff is. But while that is going on let's have Mr. Smykowski
come back up here and do debt service, and -- while that's moving
forward so we can keep --
MR. SMYKOWSKI: In your debt service tab on Pages 2 and 3
is a macro summary of all of the county's general government debt
service funds.
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June 23, 2006
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's the overview; is that correct?
MR. SMYKOWSKI: No, sir. There is a separate tab for Debt
Service.
MR. MUDD: Right behind Public Utilities before Management
Officers.
MR. SMYKOWSKl: Page 2 and 3 is a macro summary. For the
benefit of the viewing public, we talk about Debt Service. Debt
Service is really not unlike a mortgage in that it is, the budgets are for
the payment, repayment of principal interest on loans or bonds that
have been issued to finance major capital construction projects that
typically have a long-term useful life. You are typically talking 20 to
30 years.
Obviously, there is some benefit to financing, just as most people
-- Naples being a bit of an exception, there are a lot of houses that are
purchased with cash here -- but in typical America most people are
financing their home typically over 30 years, a long-term asset, and
making payments. You are not utilizing up front cash. And in the
case of new facilities that you might be building that are going to last
30 or 40 years, you are not forcing the current year taxpayer to pay
cash for a facility that new residents who move here 20 years from
now will be taking advantage of. So you try to finance, match the
payment to the useful life of the asset.
Overall there is a 17.6 percent increase in the debt service
budgets. In fund 216 on Page 7, which is one of our sales tax bond
issues, a fairly recent one, in fiscal year '06 there was only a partial
principal payment, which is typical of a new issue. The full principal
payment is scheduled in fiscal '07.
I will note in Page 8 in the Caribbean Gardens, that is funded by
the 1.5 mil tax levy. We do have a commercial paper loan that was
used to purchase that property that must be refinanced by December,
2006. So we'll be working in conjunction with the clerk's staff. We
work cooperatively, myself, with the clerk's staff in developing the
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June 23, 2006
debt service budgets, and obviously that's something we're going to
have to take care of.
The fund 232 is the Pine Ridge and Naples production park. It's
a special assessment bond that, we look to pay it off in fiscal year '06.
There is an issue, there is some residual cash in that fund. We'll look
at the potential of either refunding or making some additional
improvements within the Pine Ridge and Naples production park
areas.
Conservation Collier, that's funded by the quarter of a mil tax
levy . We have a fixed rate bond.
And other than that there are no questions. In this area, once the
board has made the policy decision to take out the loan or bond, there
really is little discretion in terms of repayment. Obviously, to protect
the financial interest and financial rating of the county repayment is an
important element, so this is an area that the board really has no
discretion in once, again, the decision is made to proceed with the
issuance of a bond. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Are there any questions?
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Are any of those due this year
or paid off this year, I should say? Because I know we did some
consolidation last year to payoff some old debt and roll over some
new debt.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: We rolled over some of the commercial
paper and refinanced that. And, as I indicated, the Pine Ridge and
Naples production park, the special assessment bond, there is enough
cash in that fund to payoff, we're going to work with bond counsel,
again, with the clerk's staff and the county's financial advisor. We'll
have to bring that to the board via an executive summary to initiate the
process to pay that loan off.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No other general government
bonds?
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June 23, 2006
MR. SMYKOWSKl: No, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Mike did mention, Mr. Smykowski did mention
that the Caribbean Gardens, we have one tax year that we levied on
that particular item so that reduced the debt service fee. We'll have this
time in November, and when we're finished with that we'll make a
determination if it's better to go to a bond issue or to do a short-term
commercial paper product, because we might end up with about a $25
million difference with those two tax levies on that particular product.
We might estimate based on those first two years of collection
that that $40 million will be paid off in approximately four, four and a
half years. And to go out to a 20-year bond item and stretch that out
where you can't have an early payoff would probably not be the best
instrument. So we're going to go through that call with your finance
committee here over the fall time period. And that's the big item that
we have.
(Commissioner Coy Ie has returned.)
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any other questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
SHERIFF
MR. MUDD: Sheriff, come on forward, you are next in line.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You spoiled all my fun. You took
the clerk's budget while I was out of the room.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It was planned that way.
MR. MUDD: And I'm on Constitutional Officers, Page 22.
MR. RAMBOSK: Good morning.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Good morning.
MR. RAMBOSK: Good morning, commission members. On
behalf of Sheriff Hunter who will not be able to be with us today, he's
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in Washington D.C. working on immigration issues, he has asked me
to thank you for the opportunity to discuss our budget with you. Kevin
Rambosk, Undersheriff with the Collier County Sheriffs Office.
I have with me today a number of people: Chief Smith, whom I
think you all know; Carol Golightly, our Finance Director; Jean
Myers, our Finance Manager; Chief Bloom with the Operations
Department, and Chief Williams with the Investigations, should you
have any individual questions with regard to operations in anyone of
these areas. If I may.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yes.
MR. RAMBOSK: This has been a pretty unique year, I think, for
all of us. We faced a lot of challenges, from hurricanes to significant
growth, recruitment and retention issues, increased responsibility day
to day, and we would look forward to those challenges. And in fact, I
think as a community we have been very successful with each of
those. And that's due in great part to the community members, to
working together as a community with other government entities such
as yourself and of course our members who contribute daily.
As we look forward to this budget year we see many expectations
from the public, which we want to address. We see a demand for
service increasing and we also see more challenges and opportunities.
Weare looking at some things that are important. We're seeing
-- well, we are holding the line on crime, which is a very good thing.
Weare seeing an increase in violent crimes, which is not a good thing.
We see the potential for increased natural, and as you see this
morning the potential of man-made disasters that we may have to face
and have to be prepared to face. And that's going to put us all in a
position with regard to fulfilling mandates that were not here last year.
For example, we have to now address the Jessica Lunsford Act,
and that's with training and procedures that we've not ever had to do
but it's critically important for safeguarding our children from
predators.
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June 23, 2006
We now must be trained in incident command, that's mandated
by the federal government. Again, to allow us to provide the service
that is demanded of our community.
More importantly, though, is how we're going to accomplish this
and how we're going to accomplish it with the staff that we've got,
which is important and something that the sheriff has stressed to us in
being able to provide without seeking significant increases in
positions.
The ways I believe we'll do this is we will work together with
organizations such as your staff, and we think that we can do that
better. And we would like to propose with your permission that you
allow us to work more closely with them in a variety of areas. And
we would like to begin as early as Monday and make contact with
your staff.
But in the furtherance of the budget we would like an opportunity
to provide any operation that you might need and turn it over to the
county manager.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I have some questions. I was looking at
your budget and your expanded forecast for FY 2007. You are
looking for an additional $1,089,500 but when you look at the bottom
line there is also, it looks like there is an additional $18 million. What
is that going to be used for, and it looks like you are going to have an
increase in manpower by about 25.25 people. Can you give us some
idea of what the additional 18 million is going to be used for, is this
going to be used for pay increases or what?
MR. RAMBOSK: Significantly, it will be used for portions of
cost of living, pay increases, certainly, some equipment purchases and
some programmIng.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: And can you, can you break this down in
more general terms in regards to about what percentage of the $18
million would be used for training and what percentage would be used
for equipment, do you have that available?
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June 23, 2006
MR. RAMBOSK: Sure, we can do that. If we're -- and
particularly let me get back to the expanded positions. As you are
aware a number of those are grant positions with only actually three
additional positions above what has been requested and authorized
through grant funding, so we're really looking at those three additions,
although we understand that it is now time to pay for the grant
positions. So there is an element of those. And I believe as we've
discussed before we're being very cautious about moving forward in
the future with grant positions. When we come to you and make a
request for a grant position we understand and we ask that everyone
understand that once approved we will have to ultimately fund that
position. So we look at it as a new position when we ask for it rather
than having to come back and fund it.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: When those grant positions end up with
__ we do not get any more money from them, do you look at them as
cost effective before you decide that it's going to be put on the
taxpayers' shoulders in regards to continuing to have that position?
MR. RAMBOSK: Absolutely. We evaluate every grant position
to determine whether it should continue, whether its original intent
benefitted the community as it was intended. If it does we will make
the recommendation to you to move forward with funding. If it does
not we'll remove it. And we're also looking at ways in which we can
incorporate that funding within our existing budget as well.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you.
Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Kevin, tell me what contact
specifically you would like to begin by Monday. I'm not suggesting
we're opposed to any contact at all but I would like to get some idea as
to what we're talking about.
MR. RAMBOSK: For example, following the productivity
committee meeting the other day the manager and I had a brief
discussion on ways in which we could enhance human resource
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cooperation. We think that has some potential. We've been doing
some of it in the past. We think it's not only looking at how we
recruit, how we purchase, cooperative, particularly training,
cooperative training amongst us.
I think we envision an opportunity to sit down and say, okay,
what specific items can we do better with, and rather than wait four to
six months to decide that we think we should get started right away.
So what we would like to do is to sit down with your staff, outline
what we think we can do better together with, bring that back to you
and the sheriff and begin to work on it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good. Good. I'm glad to see that.
Now, has there been any indication that the supplemental manpower
in the judiciary has been instrumental in reducing occupancy of the
jails or is it too early to make that determination?
MR. RAMBOSK: I would say it's probably too early to make
that determination. I can tell you that our arrests are up, and of course
that puts a demand on the jail structure.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: To follow on to that, can you
provide us information concerning the additional cost that is
associated with the illegal immigration problem in Collier County
from the sheriffs pages?
MR. RAMBOSK: The sheriff is looking at that right now. We
don't have that information with us but we know from some
preliminary data that we've looked at, for example we have a roster of
individuals we're looking for in the Immokalee area. And of that
posting, which included 20 individuals, 12 of those we believe are
illegal immigrants and they are all or most are violent criminals.
So if that trend maintains right through the entire process,
through the corrections and jail process, we believe there will be a
significant number.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And that, I presume, translates into
a significant expense to the taxpayers of Collier County.
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June 23, 2006
MR. RAMBOSK: Yes, it does.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I would appreciate it if you could
help us quantify that, so any information you might be able to provide
would be very helpful. I believe the court is going to try to provide us
similar information. So if you could do that, it would be greatly
appreciated.
And where I'm going on this is, there might be some things that
we can suggest or do that might help you with that process. And if we
haven't thought of all the ways and you have some other ideas I would
be happy to hear them.
Now, one other issue. You brought up the Jessica Lunsford Act.
Some citizens have suggested that we develop tighter rules here in
Collier County with respect to restricting where registered sexual
predators can actually live. I think there are limits now statewide as
far as schools are concerned but I'm uncertain as to whether that takes
into consideration playgrounds.
And there are some citizens who are suggesting that we as county
commissioners pass a local law that prohibits a sexual predator from
living within a specified distance of a playground for children.
What impact will that have on the sheriffs office from the
standpoint of enforcement?
MR. RAMBOSK: Well, certainly as you are aware, every time
we enact legislation that requires more enforcement. There will be a
demand for our services to enforce. However, one of the ways in
which we're addressing some of the requirements we have today is
expanding the role of our youth relations deputies to bring them out of
the school with additional duties either to and from which can address
this problem. We can probably do a similar, use a similar method
with any additional requirements that we place upon us.
So we would look at trying to accomplish it with what we've got
through assignment of staff as opposed to increases.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. It would appear that the
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June 23, 2006
primary focus would be to take the list of registered sexual predators
and compare that with an address cross reference to find out if any of
them are living within the specified distances. Beyond that, I don't
know that there is any specific requirement to patrol the areas. If you
can establish they are not living within the defined area they are not in
violation of the law as far as I know.
MR. RAMBOSK: Correct. We would, just like other crimes we
would have to observe them in an area that they are not supposed to
be.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Good. You've answered
my question.
The final question is one that really applies to everybody and I
just need to understand it a little more clearly. We all make staffing
projections and we estimate personnel costs, and if we don't staff up to
the desired level, if we're unsuccessful in hiring the people that we
need to hire, then we don't achieve those levels of expenditure. What
happens to that money, where does it go as far as county is concerned?
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, if they don't spend on their
operational based on the folks that they project to have, their forecast
comes down for what they are going to spend and those monies come
in and they go back into the reserves of Collier County, okay, they get
stripped out of their budgets. And the only way that one of your
departments can move those dollars to something else is they come to
the board and ask you for a budget amendment in order to move those
dollars around in that particular year.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So the department heads just don't
have the authority to take savings in personnel costs and move them to
another line item for another reason without getting approval.
MR. MUDD: That's right. They don't have that. And that's very
good. And in the constitutionals' particular case, if they don't spend
the dollars that has been budgeted in a particular thing they give it
back to the Board of County Commissioners by, I believe, it's 1
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June 23, 2006
November is the deadline that they have to come back to the board
and say -- and it's turn, and we call it turnback. Some weird terms that
I'm not used to. But turnback is the term that they use in that
particular -- and that's a one-time source that is coming back.
I believe one of the things in this budget proj ection is that the
sheriff is going to turn back $2 million is what is estimated in the
budget that was given to this Board of County Commissioners. And
those dollars have been put into your UFR amount of money already
based on that projection. So that's what we have.
Now, in some particular areas, and I still have to talk to Kevin
about this, and I don't mean to catch you short, for instance in your, I
guess it's a 190-something fund for the 311, these 311 dollars are
going up a little bit in his reserve account that's close to $2 million.
He's getting prepared to basically outfit the new EOC with a 911 and
he's got consoles and things like that that he's going to have to buy
with those particular dollars. So he's prepped for that, as I'm trying to
prep our folks.
So he's taken a look at those particular items and talking to us
about how well those particular accounts are transpiring. But if they
can't use it, it gets to turnback and they just don't go out there and
spend it willy-nilly that kind of way. They are very frugal with their
dollars as far as the turnback piece because that is a law of Florida
Statute for them to do it.
But on the county side it goes back into our reserve funds and
they have to come to the Board of County Commissioners to do
anything besides taking it back to reserves.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Before I turn this over to Commissioner
Henning I have one additional request I would like to have in regards
to upgrades, training and equipment, and that is the amount of money
that you anticipate you'll be using for expenditures in regards to the
illegal alien. I'm sure that's probably part of that in the 17 million.
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June 23, 2006
MR. RAMBOSK: Certainly that includes any mandated training
that will be required this year, and part of that training is involved.
What we would like to do is break that out for you, include that in the
report that we're going to provide back to you based on Mr. Coyle's--
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much. Commissioner
Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Mr. Rambosk, quite a bit of
savings through reorganization or whatever in Pelican Bay that I read
a few months ago. I think it was like $600,000 savings to that district.
MR. RAMBOSK: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Have you applied that to any
other road patrol or any other operations?
MR. RAMBOSK: No. As a matter of fact since that was a
contract that was over what we would normally use, we've reduced the
budget by that amount. So it's not incorporated in because as you
know those dollars go directly back to Pelican Bay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I understand that. Maybe I
misspoke. Are you applying that philosophy to your other road patrol
districts?
MR. RAMBOSK: Oh, yes. The urban style policing, we are.
Our pilot program was in district one or North Naples area. We are
asking each one of our district commanders to look at how to
accomplish that same service delivery method in each one of the
districts. As we're able to move forward, and the only thing really
holding us back with some of that is the filling of our positions.
We are currently total positions about 100.5 positions down
effective today. We've got 105 conditional offers out today. As those
positions fill and we make some internal reassignment and
rearrangement of staff, we -- -- our hope is to expand that program
throughout the entire county. Because, you know, we receive a lot
more questions from the eastern parts of the county, where growth is
significant, looking for their service levels to equal what we are able
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June 23, 2006
to provide throughout the more busy locations, and that is the sheriffs
goal to do that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So that would be a huge savings
or -- whether it be a turnback or asking for less revenue from general
funds, once that program is implemented.
MR. RAMBOSK: The better utilization of those resources and
about the same dollars because we've gotten most of the positions
funded today, so I don't know that we would be giving back any
dollars but we certainly would be able to increase the level of service,
put more patrol districts in your neighborhoods with the same number
of people.
But that also includes the decision to move to a 12-hour
deployment schedule as well. But that has been a very cost effective
means of providing additional staffing to the street without having to
come back and ask for extra dollars.
So in answer to your question, yes, we'll be able to put out more
resources and not have to ask for dollars today. However, as the
county grows we will be asking for additional staffing with regard to
the population.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Did I misunderstand? You
talked about two different things. I was more, I was thinking about
the 12-hour shift per person.
MR. RAMBOSK: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think that's what you did for
Pelican Bay.
MR. RAMBOSK: We did that for, actually, all of our districts
today to start all of the districts moving towards that urbanized
policing. Our only dilemma today is some of the districts are not fully
staffed. As they get fully staffed, yes, we'll be able to move into that
method.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: So it just equates to more
servIce.
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June 23, 2006
MR. RAMBOSK: Yes, higher level of service with the current
staffing that we have been authorized today.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner, maybe just, I'm sure you
probably understand this, but the MSTBU that Pelican Bay had in
regards to the service that the sheriff was providing was above what
normally they provide for other communities.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Oh, I totally understand that.
And I fully understand it's paid within that MSTBU.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Exactly.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And the benefits should be to
that district if there is a savings or whatever.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Correct. So what they end up now, they,
they share the same deputies as everybody else up in that particular
district.
MR. RAMBOSK: Yes, they chose to look at the new strategy
urban policing and decided amongst themselves that they didn't
require that additional staffing in Pelican Bay.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, I just wanted to go back
and touch on the idea of shared facility, shared resources that are out
there. I think that's probably one of the more remarkable things I've
heard here today. It's a wonderful idea and direction. I mean, the
productivity committee has been telling all of us for some time that we
ought to look into this. It's something that I would like to see followed
through on because the savings for future tax years, I think, would be
quite remarkable, I really do. Such things as sharing the motor pools
and possibly IT might be able to find some common grounds, and if
we can avoid some of those duplications of efforts we see, too.
Hopefully, you stepping up to the plate like you did today will
bring the other constitutional officers in right behind you so we can
start working towards it.w
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June 23, 2006
Here is my concern. We're going to be going into a summer
recess very shortly. We're going to have one more meeting in July,
then all of August we're off. I would hate to see this whole effort
become something that is going to fall by the wayside until sometime
in September. I was wondering if we should be considering giving
direction to the county manager to be able to start exploring it and
move it forward if something hasn't already been done or if he doesn't
need direction from us. I know previous directions has been given
before. I think the question is probably more for the county manager
then back to you for comments.
MR. MUDD: It's something that Kevin and I are talking about
and we'll be getting together over the summer and then we'll break out
into groups to see if there are things that we can mesh our stuff
together.
One of my comments was, you know, I get this great candidate,
somebody sends me a resume. I send it to our HR folks. Our HR
folks get it out to the divisions. Do my HR folks get it to the
constitutionals? And all of a sudden I get back and it's, we don't need
the body, but it might be somebody that fits quite well into a
constitutional office.
So -- and that was just -- that was anecdotal but that was a
particular instance that just came in and I'm going, you know, I don't
have fit but this is a great person, and if we're all struggling to try to
find -- and this is somebody that has come to us and said here I am, I
would like to work, and oh, by the way I just bought a house here.
You know, when you get those, especially where you don't have to go
through the cost of moving them in and doing all of those, it's a
godsend. You just have to put the person in the right job.
And we can do that a whole lot better as far as recruiting is
concerned. Sometime he might get, he puts an application out in the
sheriff and law enforcement type magazines and whatever to recruit.
They get overwhelmed with this certain application or applications but
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June 23, 2006
yet that person -- and he fills it, but he still has six good candidates
and they are all kind of sitting there and he has to turn them back, and
I might have eight code enforcement officer vacancies where those
folks could fit into and we could all win.
We just need to tie all of those things together just a tad better
and I believe we'll get after that. I don't like to waste those
opportunities.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: The subject matter that you are
going to be exploring is going to be very broad, it's not going to be
limited to just a couple things, everything from motor pools to IT to
possibly insurance purchases?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. We're going to talk about all those
things, and with the new motor pool on County Barn where we're
going to co-locate ours and the sheriffs, I think there are going to be
plenty of opportunities.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I hope this doesn't become an
exclusive club, that you allow the other constitutional officers to come
in when they reach that point of enlightenment.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: An admission fee, but other than
that.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Fiala.
MR. RAMBOSK: For the record, we have been doing things
together with actually each of the constitutionals and your staff for
sure and we just have had a good relationship, developed a good
interworking relationship. We believe that we can take that a lot
further and we would like to move on that more quickly than later.
That's what we're saying. And really it's more of an operational based
request because of the things we do day-to-day than the requirements
that we have to fulfill. If we can do that better, if we can do it with the
other constitutionals to serve the community as a whole, that would be
great.
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June 23, 2006
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. Two questions, please. The
first one is you mentioned that you have a list of 20 illegals, 12 of
them being violent criminals. When they are illegals, can't you just
pick them up and deport them whether they are doing anything wrong
or not, being that they are not here legally in the first place. I mean,
that's a crime right there?
MR. RAMBOSK: No, ma'am, unfortunately we are not able to.
We have had some limited success with the very violent criminal
offenders that we've been able to get ICE involved to remand them,
but very, very difficult today for enforcement just based on that,
unless we have some other criminal act that we can hold them for.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: The second thing, that's so -- it must
be frustrating to you guys too.
MR. RAMBOSK: Very frustrating.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I bet. I noticed you were saying that
you are using this new philosophy and you described it -- as much as I
hate to say this on the record -- I noticed how high the service, the
calls for service are in East Naples compared to everyplace else in
Collier County. My goodness, we double and then some Immokalee.
And we've gone up 23,498 just this past year.
Because of the problems that we're dealing with there, do you
have extra staff there? I know at one time you had taken some of the
staff and moved it elsewhere. But I was wondering if you have
relocated them.
MR. RAMBOSK: We relocate on an as needed, weekly, daily
basis. Every two weeks we have a compo stat process which tracks the
crime trends in each of our districts. The district lieutenants develop a
plan of address, make requests from other districts. They will bring in
resources, address an ongoing problem for as long as need be and then
they will move to another area. So, yes, we do have additional
resources when we need them and as requested by the different district
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June 23, 2006
lieutenants.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I just don't want to pass the
opportunity. If -- could we just give direction to the county manager
to begin working with the sheriffs department and any other
constitutionals immediately during the summer? That is an opportune
time.
With the commission not in session for roughly two months,
we'll have one meeting at that point in time, that frees up staff to some
degree to do things that are very productive, because we take up a lot
of their time. So when we're not in session, that is a perfect time for
you to be working together on things like this. And so I would
encourage you to go ahead and go at it.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Got my nod.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Me too.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes.
MR. RAMBOSK: We would also like to take the opportunity to
give up a position, and that's for building security here. So that can be
removed from the budget request. In fact we're talking about two
bailiff positions to assist the new judges, and no more.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any other questions? We appreciate
your cooperation and I hope that this is a long-lasting relationship and
I hope that's something that's just being started and that we can have
other people, other constitutionals join forces so that we can try to be
more efficient here in Collier County. Thank you so much.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Mr. Chairman, could I just ask one
question --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Sure.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- that goes beyond the budget, but
just something to think about. I understand your problem and concern
about the inability to take action whenever you identify or even arrest
an illegal immigrant.
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June 23, 2006
There are laws we can pass, county laws. Would they be of any
benefit to you in being able to take action with respect to people who
are here illegally, a violation of county laws?
MR. RAMBOSK: We are actually reviewing some of what other
communities have done, particularly out west. A number of states and
communities have done that. We're doing it for immigration purposes.
You will probably see a request for sexual predators in our shelters,
for example, that we would like to come back with an ordinance on.
So, yes, we would like to look at all those and bring them back when
appropriate to review them.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Please consider -- you might be
already considering, we have the ability to sanction people or
companies or employers who violate the law. We have the ability to
say, if you hire illegal aliens you cannot have a government contract,
end of story, or you are suspended from any government contracts for
five years. I'm not suggesting we do that. But other communities
have done that.
And that seems to aid in enforcement because it places the
responsibility on employers rather than having the sheriffs office be
the only enforcer of that process and the only person who is ferreting
out the illegals.
If you would give some thought to things like that, it would be
helpful. And maybe working together we can come up with a
workable solution that doesn't discriminate against our legal guest
workers, those people should be welcome in this community, they do
a lot of good for us, but the people who are here illegally should not
be tolerated, in my opinion, and we should do everything in our power
to make sure Collier County is not considered a safe haven for illegal
immigrants.
MR. RAMBOSK: We fully agree with you and we will look to
see what's available and bring that back to you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good. Thank you very much.
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June 23, 2006
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: At a Republican executive
committee meeting a month or so ago we had a lady get up and give a
speech about illegals. It was just an outstanding speech. I think it
stirred us all. And she made a couple of suggestions, and there are
some probably that we can't do but possibly some that we could.
She had said that we should end -- every time, as you all know,
every time a Cuban comes over in a boat and lands on our land, as
soon as they set foot on our land each person -- and it's only Cuban
people now -- each person who lands here illegally on that boat, we
give them $10,000 and welcome them.
And when Sheriff Hunter mentioned that a couple of meetings
back, I couldn't believe it, I never heard that before. And I did not
realize a family of five coming over here gets $50,000 for being illegal
on our land. I realize we can't stop that but it sure should be stopped
at the national level.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I would go to Cuba for that kind of
money.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: The second thing is something we
could do maybe locally here. Every time we find someone hiring an
illegal person we could fine them $25,000. This is something else she
said in her speech. And maybe that would curb the encouragement of
hiring illegal people.
And thirdly, she said maybe we shouldn't be providing all of the
services that we offer. We never ask anybody's, for anybody's green
card and then even if they produce it to verify that it's legal, and
maybe we should be tightening our laws to be able to do that and work
more closely with you. And maybe that's something else you and the
county manager could talk about. I know that you and I have already
talked about possibly an ordinance, an open air camping ordinance of
some sort or another to help us a little bit here in East Naples. But that
could even be expanded to something else to give you more tools in
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June 23, 2006
your toolbox, you know, to help you along. And I think everyone
here would be happy to work with you.
MR. RAMBOSK: We would be happy to look at that.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you.
MR. RAMBOSK: Mr. Chairman, one last thing. I would be
remiss if I did not thank you for your support throughout the year,
that, and the commission. And particularly the support we get from
the county manager and his staff that facilitate us in enabling us to do
our job day to day. So thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much.
I don't think there are any further questions. Thank you very
much for the opportunity to sit down with you and go through the
budget.
County manager, we want to go back to BCC.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. We're just getting our notes together.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: All right.
MR. MUDD: This will take us back where we left off yesterday,
and that will be, we've done debt service, that will bring us to the
management offices and we've done Pelican Bay already.
If I could please have Jack Wert, John Torre, Dan Summers and
his crew, Chief Rodriguez, Jeff Page. Plenty of chairs, don't be shy.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
MANAGEMENT OFFICES (TOURISM)
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, we're under the management office
tab, and you have the macro on Page 2 and 3 of the particular items.
And then let's go to -- we can go from left to right with Mr. Jack Wert
for tourism, and he can start. And it's on Page 10 of your book.
MR. WERT: Good morning, Mr. Chairman and council,
commission. My name is Jack Wert, Tourism Director. And as you
know the mission of the tourism department is to advertise and
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June 23, 2006
promote Collier County as a destination of choice for people coming
here for vacations and meetings, and more importantly to bring a
positive economic impact to the community. And I think over the past
year we certainly have demonstrated what tourism can do for our
community with about $1.1 billion economic impact to lots of
businesses here.
I want you to know that our budget has been presented to the
tourist development council and they looked at it at their April
meeting and unanimously recommended it to you for your review.
And subsequent to that, the Category A, the beach and inlet projects
that we're anticipating for next year, along with the Category B event
grant request, the Category C-l, which is our Collier County Museum,
that budget was looked at and recommended as well as some Category
C2 grants, which are non-county owned museums. All of those were
looked at at the May meeting of the tourist development council and
again were unanimously recommended for your review.
We're looking at a flat revenue for next year based on all the
projections we are seeing in the, throughout Florida. We see that we
should be about flat at about total of $13 million gross for the tourist
tax.
One thing I wanted to bring to your attention is that I think we've
done a pretty good job this year of requesting reimbursement from
both FEMA and from FDEP on reimbursement of various
expenditures we have had on the beach and inlet projects. And to date
we have invoiced about $11 million to those two agencies. We've
currently received about 3 million of that so we're just shy of a third
done. Looks -- all of it has been invoiced and we have it on pretty
good authority that we'll be receiving that money. So that will help us
a lot in paying back some of the money that we fronted for all of the
beach and inlet projects in the past year.
I think you have the budget before you. We have certainly kept
within the guidelines that county manager has given us. And we're
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June 23, 2006
looking forward to a good year. And hopefully we won't have any
effects from the windy season this year, we won't have to use any of
our reserve funds but as you know we do have a reserve fund for
emergency advertising. Weare in the process of building up over the
next two years to a million and a half dollars. And so we, that is
included in the budget in putting a half a million dollars towards that
fund in this next coming budget year.
So we feel the tourist budget is in good shape and certainly will
try to answer any questions you might have.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I have one question, Jack. I haven't
found it yet and maybe it's just me. That was in regards to non-county
museums. I thought we cut some of that expense.
MR. WERT: We actually did. From what was recommended we
are recommending a lesser amount, and the contracts you will see
coming before you probably in September will reflect a smaller
amount --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
MR. WERT: -- but we always know that those are open to
discussion and those groups will probably come back at that time and
ask for the full amount that they ask for.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
MR. WERT: So we're anticipating that and we're budgeting the
higher amount just in case that happens.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. You answered my question.
Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Once we complete the depot, and
we're looking forward to doing that, will you be able to use that as part
of your tourism promotion area to display brochures and so forth and
even hold meetings and things to do with tourism there, to use it to, I
mean you guys have helped a lot with the, financially with the depot
and I would love to see you benefit by some of that help.
MR. WERT: We definitely have discussed that with the museum
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June 23, 2006
staff and, yes, we are certainly looking forward to using the front part
of that facility for displaying brochures, to making it kind of an
information center for people coming by the location is certainly ideal
for that.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
MR. WERT: In addition to that there are several areas of the
depot that we certainly could use in the future for events. We're
working very closely with all of the museums in Collier County trying
to work together. We're actually going to put together a tour of the
museums on a regular basis, working with a transportation company to
do that.
So we see that the historical and cultural part of what we offer
here in Collier County will be greatly enhanced, as we get that depot
open, that will be certainly a very important part of that whole tour.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: On Marco Island there is not a
whole bunch to do there and for their concierges they have challenges
in front of them to point people to different given places? And right
now there is a group, the Marco Island Historical Society who is
planning on building their first phase on property right there, which I
think is going to help a lot as far as giving people another thing to do
on Marco Island as well as other places, coming in to see a lot of
artifacts.
Will you be in any way helping them, do you know or have they
not asked you for any help?
MR. WERT: To this point, actually, we have helped them. We
did have a C- 2 grant to that group two years ago as they were going
through the feasibility and design phase of that and we assisted them
with the funding of that. They have not asked at this point but
certainly would be one of those organizations that we would certainly
look to help if we can. If we have some funding available certainly
that would be something we would look at in the future.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any other questions from thea
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June 23, 2006
commissioners?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Jack, you did a good job.
MR. WERT: Thank you, sir.
MANAGEMENT SERVICES (COMMUNICATION & CUSTOMER
RELATIONS)
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that would bring us to
Cmmunications and Customer Relations Department and that's on
Page 18 of your book under Management Offices.
MR. TORRE: Morning, commissioner, John Torre, Director of
Communications and Customer Relations.
As county manager said my budget is on Pages 18, 19 and 20.
The bottom line increase in FY '07 is the result of providing staff and
operating expenses for the North Collier Government Services Center
on Orange Blossom. The three positions at the center are not new
positions but instead vacant positions that were transferred from
elsewhere in the county manager's agency.
F or the second year in a row operating expenses have been
reduced in the department and in FY '07 capital outlay has also been
reduced.
With that, I'll stop and answer questions.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Are there any questions from
fellow commissioners? Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What do you mean by, I mean,
you are transferring -- .
MR. TORRE: There were three vacant positions that had been
vacant for quite some time that were moved from elsewhere into the
North Collier Government Center. One in parks and two in
administrative services that had been vacant.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. And I would imagine the
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June 23, 2006
board approved these. What position are you talking about parks and
rec. and administrative services?
MR. TORRE: I think two were security guards at facilities and
one was -- it was a parks position. I don't recall specifically what it
was.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. And you are going to use
these.
MR. TORRE: They are working now at North Collier, the three
people that are there --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I understand.
MR. TORRE: -- are filling those vacancies.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You are replacing some plasma
TVs where?
MR. TORRE: In here.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: In here?
MR. TORRE: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I thought they had a longer life
expectancy.
MR. TORRE: I was told that these two larger screens are
starting to show signs of wear, they start to blink on and off. And that
is sort of an indicator that they are about to expire.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: All right.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, we won't spend the money unless
the screens expire but we do need to budget them just in case it does.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I understand. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Are there any other questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much.
MANAGEMENT OFFICES (EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT)
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that moves us to Emergency
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June 23, 2006
Management Department and that starts on Page 22 of your book.
MR. SUMMERS: Commissioners, good morning. Dan
Summers, Director of the Bureau of Emergency Services and your
Eemergency Management Director. Bear with me. I'm kind of all
smiles this morning. Number one, it's Friday. Number two, there is
nothing on the seven-day outlook that I need to worry about. And
three, I think we bring you a very good budget presentation today.
I would like to make just a few opening remarks and
introductions, if I may. To my right, Jeff Page, your Chief of
Emergency Medical Services. To my left, Chief Rod Rodriguez from
the Isles of Capri. Chief Paul Wilson is under the weather today so
Chief Rod and I will pinch hit for Chief Wilson.
As you know, within our division we have, of course, Ochopee
Fire, Isles of Capri and the Medical Examiner's Office, Dr. Marta
Coburn. That's a contractual relationship with Dr. Coburn. She
unfortunately has a case today and couldn't be with us.
I want to take the liberty of introducing two new valuable
teammates, an Administrative Assistant from Isles of Capri is Barbara
Shea. Barbara is now with us there. And a new Senior Administrative
Assistant, Christine Chase in our department. So we're back up to full
staff at emergency management, including our replacement of our
volunteer coordinator. So I wanted to make those introductions if I
could.
I would like to kind of jump around the radar just a little bit and
give you a little bit of overview of where we are with the bureau of
emergency management, our bureau of emergency services as well as
emergency management activity.
One of the highlights in the emergency management program is
to ask for a new FTE, which is a full-time human services program
manager. You all saw the struggle that we went through with nursing
homes, rest homes, assisted living facilities and special needs
populations. The new Senate bill, the new House Bill 7121 has got a
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June 23, 2006
lot of new, even more implications for dealing with medically frail
and special needs individuals and we really want to bring a full-time
human services type, if you will, into the bureau so that we can meet
your goals, which is to do everything humanly possible during these
disasters to address that.
There is also a unique situation under emergency management
where we've asked for some additional job bank funding or temporary
or contractual money so that I can build a contractual relationship with
an employee beginning October 1 so that we can have better presence
in Immokalee. You know, those emergency management planning
issues are rather unique and we work very closely with the non-profits
there but without a doubt we've got to do something. We've got to add
more to that.
Hurricanes and wildfires all have had implications on our budgets
this year as it relates to overtime. And thankfully we are so, we've
done so much better in the wildfire scenario than most of the parts of
the state who are really struggling.
We have had a good year in completing a number of grant
projects at Isles of Capri and Ochopee with some modernization of
some apparatus, which, Commissioner Fiala you're aware that made a
big impact on the ISO rating and will have a positive impact on
homeowner's insurance ratings for those districts as well.
Our new growth units with EMS are footnoted in your budget
and you're aware that's recent activity.
There's two things that are kind of unique with what we're doing
with MedFlight. We just recently had a safety award with MedFlight.
One of things that we want to do is we want to get an additional spare
rotor blade in here. While we see nothing that is an immediate
grounding necessarily of that aircraft, but there is some trends with
rotor blades associated with that line of Eurocopter, MedFlight
helicopters, and we have a great inspection program for that. But to
get a new blade is a six month lead time. To rebuild a blade also can
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June 23, 2006
be a six month, and it has to go back to Germany to be rebuilt. So I
think it's mission critical to minimize our down time to get a spare
blade here.
There is another thing that you do in med and frequently in
aviation operations, that's you do what's called a fleet study. And you
-- we, with only one helicopter here and the ongoing activity that we
have, the helicopter is routinely down for maintenance, and that
maintenance schedule varies. One of the things that you want to do
every couple of years with, although it's a fleet study and we only
have one aircraft, is that we want to look at issues like down time, cost
benefit for replacement. We also want to even get into the discussion
of a secondary aircraft. Not necessarily a second crew but a second
aircraft.
Even if we were to make a decision on a replacement aircraft our
lead time just to order a MedFlight type helicopter is about three
years. So we want to do some review in that particular area.
Our medical examiner, again, had some increases this year
related to the need for an autopsy technician, which is hard to come
by, and some new additional facility operational costs, insurance and
those type of things.
Last but not least on the operational side is that there are some
reserves that you'll note in Ochopee and Isles of Capri. I think it's
important with the growth that we're having in those areas and the
early planning stages that we have for secondary stations within those
districts or the outlying part of their district that, while we work on
programming those issues and do some planning that we maintain
those reserves if at all possible.
You did, I was noticing earlier yesterday that you had some
questions about grants and I hold my head very highly about the
grants that we have done in emergency services. We have been very
successful and probably utilized all of our opportunities for the FEMA
fire grant. That helped replace literally four pieces of apparatus with
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June 23, 2006
FEMA's support. Again, the Fire Act and dealing with the rural
apparatus.
Jeff Page and his team have been very successful with the EMS
grants. And I have some very good news for you. I learned just
yesterday that with our beginning to close our FEMA reimbursement,
close the package, that doesn't mean we have all of the money back
yet but we have an award from FEMA to the tune of about $3.89
million for hazard mitigation. That's a bricks and mortar type
opportunity and that's the largest one-time hazard mitigation grant
opportunity I have had in my career, and it speaks volume.
That is an allocation, if you will, and there's a mitigation
committee strategy that works on that. But that's phenomenal for us to
be able to come back with an additional almost $4 million.
Our team has been very good with 50/50 matches with forestry.
We've struggled in the system a little bit with the terrorism grants,
those things are running about two years, and if you have seen
anything on C-Span there is still a lot of overhauling going on with
terrorism grant activity.
And last but not least, all the really evolutionary, if you will,
activity that Governor Bush signed this year with House Bill 7121,
which we also have grant applications in for some additional money in
support of our emergency operations center construction, also some
special needs sheltering retrofit monies, which we probably won't see
until next year but at least it's in the system. So lots of good things
going on there.
Emergency management and MedFlight are pretty close to your
target budget balance. Our forestry contributions remain the same and
we certainly got our money's worth this year with our cooperators
agreement with the forestry.
Our Goodland fire district allocations remain the same. And
again, we continue to -- there are some personnel requests with
Ochopee and Isles of Capri so that we can maintain those ISO ratingi
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June 23, 2006
standards and continue to meet the national standards with minimum
staffing on our apparatus.
So that is a very, a really, a quick overview. I think you see what
we do almost every day and some of the successes that we have had in
Collier County with emergency services. I'm really happy to be in
front of you today and let me see what questions you might have.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I'll start off. As you know we had
Hurricane Wilma strike this particular area. We had some serious
concerns about special needs.
MR. SUMMERS: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: What are we doing to be proactive in
regards to updating the special needs list to make sure that people are
well informed, that if they have mothers or mother-in-Iaws, aunts and
uncles that are in need of special needs, that we know about it prior to
the event?
MR. SUMMERS: Commissioner, that is one of the areas that I
take probably the most sincerely in one of our emergency
management areas. Our emergency management technician has just
completed a mail out of every -- almost about 1300 updates of special
needs registration. There is a huge database.
And just to be honest with you it's almost impossible for one
person to maintain nursing home, rest home, assisted living facility,
plan review and to maintain this ongoing data base not only in English
but issues in Spanish.
The House bill even requires home health agencies to have a
more, have a closer liaison relationship with emergency management
and support that special needs registration. So we've just done a mail
out, we're in the process of updating that database now. This human
services program manager will help our emergency management
technician get a handle on all of those issues with registration,
database, transportation of that special needs individual, sheltering that
individual and, as you know, we even have to deal with what I call
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June 23, 2006
case work on steroids after the disaster. In other words, outplacement
or outsourcing or rereferring that individual to other long-term care
options.
And so we're making good strides. I think if we can get this
person on board and if we can get through October, and I know we're
holding our breath here a little bit, but I think we'll continue to have
one of the best programs going.
I have to mention the partnership with Dr. Colfer. It's the
relationship with the health department, her nurses, and, as you know
Governor Bush recognized her special needs care as being one of the
best in the state. So we're going to continue to strive to do that.
But I have an uphill battle with climbing numbers.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Another question I have is, the
aircraft that you are talking about, what's the likely expectancy of that
and how many flight hours do we have on there presently?
MR. SUMMERS: We have 2800 hours on the Eurocopter
EC-135. We have a full-time mechanic. We do most of our mid-level
maintenance here and our high-level maintenance, if you will, is
outsourced. We work with one vender every year that knows that
aircraft from head to toe. And that's part of what we're going to do
with this fleet assessment, quite frankly, is to look at life.
There will be some options there from the jet turbine experts as
to, you know, do we change our cycle with engine change-outs, would
we be better to have a second aircraft and balance our flight hours
with our flight demand. So those things I'll take a look at.
I will tell you that all the air issues associated with aircraft
longevity are based on preventative maintenance and even upgrades in
the life cycle in the fuselage.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That was my next question, was how
often do you have a full power plant airframe inspection of the
aircraft?
MR. SUMMERS: Chief Henderson, Terry Henderson our chief
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June 23, 2006
pilot ought to -- I'll try to get you some hard numbers on that. But I
know that we look at seven- and 800-hour maintenance schedules as
being our largest jet.
(Commissioner Fiala has left the boardroom.)
MR. PAGE: There is a 400-hour maintenance and then an
800-hour maintenance that happens every two years, the 800-hour.
But typically about two years.
MR. MUDD: Let's talk about downtime a little bit, because you
hit an area that disturbs me greatly, because that's when we don't have
any MedFlight. You do the 400-hour and it flies to where?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Tampa?
MR. PAGE: The 400-hour we can usually do in-house unless
there is some bigger problems that we can't handle, address. The
800-hour has to get--
MR. MUDD: How long is it down for the 400?
MR. PAGE: About two weeks.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: The 400-hour checkup.
MR. MUDD: And when you do the 800-hour, this is the one
where you have to fly out of state.
MR. PAGE: Yes. It goes to Louisiana and that can typically
take a month.
MR. MUDD: And one of the things I wrote down when you said
coordinate with the sheriff, when we were doing those things, now
they have mutual aid agreement with Miami Dade and with Lee
County so they try to cover us during those periods of time. But if
their MedFlight is being used at the time that you are calling you have
a shortage. I'm going to -- part of that interrelations issue that we're
going to talk about with the sheriff I'm going to talk about when we're
down in maintenance, to have --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: He's got two helicopters.
MR. MUDD: -- to have a paramedic in the helicopter at least to
get him on station. And then if ground transportation is the only way
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June 23, 2006
to pull then that will be coming, but we'll have a paramedic on the
ground as fast as we can. We're going to work out those protocols and
whatnot. I wrote it down on my list as one of those things that I
wanted to discuss.
MR. SUMMERS: And thank you. And just so -- that's why we
want to get the assessment, you know, and these numbers are real
numbers. And there is such a shortage of aircraft. I mean, there are 20
new MedFlight programs that will be online in the continental U.S.
this year alone. That's more aircraft than -- that's two years' worth of
production time just in MedFlight type apparatus, aircraft. So those
things we have to take an early look.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: What was the life expectancy of the
aircraft?
MR. SUMMERS: I said it was somewhat dependent on engine
change-out and performance issues. I don't have a hard number but I'll
get that for you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much.
Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Once again, too, if I could
piggyback on what we've been talking about with the helicopters. I
know there is much concern in Everglades City over the cost of the
helicopters. In some cases, you know, the helicopter came and there
was no need for it. They still had to transport the person and they still
charged him for it. Very, very expensive.
How much does a normal helicopter flight cost, I mean, for a
person in need of medical attention?
MR. PAGE: Typically it would be about $800 an hour --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Expensive.
MR. PAGE: -- for the helicopter itself.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Isn't there a per mile too?
MR. PAGE: Okay. If you are talking about the cost--
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm talking about a bill.
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June 23, 2006
MR. PAGE: Okay. The logistical charge for a helicopter
transport when we use the helicopter say in Everglades City is about --
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, if you turn to Page 42 of your tab,
I think that will help a little bit, Jeff.
MR. PAGE: As I was saying, the logistical transport, typically is
what would happen in Everglades City, would be thirty-two or $3,200.
You see a $5,000 charge, that's for trauma alert transport or from a car
accident. The mileage is $85 a mile. And again, we'll be coming back
to the board, it may be in September, we're hoping for July, with a rate
review for you to look at.
I can tell you that in looking at comparable Part 135 providers in
the state, we're seeing some at $6,100 for a liftoff and mileage as
much as a 105. Some of those liftoff charges are as high as 10,000 for
some companIes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Believe me, it really hurts,
especially if people do not have insurance. And if they do have
insurance it only covers a portion of it. I guess it covers in most cases
just what an ambulance would normally cost, right?
MR. PAGE: Typically, Medicare will pay almost $3,000 for a
helicopter transport. Insurance companies for a car accident usually
handle the whole bill regardless of the cost. So I think that the
logistical portion -- many of the Part 135 providers in the state really
don't have logistical transport, so that's more geared for the Everglades
City residents to cut that cost. But typically everyone else has one
charge and it's in excess of 5,000.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: One of the problems we have at
present in Everglades City is the fact that they only have one
ambulance in Everglades City but of course it gets called out quite
often for accidents on 75 or if there is another, if there's a need for an
ambulance someplace else they move it back and forth.
And that raises the problem. If you don't have an ambulance
available and you have to bring it from as far away as North Naples
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June 23, 2006
it's not feasible to try to travel over the roads, you know, you lose that
golden hour for sure, and even in minor accidents. So in some cases
you're kind of forced to use the helicopter even for minor events. But
still, once you are there, the patient has to bear the cost of it, which
raises a real problem.
I'll be honest with you, you've done a great job of working with
the people of Everglades City on this issue. It's still, it's a great
concern because also, too, where are these air ambulances needed the
most? They're needed in the rural area of the county. You get to the
more congested area of the county and it doesn't make much sense to
send an air ambulance out to pick somebody up on a congested
highway with all of the wires and everything. You try to transport
them three or four miles to a hospital.
I'm not too sure what the answer is. I do know that they are
looking at a possible place for an ambulance and fire station at Port of
the Islands, which may have a tendency to put another ambulance in
service, and then the areas we have could be used for extraordinary
circumstances, the far reaches of 75 or trauma cases that are in
Immokalee or in Everglades City.
MR. PAGE: Right.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I don't know, it's a real situation.
I wish there was a simple answer.
MR. SUMMERS: Well, Commissioner, that's actually some of
the things that we want to dig in with some of the national experts on
this fleet study. It could be issues of placement of the aircraft. I'm not
just talking about subsequent aircraft or necessarily talking about
maintenance but we also want to look at what is the best synergy in
our system and that's part of what we'll do with this fleet assessment.
(Commissioner Fiala has returned to the boardroom.)
MR. SUMMERS: And, again, absolutely part of that being
driven by aircraft cost and placement and transport issues, as you've
mentioned. Exactly what we want to look at.
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June 23, 2006
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I'm surprised that the City of Everglades
doesn't take that on as an issue of buying an ambulance.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, to be honest with you,
they kind of assign that to their commissioner. But the City of
Everglades won't buy an ambulance. City of Naples didn't buy an
ambulance, neither did Marco Island. It's not something that you want
to have private enterprise out there doing.
MR. SUMMERS: And I agree with you, sir. I think that if we
can put something together in our programming for Port of the Islands
that will be some back-up there.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you. You are doing a
wonderful job, by the way. I do appreciate everything you do.
MR. SUMMERS: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: At those prices I'm going to get a
medical alert bracelet that says please don't call a helicopter.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Put on it do not resuscitate and
I'll pay for it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, that's sort of what I had in
mind.
I would like to see a report before we start talking about buying a
fleet of helicopters. I would like to see a report of the --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Cost effectiveness.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- that the incidents that the
helicopter has responded to with a description of the nature of the
injuries or the nature of the patient's condition. I know that sometimes
you do that for relatively minor things because you don't have a
ground unit available. So I would just like to see how many of those
we really run into.
MR. SUMMERS: Commissioner, that too will be part of our
overview of that. And you know, with all of the years of pre-hospital
care experience I have, a lot of times you forget just what that drive is
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June 23,2006
like on 1-75 and what those drive issues down there -- and to see
patients that you -- you know, our success is based on that golden
hour, that clock can get away from us real quick even in general
medical cases as opposed to trauma. So again, part of our effort to
take a good look.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good. Now the other thing is you
have made the recommendation in the budget under the medical
examiner's budget that the commission approve an increase in the fee
for authorization for cremations in Collier County. You haven't
mentioned that here. Do you want us to try to make that decision here
or are you going to bring that to us separately?
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that is on -- I'm looking for it right
now, it's on Page -- Mike.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: Thirty-four.
MR. MUDD: Thirty-four.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, we've received a -- we asked for a
legal opinion on this particular issue. And the county attorney has
opined that this ordinance would be illegal. And that causes me great
concern because there are 18 medical places in the state that are, out
of 24, that are already using it. So we're going to keep talking about
that a little bit. If this budget changes we might not have that $56,100,
I believe, 51,900 as a revenue and that would be an additional cost to
the general fund.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So you are going to sort out the
legality issues of this thing and contact some other counties and see
how they justified it; right?
MR. MUDD: Yes. I'm going to ask the county attorney's office
to do that, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: It's obvious to me the opinion I just received on 8
June doesn't jive with other 18 districts, okay, so there is something
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June 23, 2006
that is askew or somebody didn't ask hard questions when they set it
up in the other districts, so I'm going to try to get to the bottom of it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Are there any other questions? None.
Thank you very much for your presentation. I appreciate it.
And we'll take a 15 minute break.
(A recess was taken.)
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, please take your seats.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you, county manager. We are
back from recess and let's see if we can finish this up.
MANAGEMENT OFFICE
MR. MUDD: We are still on management offices. The next
presenter is Mr. Mike Smykowski under the management office tab on
Page 8.
MR. SMYKOWSKl: Overall, there are no expanded services
recommended. It's essentially a status quo budget. The operating
expenses were limited to a 1.3 percent increase and the same staffing
level is recommended for fiscal year '07.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: That was easy.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any other questions? Seeing none, thank
you very much, Mike.
COUNTY MANAGER
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I'm on Page 7 right now. We'll
talk a little about my particular budget for shop.
One of the categories that I have is board-related costs. And I've
tried to itemize those board-related costs on Page 7 at the bottom of
the page.
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June 23, 2006
You try to do the best you can with what you're allocated and the
best you can come up with, what your estimates -- federal lobbyist, we
started that last year, I believe the cost will come in around $110,000
in '07. State lobbyist 75.
Grant locating up in that -- and that has to do with eCivis, and
that was a three-year contract that we brought to the board and it had
cost increases. It will go up around $1,250 in '07.
Lobbyist tool software that we use to monitor the bills, also try to
grab that information with Deb White to bring to the board. We've got
an allocation for consortium day. I don't believe that we will spend
$5,000 next year because we're not the host. But I won't know exactly
how that turns out until the summer when I meet with the other county
managers in the consortium of the six counties.
The picnic, we need to have a picnic. We haven't had a picnic in
a while. We were going to tag onto and use our employees, so to
speak, as guinea pigs on Saturday to do a soft opening to the water
park. I didn't know that -- well, we are elated by the success and the
opening and the number of people that are coming to the water park in
the last two days. And today I hope will be no different. It's
exceeding our expectations as far as people that are coming to show
an interest. And when I was going to use our employees as guinea
pigs, so to speak, we had over, we had --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: 1100.
MR. MUDD: We had almost close to 1200 by the time it was
done that had signed up. So I would like to use the picnic opportunity
this summer to -- and there is a rental hour for the facility when it's not
open in order to do that. We'll work out those details.
But, I'm -- I don't want to push Marla too much at this particular
juncture because we're still waiting on a permit for our oven hood,
okay, oven hoods seem to be a stopper for restaurants all over Collier
County, and I'm in the oven hood do loop. So we'll work with that
process.
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June 23, 2006
Right now the -- do loop is an IT, where you just keep circulating
your code for an IT program and you really get nowhere, you're just in
that do loop. Well, I'm in a do loop just like everybody else is for an
oven hood. I would like to be able to get that concession open and
maybe use our employees as a bit of a guinea pig to see how the
concession process is going to work. But we need to have that.
Our survey for, citizens survey is budgeted for $25,000. Now we
didn't do one in the in between years because we used the CBIA
survey in the off years, so we do it every two years. The CBIA survey
is done and they are meeting with each one of you to discuss that
particular survey, or at least they're trying to. They're trying to get me
to come to a presentation next week and I think I'm going to be there
to see exactly what that survey says because I do not know at this
particular juncture --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Excuse me, let me interrupt. Is that
the CBIA one that's giving the results on Tuesday?
MR. MUDD: Yes, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Are we going to be at F AC at that
time or does it start later on that day?
MR. MUDD: It starts later on that day, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Tuesday is, basically they do a preliminary
registration at F AC and then they have, it's kind of like the travel day
for people to get there. We're going to showcase our government
facilities at the north and Orange Blossom, the library and the
government center and then the new Naples Water Park, we are going
to showcase that in the afternoon. And then they have a dinner
engagement on Marco. We're also going to try to give them the
opportunity to go to Fifth Avenue and try the restaurants that we have
in the area. And it goes full up, full bore on Wednesday. Okay.
ICMA for $5,500. Performance measure, consortium, we're in a
consortium with the State of Florida, other counties to measure how
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June 23, 2006
well we do. We've got $3,000. We call it the jail committee but it's
not, it's a -- it's a special group of folks that is chaired by
Commissioner Coyle at your direction and approval that basically
takes a look at opportunities to try to minimize overcrowding in our
j ails, find different ways to do business in order to get the state
attorney, the public defender, all the judges, the sheriff and everybody
else to work together along with our facility staff to try to optimize
that whole process and to do things the most economical way that we
possibly can.
They are getting into some very detailed areas. The first couple
of meetings for the first year or so we talked more general topics, now
they are getting into more specificity as far as what they are getting at.
We believe that the court reporter at that meeting would help us
immensely as we try to go through those particular details.
Goal setting, we put down $4,000. We're going to try to take our
ops track program and link it with all the other systems to come up
with kind of what we call a dashboard in the red, yellow, green, side
of the house to let us know if we're on track or if we're getting astray,
to give us a color code so we can get it in a more automated particular
item and travel aides and supplies at $11,700.
So there is a net increase in that particular fund of 34,000,
$34,100. That's a 12.5 percent increase.
And then we basically held down the county manager's budget,
kept it within guidance. We're at 9.5 percent in most cases, that's all
personnel expense.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any questions? Thank you very much
for the overview.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
MR. MUDD: Okay. Now we're going to turn to the Board of
County Commissioners. And that's on a tab that's right behind the
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June 23, 2006
management offices.
MS. FILSON: The only thing I've -- Sue Filson from the board
office -- the only thing I've increased in my budget this year is 4
percent for the dues and membership for FAC. It increased to $28,800.
However, by the -- in between the time that I submitted my budget
the board approved recent changes in employee benefits, so there are
several girls in my office who get extra vacation time. And I currently
have $2,500 for other contractual services. And if the board's okay
with approving this I would like to increase that to 3,000.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No questions from me.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Questions from any of the
commissioners? Thank you very much.
MS. FILSON: So the increase is okay?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yes.
MS. FILSON: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. We're going to leave our travel
budgets the same?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Sure.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: We're going to reduce
Commissioner Coletta's travel budget, aren't we? Can I get three votes
to reduce his travel budget? There is one, we've got two now.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I just carry sandwiches with me
wherever I go and that will bring down the cost. I was fortunate like
you and had a small district. I could do it on a bicycle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Right.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'll be honest with you, I think
the travel budget is low for what we are. We've been the same travel
budget now for what, three, four years?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Five years.
MS. FILSON: I believe it's more like six years.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Meanwhile, what happens is is
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June 23, 2006
that we have to keep coming back to the -- every item that we put in
except for Florida Association of Counties has to come back to the
commission for approval. It doesn't matter what it is, it's in there
almost always on the consent agenda where everybody can see what it
is we had to spend it on.
The problem I see is, you know, I wasn't as active as the chair
was this year, so my travel budget is going to work out fine. The
problem is that if you have taken an active part then you have to keep
coming back to the commission. The amount of money in there, I
think, is more than adequate. I don't think -- but I almost think the
best thing to do would be have the travel budget exist in one fund,
being that we have to have it approved item by item as we go into the
year. A lot of excitement over that suggestion, you notice that?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So you mean put it like into one
pot?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: One pot. We still have to
approve every item, you know, that comes before us so that if we -- if
one commissioner can put more time into it. I'll be honest with you,
this past year I was just overloaded and I couldn't do some of the
things I normally do. But Commissioner Halas picked up the slack
and really went to town and took care of it.
And meanwhile you have to come back with your hat in your
hand for doing the county, extra work for the county.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I know you had to beg for some
extra dollars and then Commissioner Coyle donated from his fund to
help that fund out. I see what you are saying.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Why don't we just put it in one big fund.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm for that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I don't like that.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That is going to be real
problematic.
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June 23, 2006
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: How is that?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, because there are so many
functions that we're invited to and if somebody feels a need for any
particular year to go to a lot of functions, then that can really deplete
the fund. It's work.
What's wrong with coming back and saying hey, you know, I
need some extra travel monies. I mean is it the ribbing that you don't
like?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's exactly right.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You don't like the ribbing?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's exactly right.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I promise you you won't get any
from me anymore. I apologize if I offended you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Exactly. I think we are elected officials
and I think we can conduct ourselves in a manner that is -- whereby I
don't think we're in the kitty, on the dole of any kind. That if we need
money to go out of town that that is something that I feel that as
elected officials we should have that ability. If we run short then we
have to come up here and beg for it and I think that's a little bit
demeaning.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: What I was proposing would not
take away any scrutiny. We would still be dealing with it. In fact, I
would go so far as if every time there is a request by a commissioner
for money from the travel fund that it lists everything that he had for
the year down there at the bottom so everyone can see what's taken
place. Actually, it's kind of like awarding a medal to a person, the
public can actually see how much time you spent away from the
comfort of the home. Travel, and we don't get to travel first class and
we're held by all sorts of restrictions, what kind of meals we can buy.
It's not what I would call the greatest situation in the world.
It's just saying is it the biggest issue I'm going to deal with here
on the budget, absolutely not, it's a minor issue. And if the
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June 23, 2006
commission doesn't feel comfortable with going with one pot, that's
fine by me.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Even on per diem, you don't -- it doesn't
pay for your meals. You have to shell out of your pocket just on per
diem when you are out of town.
Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: The problem with putting it into
one pot is that there is no yardstick by which a commissioner can
project what they are going to be able to spend on travel. They will
never know what they can -- where they can go and how much money
they will have in their budget to support it. Because if all of the
commissioners are just using money out of one big pot we're not going
to know from one minute to the next how much has been obligated.
And I think that it's worked real well for the duration of this
county commission to have each of us allocated a certain amount of
travel, and I don't, I certainly haven't resisted giving anyone my
unused portion of travel, and I'll continue to do so.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's fair.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you. That's it.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I just want to make sure that, I'm
on Page 4 under Board of County Commissioners. When you look at
your budget, I just want to make sure for the viewing audience if
somebody looks at that page and says, well, the commissioners spent
$12.8 million, that's not the case at all. There are things in your budget
that just don't fit anyplace else, okay. I'll be honest with you, Mike
called it odd ducks. They just don't fit very well. If you would please
turn to Page 7.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Page 7?
MR. MUDD: Page 7, please, and you'll see right there under
program summary, you had $2 million in your budget for the juvenile
detention center, okay. It's a state cost to us that they basically charge
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June 23, 2006
us that says here is Collier County's cost for the juvenile detention
center. You have the Naples CRA, and you're going to hear about that
in just a second because Mr. David Jackson is going to talk about his
particular budget. That's included in your budget.
You have the airport authority in your budget, okay. Because
those two directors work for this board. So just so you know and so
somebody just doesn't look at the first page and say what's going on,
there is more to your particular budget. You've got insurance
premiums for centralized insurance processes, you've got countywide
costs for $311,000 for countywide costs not attributable to a
department such as for tax bills, utilities for common areas and tax
deed sales.
So there are some things that are in the budget that are grouped in
your particular section and I just wanted to make sure you were aware
of that and so was the viewing audience.
With that said, I would like to have Mr. David Jackson come in
and talk to you a little bit,. and you've heard a little bit about his
budget prior, but just as a review, on Page 1 7 his budget is laid out for
you.
And there isn't anything really there that is earth shaking -- sit
down, David, you're doing fine -- that's earth shaking that you haven't
already seen it. But if you have any questions at all of Mr. Jackson
and he can -- if you have anything you would like to highlight, David,
that would be good too.
MR. JACKSON: Good morning, commissioners. David Jackson,
Collier County community redevelopment agency. I would like to be
very succinct and there is some update information to let you know
what the CRA is going to be doing in the out years for the budget.
I would like to address you as the commissioners under two hats.
The first is the CRA board. There you provide the leadership for the
redevelopment of this area. Under the Board of Commissioners hat
you are the guardian of the funds. So in those two veins you have to
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June 23, 2006
pay very close attention to what we do and we try to keep you very
much up to date on it.
Right now proj ected growth rate in the CRA district is still
running about five to 9 percent as proj ected into the out years, which
is running about with Collier County.
Commercial tax increment is going to be growing on us. The
growth in new development coming online in the next two years is
going to be about 4.3 million additional new revenue sources or tax
base coming in on the commercial side of the properties for known
development.
As an aside with that in the residential, the additional tax value
that is going to happen over the next two years will be $157 million in
new construction in the CRA area. And what that does for us is
increases the tax base which increases our tax incremental financing
and we can take that and reinvest it back into the area.
Then what does that do for us? In the last report we just
received, and Commissioner Coyle and Commissioner Fiala, I've
already forwarded you those proj ections and the other commissioners
I have copies available for you, is over the life of the CRA they
proj ected a low, medium and high scenario depending on growth.
You are looking at the low scenario because I tried to be
objective on what we do in the CRA but I used the pessimistic
numbers for the TIF projections. We are looking at about $120
million over the life of the CRA, that's a big chunk of change. It isn't
coming out of the general fund, it's money that you've never realized
so it's not -- if you never get it you can't have lost it, but it will be
there when the CRA goes away. It will be a windfall for the budget
when it comes online.
With a 42 percent increase in our budget this year I'm expecting
next year's out years we're going to increase 50 to 70 percent because
it doesn't do us any good to take our money and put it in a bank and
look for interest.
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June 23, 2006
We're going to focus on several things and you're going to see
more of it in here. The first one is infrastructure. We've got to look at
the CRA boundaries on the infrastructure problems. Because if the
CRA was not there to look at it and fund it the county would have to
do it because this is all in the public realm. So my venue, what I
project for you to do is to do it now, obligate the funds early, get it
done now . You increase the tax base, you payoff that debt and return
it back into a contributing portion of the county just like the rest of the
county is.
So what are the infrastructure projects? Basically in the Gateway
area, Commissioner Fiala, your district, we're looking at stormwater.
You know that that is one of our willy nilly things we've got going in
our area that's very important for us to fix it there. We're looking at
Shadowlawn Drive and Commercial Drive, those two corridors need
to be addressed. And we're looking at residential streetscapes and
we're looking at parking. We do know that there may be a mini
triangle catalyst project and we may have to fund something like that.
In the Bayshore area, which is Commissioner Coyle's district,
stormwater to a lesser degree needs to be addressed and we are doing
that here currently with the loans and money that we're looking at.
Bayshore Drive south to Thomasson Drive that goes down to the new
Sabal Bay development. Thomasson Drive, we've got to look at that
from Rattlesnake Hammock, U.S. 41 all the way out to Hamilton
Harbor and where the county pier is -- or the county boat ramp is.
We've got to look at that. It's an infrastructure need that is going to be
impacted soon.
And we also looked at residential streetscapes and paving. So
basically in our budget as you see it here it's not -- there are no
surprises in it. And we will be looking forward to investing more on
other projects. Do you have any questions?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Are there any questions?
(N 0 response.)o
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June 23, 2006
MR. MUDD: Thanks, David.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much.
MR. MUDD: And that basically completes the Board of County
Commissioners. I want to go back--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Could I just ask a question?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Of course.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: David has asked us to commit to
funds now for some of these proj ects. And by approving the budget
are we agreeing to do that?
MR. MUDD: He's now budgeted for those, whatever is in the
budget. Now when he does the expenditure he still has to come back
to the Board of County Commissioners if there is a contract to be let
or whatever, it has to come back to you as the CRA board and then
you get to wear your board hat in order to approve that
recommendation.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good. Okay.
MR. JACKSON: These are coming online, commissioner.
These things are individual projects that we know they are coming.
They haven't been fleshed out, they haven't been approved, they're still
conceptual, but we know that they are all in the planning process.
Individually they'll be brought to you fleshed out, go through all the
departments in the county and then presented to you for funding.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good. Thank you.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: He's also got $1.8 million in reserves that
would be available for some of that the infrastructure or whatever
needs as dictated by the CRA. But obviously, he would be bringing
those back to the board for approval.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And just for clarification so that the
public understands, this is not a request for a fund transfer from the
general fund, from ad valorem property taxes. It comes from tax
increment financing for the Bayshore redevelopment area itself. So
he's really asking for approval to use funds they have collected, and
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June 23, 2006
they have.
MR. JACKSON : Yes, sir, absolutely.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Good.
MANAGEMENT OFFICES (CAPITAL)
MR. MUDD: Commissioners, I just want to go back to
management offices, if I can. And I've asked Dan and Jack Wert to
just stand by in case you had any questions on the capital side. And
I'm on management offices, Page 71. And that basically talks about
the dirt, the tourist development fund 195 and those particular issues
that are budgeted in the '06, '07 budget is on the projects that he's got
on his capital side in 195.
And you can go down that list, you can see that the parking
garage has pretty much been completed as far as the cost. You can
also see in '05, '06 a $23,570,000 expenditure that basically is, or
budget item that was used to renourish the beach that we finished just
before Memorial Day, and the expenditures that are there pretty much
on that list are there as reoccurring expenditures for monitoring and
whatnot that we have.
There is one proj ect that will start on 1 November, and that has to
do with Caxambas Pass dredging. We didn't get to that particular
project this year but we have the contractor selected. We've
negotiated to get his contract down a bit. I had to personally get
involved in that. And that particular contractor will be here on 1
November to get that done.
Yes. On Page 72, one of the things that makes this kind of an
interesting year for Mr. Wert is how the board has set up their policy
on tourism development category A funding. It talks about setting
reserves aside at half a million dollars a year until they get up to a $10
million reserve cap. And that starts right after the major
renourishment got done, so in '07 it will start with 500,000 and then it
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June 23, 2006
will build to $10,000 (sic) so that you've always got a reserve in case
you get a catastrophic problem on the beach. You're going to need
some up front funding before FEMA kicks in, and then you never get
your full 100 percent back, you get something less than that depending
on how generous they feel in any given year and what policies that
they changed.
And oh, by the way, commissioners, if you think I'm kidding
about policy changes, they just changed the policy on picking up
debris in gated communities again, and it's gone to the dark side. So
we get to fight again to get that done. Everything that this board did
and commissioners were involved in for Wilma debris removal, and
we even got our congressman involved, he even went to the President
of the United States, they somehow forgot where we were and the new
policy basically goes back to saying that we're going to have problems
with gated communities.
So I will tell you we're going to have to work through that this
year again to get that resolved, so.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Oh, boy.
MR. MUDD: So they do change their policy is what I'm trying
to say with this reserve fund. FEMA will change policies depending
on funds available at the time and some things like that from year to
year. So you really don't know hard fast after one year ends as far as
hurricanes are concerned until next year what that policy is going to
be. So having a reserve of $10 million is prudent on our part and
prudent when you approved this particular policy.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I would like to say at this time that it was
through the efforts of the county manager and also the utility director,
and I worked them pretty hard, that we were able to find that finite
window of opportunity to where we were able to address this issue
with the debris in gated communities, for the residents here in Collier
County to remove that debris out of gated communities.
And it saddens me that FEMA has overlooked what the effortss
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June 23, 2006
that we -- I thought that we set a milestone in regards to addressing
this issue because no matter whether you live in a gated community or
not you're still a taxpayer in the United States. So I feel that
everybody should have that benefit.
But I guess we'll have to work through that, and I just want to
thank those two people for their strong effort and finding that
opportunity to where we addressed our federal elected officials to
whereby they carried a letter when President Bush came to Southeast
Florida and landed at Miami and the letter was presented to him.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Mr. Chairman, may I suggest that
we provide guidance to the county manager to start working on the
resolution of that now and let's not wait until we have an emergency;
let's work to resolve that now. The fundamental issue in my mind is
that FEMA is funded by federal --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Dollars.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- tax dollars and everybody in a
gated community to the best of my knowledge pays federal income
taxes. Now, why they are being deprived of the opportunity to get
federal tax monies spent in their communities is beyond me. And I
think we should mount whatever challenge is appropriate to get that
issue resolved as quickly as possible.
MR. MUDD: If the board is going to direct staff to do that, and
we will, and I believe it's good direction, can you also agree as a body
that if I need a letter signed by the chair that he could speak for the
Board of County Commissioners on this particular item?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Absolutely, as far as I'm
concerned.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, especially if we're gone this
summer and you need it.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Let's put it to a formal vote.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay, then that's my motion.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I second it.
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June 23, 2006
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Motion on the floor for the chair
to have the ability to sign a letter in regards to addressing cleanup in
gated communities, and we have a second.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And that the staff proceed
immediately --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- towards trying to resolve this
Issue.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I second.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I'll call the question. All those in favor
signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Aye.
Opposed by like sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Do you have anything to add to that,
Jim?
MR. DELONY: No, sir. We are working on this. We have not
weighed in on this matter enormously to the board in the past. The
key point is, it's policy decisions, sir, Mr. Coyle, to answer your
question, your point. What are they going to deem as eligible? This
board was very clear to the community and to the world, for that
matter, that we were only going to pick up eligible, FEMA-eligible
debris.
We want that eligibility criteria to embrace the same level of
service that we provided during Hurricane Wilma. That's the bottom
line. Not to expand it outside of those parameters but address
eligibility in terms of what FEMA will participate in cost share. That
eligibility criteria would not change from what we had in Wilma. I
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June 23, 2006
think that's a reasonable accommodation of some of the other concerns
that have the federal sector on, you know, private property and that
stuff.
The bottom line is we're just trying to pursue what we thought
what you determined to be the right level of service for our taxpayers,
and we will pursue that as directed.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Private property owners pay taxes.
MR. DELONY: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That should not be the criteria.
MR. DELONY: We understand that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And we shouldn't let them get
away with that.
MR. DELONY: Sir, we will keep you informed of our progress
with regard to negotiating with the Homeland Security folks.
MR. MUDD: And we will use your authority to the chairman to
help us in that regard.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good.
MR. MUDD: Because I believe that goes a long way by him
having the ability. And I would -- when you did the motion you said
letter, it might be letters, okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: To lots of people.
MR. MUDD: Whatever it takes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: To legislators, President of the
United States, everybody else.
MR. DELONY: We understand your intent, sir.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I can assure you that I spent a couple of
hours in the county manager's office along with the utility director
stomping my feet and jumping up and down, saying that we needed to
have FEMA address this particular issue, and of course when the
FEMA people came here, and it was really because of the efforts put
on by Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart and also Congressman Mack
that they were able to address this issue with the President of the
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June 23, 2006
United States, George Bush, and we were able to get some relief. And
I thought that we had set a precedent so that no matter what happened
in this community that we had the ability and there would be the
ability of other communities throughout the United States that could
fall back on this. But obviously it's fallen through the cracks and I
don't know if our emergency manager director has anything to add to
this.
Commissioner Fiala. Or do you want to wait until after he's
done?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
MR. SUMMERS: Dan Summers, Director of the Bureau of
Emergency Services. Commissioners, it is frustrating for me, as I
have gone through these events and seen policy from FEMA written in
Jello and it makes it very, very frustrating for us.
I will tell you the point I want to make is that this board -- the
timing is good here because I believe, based on an e-mail I got
yesterday from the International Association of Emergency Managers,
that Thursday there is supposed to be another bill back on the Senate
floor whether to let FEMA stay under Department of Homeland
Security or pull it back out as an independent type agency with cabinet
authority .
I think it's good if we express this to our Congressional
delegation because if that bill comes back up there might be an
opportunity for some tweaking there, some tweaking within the
Stafford Act if this thing in fact makes it to the floor next week.
So. And our association is really frustrated with which direction,
neither bill has got a lot of teeth in it but we'll see ultimately what
happens. As you know, we need them to be -- we'll be fairly
self-sufficient but we really need to make sure that that Stafford Act
guidance remains solid so we can plan from year to year. So I echo
the frustration on the change in policy.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Are you saying that we need to get this
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letter out ASAP?
MR. SUMMERS: I think the letter timing is okay. I think it
might behoove our federal lobbyist group just to check in with our two
Congressional delegations on this FEMA reorg and just let them know
that we have this on our radar screen as well and see what they can
capture.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you. Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, I wanted to speak to the guy
with the great tie.
MR. DELONY: That would be Mr. Summers, I suspect. I'll tell
my tie picker you said so, she'll be pleased.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I noticed in different areas right out
by the roadway there is a bunch of dead debris from last year,
probably brought out after all of the FEMA hurricane stuff was picked
up, and of course when it sits there along the roadway and nobody
claims ownership of it or anything, number one, I would believe that if
we get some good strong winds then that is going to be blowing all
over, that could be problematic.
And number two, what do we do for now and for future when
debris like that is hauled out to the roadside but it isn't in any area that
has -- looks like it has ownership for anything. Do we let -- we've let
it sit there this year but --
MR. DELONY: Well-- I'm sorry, I didn't mean to interrupt you.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, that's all right.
MR. DELONY: First of all, we should not let it sit there, that's a
code violation. That should be addressed and proceed to resolution
through the efforts of our code enforcement agency as well as our
ordinance enforcement. I know that my colleague to my rear here that
works hard to keep our roadways clear and safe and does a valued job
in my view, works to that end as well.
So we work those hot spots throughout the year. We should not
accept that. That is not a business method. We as a delivery team and
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June 23, 2006
at your direction had a very public expression of when we would stop
the debris mission and we stopped it accordingly. Our callbacks have
been minimal. Compliance is tough and that's what we're talking
about. And so I --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I thought maybe it was some kind of
a policy when -- maybe it does -- whatever we have in place now
doesn't cover it, like the stuff on U.S. 41 East right near Bayshore
Drive, been sitting there all this time, piles of it, big piles of it. And I
was just wondering do we have some kind of policy in place to
remove that stuff.
MR. VLIET: John Vliet, for the record, your Road Maintenance
Superintendent. Normally what happens is since that hurricane there
has been several hot spot areas. We do speak with Mr. DeLony's
departments about it. We do contact code enforcement and ask them
to go out and issue a violation notice.
Also, I'm not familiar with the one on 41 but I will certainly look
at that one.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: There is actually piles of them all
along. It's not just one pile. It's kind of hard to miss.
MR. VLIET: I have to look and see if it's within that state
right -of- way.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: It looks like it. It looks like it's
brought right up to the roadway.
MR. VLIET: I will look at that, ma'am, and if is in the state
right-of-way I'll direct some crews to remove that because it's very
difficult to put ownership on anyone. There is issues, if it's vacant lot,
there is debris piled in front of it then nobody knows who put it there.
And actually what I found is it was carried from across the street in
some cases. But we are looking at every one of those issues as they
come forward to us.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I just thought that maybe if you
need something from us to help you guys, you know, some type of
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June 23, 2006
policy so that when somebody does carry their debris to somebody
else's yard or something and everybody doesn't want to claim it, but
we probably need some way to legally remove it.
MR. DELONY: Commissioner, we have those means, I believe,
in our current body of ordinances and policies right now. And I just
spoke to Mr. Schmitt. We'll take another look at it. I think we're
okay. It's just a tough mission. It's just a tough mission, and vigilance
and letting us know when you find one, and sometimes it may not be
in the right-of-way; it may be on private property so we are not able to
use some of the assets, we have to go through a different mechanism.
Lastly, as you know, this resolution through the ordinances and
through the code enforcement process sometimes take a little time.
Through your office if you will notify us where you got those,
John and I and Joe, we'll gang up and see what we can do.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you.
MR. DELONY: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any other questions?
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I still need to finish on Page 72.
You need to -- you need to understand and know this. Mandatory
annual budget allocation of funds in maintenance or reserves. A,
catastrophic review shall be accumulated in the budget with one
million dollars in '04, with half a million dollars thereafter. So that
particular policy says at this particular time in the '07 budget you
should have $2.5 million.
If you go down to C it says that now that the year is over for the
major renourishment you should have an additional $2 million. So
that should be a total of $4.5 million.
I would like you to turn to Page 69. I would like you to go down
in the middle of the page where it says reserves for capital, reserves
for catastrophic. Add those two numbers together and you should
have $4.5 million. You have 3.1, okay. I'm not asking the board to
allocate general fund dollars into the tourist development category,
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June 23, 2006
that's not what I'm trying to get done. What I'm trying to let you know
is that policy is a tough policy. Mr. Wert is working diligently to
make that happen. I believe the shortage that you have in that fund of
a total of$1.5 million had to do with the cost of the major
renourishment project that went on -- that went from the north part of
the county all the way through the City of Naples.
I wanted to make sure you were aware of that. And Mr. Wert --
and I will bring this up every year to make sure that that fund is
growing the way it should be and bring it to your attention so that you
know.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you. Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I just wanted to make sure that the
changes specified on Page 72 are the changes that were reviewed by
the TDC and our advisory committee.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, those are the ones you voted on.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So these are not being proposed as
additional changes of any kind?
MR. MUDD: No, sir, no. Those were the ones you did. And I
just wanted to get the best guidance at the time that we had and make
sure it was a tax so I could talk to you about it a little bit.
And the next item on capital outside of Clam Bay restoration and
Pelican Bay irrigation has to do with EMS impact fee 350 allocations
for capital. And I wanted to make sure that you are comfortable with
those particular items that are listed on Page 77 and 78.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's great.
MR. MUDD: Okay.
Commissioner, that pretty much takes us through the budget.
What I would like to do is I have staff here if you have any questions
on the UFR list. At one o'clock we do have public comment time
certain. Several people have asked to come speak to the board. I
know I have two speaker slips right now.
Sue, how are you doing?g
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MS. FILSON: I have three.
MR. MUDD: You have three speaker slips. And that -- if you
give them three to five minutes, let's go through the five that are here,
and if they are here and you could get done with five they don't have
to wait until after lunch, I don't believe. But we have staff here to talk
about any questions you have on the UFR list.
What I will also mention to the board is you set the official
millage, okay, after the last hearing in September, okay, for the tax
year. I just want to make sure that you understand that particular item.
You set the official tax rate when the second hearing, and Mike goes
through all of that stuff that he reads through and you finally approve,
because he has to read it twice. And any changes in between as we go
through those two hearings you set it at the last day and that is the rate
that goes on the tax bills in November that get mailed out. In--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I need to ask a question. I've seen
the UFR list. I don't see it in this packet.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: It's on Page 12.
MR. MUDD: Page 12.
MR. SMYKOWSKl: Under your general overview tab,
commISSIoner.
MR. MUDD: The other thing I will say to you is in July, and it
has to be the latter part of July, you have a requirement as the board to
set a tentative millage rate, okay. When you set that tentative millage
rate that goes out in notices, I believe, that the tax collector sends out.
Mike, you can help me on this.
MR. SMYKOWSKI: The property appraiser sends out the TRIM
notices. We have to provide him the tentative millage rates by August
4th. And then by August, I believe it's 25th, he sends out the TRIM
notices which shows the impact of not only tax rates tentatively
adopted by the Board of County Commissioners but also by all of the
other taxing jurisdictions in Collier County, the schools, the
independent fire districts, the water management district and the like,
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June 23, 2006
so that each individual understands the implications of the proposed
tax rates and the changes to each individual property's taxable value
prior to the public hearings. That is the official notification for the
first public hearing in September.
MR. MUDD: And the thing that I wanted -- and so from a
publicity side, i.e., it gets mailed out by the tax collector and they get
to compare what they paid last year with this year and from a PR side
in that mailing, if the millage rate is less then you kind of get a
positive PR piece out of it from that mailing, okay. I probably didn't
state it quite eloquently enough but that's the short of it.
The other thing that you also have to know is if you set that
millage rate at a rate in July, in September, you can go lower than that
millage rate but you can never go higher than that millage rate. So
there is only one way to go in September from that millage rate. You
can either leave it the same or you can cut it. But you can't increase it.
So it's something that you need to be aware of. And I wanted to make
sure that this board understood that one more time as we go through
the process. And we only do it once a year so it's always good for a
reminder.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: One question I have is when is the peak
of our hurricane season?
MR. MUDD: Well, we're in it. But for Southwest Florida
habitually it has been the latter -- come on up here, Dan, and if I say
anything out of line you can hit me with a book later -- but habitually
it's been the latter part of August, September. And I wanted to think
that Wilma would never come on October 24th but that's when it hit us
last year.
MR. SUMMERS: Absolutely correct, sir.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: All right. Thank you. Commissioner
Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Just briefly I want to repeat
what you just said, that if we do nothing to the millage into September
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nothing actually changes, we make our decision then, except the fact if
we do it early and we get into a financial pinch we can't roll back the
other way; that's correct, right?
MR. MUDD: You can't increase it.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You can't increase it.
MR. MUDD: After you make -- if you make a decision in July
to decrease it, okay, it's decreased, okay, and the only way you can go
is go deeper into it in September but if we get hit with something you
can't increase it.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So the July meeting is when we
make a decision like that whether to consider it at that time or consider
it in September.
PRELIMINARY UFR DISCUSSION
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. Now the UFR list, real quick, is provided
for you on Page 12 and 13 of the general overview and I covered it a
little bit yesterday when we went over it. If you have any questions at
all on that UFR list there is staff present to answer those particular
questions for you. And if not, then we can get into the five public
speakers that are here to comment. And no staff will be here this
afternoon if you have other comments on the UFR list if you think of
something.
I understand. And public comment still is advertised for 1 :00
p.m. so we need to -- you as a board need to readjourn, after lunch you
need to come back at 1 :00 to listen to folks. I know the expressway
authority is scheduled to present their needs at 1 :00 for sure.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Just a fast question. Yesterday
George Yilmaz really impressed me when he was talking about the
two people, and the word he used was desperately needed. I wrote
that down. But that isn't here, that must have already been approved
on the expanded list, right?
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June 23, 2006
MR. DELONY: For the record, Jim DeLony, Public Utilities
Administrator. No, ma'am. If I might, if I can remember. We
desperately needed to perform the function, and the recommendation
under this specific UFR was we can do it contractually or we could
hire a couple of folks in-house to do it.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Save money.
MR. DELONY: The fact of the matter is is that we will do the
mission. We're budgeted to do the function in the current budget. But
if we're able to use -- if we're able to get additional FTEs we'll use
in-house assets to do that. That is pretty much described not on this
particular UFR but all the UFRs in public utilities.
What we've laid out in the budget there are essential functions
that have to be performed to sustain compliance and meet demand.
And we're going to pursue it either through contractual means or we're
going to use in-house forces. If in-house forces aren't available
because we're not able to get additional FTEs per board direction,
you've given me the budget authority to do it contractually if you
approve this budget. This is or scenario and the or in this particular
case has a cost benefit ratio if we go in-house as opposed to contract.
And that is true for every single UFR and that's what is reflected on
that page that Mr. Mudd refers to.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Could you reiterate the cost savings?
MR. DELONY: For the overall all ten UFRs for the public
utilities budget we believe that we could have -- the whole cost
savings for those ten UFRs is about $627,000 as we program it if I'm
correct.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's after you've taken into effect that
we're paying them not only their salaries but benefits and everything
else --
MR. DELONY: Yes, sir. I'm sorry, I gave you the wrong--
$591,000 in terms of cost savings. The or condition. Contractual is
more expensive than government hire, that's the bottom line, that's just
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the way it is. These are not inherently governmental functions, they
are contractible. My recommendation though is that we hire the folks
we need to do it in the most cost efficient manner, and that was my
recommendations on that UFR. But we're still going to perform the
function in the budget that we presented to you earlier.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you.
MR. DELONY: The savings, again, let me just be clear, that
we're projecting is $591,800.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's after hiring and their salaries and
all their --
MR. DELONY: Yes, sir. I'm sorry, I gave the wrong number
earlier.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you. Any other questions?
PUBLIC COMMENT
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, let's go to those five speakers. The
first speaker that I have is Patricia Huff.
MS. HUFF: This podium?
MR. MUDD: Any podium that you want, ma'am.
MS. HUFF: Good afternoon. My name is Patty Huff and I'm on
the board of the Friends of the Museum in Everglades City. Two
years ago we came before this board and expressed our plans to
purchase the Rob Storter collection comprising of over 300 items.
To bring you up to date we took possession of the collection in
November 2004 and have been raising funds ever since through
donations, sponsorships and selling of prints and cards.
The Rob Storter collection is unique and invaluable in
documenting the early pioneer days of Collier County. The interest
has been overwhelming and widespread, with sponsorship from
people around the country. One particular painting by Rob Storter
illustrating the Dr. Lykes ship moving cattle between and Punta Reyes
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June 23,2006
and Cuba sparked the interest of many members of the Lykes family
who recently became one of our Storter Club sponsors.
It tells the story of the commerce of the cattle business a hundred
years ago, and the Lykes family is continuing that tradition today.
The collection not only represents our past but also how Collier
County developed both culturally and economically over the last
century. In the last 12 months selected pieces from the Storter
collections have been exhibited in many different location, including
the Naples Depot open house with over a thousand people attending.
It is currently on display from May until October at Rookery Bay.
This week they are hosting the Gulf of Mexico Alliance with 45
participants from five different states --
Outside Collier County we have been invited by the Bonita
Springs Historical Society to exhibit the collection at the newly
renovated Lisles Hotel. And coming up next year the exhibit will
travel to Miami for display at the Historical Museum of Southern
Florida. This will be our first exhibit on the east coast of Florida and
we feel it is an excellent opportunity to reach a wider audience.
Betty Briggs, Rob Storter's granddaughter, had a vision for this
collection and we share that vision with her. The Friends of the
Museum created a business plan, and in partnership with the Collier
County Museums, we intend to carry out this plan in three stages.
Weare currently still in Phase one with the acquisition and
promotion of the Storter collection.
Phase two will be setting up a traveling exhibit and schedule
exhibits throughout Florida and promote the collection at museums,
art shows and schools.
Phase three is our business-to-business program. The Rob Storter
collection is so comprehensive it involves all area of economic growth
and we wish to continue promoting the history of Collier County
through related organizations and exhibiting at the Florida State Fair,
the Florida Cattlemen's Association, the Audubon Society, the Boca
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June 23, 2006
Grande tarpon tournament and the IGF A and the fish and wildlife
commISSIon.
When the Friends of the Museum signed a contract with the
Storter family, we took on a monumental task. Through our hard
work and in-kind services we have paid $78,000 of the principal. That
leaves us an outstanding balance of 72,000. It is our request that the
Board of County Commissioners recognize the value and the
importance of our heritage and help us payoff the balance. This will
give us more time and money and energy to support the Collier
County museums. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much, ma'am.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Nicole Ryan. I think some of
the speakers signed up to come -- just early, to come back at 1 :00, so
I'll save their names.
Carol Mozeman. She'll be followed by Barbara Quartz
MS. MOZEMAN: Hello. My name is Carol Mozeman. I'm
president of the Friends of the Museum of the Everglades. And I'm
here to ask that you fund the additional funds for the Storter
collection. Rob Storter, the Rob Storter collection is invaluable in
chronicling the history of Collier County, including Everglades City,
Marco Island and Naples.
Rob Storter's perspective as a commercial fisherman, fishing
guide and family man gives us insight into the daily lives of those who
pioneered Collier County. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Question, if I may.
MS. MOZEMAN: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: The Storter collection, right
now you say that the balance is 72. How much have you paid into it?
MS. MOZEMAN: I believe about 78,000 at this time.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So you're halfway there with
private donations. The collection, when this collection is completely
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June 23, 2006
paid for where does it reside, who is responsible for it?
MS. MOZEMAN: Right now the Friends of the Museum of the
Everglades have purchased it.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So it will be the property of
Collier County?
MS. MOZEMAN: That remains to be seen. I honestly don't
know, sir.
MS. HUFF: Our intention --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I think we need to clarify that
because you know, it's --
MS. HUFF: I'm chairman of the committee of the Storter
collection. And yes, our intention has always been from the beginning
to donate the collection to Collier County museums. And it is the
intention of the Briggs family -- the Storter family that Betty Briggs is
the granddaughter of -- when we signed the contract we said it would
stay within Collier County and basically in the Everglades area. But
we have it right now stored in Naples in a storage unit and when we
turn it over to the Collier County museums we'll work together with
them, with the friends and the Collier County Museum.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: How much of a bulk is this
collection?
MS. HUFF: There are 312 pieces. That includes paintings,
films, we have -- and includes the carvings and things like that. It's
over 312 items that we've documented and cataloged.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You know, it would be helpful
maybe if -- I don't think we're going to reach a final decision this
meeting, probably in July -- but maybe if you could have a book of the
Storter collection that you could leave someplace where people can
look at it, it might help to understand the significance of this particular
collection as far as the history of the Everglades and Chokoloskee area
goes.
MS. HUFF: The last time that we presented to the board we had
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the Crackers in the Glades book, which actually discusses the Storter
family and all of the paintings. And then we do have -- on Exhibit
right now at Rookery Bay too we have each of the items on display
there. And wherever the collection travels and is exhibited we have all
of the items on display.
(Commissioner Coyle has left the boardroom.)
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm sure my fellow
commissioners are aware of what this is all about even though it was
last year. Thank you very much.
MS. HUFF: We just had, you know -- we need to keep the
collection together was one of the requirements when we purchased it,
that we keep it in Collier County and we keep it together and the
pieces aren't separated.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much. Commissioner
Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I did go see it over at Rookery Bay.
And at first I was just looking, and then I thought, well, I'll just start
to read, and it was just fascinating because he actually tells you of
daily life at that time and in the terminology of that period. It was an
awful lot of fun. Thank you.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Barbara Quartz.
MS. QUARTZ: I'm Barbara Quartz. I have been a board
member and volunteer at the Friends of the Museum of the Everglades
since 1998. The Storter collection is charming and showing the early
life of Everglades City, Marco, Naples, particularly Naples as a small,
small town. We would appreciate your assistance in completing the
payment for this collection. And I do urge everyone to go, if they
have the chance to go see it. It is charming. But you have to spend
the time reading his notes on his paintings. That's the charm of it.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Marion Burke.
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June 23, 2006
MS. BURKE: Good morning. I'm Marion Burke. I'm also a
volunteer at the Everglades museum and also a secretary of the
Friends of the Museum. And if you like the word desperate help, we
need desperate help for the Storter collection so that we can continue
it on and bring it to Naples too. I think if you all get a chance to look
at it you would love it too. His paintings and his writing is super.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much.
MS. FILSON: That's your final speaker, Mr. Chairman.
MR. MUDD: Mr. Chairman, for one fact, for just the board on
this particular comment. Last year on your UFR list the Storter
collection purchase was for a $150,000 on the UFR list. One of the
things that they basically said to you was they didn't sit still and they
tried to work it from their public and they have worked $78,000 to that
$150,000 purchase. And even though it says 75 on your thing they
basically told us 72. So I just wanted to make sure that you are aware
of that fact.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: If we have no other public speakers why
don't we recess for lunch and be back here at 1 :00 p.m. Thank you
very much.
(A recess was taken.)
(The proceedings resumed at 1 :00 p.m.)
MR. OCHS: Mr. Chairman, you have a hot mic.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much, Assistant County
Manager.
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. The next part of this
proceedings, of course, is public comment, and if you would all turn
your cell phones off or pagers. And we're limiting each speaker to
three minutes.
And, Miss Filson, how many do we have at the present time?
MS. FILSON: Ten.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. I'll wait and see if the county
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manager has got any further direction before we start into it.
County manager, do you have any further direction to give us
other than we're going to start into the --
MR. MUDD: We're going to do -- we're going -- I know for a
fact that we have people from the expressway authority that want to
talk about their -- their requirements for next year. And I did mention
that at the board meeting.
I know that we have City of Naples representatives that want to
be able to talk to the board of county commissioners on their fund
requirements or their -- or their requests for next year, and whatever
other slips we have for public comment.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Is there any particular order you
want to take them in or we'll just go ahead and start off however they
came in the door?
MS. FILSON: Okay. The first one is Nicole Ryan. She'll be
followed by Anne Goodnight.
MS. RYAN: Good afternoon, commissioners.
For the record, Nicole Ryan here in behalf of the Conservancy of
Southwest Florida.
The Conservancy was extremely impressed with the watershed
management plan presentation that you heard back in May during the
year based amendment transmittal hearing.
And we were also very impressed with the ambitious 20/10 time
line that you put into place during the amendment transmittal in order
to get those watershed management plans done, especially since they
had been overdue from 1993 and then 2000.
But the transmittal is really only step one. Now the funding needs
to be allocated.
The Conservancy is asking that you include the proposed $6
million of funding for watershed management plans through the
unfunded requirements. These plans would cost 2 million per year for
the next three years and that would allow you to meet your 20/10
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June 23, 2006
deadline time line in the Growth Management Plan for the watershed
management Plan competition.
The Conservancy appreciates that there are many difficult
decisions to be made during the funding and the budget cycle. We
also understand that there are more projects that can be fully funded in
the unfunded requirements category.
However, timely watershed management planning will ensure
that Collier County has the necessary tools in order to be proactive
and potentially avoid some costly retrofits through the total maximum
daily loads requirements that are going to be coming down the line.
Allocating the $6 million now will also indicate a solid
commitment on the part of Collier County to meeting this 20/10
deadline, something that we're sure the state would appreciate.
The bottom line is that new watershed management plan
deadlines within the transmitted GNPs cannot meet their 20/10
deadline unless the funding is allocated.
Therefore, we're asking you to consider allocation of the $6
million through this budgetary cycle in order to make that
commitment to meet the $2 million per year allocation and the 20/10
deadline.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Anne Goodnight. She'll be
followed by Fred Thomas.
MS. GOODNIGHT: Good morn -- good afternoon,
commissioners. I appreciate the opportunity to speak.
I'm here to speak about the fish branch culvert that is part of your
budget process and I'm representing the Immokalee Water and Sewer
District. I'm the chairman of the Immokalee Water and Sewer
District.
The Immokalee Water and Sewer District is a government entity.
We are all appointed by the Governor of the State of Florida.
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June 23, 2006
There is -- through the stormwater budget, I guess, there was
some money that was allocated in there, an estimated $160,000, I
think. I haven't seen your figures. I'm just going by our figures.
And they're saying that they're wanting us to pay, the Immokalee
Water and Sewer District, to pay for moving our water and sewer
lines. And we are just a user base, USDA funding group, and we don't
have this money to move the lines.
And, so, we're asking that -- you know, that the -- that the
commission instruct staff to -- we don't have that.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Go ahead.
MS. GOODNIGHT: Okay. All right.
That to instruct staff that when they do work of moving roads or
-- or culverts or whatever, that they let us help them with the
engineering as far as where our lines are going to be and everything,
but not send us a bill for -- for doing this because we don't have the
money to do that.
Any questions?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any questions?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Is that -- is that on this list of
unfunded --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Is this on -- on the unfunded--
MR. MUDD: No, sir.
MS. GOODNIGHT: No?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
MR. MUDD: But to bring it up a request and what I will-- what
I will have is I will have staff take a look and see what -- see what the
-- the difference is and bring that particular item forward to the board.
MS. GOODNIGHT: Okay. We don't know right -- right now
what the cost is.
MR. MUDD: Not off the top of my head, ma'am, no.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: No. Thank you very much.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: If I may? I'm sorry. I had to
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step out. I had a little family emergency.
You were dealing with the water and sewer issue?
MS. GOODNIGHT: Yeah. And the -- and the fish branch
culvert, yes, sir. That's what I was here talking about.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Right. And the fact that -- that
it's working fine the way it is, but it has to be moved because of what
the county needs to do for the drainage. And you agreed to bring it
back for consideration?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: We're going to put it back on. But look
at the -- the actual costs in regards to moving lines and so that they
don't get -- get with the costs --
MR. MUDD: Yes. It will come -- it will come back to the board
once I figure out what that cost is, sir. I don't have it right on top --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: And that will be on the --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: All right. Thank you. I
appreciate it.
Once again, I apologize for not being here.
MS. GOODNIGHT: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Unfunded mandates.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Fred Thomas. He'll be
followed by Jack Johnson.
MR. THOMAS: The hat I'm wearing today, commissioners, is
I'm the vice-chair of the Immokalee Water and Sewer District.
And I've got some detailed information for you. Weare funded
by user fees and from when we can get competitor grants from the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, we get those to handle some of the
work that we're doing.
In fact, we run a very tight shop, very tight shop.
It should be considered by you folk that whenever transportation
or any other branch of county government is doing anything,
impacting on our sewer lines that are already in place, that you all
should be able to count on us for engineering support to help design,
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June 23, 2006
locate, those kinds of issues, but that the county should pay for any of
those kind of moves because it wasn't government agency working
hand by hand with another government agency.
That's all I would like to say about that. And the figures I have is
that we're talking about right now I think it's $45,000 is all we're
talking about to move the lines all the way to Fish Creek.
That's all we're talking about in this particular situation.
But, on the overall of what we're looking at, many -- for many
years I used to sit and talk to County Manager Neil Dorrill about this
whole situation about a tax base here in Collier County.
And we had the lowest millage rate in the state, the lowest
millage rate in the state. I about a house about ten years ago. It's two
and a halftimes the value now.
The state won't let you get your fair share of those dollars that
you should be getting. And when I sell that house, I'm not going to
give you a rebate for the services you provide.
We need to leave the millage rate alone. We need to build up the
reserves. We need to get the best schools, the best roads, the best
parks and recreation, the best infrastructure we could possibly have,
then we also need to take some of that money and put it in reserve
before we think about lowering any millage rates or what have you so
we can handle storms like Wilma when they come through.
And when we get to that point, then we can look at these kinds of
things. But until we get to be perfect, we need to let people -- because
you can't get nothing -- something for nothing.
And I am a resident here. I'm a retired resident here. I'm telling
you, we shouldn't be able to get something for nothing.
Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coletta, do you have
something to say or --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
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June 23, 2006
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Jack Johnson. He'll be
followed by Tammie Nemecek.
MR. JOHNSON: Good afternoon, commissioners. I'm here to
speak specifically about the fish branch Lake Trafford Road situation
that Mr. Thomas and Ms. Goodnight have addressed already.
The problem has existed for quite sometime. I've been fighting
the windmill myself for eight years.
Commissioner Coletta came out and visited with me last week as
well as the department head of stormwater management.
Basically, there's a waterway that drains 4,000 acres that comes
to that point in Lake Trafford Road that has two six-foot-by-ten-foot
box culverts in it.
The county at some point in time put in a sidewalk that has two
48-inch round culverts. If you do the math, that's about 22 percent of
the volume.
And you've seen me before and I keep preaching the same story
and I just can't understand why can't anybody get it.
But you'll-- that's why the water doesn't go away. 4,000 acres,
I've been on that land for 25 years, I fought the fight for eight years.
I'm here again. This is the last you'll see me, I promise you, but I just
can't figure out why we can't understand two 48s versus two
six-by-tens.
The approval was given last year for that project for completion
in July, then September, then December, and what we found out was
that the Water and Sewer District has both a sewer and a water main
on either side of Lake Trafford Road.
County staffhas said, okay, we can't do that. We can't do
anything on the sidewalk. We've got to do the box culvert issue. To
do that, the county says that water management -- or excuse me, the
Water Sewer District has to move the lines. They don't have the
money.
You know, all I want to do is just make the water go away. It
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seems like to me that we could just put two bigger culverts in the
sidewalk and solve the issue but speaking with the commissioner and
stormwater last week, that's not what they want to do.
So, I'm asking that you would fund that project, that you would
fund not only the project which has been previously approved at 300
something thousand dollars for the extension of the box culverts, but
also kick in a little extra to help Water and Sewer District move those
lines because the problem does exist of something that the county did.
The county put in the sidewalk. The county made an error in the
size of the culverts. And I don't know who, I don't care who.
But what's going to happen, we keep -- we keep issuing permits
for Habitat to build on both sides of this natural waterway . We
depended on those sides of the waterway for sheet flow to alleviate the
flooding.
We approved the project and it's built out on the west side of the
branch. That's restricted about, I don't know, 300 yards of sheet flow,
which staff said there was no sheet flow. They were wrong.
We've now approved future projects, what will restrict the sheet
flow on the east side of the branch, so the water has to come down the
branch. The water can't go down the branch because it's restricted by
the sidewalk culverts.
I'm just asking that somebody would please fix this problem.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: If I may?
Yes. Jack?
MR. JOHNSON: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. You made -- the first--
the one comment you meant about this would be the last time you're
going to come here, it's not. We're going to need you here again. It's
all right. But you're part of the establishment now where you have to
be here for different other issues.
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June 23, 2006
But in any case, overlooking that little thing, I was there in
person. I seen what he meant. It took a little while to understand it.
Do we have anybody from stormwater here that might be able to
brief us a little bit, because there is some actions taking place.
There's no one from stormwater at this time.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: They're all hiding.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: They're all hiding. They seen
you coming, Jack.
But in any case, they -- they did say that there --
MR. JOHNSON: They didn't like to be called stupid, did they?
Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No. I appreciate it, Jack. But
we'll keep on top of this and I -- Mr. Feder, could you help us?
MR. FEDER: Probably not in specifics. I know that we have a
project out there. I know that typically where we have a project, if
there are utilities that have to be moved, since they get to utilize the
right-of-way for free, that we acquire the utilities to move to the quiet
question, to the size of the culverts. W e'lllook at that.
I know the sidewalk was put in there relative to school, sometime
ago, as I understand it, but again we'll get the particulars. We'll be
happy to meet with Jack and to anyone out there and going through
the item.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, because this was funded
and then I guess it slipped because of the sewer and water problems
with the pipes and that wasn't--
MR. FEDER: And we have some significant development out
there, Al Had, and others that have made commitments for road
widening and other issues that haven't come about yet.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And it's more involved than just
Jack --
MR. FEDER: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- and a bunch of his livestock.
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June 23, 2006
It's all the residents who live along that road.
MR. FEDER: Understood. And there's other issues that we're
looking at out there as well.
MR. JOHNSON: I guess that's my point. In parting, you know
-- I mean, not many people care about a bunch of cows, and I can
understand that.
But having been a life-long resident, having served on the fire
district for a long time, Carson Road, West Clock Street, everything
basically north of Lake Trafford Road and east of this branch is
flooded. And the only relief that comes from that flooding is fish
branch.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yes, sir. We'll get -- we'll get with it.
Thank you very, very much.
MS. FILSON: The next speak is Tammie Nemecek. She'll be
followed by Robert Young.
MS. NEMECEK: Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman,
commissioners. I'm Tammie Nemecek, Pesident of the Economic
Development Council.
It is always a pleasure to come and speak to you to show the
success stories and sometimes the challenges we face in our continued
efforts to diversify the economy and grow high wage jobs.
We've had a challenging year with the lack of affordable housing,
rising costs of land and land availability, and rising costs of generally
doing business, but still have several success stories to share.
One in particular, March performance which is a recruitment
project that we have worked on for the last four years has finally been
able to finish their project and has moved into their building in Collier
County, 40,000 square foot building, creating 40 high wage jobs over
$56,000 for our community.
We have been successful in branding the Immokalee Regional
Airport as the Florida trade port and bringing a great deal of
heightened interest to the Immokalee area.,
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June 23, 2006
Unfortunately, the permitting delays have basically brought
recruitment efforts to a standstill with regards to the airport.
Permitting issues have long haunted and hindered our efforts.
Whether they are local, state or federal, the hoops that businesses have
to go through make it extremely difficult to keep businesses in our
community as well as entice new companies.
A positive enhancement with our local permitting took place
earlier this year with their leadership to agree to allow the hiring of a
special projects manager, Cheryl Soder, to facilitate and improve the
fast track program.
Weare already starting to hear positive comments from our
clients with the help that Cheryl has been able to provide.
But I still contend that we have a long way to go to make this
area truly business friendly.
From increases in housing cost, as I mentioned, business costs,
increase in development fees, the list of potential companies willing to
stay and grow in Collier County and the ones we might have to
potentially recruit here is significantly dwindling.
We also completed this year an analysis of the land use in Collier
County, which has identified the need for an additional 3,700 acres of
entitled land for business park uses that we need in Collier County by
the year 2030.
A recent success to this announcement though of the need for this
land is the establishment of a new business park in eastern Collier
County by Barron Collier Corporation. The Silver Strand business
park, just minutes away from Immokalee and the new town of a Ave
Maria will significantly enhance our efforts to bring businesses and
jobs into the eastern Collier County community.
We are working closely with Barron Collier, Community
Development and Environmental Services and the Governor's office
of Tourism, Trade and Economic Development to fast track the
permitting for this park and anticipate that we could have potentially a
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June 23, 2006
company sited in this park within the next two years.
It is our best and highest hope at this time to start bringing jobs to
eastern Collier County.
With the number of challenges we face, we also see a great deal
of opportunity. There has been a definite increase in the number of
quality inquiries from businesses that are interested in expanding our
moving to our community.
Weare in constant competition with communities in the region,
state, nation, around the world for projects that will be bringing
significant economic impact and jobs to our area.
We need to keep a constant and consistent message that Collier
County is a viable choice that is not just a place for people as a tourist
destination, but a place where they can locate and grow successful
businesses.
This messaging will come in several different forms from direct
contact with site selection consultants, business partnerships,
partnerships with Enterprise Florida and participating in the state's
marketing programs to our own business intelligence, which leverages
relationships and research to find companies that will be prime
candidates for possibly relocation or expansion in Collier.
The $160,000 request that is included in the unfunded requests is
the first of what we hope to be recurring financial support from Collier
County for a comprehensive marketing and public relations campaign
for the community that is needed to meet our joint diversification
goals.
As always, the EDC is willing to match this additional amount
dollar for dollar. With our fund raising efforts and private sector
support, we are currently in discussions with. Paradise Advertising,
who currently works with the Convention and Visitors Bureau and --
and Marketing Promotions to put together a prioritized plan for the
EDC, which will allow us to maximize that $160,000 request and
leverage it with our private sector support, as well as funded programs
June 23, 2006
on a regional basis and through Enterprise Florida.
Thank you for this support of the request. I am here to answer
questions and have -- may -- and hope that you will see this request as
one of your priorities.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you, Tammie.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Robert Young. He'll be
followed by Carol Pratt.
MR. YOUNG: Good afternoon, commissioners.
I'm here to speak just for my wife and myself. As property
owners in Golden Gate Estates and in Naples, and I'm going to speak
to the idea of the possible adjustment of the millage rate. I don't know
much about that subject, but I did hear there was some possible idea
there might be some type of refund or reduction and I'm not in favor
of that.
We've been living in the estates for approximately the last 20
years and we've been paying taxes on properties which when we first
moved there, of course, for many years we were on a dirt road. The
road was recently paved and we have been paying taxes on other
properties there where there's no paving on the road and that -- I'm
sure that money has been used along with other moneys for paying --
paving roads and -- and other parts of the county.
We've been happy to pay taxes when we see that Airport Road is
being improved. We see Golden Gate Boulevard being improved.
We see Vanderbilt Beach Road going on in progress and so forth.
However, we have been paying taxes and we think that money
has been going for development of the area closer to the -- to the -- to
the Gulf Shore, which we didn't complain about. We're happy to see
all the development going on.
But if there's a possibility that a reduction in millage rate, as
someone mentioned earlier, I think we're already very low as far as the
other communities in Florida.
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June 23, 2006
I think that that money could well be used for continuing
development in the east of 41 and other parts of the county where it's
needed.
It wasn't too long ago I heard about an idea that residents on dirt
roads might want to help pay for them.
Well, I think there are thousands of people even on undeveloped
properties have been paying taxes for -- ever since Golden Gate
Estates was established, and still they don't have paved roads.
But I think we could -- and we should consider the continuing the
development there for the benefit of all of Collier County and that way
as the county grows and the population increases, that we will have
sufficient reserves to do whatever is needed.
So, I appreciate your time and -- and I think there are some other
people living in our area and near Wilson Boulevard who feel the
same way.
So, I thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you, sir.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Carol Pratt. She'll be followed
by Steve Olivera.
MS. PRATT: My name is Carol Pratt. I live in Golden Gate
Estates.
Mistakes have been made in the past. There's been poor planning
and lack of communication between the different county departments
and divisions. And no matter whose fault it is, the residents of Golden
Gate Estates are paying the price for those mistakes.
Everything that the county can do to help make the residents of
the estates more whole should be done.
Since you insist upon putting Vanderbilt Beach Road through,
make no mistake, for the record, I am still opposed to it, it should go
where it was -- should -- you should put it where it should go and
that's north of the canal and not where homes now stand.
Use the excess funds of over $20 million to re-engineer or
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June 23, 2006
redesign or whatever you do to golf courses and use eminent domain
on them, ifnecessary, in lieu of taking people's homes.
Thank you.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Steve --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you.
MS. FILSON: -- Olivera.
He'll be followed by Sara Timmons.
MR. OLIVERA: Good afternoon. Steve Olivera. Golden Gate
resident, 30 year, Naples.
The past 20 years, those of us that have been here, we have been
amongst the privileged and our community always rating well within
the top ten places to live.
And in the most recent years we've even been more privileged to
Santa Clara, Santa Barbara and Naples, Florida, number one best
investment regardless of the price. How lucky have we been?
Last week, the national news reported, and these same groups
that we -- we've held praise and -- and they're all experts, they have
just come out, and I think you might be aware of this. It's on our
national news. Neil Kabuto is the segment that I saw.
They're now reporting that our million dollar homes in Naples in
the experts' opinions are now 103 percent over value. That means a
$2 million home in Park Shore, Naples Park -- not in Naples Park,
Park Shore and Pelican Bay is actually worth a million dollars.
Anybody that's bought their home in the past five years, the most
affluent amongst us has just taken a psychological hit because we
haven't actually seen it yet.
But when these people report their -- they've been very accurate.
You know, I think we all have to agree they've been very accurate.
This hasn't hit in medium homes yet here. It's still being
evaluated.
We have to look at -- and when we look at your concurrency, our
road issues here, the quality of life which this -- these reports are
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June 23, 2006
based on, this is telling us a story.
Weare -- I think it's critical. I think this is serious. We really
need to pay attention. We need to make changes to whatever it is, you
know.
Any of you had been here, our traffic is getting worse and worse
and worse. What -- whose fault, what's the blame?
It's complex and complicated. I'm not faulting anybody, but
obviously there's a serious problem.
(Commissioner Coyle entered the room.)
MR. OLIVERA: If these reports continue, people that have been
coming aren't. The people that we need -- the developers that are
coming here plunking down millions of dollars to create, help us
create this community, are going to walk away from us, leaving us
holding the bag.
We'll still have people here. They'll have bought the houses
cheaper, but they'll still be here. We'll still be needing roads.
What are we going to do? What do we do? Do we reevaluate
that $2 million home where we're collecting taxes on now? Do we
actually go in there and the next person that buys it for a million
dollars, our tax structure going to fall?
I mean, perhaps the county manager can weigh in on this. I
mean, I really think that that report was very alarming. If you hadn't
saw it, they're going to be doing it, another report.
You look at our -- again our concurrency. We have
commitments to Ave Maria, to these people. We've made
commitments. We're failing just in Ave Maria alone.
We're at 50 percent failure. In other words, our committed roads
to them, half of them aren't done and will not be -- it will be debatable
whether 50 percent of them be completed on time.
The other 50 percent are not in the inventory and we don't have
the money . We're not counting a special district, we're not counting
Trafford. This is a very large -- we need -- we probably need to
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increase $6,500 per person to bailout of this.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much, sir.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Sara Timmons. She'll be
followed by Tim Nance.
MS. TIMMONS: Hi, commissioners. I'm Sara Timmons. You
all know me if you've read the paper.
Anyway, I think that the excess money should be left alone. I
don't think it should be returned. I don't think we should change our
tax structure, but I do think that the people in Golden Gate Estates
who are going to be affected by Vanderbilt Beach Road deserve
special compensation because we are being asked to give up our
homes or our land and, more importantly, our way of life for future
development.
And that will benefit people who don't live in Florida now and
may not even be born. So, keep that money and just give it to us.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Thank you.
MS. FILSON: Tim Nance. He'll be followed by Jim Jack.
MR. NANCE: Good afternoon, commissioners. Thank you for
the opportunity to speak.
Tim Nance. I live in the northern Belle Meade.
I would also like to speak to the issue of the perceived surplus
and moneys that the county thinks that it might although it might not
think it has so after January the 1st, but maybe you do now.
I would like to also address the quality of life issues that I think
are playing -- starting to play out very poorly within the working
people in eastern Golden Gate Estates and the needs that they do have.
And a lot of those are tied to the infrastructure that we have and
the need we have for roads. Particularly, I'd like to address the
commuting problem, both going to work, to infrastructure that they
need, such as groceries and goods -- and other goods and services.
I think the coastal part of the county is well appointed and I think
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June 23, 2006
the commission has done a very good job catching up for past
mistakes.
But I believe that residents on eastern part of the county now feel
like it is their opportunity. It's their time to get some of the
infrastructure out there updated and improved.
And I would request that the commission do act on -- in that
direction and direct the money towards the very critical -- particularly
the road infrastructure that we need.
Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you, sir.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Jim Jack. Bill Barton. He'll
be followed by Ron Wallace.
MR. BARTON: Good afternoon, Chairman Halas,
. .
commISSIoners.
For the record, my name is Bill Barton. I'm here today to speak
to you for a few moments in my capacity as chairman of the
Southwest Florida Expressway Authority.
By way of introduction, you all are fully familiar with the
authority that was enacted by -- enacted legislature this past year.
However, during the creation of the authority, the legislature
forgot to fund it. So, that's part of what I want to talk to you about
today.
As you well know, the -- the sole objective of the authority is to
dramatically accelerate the implementation often-lane section of 1-75
through a 35-mile corridor in Lee and Collier County.
Our start up for the authority, you have been good enough to loan
us your staff, Lee County has been good enough to loan some of their
staff.
Your Don Scott has -- has been elected as secretary of the
authority .
David Loveland, who is with the Lee County transportation staff
has been elected as our treasurer. And David and some of his staff are
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here today in case we need to call on them.
And let me at the expense -- or at the -- the advent of
embarrassing them a little bit, let me tell you that they have -- both
your staff and the Lee County staff have -- have just been outstanding
in this start up of the authority.
They have come to the table. They have allowed us to move
very rapidly, I think, in our first two meetings, and you should very
pleased with -- with your staffs participation in that regard.
Our objective at the authority is twofold. The first is to do
whatever we can to try to accelerate the additional four lanes toll --
four toll lanes of 1-75 with a start dates simultaneous or at least during
the six -lane construction, which is, as you know, is due to start in
2007.
I will tell you there's a window of opportunity there, but it's a
very, very small window.
Whether or not we're going to be able to climb through that
window is yet to be seen, but I want you to know that we're working
very hard to keep that window open and to expand its horizon so that
that's -- continues to be a possibility.
In the event that we cannot get started within that time frame, our
-- our second objective would be to start construction on those toll
lanes shortly after the completion of the six laning, which is now
expected to be finished in about 2010, 2011.
So, those are the two windows that we're looking at right now,
either of which would indeed dramatically accelerate the advent of
that ten-lane section.
And, as you may know, proj ections right now for the six -laning
completion will show segments of that highway already back at level
of service F when it opens with six lanes.
So, that's how critical it is that -- that we move forward with this
ten-lane section.
If we're going to move forward, obviously we're going to have to
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have some funding. Without it, we're just a ship that's out there
floating with no power.
We've got to have dedicated staff. We can't continue to rely on
yours, as good as they've been. They're currently being pulled away
from their -- their normal duties.
We've got -- one of the -- the things that that dedicated staff will
do is immediately begin to identify other sources of funding, so as we
go forward, the -- the sources of funding will be more aligned to the
spe~ific purpose rather than requested from -- from the counties.
Traffic revenue studies are imperative. If we don't get those
started quickly, I can tell you that window of opportunity will slam
closed within a matter of six months.
We just simply will not be able to make that early start date
unless we can get traffic and revenue studies underway quickly.
We've got to have engineering and financial -- professional
support, also obviously takes funding to get that accomplished.
We've asked David Loveland's office to prepare for us a budget
and our -- our initial look at that budget shows us that that start up, the
study and professional support, that I mentioned, and the first year's
budget will run just over $2 million.
Obviously we have no history at this point, so a lot of these are
projections, but they're reasonable projections.
Could it come in less than that? Absolutely. And that will be a --
one of the obj ectives of the authority is to bring that budget in as low
as we can without cutting the corners that would make our work less
fruitful.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Bill, so what you're asking us is to look
at the possibility of funding at least a million dollars?
MR. BARTON: No, sir. We're looking for -- for each of the two
counties to give consideration to loaning us in that first year 775,000
each --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
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June 23, 2006
MR. BARTON: -- because we're also applying to the State of
Florida's revolving trust fund for a $500,000 loan.
Our objective on that would be that -- that the security for that
would be the same as the security for Collier and Lee County, and that
is projected revenue excesses when this toll facilitY is in place.
Obviously that's probably seven, eight years down the road.
However, I want to be real candid with you, and that is that the
State of Florida may come back and insist that the counties secure that
$500,000 loan.
We're going to resist that because we think it's inappropriate. But
I want to put it on the table so you'll understand now and not be
surprised if I have to come back later.
There are other alternative sources of funding and one -- as I
mentioned earlier, one of our primary objectives in dedicated staff will
be to start to identify those very quickly.
And I will tell you that I have already opened communication
and dialogue with a state representative, Mike Davis, to introduce
state funding for us in the next legislature. So, that's already in the
works.
In the event that other sources of funding can't come through, I --
I would also tell you there's a possibility I'll be back here next year
looking for additional loan for a second year and our current thinking
is that that might be in the range of 625,000.
Obviously, we would not have some of the studies that we need
right now, nor would it have the start up costs involved in it.
Total exposure to the counties. Year one is 75 -- 775,000; year
two, ifnecessary, would be 625, bringing the total cash outlay in the
form of a loan to 1.4 million.
And then there is the possibility that the county might also have
additional risk, not cash requirement, but additional risk of 250,000 on
security for the state revolving loan.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
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June 23, 2006
MR. BARTON: So, that's -- that's where we are today. We need
to have you consider that.
As I have said earlier, if -- if this authority is going to be
successful in moving forward and accomplishing what we all know
needs to be accomplished, we're not going to do it without funding and
this is the -- appears to be the resort of last -- the source of last resort
or maybe the source of first resort and those two may be the same.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I would just hope that we had that
window of opportunity to tie in the -- the expansion of the four lanes
with the six lanes, because I'd sure as hate -- heck hate to see us
commit the six lanes and then have to tear the whole expressway apart
to address the issues with the bridges and everything else just to add
the additional four lanes which we really need.
But the cost is -- would be unbelievable. And if we can
consolidate all that together, I think that would be a great way of
doing it. And I wish you all the luck in the world.
MR. BARTON: Early estimates, commissioner, is that there is
probably a 200 to $250,000 savings available if we can get that
accomplished.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Wow!
MR. BARTON: Plus, instead of three to three and a half years of
construction turmoil, if we have to start the four laning -- or the ten
laning second, then we're going to have the disruption of construction
for more like six or seven years.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's what I was getting at.
MR. BARTON: Yeah.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: It's just -- Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you.
I -- I'd like to emphasize the reason for it being, of course, is the
fact that if you have the forces already in place, you don't have to
marshal them again to get to where you need to be because you have
-- you save that cost.
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June 23, 2006
Now, how you get there is another thing, but there's a good
possibility in the near future we'll receive a nonsolicited proposal that
will come forward that will outline exactly what the contract for this
particular contractor to pick up and go forward.
But that's neither here nor there. If we don't have the ability to be
able to keep this up and alive.
Mr. Mud.
MR. MUDD: Mr. Barton, if you could clarify for the record.
You said the savings from doing it at the same time that they're doing
the two-lane expansion was $250,000. And that's --
MR. BARTON: 250,000,000.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. You said--
MR. MUDD: Okay. I wanted to get a correction on the record,
okay. Because it's -- I believe -- I'm going 250,000. Why is he even
here? But 250,000,000 is a different story, sir.
MR. BARTON: Yeah. I -- thank you for correcting the mistake.
It was between 200 and $250 million.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Mr. Feder, I know that you've
had tremendous experience in this before from your exposure to
Tallahassee and all the other authorities you've been involved in.
Your comments would be most appreciated.
MR. FEDER: For the record, Norman Feder, Transportation
Administrator.
My comments mayor may not be. If you're asking personally
and then I'll go back to the board.
Personally, my observation would be that in spite of the desire
and the long wait for six laning, that if anything, the six laning ought
to wait and we ought to move on the eight laning to develop these toll
lanes, allow then to the interchanges to be improved and the last thing
building the six lanes.
The six-lane concept comes within the median, which is exactly
where your toll lanes need to go. And to develop a six lane with a
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continuous right-turn lane, which is what it will become without
having the interchange improvements and creating the added costs to
the needed ten laning of 250,000,000, and probably be more before it's
over with, is probably not a very viable vehicle.
I also understand that what I'm recommending and what I just
said is the possibly of delaying the six laning and that would probably
be heresy.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You're absolutely correct. I -- I
don't think that this particular counsel has been put together, this
authority .
We already entertained that particular fact that we -- we don't
want to delay the public benefits any longer than necessary. I mean,
the idea that it might expand that time another year or two before we
have the road down was something that the authority was not
receptive to, not that they can't discuss it again, and we appreciate
your input at the meetings that we have.
MR. FEDER: I will tell you though obviously the dollar request
you have here, if we're going to explore this, we need to do it now.
The idea of having that many years of construction and that much
undo of six laning, I think it's worth the efforts of understanding that
up front --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I agree.
MR. FEDER: -- and making sure if we had any option to move
forward on it.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Nevertheless, we still need the money to
be able to get the start up money to able to go forward.
And where would be the most appropriate place to ask for it, Mr.
Mud. Would that be from the -- on the UFR list? What part of the
UFR list?
MR. MUDD: Sir, that's -- that's on the general fund side of the
house. I mean, the expressway basically benefits everybody in the
county. And, so, I would add it under the UFR list where you have
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the most amount of dollars that are available.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I have a question.
My understanding is if we six lane the express way at the present
time and then go back and address the additional four lanes or toll
roads, that we're probably looking in excess of just the -- the four-lane
tolling along with all the bridges, over a billion dollars.
Is that correct?
MR. BARTON: That's the estimate, yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Wow!
Okay. Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Haste makes waste. And I
understand that the impact of Mr. Feder's observations, but I quite
frankly think he's right.
You know, is there anybody here who can tell us what the
configurations of the intersections are going to be with the toll lanes
and all the other lanes developed?
I don't think so.
And I think if you start building part of this thing without giving
consideration to its final configuration, we're going to get into more
delays and more budgeting problems and more cost overruns, more
change orders than we really ever want to think about.
Just imagine having toll lanes on the inside, you know, the
median. Where are people going to get off? How do you get off of a
toll lane in the middle of the road if you want to exit at Immokalee
Road? You have to build an elevated ramp to go over the outside
lanes?
I don't know. But if you're going to do that, you better plan on
building it first rather than going back and tearing up everything later.
And I would be very reluctant to proceed in a way which is
designed to get something done quickly without thinking this whole
thing through.
There should be a design of this entire roadway, at least a
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conceptual design of this entire roadway with all of the anticipated
improvements before the first decision is made about which lanes you
want to build.
It is just crazy to proceed in any other way and if it means you
spend a little more money up front getting a good design and a good
clear understanding of the configurations of all of these interceptions
and the ramps, entrance and exit ramps, that are going to be required,
you know, we really need to do that now.
We can't -- we can't wait and put in two lanes and think about
that later on. It's just -- just crazy.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Well, I've got a question to ask. I don't
know if the expressway authority has looked at this, but as we know,
we're in desperate need to do something with 1-75 as far as widening
it.
And I think that what Commissioner Coyle brought to the table is
very viable. I believe that the cost right now with just six laning that, I
think we're looking at about $490 million; correct?
MR. BARTON: Four sixty-nine, I think is the number, but --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
MR. BARTON: -- that's right ballpark.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: And then with the additional billion
dollars to replace all the interchanges and the bridges, that's a huge bill
at the present time.
And to tear up the expressway twice, I wonder if we've given it
really some serious thought about as an interim time is looking at State
Road 82 and 29 to see what we can do to work that out as a safety
valve for 75 so -- so that we can take this huge major undertaking and
get it all done at once?
And in the meantime, maybe look at State Road 82-29 and see if
what we can do to accelerate that as a safety valve, because when we
start tearing this thing, whole -- whole thing apart, we're going to need
someplace to direct that traffic when we start getting into that kind of
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June 23, 2006
a thing.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Mr. Feder, I'm going to ask you
back up again. 29, 82, the way the process is going -- it's for you.
The way is process is going -- tell them to stop calling.
The way the process is going, if you know 29, you know 82,
even if they put it in the fast mode at what point in time could we
expect to see that road four lane, six lane, whatever, all the way from
Fort Myers back down to 29 and 75?
MR. FEDER: We're just starting up a project involved in an
environment study. As you know, that's the first of about a
six-to-eight-year process typically.
And that has some issues associated with it relative to habitat and
other items as you heard the other day.
So, if you're asking me if there's really fast track, all the moneys
were there and the intent to get it done five to six years at the earliest
and probably more likely eight to ten.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So, in other words, five to six
years wait there before we could kick into the -- the next mode, which
would be go back and be able to start the whole project at 75.
Now, none of these ideas are bad. But the truth of the matter is
that there's more here than meets the eye. There's such things design
and build.
And Bill will tell you, too, that we're already thinking about the
fact that when they get the right-of-way for the -- this road and they
start to build it, regardless of what they do, they're going to get the
right-of-way for six lanes. They're going to build all the drainage
ponds for six lanes.
MR. BARTON: Actually for ten -- ten lanes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: For the ten lanes, ten lanes.
They're going to have provisions put in it. And I mean this is
very early. In order for us to get to the next step, we need to have a
staff, we need to be able to have a mechanism to be able to make it
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June 23, 2006
work.
We can talk about the design of this road until we're blue in the
face up here, and we're never going to settle a thing. This is why you
got an authority in place, but the authority can't function if it doesn't
have the dollars --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: We understand that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- to be able to go forward.
I just want to bring it up. There's more to it than meets the eye.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Well, Bill made that very clear what he's
looking for. And we're just kind of adding to the -- the idea that, you
know, I understand what he's up against and that we're trying to
address that.
Commissioner Coletta.
MR. BARTON: In -- in my closing the gentlemen -- ladies and
gentlemen, and I do appreciate you allowing me to be here today.
I'm going to follow up just a moment on Commissioner Coyle's
thought process that if we get too fast, we're going to hurt ourselves.
And Commissioner Coletta will vouch for me when I said that at
the last authority meeting it was moi that suggested that we should not
take off the table the possibility of delaying that six year -- or six
laning for a year.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Exactly.
MR. BARTON: And Mr. Feder shared with me just briefly the
concept he just presented here and that is that perhaps we ought to be
giving serious thought to the first phase of construction including the
four toll lanes.
Then you end up with eight lanes at the end of that initial
construction period. It will greatly enhance the revenue side because
the -- the desire to use those two toll lanes, which are voluntary, is
going to be increased because they'll be offset by two free lanes
instead of three free lanes.
I'll tell you, that concept to me has a lot of forward thinking in it,
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June 23, 2006
and I will assure the commissioners that a lot more thought has been
given to it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And -- and -- I'm sorry. It's not my
turn yet, is it?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. And you're saying that
didn't get a lot of support on the --
MR. BARTON: No. That concept has not been breached -- or
broached before the authority at this point.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's why I think it's -- it's very
important when we're -- we're getting ready to make a decision soon
about $775,000 for one year of funding to help the toll way authority
move ahead.
I'm -- I'm -- I'm interested in -- in trying to define the scope of the
work that will be done with that money and what deliverables are we
going to get.
And -- and where I'm really going there is at least a conceptual
sketch of this project, that -- that shows a sketch of the -- of the -- of
the toll lanes integrated with the additional free lanes, all of the
intersections for the entire length of the project, so that people begin to
get an understanding of how these things can best be integrated. The
engineers can visualize this stuff fairly well. Others have great
difficulty with it. And -- and I -- I really am -- I've seen lots of these
projects on the ground, as have you, and I have seen lots of them that
do not work very well, where you have to bring the toll lanes to an
end, have them merge with the free lanes, work their way across two
or three lanes of traffic to exit at a conventional intersection, that
defeats feats the purpose of having a very fast toll lane to get from
point A to point B and then you slow down and you -- you're tied up
in traffic for 30 minutes trying to work your way to an intersection.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: We're just here right now just to figure
out if we're going to give him the funding.
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June 23, 2006
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, no. No. It's more than that,
because if we say, here, take $775,000 and go away--
CHAIRMAN HALAS: We're not going to say go away.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- without -- without specifying
what we would like to have done with this.
And I -- I'm sure you don't intend it. It's just going to be office
expenses.
MR. BARTON: No. No, sir. In fact, I can provide you with a
thumbnail sketch, and a significant amount of those dollars go to
traffic and revenue studies, which are imperative.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
MR. BARTON: And once that money is spent, although it's
spent in the year 2006, you don't have to go spend it again in 2008.
Now, you may have to update it in 2008 with additional and new
traffic revenue -- or traffic condition information, but to update it is a
small amount compared to the original.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But -- but in order to do that,
wouldn't it be beneficial to you to know whether you're going to build
two toll lanes initially, at least concurrently with the addition of the
other two free lanes?
MR. BARTON: Well, commissioner, I think you reverse it
though.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. BARTON: My inclination right now is that what we ought
to be doing -- asking for a revenue -- a traffic and revenue study is to
look at both, because the study itself is likely to aim you in the proper
direction rather than to guess at the proper direction and go do a study
to justify it.
You know, that makes little sense to me. But to say, look, here
are two concepts. We need both of them looked at.
That helps us then to define which of the two is the more
appropriate.
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June 23, 2006
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Now, the -- the Florida Toll Way
Commission, I believe, conducted a study, a feasibility study. They
were supposed to provide the results. I think they did.
MR. BARTON: They did, yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And, now, to what extent does that
fail to meet your needs?
MR. BARTON: That -- that study is -- was done in-house by
them, and it's much less detailed than the study we would do.
And it was aimed at one thing. It was aimed at whether or not
this facility would satisfy state law that would allow that the toll road
authority to actually build it. That was their objective.
Our objective is totally different. Our objective is how much is it
going to cost, at what point in time, and how much revenue can we
expect at that point in time?
That then tells us how much money we're going to have to get
from other sources to get this project accomplished.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Why don't we do this? Why don't we
have you come forward with an idea in which you are proposing and
then maybe we can have a workshop early in the fall and go into
further discussion in regards to exactly, you know, some of the
concepts and ideas.
Does everybody agree with that?
MR. BARTON: Well, commissioner, not -- not to push you, but
I will tell you that it's our hope that this funding can be available to us
in the fall rather than start to consider whether or not it's available --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yeah.
MR. BARTON: -- or not.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I understand where you're coming from.
But I think in order instead of taking up time up here, what we
need to do is you come forward and -- and give us a -- basically a
blueprint of what you need. I'm sure that the commission here will
take a look at it.
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June 23, 2006
But then, let's say after you get the funding, you can sit down
with us at a workshop and have the expressway authority sit down
with us at a workshop, so we can kind of hash this all out and catapult
with some --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I think--
CHAIRMAN HALAS: -- ideas.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I think that's an excellent idea,
but in order to be able to come up with the ideas and some data, we
need to be able to have a staff. At present we've got two people that
are on loan to us and --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: But you didn't listen to what I said. I
said, we -- if he comes up with a proposal just basically what the
outline is, what -- why -- what they're going to do with the 750,000, I
think we can make a determination from that to say, yes, you need the
money and let's go forward.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: But the problem is our budget
year starts October 1 st and the decision has to be made by the -- by
September what?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I think what I said is that ifhe comes
forward with a proposal of exactly what they're going to do with the
cash outlay of the money, we can then say, yes, we're going to put that
into the equation for the budget to start in the cycle of October the 1 st.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So, in other words, I ask for the
money to be put on the UFR list with the idea that we can still make
our decision come September.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's exactly right.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's acceptable.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
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June 23, 2006
MR. BARTON: Let me tell you what -- what we had hoped and
envisioned, and that is that we could get an expression of intent from
both the Lee County and the Collier County commission sufficient to
cause us to be able to start thinking about and looking for an
executive-director as a for instance.
If we felt fairly comfort --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Can't do that today.
MR. BARTON: No. I understand that.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yeah.
MR. BARTON: But if we, within the next month or so, felt
fairly comfortable that those funds were going to become available in
the next budget cycle, then it's not inappropriate for us to advertise
now and begin the interview processes.
And as you well know when you're hiring that kind of an
individual, 60 to 90 days is absolutely necessary. We've got to get
some resumes in, we've got to interview some people.
But on the day that those funds become available, I'd like to hit
the ground running, because if we don't, I'm going -- I'm telling you
right now, the window of opportunity is going to go away and we'll be
stuck then with six laning first and the additional four laning later.
That's just the way it is.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Henning.
MR. BARTON: So, if we lose two to three months right now,
that takes away about 25 percent of the time we've got before FDOT is
prepared to let a contract.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I thought I had a solution
to this problem, but after I heard the executive summary, I'm -- I'm
going to keep quiet.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I don't know why we can't make a
decision in July.
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June 23, 2006
MR. BARTON: That would be perfect.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You know, that to me--
MR. BARTON: And -- and, as I said, even if it's nothing more
than a -- than a very strong intent, then I don't feel bad going out in the
marketplace and asking people to spend their time and effort to get us
resumes and us to spend time and effort to begin to review those, so
that we can hit the ground running when the new budget year begins.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You know, if -- if you could do as
__ as Commissioner Halas has suggested is provide us essentially a
budget or a forecast and --
MR. BARTON: We will do that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- define the scope of the work
that's going to be done in the deliverable and -- and we -- we're back
in July, late July, to have a meeting concerning the budget.
We'll set the millage at that point in time, which means we'll --
we should know by that point in time what we're going to fund as far
as UFRs are concerned, so I don't know why we can't make a decision
like that at that point in time.
Is there any reason?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: We don't do the final-- we don't do the
final UFR list until September, my understanding.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, if we set the -- if we set the
millage -- well, that won't affect this year's budget. That's right.
MR. MUDD: Sir, if -- if -- if I may.
What I'll have is transportation have an executive summary with
this back -- I'm going to use Mr. Don Scott since he's wearing two hats
and I'll put it under the county manager's side of the house so that
you'll have that particular piece, and at that time we'll ask you at that
time to add it to the budget, okay?
And then at that juncture you'll have what you want is some kind
of a -- a firm commitment from the board and -- and then we can do it
that way.
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June 23, 2006
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. If I may?
The -- we're going to need a course to help with our staff and our
budget department, and we'll have to be able to direct the county
manager to be able to do that, to work in conjunction with the Lee
County elements, too. We've got to get a buy-in from them.
Of course, I would assume that's going to be one of the
conditions if we ever get to the point for approval that the Lee County
commission be there with the equal amount and equal commitment.
But, meanwhile, in order for it to happen, we do need staff to be
able to have it be done; the only staff available, of course, the existing
staff that's in Collier County or Lee County.
MR. BARTON: And for your information, Commissioners, I -- I
am currently scheduled to speak to Lee County commission next
Tuesday.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Good.
MR. BARTON: And Commissioner Halas, on your suggestion
of a workshop, I would not only be willing to do that, I would
embrace the idea.
It's imperative from -- from my point of view and I think I speak
for the authority that both commissions be intimate parts in this
process because this is -- this is your backyard. So, I want -- I want
you --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: You can have it.
MR. BARTON: I want input from you and I want you to know
everything I know about this process as it goes forward.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: We could have both commissions
together, a workshop and that--
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Bill--
MR. BARTON: That would be great.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- share with my commissioners
the concern I had when the proposal was first brought up and what I
said we had to do.
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June 23, 2006
MR. BARTON: The commissioner said we needed to move
forward as quickly as possible.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And bring it to this commission.
MR. BARTON: Bring it to this commission.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Not that I want to put words in
your mouth, you know.
MR. BARTON: That's precisely what he suggested.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
Well, I'll just weigh in as long as others are weighing in and I'll
just say 775 is a very little price to pay to get this thing up and rolling
in a timely manner and for us all to be able to use that road years
sooner.
So, I -- I think that -- you know, I agree with everything that the
other commissioners have said, but it's -- it's -- it's good that you're --
you're taking the -- the high road right now and getting this thing
started early and I'm glad we're going to have the workshop to discuss
everything that can be done.
And like Commissioner Coy Ie says, he wants to know exactly
what it's for, but if it's all that we think it's going to be, it's going to be
__ you know, imperative that we do it first and quickly.
MR. BARTON: Thank you, commissioners.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Thank you, Bill. Appreciate it.
Next speaker, please.
MS. FILSON : Your final speaker is Ron Wallace from the City
of Naples.
MR. WALLACE: Ron Wallace, Director of Construction
Management for the City of Naples.
I'm here this afternoon at a request of the city manager following
up on a request he had made to the county manager regarding entering
into a funding partnership with the city on three separate capital
improvement projects that benefit both city and county residents.
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June 23, 2006
I'm not sure if any of you have seen this request or the dollar
amounts. Basically, the three projects are improvements to Sandpiper
Street, a connection of the Gordon River green way from the airport to
the new Pulling Park that's proposed on the west side of the river, and
a new rec center at Fleischmann Park.
I can go through each one of these items and give you some idea
of what -- what they are, and what the impacts are and the costs if you
haven't had a chance to look at them.
But, quite frankly, I'm not sure how much information you have
been provided.
MR. MUDD: Ron, they've got the letter that was sent on the
15th of June --
MR. WALLACE: Okay. Thank you.
MR. MUDD: -- within a day of my receipt.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Any questions from commissioners?
You have nothing else to bring forward, well, we're going to take
it under advisement.
MR. WALLACE: Okay. We do have other city staffhere. We
are requesting a 50 percent match as is stated in the letter. The city
has budgeted for design and construction.
The -- just -- real brief. Just to add something to this to maybe --
you can consider Sandpiper Street is a city -- is a street that runs
through the city and the county.
Approximately a third of it is inside the city limits, another third
of it is split between the city and the county where the county is
responsible for maintenance.
It is the right-of-way has been -- or the right-of-way maintenance
has been deeded to the county. The southern third of it is primarily in
the county.
The Gordon River green way obviously is a connection from the
county to the city, and it will be used by a number of visitors and
residents. And it's part of an overall plan that I think we're all
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June 23, 2006
involved with, with a number of other groups.
The last item though, I would like to mention Fleischmann Park.
Obviously, with all of the growth that is happening throughout the
county, that park has been impacted tremendously.
The city has already spent upwards of five to $6 million in
improvements there, and we're proposing another four to $5 million
for a new rec center.
So, we have committed up to $10,000,000 and what we're asking
for here is basically a $2 million contribution to that rec center, which
is utilized primarily by county residents as well as city residents.
But I think the percent is 75 percent of that -- of the use there is
by county residents.
So, we appreciate your consideration.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: And if we get in with the cost share then,
will there be -- will it be equitably between the city and the
unincorporated area of the citizens so that the unincorporated areas of
citizens aren't paying an additional burden?
MR. WALLACE: Yes. I believe that if there is a partnership,
then that takes out that the -- the concern that city residents are paying
and county residents are using at the same rate. That has been a
discussion on --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Right now --
MR. WALLACE: -- other programs.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: -- I think the county residents are paying
more than the city residents as far as the use of it; is that correct?
MR. WALLACE: Correct, yes. If the fund -- yes. If there's a
partnership, then that obviously offsets that, yes.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Great. Okay. Thank you.
Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Just a point. I've seen the June
letter, but it's not in this packet. Was it supposed to be in this packet?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. What I was trying -- I had a request that
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June 23, 2006
came in after you already went -- or you already received this book.
And I -- you have a presentation and I'm looking for the board's
direction to add this to the unfinanced requirement list, so that you
have it into your consideration.
And that's what I'm -- what I'm trying to get to.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So -- but it's not incorporated in
anything we have in this book.
MR. MUDD: No. The only thing that's -- the only thing of this
particular item that's in here is you have a $500,000 line item for
Fleischmann Park and that was based on a previous letter from Mr.
Lee to me.
It went to in front of the -- that particular request went to the pay
rab, and the pay rab, they recommended that the county fund that
$500,000. So, it's there on the list.
There are -- there are a couple of items here that have to do with
the pay rab. When this is over, I'm going to go to my parks and recs
director and basically get them to discuss those particular items, okay,
because that's your committee that does parks and rec, fees and -- and
-- and plans in order to get that done.
But I want to make sure that the board is giving me direction to
add this to the unfinanced requirement listing. Then I will add it to it
and I'll bring it back to you in September with that complete listing.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But is the $500,000 that is -- that is
in this proposed budget duplicative of the $500,000 that's being
requested by the city today?
MR. MUDD: No. They're asking for a million dollars more on
top of the 500,000.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Okay.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: The other question I have for the county
__ or the county manager is there's a letter dated March 30th, 2006.
And it says in that, the city is requesting a contribution from the
Collier County in the amount of $6,100,500 to assist in Phase I and
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June 23, 2006
Phase 2 of the Fleischmann Park master plan.
Is that what your -- some of your requests also, sir?
MR. WALLACE: No. The city has gone ahead and done that
work and it is almost complete. This is a request specifically for the
rec center.
I believe the -- was there funding? I'm sorry. I need to just ask
Dave Lichens (phonetic), the Director of Community Services, if there
was any money contributed towards that, but -- now, the city had gone
ahead and done that work, that Phase I, which was basically site
improvements, and this second phase is for the rec center itself.
So, this request is for the construction of the rec center.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
MR. WALLACE: And if you do not have the specifics of this
letter that break it down, I -- I'll be sure to leave a copy with it,
because it's important. And if you don't, I'll-- I'll be able to -- I would
be glad to explain them.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I believe the county manager's got a
copy. He'll make sure that we get a copy of that, sir.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But just -- just so that you can say
one more time, you wanted how much for what thing? Just -- just list,
you know.
MR. WALLACE: Okay. Sandpiper Street improvements, which
are roadway enhancement and beautification of Sandpiper Street from
Curlew to Marlin Drive, the construction estimate is $2 million, the
design budget is $200,000, and we're asking for a 50 percent match.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Of the -- of the design?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: 2 million plus the design.
MR. WALLACE: The request is for both.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So, what is that total, please?
MR. WALLACE: 2.2 million or 50 percent of 1.1 million.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Go ahead.
MR. SMYKOWSKl: Just for clarification though, the -- the
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June 23, 2006
letter does indicates that the construction of $2 million is planned for
fiscal year '07-08 in the city letter, so --
MR. WALLACE: That's correct. That is correct. Weare
budgeting for design for all three of these projects this year and
construction the following year.
The Gordon River green way, we have $200,000 budgeted this
current year to do the design. Weare in the process of negotiating a
contract with a consultant.
That will be fully funded by the city. The request is for 50
percent of the construction estimate, which is $1 million for the
following year, or $500,000.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
MR. WALLACE: And Fleischmann Park, we have budgeted
$400,000 next year for the design of the rec center with the intent of
budgeting four million the following year for construction, and again
we request 50 percent for both.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Any other questions from our
commissioners? No.
Thank you very much.
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I -- I spoke to the county
manager during lunch break, and there's some possibilities of funding
some of these things, and I just might want to add to that the
anticipated gas taxes. I mean, the gas taxes and the shared revenue
from the state.
Those funds really can be used to take care of some of these
unfunded requirements.
If you remember during the budget guidance, the county
managers said -- gave guidance -- we gave guidance, 12 percent to the
constitutional officers, and it was stated that we can stay within 12
percent as long as we didn't have some unfunded mandates coming
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June 23, 2006
from the state and the federals.
It's the same thing. The mandates are the same thing.
So, really, we should be, in my opinion, that 12 percent increase
and if we could stay into that, I think that we can hold our heads up
high, at least I can, and say we still increased access taxes but, you
know, overall, if you take a look at it, we double the -- the moneys for
roads, we're going to house the -- the judges, we've got tons of
stormwater projects that we didn't do it in the previous time.
But I do want to comment on one thing, and some of the folks
that says we have the lowest millage rate, well, we may have the
lowest millage rate, but our -- we're second in the state as far as
taxation per capita for the total county.
I mean, I -- I just want to commend the county manager for doing
a good job of staying -- even though you're at a 16, I'm sure we can
get down closer to 12 and still provide some of these unfunded
mandates within some of the things that we're discovering.
But, county manager, if you want to just share a little bit of what
we found during our break.
MR. MUDD: We had conversation with Commissioner Henning
and he made a -- a statement, and I wish this was bigger, and I -- and
I'm going to blame our state lobbyist not being bigger.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Cut and paste he did.
MR. MUDD: Yeah. Remember, he cut and pasted and that's
what I got.
So, remember your -- your budget books or, excuse me, your post
legislative workshop that you had, and -- and Norm Feder is here, and
I believe Marla Ramsey or your library director is here.
I could talk to a couple of issues. But the first point, I went down
the appropriation. Commissioner Henning made a statement that the
appropriations that were supplied to us by our lobbyist weren't in the
budget.
And -- and I went over this morning and -- and checked these till
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June 23, 2006
__ and notched them all down, which one was state, which was South
Florida Water Management District, Big Cypress, which one was
schools, which one had to do with the children's museum.
And there's two items on the list, one of which is at the very top,
and you can see a line that says, waiting for a contract. That had to do
County Road 951, Collier Boulevard from County Road 890, which
Pine Ridge Road to Golden Gate Boulevard.
And it says, add lanes and reconstruct, and there is a state
allocation of $4.9 million and change that's there.
And as soon as Norman has that contract from the state, then he
adds that particular amount of money into his budget in order to get
that construction done.
And Norman can talk a little bit about that, I believe, on how that
process works.
The -- the last item on that list talks about the South Regional
Library, library construction project, and that's $500,000.
And when Miss Mathis briefed yesterday, she mentioned that
when we get the letter; i.e., the contract from the state, that's when she
adds that particular item to her work program, and she can talk about
how that gets added into the particular process.
Commissioner Henning mentioned that in our discussions right
after you broke for lunch were, is there -- is there an opportunity to
offset ad valorem dollars in these two particular accounts.
I -- I -- I can tell you in the South Regional Library, I don't
believe that's the case because their budget's already pretty tight, but
I'm going to let Miss Mathis answer that question in more detail.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I don't think that they can
either on that grant, but --
MR. MUDD: And -- and -- and then Norm, if you could top that
particular item at the top.
MR. FEDER: The item at the top is for Golden Gate -- from
Pine Ridge up to Golden Gate Boulevard. It was a trips grant. It is a
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project that's going out in fiscal year '08, not necessarily in '07, which
is what we're dealing with in budget.
We didn't show it yet even in our work program, the five-year
work program, because we haven't gone through with all the funding.
That's one of the reasons in an outer year we pulled out Everglades
Boulevard as an example.
It's also an item that we get paid back. It's a reimbursement item.
So, in fiscal year '08 when we come back to you with a budget, we
should have exercised all the agreements that will be shown in there.
We'll modify our work program as well and present it at that
time, but until we have all the agreements, we don't show it. We can't
get reimbursement until after we've started the construction to get it
reimbursed.
So, most of it will be a fiscal year '08 to '09 before the money
realized, but once we have the agreements, we would reflect it in our
'08 budget request.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. My mistake. I thought
our lobbyist said that it was going to be this fiscal year that we would
receive those.
MR. FEDER: Originally they're looking at '07 dollars and the
trip money and they understood we asked for it to actually be put on
the section, which will be in '07, which is from Immokalee down to
Golden Gate Boulevard, and they said, no, they want to keep it on the
second section and they will allow it to move to the next year.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Well, be that as it may, the -- and
I -- I really feel the revenue sharing and gas taxes are going to come in
more. And I think that we can just tell the county manager to, you
know, bring back his recommendations on these UFR things and bring
that back in our -- in our meeting in July.
Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I don't have anything.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Oh, I thought you had.
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Is there any discussion from us?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I might have, but I can't remember.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No. I think that's a good idea. But
I -- I think there's -- there's a bit of clarification.
You made a minor adjustment to the UFR list. No. The funds
that were available for the UFR list is roughly $20 million if I
remember correctly.
MR. SMYKOWSKl: Yes, sir.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Now, one of your fundamental
assumptions was that you were going to propose a -- a millage rate
decrease, but please explain the -- the relationship between that
proposal and the $20 million roughly that will be available for
unfunded requests.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
Bear with me for just a second, please. I beg your -- all right.
This is -- this is about as ugly as you can --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Oh, that's pretty.
MR. MUDD: This not about -- this is about as--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You put a lot of work into this,
didn't you?
MR. MUDD: Well, if you can give me ten minutes, I can gussy
it up a little bit, but that isn't bad writing in between. And all I was
doing was searching for projects.
All right. And -- and let me try to explain. And it's my -- and one
good news thing is I didn't get a consultant to figure it out for me.
The --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Maybe you should have.
MR. MUDD: No. It's okay.
Commissioner, as I said yesterday, for -- for moneys that are
uncommitted at this particular time, and I -- and I made a clarification
to a newspaper article in the Naples Daily News that said that there
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was $23 million as far as the -- as far as uncommitted funds.
And I mentioned to you yesterday that it was more like $50
million.
Well, if you add those three figures together, it's 49. And, you
know, I didn't put the -- the -- the thousands of dollars off to the side,
so for this -- for this discussion, let's just say it's $50 million.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Is that what that says at the top
there?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It's 22.
MR. MUDD: It's 22 million, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Okay?
And the 25 percent to the 16 percent in those brackets, the
reduction -- the -- the increased assessed value of Collier County came
in at an average of 25.2 percent, 25.2 percent to go to 16 percent,
which is basically what was in your guidance.
And to -- and to -- would represent a $22 million decrease in the
budget. And that would go from a millage of about 3.87, and you see
it right there, going down to approximately 3.5.
And it -- and it comes out to be a .28 mill decrease.
That $22 million is not shown in your budget book, as I -- as I
described to you yesterday. I said, we prepared this budget based on
budget guidance. Okay?
The budget guidance said 16 percent and above, adjust the
millage rate, and it's a savings to the taxpayers and that's what you
wanted to see at budget time, and that's what we presented.
And everything, 16 percent and below, you have visibility on.
Okay. On your UFR list underneath the 16 percent, and that's
savings from interest, 16 percent and below, you have $20 million,
and it's $20.2 million on your UFR list, and I showed you that
yesterday, along with $7 million in your -- your unincorporated
millage fund, which is your MSTD fund.
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So, there's a total of $50 million out there that's uncommitted at
this particular time, of which we've discussed on your UFR list only
this portion, okay, which is the $27 million that you're shown.
There is still $22 million on top of that reoccurring money that
this board has the option to take if you follow the budget guidance that
you gave to the staff in March to reduce the millage from 3.87 to 3.5.
And Mike's got it right here, 3.5912, which equates to a .2860
millage rate reduction.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Just so -- if I could just
summarize so that I make sure I understand it correctly.
We -- we could take the $27 million that you have identified as
being available for unfunded requests and we could allocate that entire
$27 million to those unfunded requests if we desire to do so.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. And still give a--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: We would still be giving the tax
payers $22 million back.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. I just want that to be clear
to everybody who's listening. And there's no assurance that we want
to spend all the $27 million either. We might spend -- send some
more money back.
But -- but the way it sits right now, unless the board changes it,
we've got $22 million we're sending back to the taxpayers.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. All right.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. I -- I wanted to know -- just a
little side note.
A few years back I think we allocated money to the FP &L green
way and they were supposed to be building that and I don't know how
-- about $1.3 million.
I wonder what either happened to the green way or what
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happened to the money?
MR. FEDER: For the record, Norman Feder.
The green way is still a viable project. It's in design phase right
now. One thing we've experienced is an effort to try and get
easements throughout the length of that project and we're continuing
to work that through.
The other thing is helping put some of it and coordinating it with
the County Barn and the Oasa (phonetic) proj ect, but the proj ect is still
viable, still moving, but it is going to take longer to get all the
easements along that line than was originally anticipated.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I don't know if anybody
else remembers, but I do remember the county manager saying that he
thinks he can come in at 12 percent increase as long as we didn't have
any state mandates.
And that's what the minutes reflect and that's what
correspondence that I've received reflects.
So, if we could stay close to that, I'd be -- I'd be tickled pink.
And -- and still hammer away at some of these things.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think that's where we are.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: He wants to go down to 12 percent
instead of 16.
MR. MUDD: You're at 16 and Commissioner Henning is
requesting to go to 12. And what that would -- and what that would
do, okay, he's asking to drop four more percent, okay, on the rollback,
and that would be an additional -- this is a estimate on my part -- $10
million off of the general fund cut at $20 million that's sitting there.
Now, the -- the part that -- that I'm a little uncomfortable with is
that recommendation is if you'll -- if you'll look at where the money --
where the money sits, and most of -- and almost all of that $20 million
is one time funds that were interest from the Clerk and returned back
from the Sheriff.
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And, so, that's -- that's something that I'm going to have to dig
into a lot more to figure out exactly what it is. But it's about a $10
million additional.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, if it's one time, you can't
keep on giving it year and year. I mean, if you -- if you lower it, give
it back to the taxpayers and lower the millage rate, that's going to be
problem the following year; correct?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, that isn't -- that isn't what
we need to do.
But I'm just saying what I remember the guidance was and what
was said in the -- in the -- in the -- in the guidance part of the County
Commissioners' agenda, and that's what I heard.
But to -- to say we're going to lower it just one time, only to
increase it the following year, I'm not sure if that's the best thing, best
thing for us to do.
But if you can bring it back down as much as you can so you
have that reoccurring, I -- I still believe that you can hit some of those
things.
And I -- and, again, I think that we can all hold our heads high
and say, yeah, we did raise your taxes, but here's -- here's some --
some of the great things that we're doing like transportation, twice the
amount of budgeting that we did last year.
You know, there's a lot of good things in there.
Can we do better? Yeah. We sure can. I believe that we can.
And we should strive for that.
But, you know, the thing is, is -- is you need a super majority
vote on the -- on the budget and we need to work together. I've had a
mission and I know some of you have a mission and I'm -- I'm going
to change some of my philosophies to accommodate my colleagues,
but I need something in return.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coletta.
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COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, I guess the question is, is,
you know, what exactly don't we need in this world? What is our
priorities -- what are our priorities?
I think our priorities have always been roads. I don't think that's
ever changed. I believe that's still the same now. And we've been--
we've been pushing for a long time.
So, if we're going to cut, what are those things that our citizens
can live without? What's in that budget that we can take the fluff off
of that is not absolutely essential?
So, we're getting down to the ambiance that makes Collier
County special; the pathway, the parks, the maintenance of it.
I can remember before past commission -- commissioners cutting
budgets to the point they didn't have the money to be able to maintain
the parks, to be able to take care of the grass, take care of the
equipment that was there, just to be able t save a little bit on it.
Then you had to pay in the long run because eventually you have
to make a catchup on it. So, if we're going to come to the point that
we're going to cut, all fine and good. Let's get our priorities straight in
this world.
What is the most important thing that we have to do? Health,
safety and welfare is number one. The roads are very important. We
recognize it as the number one priority, and then we start working
backwards from there.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'm -- I'm very encouraged that --
that we can reach an agreement to substantially reduce taxes and still
get our work done, and all the essential work done.
But -- but we need some clarification not only for ourselves but
for the general public.
You know, we've talked about a budget that's roughly $1.1
billion, 1.1 billion, but only two hundred and what, sixty-seven
million of that, 267 million -- 276 million is ad valorem property
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taxes.
The rest of that money, and I'm sure the public does not
understand this, the difference between 1.1 billion and 276 million in
property taxes is enterprise funds, they're fees paid by developers,
they're impact fees and, yes, there are gas taxes and sales taxes in
there, but there are no property taxes in that difference.
So, when we're talking about reducing a property tax rate, we're
affecting only that $276 million increment of an $1.1 billion budget.
Now, I would say to -- to the public that you probably don't want
to reduce the difference because the difference is user fees, water and
sewer fees.
People have got to pay for those services. Developers have to pay
impact fees. Developers have to pay services to get permits processed
and to get inspections done.
Do you really want to reduce those? And I would suggest you
don't.
We should charge people the cost of providing the services that
we as a government provide. So, we -- we have to make sure we
understand the difference.
When you talk about a budget of $1.1 billion, much of that does
not come out of the pockets of taxpayers, and certainly none of it
comes out of the ad valorem property taxes.
Only the 276 million is -- is gathered by -- by payment of
property taxes.
So, now, to -- to get to the real issue, since we're talking about
property taxes, we're talking about whether or not you have utilized a
16 percent increase in property taxes in your budget or have you
utilized the 16 percent total increase of the $1.1 billion budget to
formulate your budget?
Did I make -- did I make any sense? Do you understand where --
what I'm talking about?
So, just tell me which one we did, the 16 percent of property
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taxes.
MR. MUDD: Yes.
MR. FEDER: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Okay? But the budget --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Right.
MR. MUDD: -- lay the budget on everyone was to try to hold
the line at 12 percent across the board --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes.
MR. MUDD: -- on everything.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes.
MR. MUDD: Okay? And I provided you those numbers on
Page 2 to let you see that I've done that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. You know, let me --let me
deal just a minute with the concept that we need to keep all this money
so that we can build infrastructure and particularly roads because we
need roads pretty badly.
We can get there without keeping all this money. We don't have
to delay roads. We can still get the roads built, okay, and we'll talk
about that in a minute.
But if -- if you -- if you take all this money from property taxes
and you push it into road construction, next year what Amy Patterson
will have to do is she'll have to give credits for all the impact fee
calculations for any ad valorem property taxes that were used for
growth related infrastructure development.
Am I right?
MR. MUDD: You are right unless you set up an instrument that
says that it is a loan to that impact fee and to be repaid --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: They have to pay it back.
MR. MUDD: And paid back by that impact fee.
And we've become very good at setting up those instruments --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: -- so that -- so that we don't get into our -- we don't
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get into the credit issue.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. So, it's very important that
we understand that risk. If we get involved in that, we could very well
impact our future impact fees.
Now, the best -- the really simple way to do this whole thing is
the way we discussed earlier today. Let's get more of this stuff done
through developer contribution agreements.
If growth is going to pay for growth, then let's have it pay for
growth.
Right now we're paying for 30 percent of that with ad valorem
property taxes.
Increasing that percentage in my estimation is not a good thing to
do for our taxpayers. So -- so, I believe we can get the roads built, we
can get them built on time by using developer contribution agreements
and -- and still refund some of these taxes to our taxpayers.
I don't think we should feel obligated to spend all of the money
that we get just because the taxpayers' property values went up.
And I would -- I would say one thing. We -- we didn't really
increase the property taxes of our -- of our residents.
What happened was that we have created a county together
where property values have increased, so our homeowners' property
values have increased, their wealth has been increased and their taxes
went up, but not because we raised them.
So, I think we ought to give them some money back by -- by
reducing the millage rate. And I guess now it's just a debate about
how much.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Why don't we take a 15-minute break
and we'll start off with Commissioner Fiala, Commissioner Henning
and then it will be Commissioner Coletta when we return.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I think Commissioner Henning was
before me.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
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(A recess was had.)
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. Let's go.
MR. MUDD: Mr. Chairman, you have a hot mic.
Ladies and gentlemen, please take your seats.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Thank you very much, county manager.
We're back out of recess and hopefully we can get this taken care of so
-- and we've had a long, long week here, so --
MR. MUDD: Okay. The -- I need you to turn to Page 4 of the
general overview and -- and also look at Page 5.
And in the budget guidance, to be specific -- where is it at, Mike?
Okay. It says general fund millage rate, FY07 budget policies. And
FY07 general fund ad valorem tax revenues will be capped at a
maximum increase of 16 percent.
Any increase above 16 percent in taxable value will result in a
millage rate reduction.
While there has been a cooling in the local real estate market, the
taxable value for FY07 will be based on market activity during
calendar year 2005, which was the height of the local real estate
market.
And then there's a table that basically shows where it -- where the
different rates are underneath.
General fund budget allocation, that the board continues to
budget policy limiting general fund agency budget appropriations to --
to no more than their respective percentage in the adopted FY07 fund
budget and that's basically the pie with the maximum agency budget
increase of 12 percent.
This will provide the board with some discretionary funding.
Tax revenues between 12 percent and 16 percent increase and taxable
value to address special needs, the portion of the Caribbean Garden
purchase above $40 million or unfunded mandates from the state or
federal governments.
And I believe that's what Commissioner Henning was alluding to
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in that particular case.
I believe my comments on the record and -- and this is from
memory now. We talked about state unfunded mandates and the
discretion -- and the discretionary items of the Board of County
Commissioners.
And so that was laid on. So, when -- when we put Page 4 in your
book -- when we put Page 4 in your book, we're basically following
that guidance and laying out everything above 16 percent to -- to be
rolled back.
And that's a recommended tax rollback of $22,006,158 and the
proposed millage rate for FY07 following your guidance of 3.5912.
If you now take a look at Page 5, you will see all the millage
rates.
I have to blow this up a little bit.
You will see all the millage rates laid out based on that budget
guidance. First line, general fund, decrease from 3.8772 to 3.5912,
which is a $28.60 reduction per hundred thousand taxable value on
your home.
Water pollution control, 114.
Mr. Ray Smith briefed you yesterday and he basically said in his
comments that -- that his millage rate would go from .0347 to .0321.
And Mr. Smith based his budget on 16 percent, and he put some
moneys into his reserve account in case he has some of his high priced
equipment that breaks down, because he didn't have much there.
So, that would be a reduction of 7.5 percent.
The other areas, the unincorporated general fund would remain
the same, and you can see on the list of proposed millage rates and the
changes from the previous year on all the other MSTUs and fire
control districts that the county has on that particular chart.
What -- what I'm needing as a county manager is what do you
want me to come back to you through Mr. Smykowski on the 25th of
July to set the upper limit rate to the millage? And that -- that is
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important.
Remember, I said in my previous conversation today. I said,
once you set that rate, you can't go above it. So, if you decide to cut
some, then there's where you are and that's where you stand when you
do your September budgets.
Now, if you want to decrease more in September off of that
millage, then you have that opportunity to do so.
Staffs recommendation following your guidance is provided on
the overhead.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Start with the questions that were -- or
commissioners that had questions before the break and starting with
Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No. Commissioner Henning
was first, Fiala --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- and then I was last.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. I'm -- I'm going to
answer the question also because I -- I really need to leave here
shortly.
You have a substantial amount that's not reoccurring; correct?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. And I have to go back and scrub that.
And I --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right.
MR. MUDD: -- I need to get that done.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Whatever is not reoccurring,
apply that to the UFR list, make recommendations. That's a -- you
know, I'm in favor of it, because again it doesn't make sense to use
that -- those nonrecurring to lower the millage rate even more only to
raise it the next year. Okay?
The -- the next thing, I -- I want to correct something that Mr.
Feder corrected me on about his capital improvement plan.
It hasn't doubled, but it is 200,000 -- $200 million, what's
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appropriated, and it probably will be adopted and it will probably be
amended up.
That depends on the projects that he comes forward during--
during the mid year.
But I want to -- I want to correct something that was said. And I
don't want to give anybody the impression that we're cutting services.
In fact, we're increasing services by $200 million over last year.
That's -- that's not coming off of property taxes as Commissioner
Coyle pointed out, but we're not cutting services like that that was
stated. We're increasing services.
So, with that, I -- I hope my colleagues answers -- gives the
county managers some guide -- that guidance so we can move on.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
I -- I was pretty impressed that the millage rate is dropping and
yet we could still have such a good budget and still answer the needs
for our community, and I -- and I really think you prompted that drop,
and I -- in fact, I'm sure of it. I'm delighted to see that. I think that
that's good, yet it still gives us some UFRs there.
And Commissioner Coletta was talking about the roads. I think
he's right, but I had a couple of questions about that.
On -- on this UFR list, there -- there were quite a few things for
transportation.
Say, for instance -- and -- and I have it all marked as something
that I would like to see you first go for by the way every single -- I
think every single one of them.
But I wanted to know if then if we approved like the five million
for the lime rock conversion and if we approved the 10 million for the
right-of-way acquisition fund, that doesn't have anything to do with
the impact fees; right?
We -- that would not then affect us at all; right?
MR. MUDD: No, because the right-of-way acquisition fund that
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you would put forward --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
MR. MUDD: -- would be a loan to Norman, and when the
impact fees came in for that particular road, he would repay where --
that right-of-way acquisition fund. And, so, it's basically you're
establishing a revolving fund, where there's money initially outlaid.
Norman has a loan. And when his impact fees come in, he replaces
those dollars.
So, it's -- it's always a $10 million revolving fund in that
particular case.
MR. FEDER: And that would be on the right-of-way and -- and
to add to that on the lime rock, that isn't an impact fee issue anyway.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right. Right. And I knew that.
I just wanted to --
MR. FEDER: Yes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- state that up front because that's --
that's something else that's on here and yet I think it's much needed.
If we -- if we -- Commissioner Henning was talking about cutting
it to 12 percent. Are still saying that?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What I said was there's a
substantial amount of moneys that are not reoccurring, substantial
amount of moneys.
Apply those to the UFR list and whatever is -- it is reoccurring,
reduce the -- the millage.
MR. MUDD: Sir, and I'd like to -- I'd like to take that particular
guidance in digestible doses for -- for my particular case because I've
got to be able -- I am -- I am certain without a shadow of a doubt that
everything above 16 percent that I've provided on this -- on that slide
right there that you got on the overhead right now is all reoccurring
and you can roll that back and you cannot have -- and you will not
have a problem in Collier County for this next FY.
I can -- I -- beyond a shadow of a doubt, over and -- but when
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you want me to go into the UFR list right now, based on what I've
seen and where the dollars are coming from, I have to do some more
homework. I have to dig into this budget some more in order to find
that out.
So, if the board is going to make a recommendation today for the
25th of July for Mike to -- to come forward, my recommendation is
you do what's on this chart that's on the overhead right now that's on
Paragraph 5 of your thing.
I will go back and look at this UFR list and scrub the heck out of
it and -- and where the moneys are coming from, so I can provide to
you the first meeting in -- in September those things that are
reoccurring as far as dollars, revenues coming in, and -- and not -- and
then we can get at Commissioner Henning's particular case if those
dollars are reoccurring, you want to roll back on those particular
items.
So be it. That's your discretion.
But I -- I -- I would hope you wouldn't make that decision today,
that you would go with what's on the chart for 16 that I'm very, very
comfortable with and then let me get in there.
And if you go below 16 today, I -- you get in my uncomfort
zone. That -- and I'm not saying you need to make me comfortable.
I'm just telling you I want to do the right thing for Collier County and
I -- and I don't want to roll back on one time money because that's a
big mistake.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Okay. I'm not -- I'm just
going to repeat myself briefly.
The reason I was looking for the excess funds because beyond
knowing that's going to be coming in future years. Contingency fund
where you put it in there not to offset developers' contributions. I
think we've done an excellent job in Collier County with developer
contributions and we're not going to change that format in the future.
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However, that's said. I can see that that's not going to be the way
it's going to be.
I do have extreme concerns that we take a budget that's been all
put together on the guidance and we're talking about additional
rollbacks and then putting stuff on the UFR list to compete with items
that are very much needed, and I -- I see that raising all sorts of
problems.
As much as I don't like it, I could accept the budget as it is with
the budget guidance.
As far as 16 percent being the hallmark, 12 percent -- unless you
can show me what particular items, and I think the budget guidance
shouldn't be so much reoccurring funds or whatever. It should be by
priorities.
Those items that aren't required to whatever -- ever elements that
we want to come up with. What items are the fluff that we got in there
that are over and above our annual reports that we do, what are the
items that we're going to remove, that's fine. Let's go for it. Keep the
priorities where they have to be.
If we get to that point that we're going to cut, we need to really
go into it and look at what we're going to remove from it.
As it is today right now, I'm willing to accept the -- the cap of the
16 percent rollback too, but I -- I won't go with giving guidance for the
12 percent. I think that sends a mixed message that may lead us the
wrong way.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I'm in favor of what you come up with as
far as the budget guidance of limiting the rollback to 16 percent from
the 25 percent.
Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I -- I support the budget as it
-- as it is now, but -- but I -- I -- I do believe that we should give the
county manager flexibility to conduct an analysis to determine if there
are future savings available. Okay?
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June 23, 2006
And -- and have the -- what we have here as the maximum
budget, we'll -- we'll -- we'll roll it back and send 22 million back to
the taxpayers.
MR. MUDD: For sure.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: For sure. And then you will
analyze recurring and nonrecurring revenues and come back with us --
come back to us with a report as to what you think you can do with
some of that.
And -- and we might then have the option of using it for
unfunded mandates or turning that back to -- to the -- the taxpayers.
MR. MUDD: An additional roll--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. Additional rollback.
MR. MUDD: You'll be able to do that in September.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And -- and we'll just make that
decision at that point in time based upon what you tell us.
But -- but could I take just a minute, and I don't want to -- want
to get into big -- a big discussion about this, so if this is controversial
to the other members, just tell me and I -- I'll stop it.
But -- but I -- I still have a problem with us competing in the
EMS and fire department business with fire departments that have
EMS capabilities.
I -- I would like to feel that we're getting -- we're going to get out
of that business pretty quickly and that we ought to move ahead and
see if we can't get an agreement with the fire departments to
consolidate their operations, not under us.
Consolidate their operations. We give EMS to them. We have a
separate fire board and centralized management and -- and save
taxpayers a ton of money and get us out of the business of managing
independent fire departments and, in fact, competing with -- I'm sorry.
Managing dependent fire departments.
And get us out of the business of competing with the independent
fire departments and their EMS personnel, because they're hiring EMS
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June 23, 2006
personnel and they're paying them more than we can afford to pay
them.
We've got over a half -- almost a half million dollars in this
budget just to supplement our EMS services. And, quite frankly, I
think they can do a better job of it. I mean, that's what they're doing
anyway.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Are you soliciting comments?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. Well, yeah. Just if it's too
controversial --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Let him go, let him go.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: If it's going to take too long, if you
don't want to --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: He's going to touch -- because
he's bringing up a real neat issue.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. I just like to get the board's
sense of this and see if the board thinks it's a good thing for us to
convey to the fire departments.
They are suspicious that we want to take it over. And I don't
want to take it over. They're better qualified to do that than I am. I
would just like to see them consolidate.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I think that's the best thing we could do
is have those fire departments, well, basically, come all together under
one umbrella.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: And -- and I think it would save the
taxpayers an awful lot of money.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And I -- I think if -- if the county
manager and -- and some of the fire departments were to get together
and he would convey that message as a sense of the board, maybe it
could initiate that discussion and we could really be -- be a lot more
effective in spending taxpayer money.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Commissioner Coletta.
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June 23, 2006
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You're -- you're --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I can't contain myself.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Your time has expired.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No, no, no. I've got to. I--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: He's jumping out of his seat.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: This man, he's absolutely
correct. And this is something that we've been talking about for a long
time and I've been working with several different fire departments on
this.
And they do have some efforts going in place. It's because
they've got a little bit of encouragement from us, but they have started
some sort of work out there as far as the exploratory. But it hasn't gone
anyplace.
Now, I will tell something. If you're really serious about this, if it
isn't too late, you can put it on the ballot.
Would you like to see this happen?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'm wondering if they might--
might interpret that as a -- as a ploy to try to force them to do
something.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Not if you worded it right.
Would you encourage the -- the fire departments in Collier
County to --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- consolidate?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, I would, but I would like to
get their input on the ballot question. I wouldn't have any obj ection to
it, but I don't want to destroy the spirit of cooperation by going around
it.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Why don't you continue and then stick
with trying to figure out what we're going to do with the millage here,
get that done.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, but it --
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June 23, 2006
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, let me -- let me comment on
that, too, then.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- it does affect that though. It
really does affect it.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Why -- why do we have to -- I
mean, we already know that they're trying -- that they're working on
consolidating but, yeah, it's going to take them awhile because there's
a lot of issues they have.
But why -- why don't we then give the EMS to them as it is and
say, now you guys --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No. The problem --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- figure out how to handle it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: The problem is that then you have
-- have it split up among a number of different independent districts
that were -- are competing among themselves and you might not
maintain the same high standard of -- of -- of--
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, what I was saying --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- responsibility.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- is that might encourage them to
consolidate a little more rapidly if they have the added responsibility
of -- of the EMS under their--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'll tell you what I think would be a
bigger incentive, is to say to them, if you will consolidate --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Then you got it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- we will transfer it all to a
consolidated organization. And if you do that quickly, we'll give it to
you quickly. We're still going to maintain some kind of control over
standards, okay? I mean, we still have to issue certifications and
things like that, but we need to move on this thing. It's -- it's --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I guess we all are in agreement.
MR. MUDD: So -- so, I just want to make sure for the record
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June 23, 2006
that I've got this down pat.
No. We need to do this because I've said the them thing that you
just said, okay, and it -- and it got misinterpreted like we want to take
over fire.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: No, we don't.
MR. MUDD: My -- my -- my thought when I met -- the first
time when I met with the chiefs' committee was if you guys would
have one fire district, I'll give you one EMS district. Okay?
But I'm not going to take EMS and fracture it up into 11 damn
different -- excuse me -- I'm sorry -- at 11 different -- but I did say -- I
did say the other word to them, that -- that -- that I'm not going to take
an organization that's unified that's working great that's got -- that's got
one standard and fracture it out to all the independents and all the
dependents, everybody now has their own little independent EMS.
And I'm going to be no better off as a county than we are today.
There's going to be four fire districts, then the North Naples District,
okay. That's probably the jewel of the fire districts as far as income.
And it's okay. And all we have to do take a look at their budget
and we will know.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Oh, we know.
MR. MUDD: Okay. And, so -- so if I fractured EMS into 11
pieces, then I'm going to have one set of paramedics -- or -- or --
paramedics go into a -- to a -- an incident to help recover or help
somebody resuscitate that might not have the best equipment.
And -- and I have another set that got top of the line everything
between chair lifters and -- and -- and gurney lifters going downstairs
and resuscitation equipment. And -- and guess what. That's not right
and that's not fair to the taxpayers of this county.
So, my -- my -- my comment has always been you can become
one, we'll give you one and then you'll all be one big issue and that's
exactly what I heard this board just talk about just a second ago.
The fire districts need to work together to unify. When that
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June 23, 2006
particular issue is done, then the County Commission will be glad to
move their one unified EMS and merge into their particular
organization, unified organization.
Is that what I heard?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's -- that's exactly what --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's what you heard.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
MR. MUDD: Okay?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think it's unanimous.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I thought that -- what about the --
what about the -- yes, it is.
MR. MUDD: Did the court reporter get all of that? Good.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: What about the dependent fire
districts that are now under county?
MR. MUDD: They would -- they would become unified with the
other fire districts. There would only be one in Collier County.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: But here's the thing. We've been
talking about this before. I don't want to talk about it forever. Okay?
So, there's a point when we need to gather and say, well, what do
we do now?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Fish or cut bait.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Fish or cut bait, that's right.
And we need to send that message to the fire districts and, oh, by
the way, they have a big windfall this year that they ought to assist the
taxpayers, and that -- that ought to be a message, too, along with the
other taxing districts.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, let--
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Let's get to the point at hand here and get
the millage here.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, we did.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, we did, I think. We agreed
on it.
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June 23, 2006
COMMISSIONER HENNING: We're all done.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I think we agreed on that.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: All right. You've got a unanimous vote
of -- of the point thing in the back that says --
MR. MUDD: Consensus with signing overhead on your Page 5.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: All right. Good.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Question.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. Yes, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But that's -- if we could just take a
quick minute and get a sense of something official to communicate to
the fire districts to get this thing moving as Commissioner Henning is
suggesting.
Can we --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Well, I think what we've done is in the
past we've told them that they needed to consolidate and they just kind
of looked at us like, oh, really, okay.
So, I'm not sure how we can get the message out unless it's --
unless we put something on the ballot and make -- and, therefore, the
people speak and say it's time that the fire districts get consolidated
under one umbrella.
And it's not under --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's it.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: And it's not under the jurisdiction of the
county manager. It's strictly under the jurisdiction of themselves.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I -- I don't have a problem with that
as long as the fire districts won't -- won't interpret it --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- as -- as an attempt to stab them
in the back without consulting them about it.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yeah. It's the impression I get, I'll
tell you.
I -- I just feel that, you know, we can -- like Jim Mudd just said,
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June 23, 2006
you know, we've got it all on the record. We've said it very clearly.
We can even put it in -- in a letter stating exactly what --
MR. MUDD: If you'd like--
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- we've said again in --
MR. MUDD: If you would like me to draft a letter for--
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- front of the court reporter, writing
it --
MR. MUDD: If you -- I'm sorry. I interrupted.
If -- I think I'm coming -- if you would like me to draft the letter
for the chairman's signature to -- to -- to attach the record from today
so that they understand exactly what was said and so that there's no
misunderstanding whatsoever, I'll be glad to do that.
And -- and if you let your chair sign that, as the board consensus,
that would be great.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And if the Naples --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: But wait.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: If the Naples Daily News would
run a banner headline tomorrow, that the commission encourages
consolidation of --
MR. MUDD: I know Mr. Hannon writes these stories, but I don't
think he's the headline -- he's not the headliner in the paper. He can
suggest though.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: May I?
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Sure.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. We've got to get to stop
talking just for a minute to catch up.
You're doing good, by the way.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I've been quiet all day.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And I think we ought to have
Commissioner Coy Ie as our lead person on this, but I still think that
while the time and the initiative is still there, because it won't come
back again for a couple of years, that this should be a ballot question
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June 23, 2006
and it shouldn't be anything that's that obtrusive.
Would you, the people of Collier County, be interested in seeing
a consolidated fire department with EMS being a part of the element
not under county control? Something like that, very simple.
And if nothing more than a straw poll to be able to give guidance
to us and to the fire departments.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Commissioner Coletta, I really think
you're heading down the wrong road, in fact, two ways. And it's first
the one we call that even state it, because it might look like it's a heavy
hammer.
And, secondly, different districts feel very passionate about this
article.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Oh, they sure do.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: This -- these are the people that
come in and rescue them and save them, and if we say, do you want to
consolidate it so you want have this anymore -- that personalized
thing, they might not like the idea.
I think we would be barking down the wrong road for that one.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, and again, too, that gives
us the direction that we need to go and than they're still on their own
and nothing's changed.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: When you say give us the direction
again, that's implying that we're trying to control them.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Oh, not at all. I'd love to see this --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I don't think we should say we would
give them, you know, as direction from us because --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No. The ballot is direction from
the populous of this county as to what they would like to see. It's
plain and simple. It's the way of democracy that's worked for a couple
hundred years now. And just a --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I like the idea of a letter.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: A letter is good, but I don't know what
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June 23, 2006
weight the letter is going to carry.
MR. MUDD: Well, commissioner -- you know, Commissioner
Fiala, you all have good ideas. The intention is very -- is very good.
Okay?
This has been -- this has been a problem that's been longstanding
because there's -- it's getting to the point in time that fire districts are --
are not giving the same kind of service because of tax proceeds that
are comIng In.
So, there's -- there's differentiating inserted.
May I recommend that we go with the letter this time, and then if
there's no action and there's no movement on this in the next year, the
next year you come back with that ballot question and you put it on
there just as -- as Commissioner Coletta and we'll -- has suggested,
and then -- and then you get at the point, so that we've got a good year
to talk and see if there's any movement in this regard.
And -- and if you believe it's still a problem at that particular
juncture, then you can always go to that ballot question and get it to
the particular issue, but you give them a chance to have some
movement in this next year.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: But my concern is the fact that I
don't know what kind of ballots are going to be going out the
following year. It's usually --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: It will be 2008.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. That's two years away.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That would be two years away in 2008.
MR. MUDD: Unless there's a -- unless you have a special item
on the ballot that you would like to put there, this board can pay the
money to have a special ballot, one question asked.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No, not for a straw ballot.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Any -- so, the direction we're
going to give the county manager then is we'll formulate a letter and
I'll sign it and we'll see where it goes from there.
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June 23, 2006
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's the plan, I guess.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Just make it clear that it's -- it's
their -- their operation.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It's not going to be subordinate to
us.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I think that's got to be very clear.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right. That's very important.
You're right.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: That's very clear that we're not involved
in that -- in getting involved in -- that we want to have control of them,
but that they have to come up and make sure that there's -- it's equally
disbursed amongst all the county in regards to the type of service that
all the residents expect. Okay.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: One fire one EMS joined together.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Yeah.
MR. MUDD: The -- I believe -- I believe we're -- I believe we've
covered everything unless you've got some more?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Not -- not me.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, but how many say--
CHAIRMAN HALAS: And the filibuster doesn't have anything
more to say.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Do it, do it.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Tom Henning said he's sorry but he
had to leave so --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: Okay. Is that all? If that's everything
for this, we're going to close down the --
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I thank --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: -- initial budget guidance.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. I thank you for a good two-day
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June 23, 2006
workshop. I think we got at a lot of the issues and -- and it was good
to have the public comment. I don't believe we had the public
comment last year. I think--
CHAIRMAN HALAS: It was great thing.
MR. MUDD: -- it was good form --
CHAIRMAN HALAS: It was a.
MR. MUDD: -- to listen to those particular issues as you think
about the UFR list and whatnot over the summer months, so I thank
you very much.
CHAIRMAN HALAS: I'm looking forward to Bill Barton
coming forward with a list of -- or give us an idea, a thumbnail look at
what he needs there for the funding because I think it is very, very
important, but I think we also need some guidance, so that the public
realizes that that money is -- is going to be put in good hands for a
good reason.
So, with that, we are adjourned.
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June 23, 2006
*****
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 3:24 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS CONTROL
~~
FRANK HALAS, CHAIRMAN
A TTESl':;. ,
DWIGlIt E:~,BROCK, CLERK
~....~
W
... -G..;:i . 'w
~ .At..~- '1,.1:* Cli,ll'llaJl ,
. ~ 1 'Jfl!1t1.""~;' "',
These minutes approvegpy the Board on f- f ':l-s;t 6 Cp ,
as presented ~ or as corrected
Page 148