Agenda 01/12/2021 Item #2E (BCC-S Minutes 12/15/20)01/12/2021
COLLIER COUNTY
Board of County Commissioners
Item Number: 2.E
Item Summary: December 15, 2020 - BCC/Special Meeting Minutes
Meeting Date: 01/12/2021
Prepared by:
Title: Executive Secretary to County Manager – County Manager's Office
Name: MaryJo Brock
12/28/2020 8:19 AM
Submitted by:
Title: Executive Secretary to County Manager – County Manager's Office
Name: MaryJo Brock
12/28/2020 8:19 AM
Approved By:
Review:
County Manager's Office MaryJo Brock County Manager Review Completed 12/28/2020 8:30 AM
Board of County Commissioners MaryJo Brock Meeting Pending 01/12/2021 9:00 AM
2.E
Packet Pg. 19
December 15, 2020
Page 1
TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Naples, Florida, December 15, 2020
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 12:00 p.m., in
SPECIAL SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex,
East Naples, Florida, with the following members present:
CHAIRMAN: Burt L. Saunders
Andy Solis
William L. McDaniel, Jr.
Rick LoCastro
Penny Taylor
ALSO PRESENT:
Leo Ochs, County Manager
Jeffrey A. Klatzkow, County Attorney
Troy Miller, Communications & Customer Relations
December 15, 2020
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MR. OCHS: You have a live mic, Mr. Chairman.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Thank you. The meeting of the
County Commission will please come to order. We've already done
the Pledge once today. I think that's probably sufficien t.
MR. OCHS: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: We'll move on to the main
objectives here, Mr. Ochs.
Item #2A
EVALUATING QUOTATIONS FROM QUALIFIED EXECUTIVE
SEARCH FIRMS AND FINALIZE THE PROCESS TO BE USED
TO RECRUIT CANDIDATES TO FILL THE FORTHCOMING
COUNTY MANAGER VACANCY – MOTION TO APPROVE
OPTION #2 AND ALLOWING THE POSITION TO BE OPEN
FOR 30 TO NO LONGER THAN 60 DAYS WITH A REVIEW AT
THE FIRST MEETING IN FEBRUARY, 2021; TWO
COMMISSIONERS TO SERVE ON A SUBCOMMITTEE FOR
THE REVIEW OF APPLICANTS WITH STAFF – APPROVED
MR. OCHS: Yes. Thank you. Mr. Chairman, the Board had
called this special meeting to cover two items that are listed on your
index. The first is a recommendation for the Board to evaluate
quotations from qualified executive search firms and finalize a
process to recruit candidates to fill the forthcoming County Manager
vacancy.
And Ms. Leiberg has assembled some information and is
prepared to make a brief report.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. Good afternoon.
MS. LEIBERG: Good afternoon, Commissioners. Amy
Leiberg, Human Resources Director.
December 15, 2020
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At your meeting last week, you directed us to take a couple of
steps to talk about the County Manager recruitment strategy, and so
I'm going to give you a little bit update on that.
I will -- I'll touch again upon the different steps that we will
need to follow in this recruitment process, and then I'm going to have
a summary of the firms that provided quotes to you for evaluation
this afternoon. And we're going to see if this is going to work.
MR. OCHS: Arrow down.
MS. LEIBERG: Arrow down. Very good. Thank you.
So, after the meeting last week, we released the new job
announcement for the County Manager on governmentjobs.com, on
indeed.com, through Zip Recruiter, and on LinkedIn, and we also
went out to request quotes from interested executive recruitment
firms. That information came back to us yesterday, and I'm going to
provide a summary for you here shortly.
You do have some key decision points that, as a Board, you
need to make on this recruitment. You've got some options on the
strategy that you will use to fill the County Manager vacancy whether
that be to hire a firm, use internal resources, or the Board conducts
the recruitment.
And then also your involvement during the recruitment and
selection process, whether all of you participate, whether you're
going to select a subcommittee, or the chair or other designated
commissioner will lead the recruitment process.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: May I ask her a question.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Yes. Commissioner Taylor.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Just because -- that's what I'm
confused about. Why would we get involved in this? For what --
more importantly, what function would the BCC undertake in this
process?
MR. OCHS: Commissioner, if you give her two more slides,
December 15, 2020
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she's probably going to answer that for you.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Okay, good. That was a
question from before, so thank you.
MR. OCHS: You're welcome.
MS. LEIBERG: So, the recruitment steps include -- and talked
about this the last time -- that we would start with a needs assessment
and information gathering. So that would either come through
individual discussions with the Board members one on one, you
would complete a questionnaire, or we, either the staff or recruitment
firm, could facilitate a workshop to gather that information, and the
action item out of that would be that you would approve a final
profile document. That would be what we would put out to interested
candidates that would tell them what you are looking for in that ideal
candidate.
The next step would be to start the recruitment, and that's -- I
think that's what your question was, Commissioner, and I'll answer
that. The recruitment would actually be over a period, we're hoping,
to meet a deadline of June the 1st of about a 12-week window to get
that recruitment done. The position would be posted for four to six
weeks. Applicant reviews would take two to three weeks.
I will make note that, you know, if a firm does that, it's going to
take a little less time; that if that's designated to staff depending on
the number of applicants that we might get for this opening. And you
could develop a candidate list of up to the t op 25. And that's where
you would come into that process. We would bring back that
information, whether that be the recruitment firm or your internal
staff who are handling that, to take a look at those candidates and
narrow it down to 10 to 12 of what we -- based on your initial
assessment of what you're looking for in a candidate to 10 to 12 for a
closer review.
The next step after that would be, again, to take that candidate
December 15, 2020
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review. So, what would we do at that point or what would the firm
do at that point? Additional information would be gathered about
each of the candidates. There would be some interviews conducted
of those 10 to 12 candidates that you would be under -- that would be
under consideration. And some decisions will need to be made as
well about who would conduct that interview if it's not going to be a
firm doing that for you.
Also, with the Internet and background searches, there would be
limited searches that we could do with our processes internally. A
firm could probably give you much more comprehensive review of
somebody's background as part of their process.
And from that, your action item would be to determine two to
four candidates for in-person interviews, and that would be a decision
point you would need to make as well.
The last step in this process -- and, again, this is very simplified.
But, you know, there's reference checking, interviewing, and
selection. So, after those reference checks are completed and
conducted and in-person interviews are completed, you're going to
deliberate and select the next county manager from the finalists and
authorize negotiation and a contract development. The goal is still to
have that done by the first meeting in May of 2021 to bring back that
candidate for you.
So, we have posted that job. We have put that out to interested
candidates through the vehicles that we shared with you just a few
minutes ago. Okay. We also got information back from three search
firms that are interested in providing these services to the county.
This next slide will kind of give you an overview of what that is.
We took a look at them from different aspects: The number of
recruitments that they have conducted at the executive level for an
organization between 2015 and 2020; the number that they're
conducted in Florida in that period of time; what their timeline was.
December 15, 2020
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Could they meet our requirements to conduct the recruitment in the
period that we're looking to have it completed?
How many visits based on their -- based on their submission that
we would be looking at, that they would come back and meet with
you? Do they have experience and have we worked with them before
in the Board -- with the Board of County Commissioners agency?
Do they have a Florida office?
And for the warranty item, you know, a lot of them will give
you -- if something happens to your candidate, if they come on and
they leave within a certain period of time, would they come back and
help you recruit again for a candidate? And all three of them do.
What the price is for the services that they have quoted that we put
out in the request for quotes that's part of the backup that you have in
your agenda today? And do we have -- would there be any additional
fees for their services?
All three of the firms, we actually reached out to them. If you
have any questions about the services they provide, they are standing
by on Zoom this morning if you would like to answer -- to ask them
any questions about what they might do through this process.
We do have a recommendation based on our review. And if -- I can
move on to that slide if you'd like, or I can pause here, and you can
ask any questions about information that we've gathered.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Okay. Anybody have any
questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: If not, let's move on to your
recommendations.
MS. LEIBERG: Very good.
We did look at all of the firms. We would recommend, in order,
Colin Baenziger & Associates and The Mercer Group and then
Strategic Government Resources.
December 15, 2020
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CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Mr. Klatzkow, I think I asked you
the wrong question at the last meeting. I asked if the resumés
received by a search firm would be public records, and you advised
that they would be public records.
The question I should have asked is, these search firms have
files already on hand of interested people who they would reach out
to. My assumption is that those files would not be public records;
they would not be a public record until there was a solicitation from
someone directly to Collier County or to that search firm in response
to our request for that; is that accurate?
MR. KLATZKOW: That's correct, sir.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: That's the point I was trying to
make before with the search firm. They do have a group of resumés
that they can search and source without it becoming a big public issue
for those people at that point.
Commissioner LoCastro.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Amy, I just was going to ask
you, do you know if either of these three -- if any of these three
search firms were involved in the city manager sear ch at Marco
Island?
MS. LEIBERG: I believe that Baenziger & Associates, if I'm
not mistaken. And I'll look to my -- actually, I think that was --
Mercer Group was involved with the City of Marco, and Baenziger
was involved with the City of Naples.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Oh, okay.
MS. LEIBERG: I misspoke.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: If you would restate your
recommendation, and then we'll see what the -- Commissioner
McDaniel.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I do have a question. How
many applications have we received so far?
December 15, 2020
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MS. LEIBERG: We've received resumés from five interested
individuals.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Internal, right? Just strictly
internal or not necessarily?
MS. LEIBERG: They are not -- they are not -- they are -- this
went out nationally, so it really is from across the country.
(Simultaneous crosstalk.)
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. So, what we need to
decide today is, number one, are we going to use a search firm, which
I think we sort of decided that and, number two, which firm would
that be?
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: No, we didn't.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: No?
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: No, you wanted to.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: You decided.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: I thought that we were all kind of
leaning in that direction.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: No.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Well, then we're -- Commissioner
McDaniel.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: And just for the record, so
everybody knows, I went ahead of Commissioner Taylor because I
knew she was going to -- I saw her reaching, so I just jumped.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: He did.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: And I haven't come off of my
opinion from last week and from before. I see there's -- there's value
in having a recruiting firm, but I don't think we -- I don't think we
need to do it. I would prefer that we continue on the path that we did,
allow the position to be open for 30, no longer than 60 days, review
at the 45-day mark. I would suggest that a subcommittee of two of
December 15, 2020
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this board -- whatever's legal, County Attorney, do it. I have a lot of
experience in this process, in my private life on the board of directors
of Goodwill hired two different executive directors, and similarly at
the Housing Authority, at the bank as well.
It is not an easy job by any stretch of the imagination. I think
we have qualified staff that can take care of the background checks,
the reference checks, and do some of the what I consider
administrative things to make sure that applicants have affirmed what
they've represented, or we can reaffirm what they've, in fact,
represented. But I think if we did that for a 30 to -- 30 to no longer
than 60, that takes us to our first meeting in February, we still then
have an opportunity to engage a national firm. We wouldn't disway
[sic] them from offering us a candidate and/or -- and paying them a
fee along that line. Everybody knows that -- not everybody, but
there's a -- the information is out. So, I would -- I would suggest we
stay on that path. If we haven't gotten -- well, I mean, we've only
been open for a week, and we have five applicants now.
And if we haven't gotten somebody we think we can warm up
to, to move into that weeding-down process, as you've shared, then
we could actually look at hiring a firm.
I would be willing to volunteer Commissioner Saunders to serve
as one of the two. And I'm joking, Mr. Chair. I mean, if you
would -- personally, I would be certainly willing to devote the time
necessary to go through the processes and stay on that timeline that
you talked about and the weeding, if you will, of the applicants and
such.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Yeah. Let's go ahead and do this.
I'll reduce the number of commissioners that would be interested in
serving that way. I will not serve on that type of committee, so we're
down to four. Why don't you go ahead -- we've got two other
speakers. Why don't you go ahead and make a motion. Let 's see if
December 15, 2020
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that flies and, if not, then we'll open it up. Is that okay with --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I'll try to surmise then. I'd
like to make a motion that we not engage a firm, whichever one of
these options, I think it's No. 2, Point No. 2, is that the --
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Yes.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: -- in the executive summary?
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: We all are going to participate
in this process whether we like it or not --
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: -- at some point and stage, and
that we open the position up for 30 no longer than 60, review it at our
second meeting in January to the aggregate -- the total -- I don't want
to get too off into the weeds, but I just -- I'm not -- I would -- and I
would suggest that we select a subcommittee of the Board to go
through the applications working with staff to fulfill those requisites.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. There is a motion. Is
there a second?
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Second.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: We have a motion and second to
basically go with Option No. 1.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Two.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: I'm sorry. Option No. 2.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Point No. 2, Options A, B, C.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Yes. Commissioner Taylor.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Yes. May I suggest that we just
modify a little bit, because I will support your motion. But I would
like to have this window which you said of maybe -- and maybe you
said this, but I don't know. So, we do it ourselves for a set period of
time. If we cannot find a qualified candidate at that time, then we go
to a recruitment firm?
December 15, 2020
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COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Yes, ma'am. And I don't
know if I actually -- I said that in my front-end --
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Okay.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: -- thing, but I don't know if it
was part of the motion. My motion in my brain was 30, minimum
30, no longer than 60, with a review period at the 45-day mark.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: And so, we're looking at -- we're
looking at February 1st. That's kind of the --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Review in our second
meeting -- or first meeting in February, yes.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Okay. Okay. Good.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: And the second accepts that
clarification?
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: And would the subcommittee --
because I've been through this in the City Council with --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Right.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: -- searching twice now, three
times. Would this subcommittee do the first cull of the appointment
of the resumés, or would they recommend and then bring everything
to us so that we can make a decision?
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I think -- that needs to be
done. There's no culling by the subcommittee.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Okay, good.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: The subcommittee just goes
through, works with staff to verify that the applications that submit --
are submitted, and then we bring back for -- if you want to call it a
culling -- that's a little bit abrupt -- for the review and the conciseness
of the process.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Commissioner Solis.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: I just want to raise a couple issues
December 15, 2020
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that I think are problematic. One is that -- well, we want to get -- we
want to find the best candidate, obviously, for the job. And I think
that trying to do this ourselves puts our staff in a -- in an awkward
position. And in order to come up with the candidate which has been
vetted completely -- because as I understood it, there's limitations on
the kind of background research and things that our staff can actually
do for us. I just -- you know, I think we'd probably end up with the
same -- the same hire, but I think the process would be more
transparent and more, I want to say -- I don't want to say sterile, but
just -- I think if -- the more involvement we have from the very
beginning, the more -- the more room there is for putting staff in a
difficult position.
I mean, we know we're going to have applicants from within.
We know we're going to get applicants from without. I just think that
having a third party vet them, then the commissioners, we do our
interviews and we hire somebody. It's just -- it's a cleaner, more
sterile way and doesn't put our staff in an awkward position.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. I'm going to call for the
vote in just one quick second. I do want to make a comment on it.
I think it's a mistake to go this route. I do believe that a
professional firm can vet candidates, many of which would be able to
be vetted before they even become of public record. I think when
you ask people from around the country to submit resumés that a
commissioner and some group will be evaluating, I don't think you're
going to get the really qualified candidates that you could get if they
have some anonymity when they make those -- file those
applications.
So, I'm going to vote against the motion. It looks like it will
pass 3-2, but I just want to go on record saying that I believe it's a
mistake.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
December 15, 2020
Page 13
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Aye.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Aye.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All opposed.
Aye.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: That passes 3-2. Thank you.
MR. OCHS: Mr. Chairman, that takes us to the second item on
today's agenda. This is a recommendation for the Board to provide
staff direction on a date, time, and location for holding the public
hearings related to the upcoming One Naples Growth Management
Plan small-scale amendment application and their companion rezone
petition.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Commissioner McDaniel, are
you --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Yeah, I lit up before he went
to Item B.
MR. OCHS: Oh, I'm so sorry.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: A portion of Point No. 2 was
all of the Board participate during the regular meeting dates in the
workshop format; the Board elect a subcommittee. We could do that
today.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: We need to do it today.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: And we should do it today.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: That's right.
MR. OCHS: Amy.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: And that subcommittee -- and
then the Chair or the designated commissioner leads the recruitment
with reports and how we're going to -- and just go through that
process before we jump and go away.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: How many people do you need on
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that subcommittee of commissioners; is that two or three?
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I think it should minimumly
be two, and that keeps the sterility in line, so --
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Well, we had three people that
voted for the motion, so I would suspect that two of those three
should be on that committee, because I'm not going to serve on it.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: So -- but we have Sunshine
issues; is that correct, sir?
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: You don't have Sunshine issues.
It's in the Sunshine. There's no issue.
MR. KLATZKOW: The purpose of the committee is to review
and vet applicants and to eliminate any applications and, yes, you
must be in the Sunshine. I don't know what else -- other purpose the
committee would have.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Correct.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: So --
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: So, I'll make a motion that
Commissioner McDaniel and Commissioner LoCastro be on that
committee.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: I'd agree to it, to that
responsibility, absolutely.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I'm fine with it.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: I'll second that.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Just a quick question. Okay. So, if
the committee's not going to be making decisions, then I'm still not
clear on what the committee's going to do. The committee's not
going to reduce the number of applications and bring applications
forward?
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: It just -- it's just a review
process to go through to make sure -- working with -- in my opinion,
the rationale, and when I've done this in the past, is we work with our
December 15, 2020
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staff to ensure that the representations of the applicants are -- are
fulfillable with what they have, in fact, done; that the references are --
and those are jobs that staff can do, calling refere nces and verifying --
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Verifying.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: -- verifying the information
that's on the applicant is there, and then we come back with a brief
report and go through --
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: On each one, not -- so let's just --
I'm just saying -- let me ask the question. So, let's say that you're
vetting -- the committee is vetting an application, something's not
actually correct on the application, then what's the committee's going
to do?
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Note that, bring it back to the
Board --
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: -- and the Board will make
decisions along those line. Just -- again, it's -- necessarily, it's just a
process to move through this on the front end, not excluding the
recruitment avenue if, in fact, we, the Board, decide that that's a path
we need to travel.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: I think one of the things, too,
we could also decide that might show itself early is, wow, we're
really not getting the quality candidates, so w e want to move quicker
to the professional, you know, headhunter service or what have you,
recruiting service, or, wow, we're getting overwhelmed with
incredible candidates internal and external through, you know, our
normal vetting process. Maybe we need help to vet, but we're
making more of a judgment call. But we're not vetting candidates.
We're sort of quality controlling what's coming in and then
reporting back to the committee [sic] saying, wow, we've got a
handful of -- you know, more than a handful of candidates here or,
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wow, we need to move a little bit quicker to the recruiting service.
They're just trickling in, and it's not what we're looking for. You
know, just that as a recommendation, you know. Not that we're being
directive. But I think that, you know, Commissioner McDaniel and I
can certainly at least come back with some judgment calls on some
things.
MS. LEIBERG: Commissioner, the next step would be, as we
talked about earlier, we'd have to do a needs assessment and
information gathering from you. So, we have -- since you've chosen
your course of action, we're going to need for you-all to complete
questionnaires that would tell us some key attributes and expectations
of your next county manager.
We will get that questionnaire and get it to all of you. We
would ask -- you know, we would probably set a deadline for that so
we have it. That would allow us to do our initial vetting since you're
having staff do that for you before we bring it back to the
subcommittee. That way, you know, once we understand what the
expectation is of the individual you wish to fill this role, then at least
we can apply that to any of the applicants or the resumés that we've
received and bring you back what we believe to be qualified
individuals for evaluation.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. I'm going to ask the
County Attorney just to give us a little bit of advice because we do
have a new member and you're not necessarily used to dealing with
public records law and the Sunshine law. You're now going to be on
a committee of two, which is going to be very, very visible. You're
going to get a lot of scrutiny from that.
Mr. Klatzkow, in terms of public records, text messages, emails,
can you give us a quick synopsis of what would be considered a
public record if there's any text messages and that sort of thing
dealing with any type of an issue like this.
December 15, 2020
Page 17
MR. KLATZKOW: My recommendation is that this committee
meets in the Sunshine; that all documents involving that matter will
be public records. Text messaging, since it is transient, doesn't really
fall under that, but I would caution that --
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Let me ask you -- let me ask you a
question on that, because I disagree with you. There was a
conviction in Orlando of commissioners that were texting.
MR. KLATZKOW: Yes. What I would caution is, you don't
use text messages as a subterfuge to get around the Sunshine Laws or
the public records laws, all right, which is what they were doing
there.
You would use email. And I've always said, use email,
whenever you can, in your county email.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: I only mention that just for you to
be careful, because --
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: I'd like to excuse myself from
the committee. No, just kidding.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Just beware.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: I think it would maybe be
prudent, too, if maybe, you know, you spoke with Commissioner
McDaniel and I just before we started the process just to maybe
review any type of, you know, things just to make sure that we get off
to a clean legal start, if there's anything specific that, you know -- so
we're not sort of going on our own.
MR. KLATZKOW: I would let staff handle the particulars of
this and then bring all documents, whatever, to this subcommittee.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Yeah.
MR. KLATZKOW: Let staff do the laboring or [sic] on this.
On the subcommittee will be the decision makers. But do meet in the
Sunshine. You don't have to meet in the room. I mean, we have
plenty of conference rooms, and they'll be noticed, and staff will
December 15, 2020
Page 18
bring forward the information that they're gathering for your review.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. Thank you, sir.
MS. LEIBERG: And that would be my clarifying question to
the Commission as well. Would you like for us to make an initial
evaluation, or shall we plan to bring --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Bring them all.
MS. LEIBERG: Bring them all.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Excuse me. Bring them all.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: But give us your ETA on what
our -- what we -- the list.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I've got a light over here.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: I'm sorry. Commissioner
McDaniel.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Recommendations.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: And this may answer your
thought. The sooner you get the questionnaire to us for what our
expectations are, the sooner we can get through the process of --
culling process for the Board, and I think that's imperative for us to
be getting that information to staff.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Right.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Then we go through this -- we
go through the verification process and come back to the Board. The
sooner that questionnaire's effectuated and you know what the
expectations of this board are, then we can give better direction going
forward. So that was a comment that I wanted to make.
And I do have a secondary comment with regard to texting and
that sort of thing. We really can't control when people text us
personally with regard to government issues. We can control
ourselves in response to government issues by text, and just don't do
it.
December 15, 2020
Page 19
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Well, I think if -- the point is, I
think if you receive a text in reference to the selection of a county
manager and the committee you're serving on, that becomes a public
record whether you solicited that text or not, and you have to keep it.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Right.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Now, the County Attorney and I
disagree on that, but there was a conviction in Orlando --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Can I share with you --
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: -- dealing with people deleting text
messages, and I just wanted to caution you on that.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: When I do get a text from
somebody on a government matter, I forward it over to my email, and
it becomes a matter of public record.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Yes.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: And when people ask for it, it
gets submitted, and off we go. That's how I manage --
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: That's fine.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I can't control people sending
me things, and so when that, in fact, transpires, I move it over to
email, and it's out.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Okay. Just a caution.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: So, when will we get the
questionnaires?
MS. LEIBERG: Commissioner, we will work on a
questionnaire to provide to you.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: How about 4:00 this
afternoon?
MS. LEIBERG: I think we might need a little more time than
that, sir. I think by close of business tomorrow.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Okay.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Can I just -- in that regard, that was
December 15, 2020
Page 20
what my light was on about. In my opinion, the evaluation that the
County Manager fills out every year is a very detailed one, and I
think whatever you need in terms of selection criteria is in there; just
to try to help expedite the process. I mean, at least --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Absolutely.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: -- that's what we've been evaluating
the County Manager on for -- as long as I've been here, and I think
that's --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Job description, what the
Board feels like.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I concur 100 percent. That
will help you develop that questionnaire from us.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: I should have asked this earlier:
Do we have any registered speakers on this item?
MR. MILLER: I do not, sir.
Item #2B
PROVIDING DIRECTION ON A DATE, TIME AND LOCATION
FOR HOLDING A PUBLIC HEARING REGARDING THE
UPCOMING ONE NAPLES SMALL SCALE GROWTH
MANAGEMENT PLAN AMENDMENT APPLICATION AND
COMPANION REZONE PETITION - MOTION THAT THE
BOARDROOM BE THE LOCATION FOR THE PUBLIC
HEARING – APPROVED; MOTION THAT THE MEETINGS BE
HELD MARCH 1ST, 2021 AND MARCH 2ND, 2021 AS AN
ADDITIONAL DATE IF NEEDED – APPROVED
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Okay. Then let's move onto
Item 2B, which is the date and time and location for a hearing on the
December 15, 2020
Page 21
One Naples project.
Commissioner Taylor.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: I just -- point of clarification. At
our last meeting I talked about the church area at St. Johns on 110t h.
The concept would not be to have the meeting in the church. The
concept would be, there's a fairly large hall that the meeting could be
held in, and there is a church which is covered, in air conditioning,
which could be good for speakers who, because of social distancing,
can't get in the room.
And it's my understanding that some of the leadership, the
leadership up there, would prefer to have the 110th Avenue North
location, so --
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Okay. Commissioner Solis.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: I think there's several concerns that
I have. And as a policy, it makes me uneasy that we're going to get
in the realm of changing what our procedures are for zoning hearings
on the fly.
And so what's the criteria going to be for the next zoning
hearing when those people involved in the next one want it
somewhere other than where every single zoning hearing in the past
has ever been held? I mean, I just thi nk we're -- we're going to open
a can of worms, I think, that we may not be able to recover from.
And I say that because -- and now, having a set date that will only
cover the One Naples application, I think, is a great idea. I think it
will take a whole day anyway and having a set time where everybody
can speak is a great idea. And I would support that. And I'm going
to look towards the County Attorney. I mean, I'm concerned about
changing the process and how the hearings are handled, because we
haven't ever done that in the past that I'm aware of, and I think that
just gets us out of the usual process that's established by our
ordinances and has been the practice for the county as long as I've
December 15, 2020
Page 22
been here.
MR. KLATZKOW: I think the problem right now is we're
living in COVID-19 world. Pre-COVID world we would have the
room filled with the people, and that would be the end of it.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Overflows.
MR. KLATZKOW: And with the overflows. In COVID world,
we can't do that. We have to socially distance. If it's the will of the
Board to try to get as many people in the same room as possible,
you'll need a bigger -- you'll just need a bigger room.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Right.
MR. KLATZKOW: Post-COVID world you won't have these
concerns. So -- that I think these are very unique and unusual times,
and I don't think it would set any precedent one way or the other.
I think it comes down to the security of having it here on the
comfort for everybody having it here as opposed to whether or not
you want everybody in the same room, and you'll need a very, very
large room for that.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Well -- and my second concern is
that if we do it at a noncounty facility, we will be able to hold maybe
more people than we can hold in this room, but what about the people
that still are not going to feel comfortable attending because of
COVID and want to call in?
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: They'll be able to.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: We're going to have the technology
for that at a church that --
MR. OCHS: I don't know that we've evaluated the church.
We've evaluated three locations that the Board mentioned last week.
And Commissioner Taylor's absolutely correct; she mentioned the
church as a potential for it. I didn't think that there was consensus at
that time among the Board to pursue that one as an option.
December 15, 2020
Page 23
But we looked at our capabilities on this campus, we looked at
the North Collier Regional Park exhibit hall and overflow in the
gymnasium there as a potential, and then the school district's meeting
room and whatever overflow capacity they've had.
Just based on those three preliminary analyses, we are
recommending this facility. We've got four overflow rooms plus the
boardroom. We know our technology. We know that we can handle
the Zoom calls, and we could even Zoom people's comments from
the overflow rooms directly into the Board, and you can interact with
them visually and audibly if you'd like or if they would like. So as
the County Attorney said -- plus we have security in place here and
Sheriff's deputies.
But we can handle any of those three. We're most comfortable,
because we know our processes and our capabilities from a
technology standpoint, in this facility better than we do anywhere
else.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. Let's -- I know a couple
lights are lit up. I agree with Commissioner Solis. Let's just see if
there's support to move it out of this room first. Let's see if there's a
motion. The motion would be either we have the hearing here or we
have it someplace else.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: May I speak to that before we
vote? And I would say that it is one thing to have someone's voice on
a telephone in this room. And we've done it now since March. And
it's another thing to have the person in front of us. And I think, what
I'm understanding, there are 20,000 people that have participat ed in
this issue over the last two to three years, different people, and they
need to be heard. And I think we -- we, as a government, need to --
owe them the respect of the opportunity to speak before us. And so, I
would -- in that light, I would not support it being in this room with
them in -- you know, like sardines in all the other rooms. I would
December 15, 2020
Page 24
rather have it in an area that could accommodate it.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: We should have it over in Miami at
the football stadium.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I was going to say, Teco or
Hertz, or whatever.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Let's just see if there's a desire to
have it someplace else, because then we can figure out where that is.
I'm going to make a motion to hold the meeting here. In terms of
date and time, we can figure that out next, but let's just see whether
we want to move the meeting to someplace else. So, I'll make the
motion to have the One Naples hearing in the county commission
chambers.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Second.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. We have a motion and a
second. I'll call for the question. All in favor, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Aye.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All opposed?
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Opposed.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Opposed.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Okay. That passes, I believe, 3-2.
So, we're going to have the meeting here.
Next question is when.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: What week? Schedule.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: It's going to be a six- or seven-hour
meeting. It's -- we're not going to be dealing with it for two or three
days at a time.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I'm making a joke. I'm sorry.
December 15, 2020
Page 25
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: No, that's all right. And levity is
really appreciated right now. But I think we can assume this is going
to be somewhere between a six- and seven-, maybe an eight-hour
meeting. I talked to the manager this morning about the possibility of
the second Tuesday -- or second -- our second meeting in February
having nothing on that agenda other than consent-agenda items and
then scheduling this for 10 a.m. on that Tuesday with nothing else,
and that will take us until 6:00 p.m. or 7:00 p.m. if we need to. Just a
thought to get the discussion going.
Commissioner Solis.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: That would be acceptable to me,
and even if it ran over to the 24th, that's fine. Just for dates --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Make sure you're looking at
the right year.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: What do you mean running
over -- oh, the next day.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: The next day if it requires that,
right. No, that's a good point. Looking at the right year.
My only concern is that I would have a conflict with the week of
the 15th of March. So as long as we stay away from that week then,
you know, I'm -- with whatever the consensus of the Board is as to
when to have it.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: How many people can we hold
in here with social distancing?
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Lights are --
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: I'm sorry.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Commissioner McDaniel.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I -- you know, we have a habit
of -- and not a habit. And I don't mean this in a negative manner by
any stretch, but we have a tendency to jam the 20-pound load in a
10-pound bag, and my concern is having it on one of our stated
December 15, 2020
Page 26
communication dates takes away from other business that's
transacting on a regular -- on regular business.
I was looking at my calendar, and, you know, March actually
has five Tuesdays. And the second -- the first Tuesday is -- I would
be more in favor of having the meeting on a non-regular board
meeting and just dedicate that time for that on a Tuesday. And that --
and that first Tuesday in March is March the 2nd. I wasn't hardly
listening when you said you had a conflict. Did I pick the week you
have an issue?
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: No, that's the second --
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: My thoughts were to have a
special meeting for that, for that item and no other business to
transact, and allow our -- allow our normal meetings to be dedicated
to the operation of the county and our normal business. So that
would -- and that's just one date I threw out. I was looking at that
date. You know, I didn't really look -- and January and February
both have a regular four Tuesdays, and March is the first one, and we
get an extra week during that time in between our regular ly slated
meetings. So that was my thoughts.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Commissioner LoCastro.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: I just want a clarification. So,
Commissioner McDaniel, you voted to have it here.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: I did.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: All's I would just echo is that
maybe we put some thought into the best way to work the logistics. I
mean, everybody sort of remembers the Petland fiasco. I think if
we've got people in waiting rooms, maybe when somebody speaks
here, then they exit, and we backfill their seat, because I definitely
strongly agree with Commissioner Taylor that there's no substitute
for face to face, and when people are sweating up on the top floor
waiting their turn, they don't really know where they are in the queue,
December 15, 2020
Page 27
then they hear [sic] and they're in the queue. You know, so maybe
we can't, you know -- if we're going to, you know, put 10 pounds of
activity in a five-pound bag here, maybe we could at least figure out
the best use of the bag and how to have people feel like the y're being
revolved through, or whatever works. But that we don 't just sort of
do the standard technique for this many people, because it's going to
be a big one, and we want citizens to feel like they're heard.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. I have no problem with
March 2nd. I do have a conflict on March 3rd, so...
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Well, that's not good.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Well, Commissioner Taylor
will be the chair, so...
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Yeah. You guys are making
decisions --
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: They need four --
(Simultaneous crosstalk.)
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: It's a supermajority vote, so we all
have to be here for that. I'm just saying, I can be here from 8:00 a.m.
to 10:00 p.m. on the 2nd, but I cannot be here until the -- I could be
here in the afternoon on the 3rd, but not during the day -- during the
morning.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: We actually could even move
it to a Monday just to forestall the potential of you not being able to
be here. Monday, May [sic] the 1st is there.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: March 1st.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Excuse me. Not May.
March 1st.
And I occur with Commissioner LoCastro with regard to
amending our process. I concur with Commissioner Taylor with the
fact that there is no substitute for personal attendance at our meetings
but, as our County Attorney has said, these are different times and,
December 15, 2020
Page 28
unfortunately, we're not going to be able to pack the room with red
shirts and do the things in that Petland adventure that we had a couple
of years ago when I was chair. But I think if we enhance our process,
I think the County Manager has shared that we can actually even set
up Zoom so we can see people's faces while they're in our overflow
rooms, that sort of stuff, and maybe go through some trial processes
with uninitiated folks who haven't necessarily been to our meetin g,
moving them through the system and do some practice runs. I think
we can facilitate as much of the personal touches as is necessary.
Because I like the idea. I mean, I'm saddened by the fact that we
still can't all get together and do what we always did before, but at the
end of the day, there is an issue amongst us, and we ha ve to tend to
that and to the personal protection of our population, so...
So I think even after the virus is over or not, as the case may be, we
still are going to have to be able to tend to the personal wishes of the
protection of the individual who doesn't want to even take a chance
after the vaccine's out and everything's there, so...
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Commissioner Solis.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: And I will agree with
Commissioner LoCastro and Commissioner Taylor that we need to
do what we can to make sure that everybody's heard, and I agree with
that. I would also point out that since we've been doing things with
Zoom, at least my experience with doing town halls, the number of
people that have been involved in these things has gone up
exponentially. I mean, I can't even believe -- I think I had a -- I had a
town hall I did for the Palm River folks that were here last week, and
110, 120 people -- I was expecting, you know, 40 or 50 at the most.
So, I mean, I understand the concern and the desire to mak e sure
everybody's heard, and I have that same desire. I think we can
accomplish that using the same process that we've always used for
these matters without having to change the rules.
December 15, 2020
Page 29
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Commissioner Taylor.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: What we -- we made a decision
without understanding numbers. What -- the social distancing, how
many people can this chamber hold and the four overflow rooms in
this building?
MR. OCHS: About 130, I'm told.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: And if we have 350 people that
want to speak?
MR. OCHS: We have to find other places to put them. Shuttle
them. The school district, believe it or not, tells me with their
overflow, they have people stay in their cars, and when it's their --
and give them a number. When it's their turn, they flash the number
out in the parking area, and the people come in and speak. We will
do our level best, and if we can set up an area where people are
willing to give their comments via Zoom, even if they're in an
overflow room, we could do that at the church for convenience sake.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: No. I just think there's no
substitute for someone coming in speaking at a podium not Zoom.
MR. OCHS: Yes, ma'am. I understand. I'm not arguing with
you. We're just trying to make it work the best we can under the
circumstances.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: And I think, Commissioner
Solis, with your concerns about precedent, years ago, I think it was in
the '80s, a little issue called Sabal Bay raised its head in the City of
Naples, and they were in a small chambers, and they held that council
meeting at the high school auditorium. It is the first a nd last time
pre-COVID that the City Council has had a meeting in the high
school auditorium. So, I don't think it's precedent setting. I think it's
responding to the public.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. So, we made a decision
as to where the meeting's going to be. We've, I think, talked about
December 15, 2020
Page 30
the possibility of March 1st and 2nd, with the 2nd being potentially
not necessary. I do want to make a comment in terms of public
comment.
There may have been some folks that were unhappy with the
limited number -- amount of time, but no one's been denied an
opportunity to speak. I think we had 140 speakers at one point, many
of which were in the room, many of which were in overflow rooms
and came in here and, of course, we had plenty on Zoom and on the
telephone. No one will be denied an opportunity to speak regardless
of where the hearing is.
Commissioner McDaniel.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Yes. And I think, you know,
there again, with the technology that we have, I agree with
Commissioner Saunders. You folks will recall the stormwater utility
and the fee that transpired there and the unprecedented amount of
public speakers we had that evening.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: That's when Commissioner Solis
was in a pub in Ireland, I believe.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Yes. He was actually on his
third ale by the time we got through with that four-hour hearing. But
the bottom line is I think we can accommodate everybody
appropriately.
I'd like to make a motion that we go ahead and set March 1st as
the date for that hearing with the overflow day of March 2nd and
hold it here in these chambers.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: I love it. It's the Ides of March.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. Let me ask
Mr. Klatzkow a quick question, because we're doing this without
discussion with the petitioner. Does that present any difficulty?
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Somebody forgot to ask them.
MR. KLATZKOW: No. The agenda's set by the County
December 15, 2020
Page 31
Manager and in consultation with the Chair. Here it's being set in
consultation with the entire Board. Absolutely appropriate.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. Thank you. All right.
We have a motion. Was there a second?
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: I second it.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Any discussion?
MR. OCHS: Sir, I'm assuming 9:00 a.m. for the start time.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Yes. You get to pick.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: We have a motion and a second for
the meeting to begin at 9:00 a.m. on March 1st, keeping March 2nd
open if necessary. All in favor, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER SOLIS: Aye.
COMMISSIONER LoCASTRO: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: Aye.
COMMISSIONER TAYLOR: Aye.
COMMISSIONER McDANIEL: Aye.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: That passes unanimously.
Do we have any registered -- let me ask if we have any registered
speakers.
MR. MILLER: No, we have nobody online or in the room
registered.
CHAIRMAN SAUNDERS: All right. Then unless there's some
other business, we are adjourned.
*****
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 12:48 p.m.
December 15, 2020
Page 32
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS CONTROL
___________________________________
BURT SAUNDERS, CHAIRMAN
ATTEST
CRYSTAL K. KINZEL, CLERK
__________________________________
These minutes approved by the Board on ____________, as
presented ______________ or as corrected _____________.
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF FORT MYERS
COURT REPORTING BY TERRI LEWIS, FPR, COURT
REPORTER AND NOTARY PUBLIC.