BCC Minutes 12/16/2008 R
December 16, 2008
TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Naples, Florida, December 16, 2008
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 district as has been created according to law and having
conducted business herein, met on this date at 9:00 a.m., in
REGULAR SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex,
East Naples, Florida, with the following members present:
CHAIRMAN:
Tom Henning
Donna Fiala
Jim Coletta
Fred Coyle
Frank Halas
ALSO PRESENT:
Jim Mudd, County Manager
Jeffrey A. Klatzkow, County Attorney
Sue Filson, BCC Executive Manager
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COLLIER COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
and
COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY BOARD (CRAB)
AGENDA
December 16, 2008
9:00 AM
Tom Henning, BCC Chairman Commissioner, District 3
Donna Fiala, BCC Vice-Chairman Commissioner, District 1; CRAB Chairman
Jim Coletta, BCC Commissioner, District 5; CRAB Vice-Chairman
Frank Halas, BCC Commissioner, District 2
Fred W. Coyle, BCC Commissioner, District 4
NOTICE: ALL PERSONS WISHING TO SPEAK ON ANY AGENDA ITEM
MUST REGISTER PRIOR TO SPEAKING. SPEAKERS MUST REGISTER
WITH THE COUNTY MANAGER PRIOR TO THE PRESENTATION OF THE
AGENDA ITEM TO BE ADDRESSED. ALL REGISTERED SPEAKERS WILL
RECEIVE UP TO THREE (3) MINUTES UNLESS THE TIME IS ADJUSTED BY
THE CHAIRMAN.
COLLIER COUNTY ORDINANCE NO. 2003-53, AS AMENDED BY
ORDINANCE 2004-05 AND 2007-24, REQUIRES THAT ALL LOBBYISTS
SHALL, BEFORE ENGAGING IN ANY LOBBYING ACTIVITIES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, ADDRESSING THE BOARD OF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS), REGISTER WITH THE CLERK TO THE
BOARD AT THE BOARD MINUTES AND RECORDS DEPARTMENT.
REQUESTS TO ADDRESS THE BOARD ON SUBJECTS WHICH ARE NOT ON
THIS AGENDA MUST BE SUBMITTED IN WRITING WITH EXPLANATION
TO THE COUNTY MANAGER AT LEAST 13 DAYS PRIOR TO THE DATE OF
THE MEETING AND WILL BE HEARD UNDER "PUBLIC PETITIONS."
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December 16,2008
ANY PERSON WHO DECIDES TO APPEAL A DECISION OF THIS BOARD
WILL NEED A RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS PERTAINING THERETO,
AND THEREFORE MAY NEED TO ENSURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD
OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE, WHICH RECORD INCLUDES THE
TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE APPEAL IS TO BE BASED.
IF YOU ARE A PERSON WITH A DISABILITY WHO NEEDS ANY
ACCOMMODATION IN ORDER TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS PROCEEDING,
YOU ARE ENTITLED, AT NO COST TO YOU, TO THE PROVISION OF
CERTAIN ASSISTANCE. PLEASE CONTACT THE COLLIER COUNTY
FACILITIES MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENT LOCATED AT 3301 EAST
TAMIAMI TRAIL, NAPLES, FLORIDA, 34112, (239) 252-8380; ASSISTED
LISTENING DEVICES FOR THE HEARING IMPAIRED ARE AVAILABLE IN
THE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS' OFFICE.
LUNCH RECESS SCHEDULED FOR 12:00 NOON TO 1:00 P.M.
1. INVOCATION AND PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANc,:E
A. Pastor J. R. Pagan, International Worship Center
2. AGENDA AND MINUTES
A. Approval of to day's regular, consent and summary agenda as amended. (Ex
Parte Disclosure provided by Commission members for consent and
summary agenda.)
B. November 5, 2008 - Value Adjustment Board Special Meeting with Special
Magistrate Mazur
C. November 7, 2008 - Value Adjustment Board Hearing Meeting with Special
Magistrate Pelletier
D. November 13,2008 - Value Adjustment Board Special Meeting with Special
Magistrate Watson
E. November 14,2008 - BCC/Pre-Legislative Session Workshop
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December 16, 2008
F. November 17,2008 - Value Adjustment Board Special Meeting with Special
Magistrate Pelletier
G. November 18, 2008 - BCC/Regular Meeting
H. November 21,2008 - Value Adjustment Board Special Meeting with Special
Magistrate Mazur
I. November 21,2008 - Value Adjustment Board Special Meeting with Special
Magistrate Watson
J. November 24,2008 - Value Adjustment Board Special Meeting with Special
Magistrate Pelletier
K. November 25,2008 - Value Adjustment Board Special Meeting with Special
Magistrate Pelletier
L. November 26,2008 - Value Adjustment Board Special Meeting with Special
Magistrate Watson
3. SERVICE AWARDS: (EMPLOYEE AND ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERS)
4. PROCLAMATIONS
5. PRESENTATIONS
A. Presentation to the Board of County Commissioners ofa check to purchase a
new vehicle for the Veterans Transportation Program. The check will be
presented by Jim Elson, President, Collier County Veterans Council; and
Ernie Bretzmann, Executive Director, United Way of Collier County.
B. Santa Barbara Boulevard - Six-Laning from Davis Boulevard (SR-84) to
Copper Leaf Lane and Radio Road Four-Laning from Santa Barbara
Boulevard to Davis Boulevard, Contract 06-0442. (Project #62081)
6. PUBLIC PETITIONS
A. Public petition request by Larry Basik to discuss small scale GMP
amendment on US 41 East and Trinity Place.
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December 16, 2008
B. Public petition request by Cynthia Dennis to discuss waiver ofloan in the
amount of $19, 173.98 in order to prevent foreclosure.
C. Public petition request by John Martinowich to discuss billing, surcharges
and fees for utility billing account.
D. Public petition request by Reverend David Mallory to discuss deferral of
impact fees.
E. Public petition request by Kathleen Reynolds to discuss funding for the
Early Learning Program (Child Care Subsidy Program).
F. Public petition request by Tim Hancock to discuss rezone request by North
Naples United Methodist Church.
Item 7 and 8 to be heard no sooner than J :00 p.m., unless otherwise noted.
7. BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS
A. This item continued from the November 18, 2008 BCC Meetinl!. This
item reQuires that all participants be sworn in and ex parte disclosure
be provided bv Commission members: CU-2008-AR-13201: VI Ltd,
Limited Partnership and Collier County Parks and Recreation, represented
by Richard D. Yovanovich of Goodlette, Coleman, Johnson, Yovanovich &
Koester, P.A., is requesting a Conditional Use in the Residential Tourist
(RT) zoning district and the Vanderbilt Beach Resort Tourist Overlay
district (VBRTO) and the RMF-16 Zoning District, pursuant to Land
Development Code Section 2.0 1.03.G.l.e, to allow for public facilities
(limited to public restroom facilities) that will be constructed within the
public right-of-way and partially within the Moraya Bay Beach Club
property. The subject property is located in Section 29, Township 48 South,
Range 25 East, Collier County, Florida. (CTS)
B. This item reQuires that all participants be sworn in and ex parte
disclosure be provided bv Commission members: V A-2006-AR-II 064:
VI Ltd, Limited Partnership, represented by Richard Y ovanovich of
Goodlette, Coleman, Johnson, Yovanovich & Koester, P.A. requesting three
variances from the requirements of the Residential Tourist (RT) zoning
district and the Vanderbilt Beach Residential Tourist Overlay District
(VBRTO) to allow for a proposed trellis structure. The requested variances
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December 16, 2008
are as follows: 1) A variance of 25 feet 4 inches from the required Building
Separation Distance calculated as half the sum of the two buildings (50 feet
4 inches) between the trellis and the principal residential structure to allow a
25-foot separation; 2) A variance of20 feet from the minimum required 30-
foot front yard setback for the trellis to the north property line to allow a 10-
foot setback; and 3) A variance of2.5 feet 4 inches from the required
Building Separation Distance calculated as half the sum of the two buildings
(12.5 feet 4 inches) between the trellis and the proposed public restroom
building along the northern property line (Bluebill Avenue) to allow a 10-
foot separation. The subject property, consisting of 4.96 acres, is located at
11125 Gulf Shore Drive, on the Southwest corner of Gulf Shore Drive and
Bluebill Avenue, in Section 29, Township 48 South, Range 25 East, Collier
County, Florida. (Companion to CU-2006-AR-II046) (CTS)
C. This item reQuires that all participants be sworn in and ex parte
disclosure be provided bv Commission members: CU-2006-AR-Il 046:
VI Ltd. Limited Partnership, represented by Richard Y ovanovich of
Goodlette, Coleman, Johnson, Yovanovich & Koester, P.A., requesting a
Conditional Use for the Moraya Bay Beach Club to allow a private club in
the Residential Tourist (RT) zoning district and the Vanderbilt Beach Resort
Tourist Overlay district (VBRTO) of the Collier County Land Development
Code (LDC), as specified in Sections 2.03.02.E for the RT Zoning District
and 2.03.07.L. for the VBRTO. The proposed private club will be located
within the residential building. The subject property, consisting of 4.96
acres, is located at 11125 Gulf Shore Drive, on the corner of Gulf Shore
Drive and Bluebill Avenue, in Section 29, Township 48 South, Range 25
East, Collier County, Florida. (Companion to V A-2006-AR-II064)(CTS)
8. ADVERTISED PUBLIC HEARINGS
A. Recommendation to consider adoption of an ordinance to amend Collier
County's Noise Ordinance (Ordinance No. 90-17, as amended).
9. BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
A. Appointment of members to the Ochopee Fire Control District Advisory
Committee.
B. Appointment of member to the Habitat Conservation Plan Ad Hoc
Committee.
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December 16, 2008
C. Appointment of member to the Black Affairs Advisory Board.
D. Appointment of members to the Historical/Archaeological Preservation
Board.
E. Appointment of member to the Collier County Coastal Advisory Committee.
F. Appointment of member to the Pelican Bay Services Division Board.
G. Appointment of members to the Golden Gate Community Center Advisory
Board.
H. Appointment of members to the Golden Gate Estates Land Trust Committee.
I. Appointment of member to the Isles of Capri Fire Control District Advisory
Committee.
J. Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners formalize its
intent and direction regarding the establishment of new and/or reconstituted
advisory committees to work with the Office of the Medical Director.
10. COUNTY MANAGER'S REPORT
A. Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase with The
Islands Marina, LLC and Port of the Islands Properties, LLC for the
purchase of certain portions of the Port of the Islands Marina property for a
purchase price of$5,488,000 which includes $4,750,000 cash at closing and
a $738,000 Seller charitable donation, together with a second charitable
donation of furniture, fixtures and equipment valued at $105,000, with
additional costs not to exceed $95,800. (Marla Ramsey, Public Services
Administrator)
B. Recommendation to adopt a resolution approving amendments
(appropriating grants, donations, contributions or insurance proceeds) to the
Fiscal Year 2008-09 Adopted Budget. (John Yonkosky, Office of
Management and Budget Director)
C. Recommendation to adopt a resolution superseding Resolution 2006-142
and authorizing the acquisition by gift or purchase ofland and easements
necessary for the construction of roadway, drainage and utility
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December 16, 2008
improvements required for the expansion and extension of Vanderbilt Beach
Road from Collier Boulevard to east of Wilson Boulevard. (Project No.
60168.) Estimated fiscal impact: $32,910,600. (Norman Feder,
Transportation Services Administrator)
D. Recommendation for the Collier County Board of County Commissioners to
approve a fare increase and limited reduction in Sunday service to address
the reduced Collier Area Transit Fiscal Year (FY) 2008-09 budget. (Norman
Feder, Transportation Services Administrator)
E. Recommendation to approve award of Bid #09-5142 to Mitchell and Stark
Construction Company, Inc., for the Lely Area Stormwater Improvements
Project (LASIP) Phase I B, Project No. 5110 I in the amount of
$3,530,719.90 plus a ten (10%) contingency, totaling $3,883,791.89.
(Norman Feder, Transportation Services Administrator)
F. Recommendation to approve an amendment to the Treviso Bay Water
Management Agreement allowing for coordination between Treviso Bay
Development, LLC and Collier County to complete construction of the Lely
Area Stormwater Improvement Project located within and adjacent to the
Treviso Bay Development, Project No. 5110 I. (Norman Feder,
Transportation Services Administrator)
G. Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve the
2008 Incentive Review and Recommendation Report required by Florida
Statute 420.9076(4) and direct staff to bring back an amended Impact Fee
Deferral ordinance as outlined in the report. (Marla Ramsey, Public Services
Administrator)
H. Recommendation to approve the purchase of Group Health Reinsurance
coverage for calendar year 2009. (Jeff Walker, Risk Management Director)
($1,310,124)
I. Recommendation to Award Bid #09-5157, Seating for the Collier County
Emergency Services Center to Marco Office Supply in the amount of
$123,411.39. (Steve Carnell, Purchasing Director)
J. Recommendation to A ward Bid #09-5158, Systems Furniture for the Collier
County Emergency Services Center to Corporate Express in the amount of
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December 16, 2008
$106,153.37. (Steve Carnell, Purchasing Director)
K. Recommendation to Award Bid #09-5159, Casegoods for the Collier County
Emergency Services Center to The Beaux-Arts Group in the amount of
$239,702.77. (Steve Carnell, Purchasing Director)
L. Recommendation to: Develop a Landfill Gas-to-Energy Facility that will
beneficially use landfill gas from the Collier County Landfill to generate
electricity and, in turn, generate new revenue for the County's Solid Waste
Fund by (a) entering into a Landfill Gas Sales Agreement and Ground Lease
authorizing Waste Management Inc. of Florida to design, permit, construct
operate and maintain a Landfill Gas-to-Energy Facility at the Collier County
Landfill; (b) amending the County's Landfill Operation Agreement with
Waste Management, Inc. of Florida; (c) approving the Facility through the
Site Development Plan process; (d) directing the Division Administrator
from Community Development and Environmental Services to expedite the
permit and review process, and (e) authorizing the Chairman of the Board to
execute the Agreement and the Amendment to the Landfill Operating
Agreement. (Dan Rodriguez, Solid Waste Director)
M. Recommendation for the Board of County Commissioners to approve the
award of Bid #08-5136 to the lowest qualified and responsive bidder Quality
Enterprises USA, Inc., for the construction contract of the 951 Boat Ramp
Parking Lot Expansion Project No. 80071. ($1,393,279.65) (Marla Ramsey,
Public Services Administrator)
N. Recommend approval by the Board of County Commissioners to award Bid
#09-5148 to Subaqueous Services, LLC in the total amount of$I,755,096
for 2008 Dredging of Doctors and Wiggins Passes. (Marla Ramsey, Public
Services Administrator)
11. PUBLIC COMMENTS ON GENERAL TOPICS
12. COUNTY ATTORNEY'S REPORT
13. OTHER CONSTITUTIONAL OFFICERS
14. AIRPORT AUTHORITY AND/OR COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT
AGENCY
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December 16, 2008
A. For the Collier County Community Redevelopment Agency Board to give
direction to the Bayshore Gateway Triangle CRA Executive Director
concerning three proposed purchase contracts for multiple real estate parcels
within the Bayshore Drive and Gateway Triangle portions of the CRA area.
(David Jackson, Executive Director, Bayshore Gateway Triangle CRA)
15. STAFF AND COMMISSION GENERAL COMMUNICATIONS
16. CONSENT AGENDA - All matters listed under this item are considered to be
routine and action will be taken by one motion without separate discussion of
each item. If discussion is desired by a member of the Board, that item(s) will
be removed from the Consent Agenda and considered separately.
A. COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT & ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
1) Recommendation to direct Engineering Review Staff to issue
Commercial Excavation Permit Number 60.010, AR 11983, to Barron
Collier Partnership, L.L.L.P. for the project called South Grove Lake.
The project consists of 158.68 acres, more or less, sitting in Sections
17 and 18 of Township 48, South, Range 29 East, Collier County,
Florida, more particularly sitting on the north side of Oil Well Rd.
about two miles east of Oil Well Grade and west of the entrance road
to Ave Maria.
2) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners (Board)
adopt a resolution to adjust the regulatory assessment fee from two
percent to three percent of gross revenues for non-exempt privately
owned water and wastewater utilities subject to local regulation, as
well as all other water and wastewater utilities bound by an interlocal
agreement, effective March 1,2009, as approved by the Board of
County Commissioners in the fiscal year 2009 budget and as approved
by the Collier County Water and Wastewater Authority.
3) Recommendation to grant final approval of the roadway (public) and
drainage improvements for the final plat of Arrowhead Reserve at
Lake Trafford Phase One with the roadway being maintained by the
County and the drainage improvements being privately maintained.
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December 16, 2008
4) To accept final and unconditional conveyance of the water utility
facility for Tall Oaks, Phase 3.
5) Recommendation to approve final acceptance of the water utility
facility for Veterans Memorial Boulevard, Section 7 - Phase 2.
6) Recommendation to approve final acceptance of the water utility
facility for Veterans Memorial Boulevard, Section 7 and 12.
7) Recommendation to approve final acceptance of the water utility
facility for Edison College.
8) To accept final and unconditional conveyance of the water utility
facility for North Collier Hospital Expansion.
9) Recommendation to grant final approval of the roadway (private) and
drainage improvements for the final plat of Terranova at Pelican
Marsh Unit One with the roadway and drainage improvements being
privately maintained.
10) Recommendation to grant final approval of the roadway (private) and
drainage improvements for the final plat of Terrabella at Pelican
Marsh Unit One with the roadway and drainage improvements being
privately maintained.
11) Recommendation to grant final approval of the roadway (private) and
drainage improvements for the final plat of Terrabella at Pelican
Marsh Unit Two with the roadway and drainage improvements being
privately maintained.
12) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve
an impact fee reimbursement requested by Cheffy Passidomo Wilson
& Johnson, LLP on behalf ofthe Weakley Family Properties, LLC,
totaling $249, I 07 .61, due to the cancellation of four building permits.
13) This item reQuires that ex parte disclosure be provided bv
Commission Members. Should a hearinl! be held on this item all
participants are reQuired to be sworn in. Recommendation to
acknowledge those Lots along Ravenna Avenue, as shown on the
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December 16,2008
attached Exhibits, as legal, non-conforming Lots of Record.
14) Recommendation to grant final approval of the roadway (private) and
drainage improvements for the final plat of Trail Ridge with the
roadway and drainage improvements being privately maintained.
15) This item reQuires that ex parte disclosure be provided bv
Commission Members. Should a hearinl! be held on this item, all
participants are reQuired to be sworn in. Recommendation to
approve for recording the final plat of Amerimed Center, approval of
the standard form Construction and Maintenance Agreement and
approval of the amount of the performance security.
16) Recommendation that Board of County Commissioners approves
Option #3 and takes no action on Public Petitioner's request to change
allowable uses in the Randall Boulevard Commercial Sub-district
within the Golden Gate Area Master Plan and the Mir Mar PUD.
B. TRANSPORTATION SERVICES
1) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve a
Budget Amendment recognizing an additional $404,634.00 in State
Public Transit Block Grant funding for Fiscal Year 2008/2009.
2) Recommendation to approve the purchase of four (4) paratransit
vehicles utilizing the FY08-09 Federal Transit Administration Section
No. 5310 Grant award. ($31,080)
3) Recommendation to approve a Resolution to reduce the speed limit on
Oakes Boulevard between Vanderbilt Beach Road and Immokalee
Road from the current speed limit of forty-five miles per hour
(45 MPH) to thirty-five miles per hour (35 MPH).
4) Recommendation to approve a Resolution to reduce the speed limit on
Coconut Unit 3 residential roadway network (Burton Road, Esther
Street, Bonnie Street, Lorraine Avenue, Kathy Avenue and Gale
Boulevard) from the current speed limit of thirty miles per hour
(30 MPH) to twenty-five miles per hour (25 MPH).
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December 16,2008
5) Recommendation to approve a Resolution authorizing the Chairman
of the Board of County Commissioners to execute the attached
Federal Transit Administration Section 5310 grant application, and to
accept the grant if awarded.
6) Recommendation to approve a Resolution authorizing the Chairman
of the Board of County Commissioners to execute the attached
Federal Transit Administration Section 5311 grant application and
applicable documents.
7) Recommendation to approve and execute Medicaid Contract
Amendment Number 8 between Collier County and the Florida
Commission for the Transportation Disadvantaged for a funding
increase in the amount of $41 ,920.00 for the provision of
transportation for qualified Medicaid recipients.
8) Recommendation for the Board of County Commissioners to approve
a budget amendment to recognize revenue for the Congestion
Management, TIS Review, PUD Monitoring/Traffic Counts PIL, and
PUD Monitoring/Fair Share Projects within the Transportation
Supported Gas Tax Fund (313) in the amount of $630,271.32.
9) Recommendation to approve the purchase of one (1) para-transit
vehicle utilizing the FY08-09 Shirley Conroy Rural Area Capital
Assistance Support Grant award. ($59,400)
10) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners (BCC)
approve the Northeast Collier County Trail Feasibility Study Final
Report. Due to the size of the Final Report, Volumes I and 2, copies
are available at the County Managers office.
11) Recommendation to approve the purchase of improved property
Parcel No. 132FEE (Jerry L. Mitchell and Barbara Mitchell) required
for the construction of the Vanderbilt Beach Road Extension project.
Project No. 60168. (Fiscal Impact: $729,104)
12) Recommendation for the Board of County Commissioners to approve
a budget amendment to recognize carry forward in the amount of
$3,583.99 and to recognize additional revenue for the Collier County
Transportation Pathways Program in the amount of$23,550.08 for
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December 16,2008
Project No. 690811 and direct staff to proceed with the design and
construction phase of the proposed projects.
13) Recommendation to award Contract #08-5107 to Dyer, Riddle, Mills
and Precourt, Inc., to prepare the Collier Metropolitan Planning
Organizations 2035 Long-Range Transportation Plan Update with an
estimated project cost of$505,159.00. (Fund 128, Cost Center No.
138334)
C. PUBLIC UTILITIES
1) Recommendation to approve a budget amendment to appropriate
funds in the amount of $61,760.60 to reimburse the Collier County
School Board for re-routing the Lely High School Force Main
associated with SCWRF Reliability Improvements Project No. 72508.
2) Recommendation to Award Bid #08-5123 for purchase of hauling and
disposal of lime sludge services to Pro-Lime Corporation in the
estimated amount of $150,000 annually.
3) Recommendation to Award Bid #09-5145 for purchase of cartridge
filters for the North and South County Regional Water Treatment
Plant to George S. Edwards, Company Incorporated in the estimated
amount of$500,000.
D. PUBLIC SERVICES
1) Recommend approval by the Board of County Commissioners of Use
Agreement No. U-0344 between Board of Trustees of the Internal
Improvement Trust Fund of the State of Florida and Collier County.
2) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Rolly St.
Jour (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees for
an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 155, Trail
Ridge, East Naples.
3) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Natalie
Conde (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees for
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December 16, 2008
an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 174, Trail
Ridge, East Naples.
4) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Serge
Mathurin and Michelene Mathurin (Owners) for deferral of 100% of
Collier County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing
unit located at Lot 95, Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
5) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve
the amount of $75,000 for FY09, FYIO and FYII to Contract #08-
5082, Sea Oat Planting for Collier County Coastal Zone Management.
(Project No. 195-900441)
6) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Kenold
Pierre and Marie Gertrude (Owners) for deferral of 100% of Collier
County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit
located at Lot 40, Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
7) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve
and authorize the Chairman to sign a Consent of Mortgagee thereby
allowing Eden Gardens Apartments Limited Partnership (EGALP) to
execute a grant of easement to Lee County Electric Cooperative
(LCEC) for the Reserve at Eden Gardens.
8) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with
Medelsonne Garraux and Rose G. Garraux Gerome (Owners) for
deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees for an owner-occupied
affordable housing unit located at Lot 176, Trail Ridge, East Naples.
9) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Mayra
Cardenas (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees
for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 48,
Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
10) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Christy
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December 16, 2008
Marie Fegueroa (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County
impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at
Lot 49, Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
11) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Rebecca
Antoine (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees
for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 29,
Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
12) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Manus
Louis and Juslene Louis (Owners) for deferral of 100% of Collier
County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit
located at Lot 170, Trail Ridge, East Naples.
13) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Styve
Desgrottes and Najah M. Desgrottes (Owners) for deferral of 100% of
Collier County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing
unit located at Lot 135, Trail Ridge, East Naples.
14) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Suzella
Joseph (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees
for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 172,
Trail Ridge, East Naples.
15) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Philornise
Francois (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees
for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 45, Trail
Ridge, East Naples.
16) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Ketty
Montoban (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact
fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 175,
Trail Ridge, East Naples.
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December 16, 2008
17) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Mario
Diaz Lujan and Jael Avalos Perez (Owners) for deferral of 100% of
Collier County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing
unit located at Lot 171, Trail Ridge, East Naples.
18) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Jean
Baptiste Sergot Souverain and Marie Edith Souverain (Owners) for
deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees for an owner-occupied
affordable housing unit located at Lot 38, Liberty Landing,
Immokalee.
19) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Pabiliee
Anofils (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees
for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 119,
Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
20) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Frantz
Desgrottes and Rolande Desgrottes (Owners) for deferral of 100% of
Collier County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing
unit located at Lot 138, Trail Ridge, East Naples.
21) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Ignacio
Zaragoza and Maria Zaragoza Benitez (Owners) for deferral of 100%
of Collier County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable
housing unit located at Lot 52, Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
22) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Martha
Luz Carrillo (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact
fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 108,
Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
23) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Jose
Santos Avellaneda and Marisol Mendoza (Owners) for deferral of
Page 16
December 16, 2008
100% of Collier County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable
housing unit located at Lot 51, Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
24) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Marie G.
Jorcelin (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees
for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 50,
Liberty Landing, Immokalee.
25) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Francisco
Vera and Maria Juana Vera (Owners) for deferral of 100% of Collier
County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit
located at Lot 8, Milagro Place, Immokalee.
26) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Therese
St. Cyr (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees
for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 2,
Milagro Place, Immokalee.
27) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Amalia
Lubrefand Mentorlis Lubref(Owners) for deferral of 100% of Collier
County impact fees for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit
located at Lot 7, Milagro Place, Immokalee.
28) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, a lien agreement with Lucienne
Larose (Owner) for deferral of 100% of Collier County impact fees
for an owner-occupied affordable housing unit located at Lot 18,
Milagro Place, Immokalee.
29) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves,
and authorizes the Chairman to sign, the annual Certification for
Implementation of Regulatory Reform Activities by the State Housing
Initiatives Partnership (SHIP) Program.
30) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners recognize
and approve the expenditure of Housing and Urban Development
Page 17
December 16, 2008
(HUD) funds in the amount of$84,375.00 for the Golden Gate Senior
Meals Program which is administered by the Department of Housing
and Human Services (RRS). This program is an expansion to an
existing HHS program which provides nutritious meals to low-income
seniors in Collier County.
31) Recommendation to approve and execute a Lease Agreement with
Messiah Lutheran Church, Inc. of Golden Gate for space to
accommodate the Rousing and Human Services Senior Nutrition
Program.
32) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approves
and authorizes the Chairman to sign an Agreement between Collier
County and VI Ltd., Limited Partnership regarding professional
services for Collier County beach amenities on Bluebill Avenue
thereby ratifying and confirming all actions taken by Staff with the
Developer in this matter.
33) Present the Board of County Commissioners a summary of Impact
Fee Deferral Agreements recommended for approval in FY09,
including total number of Agreements approved, total dollar amount
deferred and balance remaining for additional deferrals in FY09.
34) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve
and authorize the Chairman to sign a sub-recipient agreement
providing for a Housing and Urban Development (RUD) grant to the
Physician Led Access Network (PLAN) in the amount of$40,000 to
provide medical referral services and prescription medications for
low-income residents in Collier County.
35) Recommend the Board of County Commissioners approve the award
of Bid #08-5134 to the lowest qualified and responsive bidder
Williamson Brothers Marine Construction, Inc. for construction
contract of the Caxambas Boat Dock Project #80057.1. ($132,140.00)
36) Recommendation to accept a donation from Collier County Veterans
Council in the amount of $23,360.40 for purchase of a vehicle for the
Veterans Transportation Program. Approve Budget Amendments to
recognize the donation and transfer funds to the Veterans
Transportation Program. Reference Item #5A, December 16, 2008.
Page 18
December 16, 2008
37) Recommend that the Board of County Commissioners approve and
authorize the Chairman to sign Change Order #1 to Work Order
C3TS-FT-4153-08-02 for design consultant C3TS for the Manatee
Park design in the amount of$50,000.00 on a time & material, not-to-
exceed basis to provide the Site Development Plan and the required
SFWMD permits. The net contractual value of services will total
$243,950.00.
38) Request Board of County Commissioners approval ofInternational
City/County Management Association (ICMA) Public Library
Innovation Grant, in the amount of$53,770 and authorization for the
Chairman to sign the application.
39) Recommendation for the Board of County Commissioners to approve
the budget amendment and authorize the Chairman to sign a grant
agreement with the United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development for Economic Development Initiative (EDI) funds in the
amount of$147,000 for improvements to South Park in Immokalee.
E. ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES
1) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Alan Tucker for 10 acres under the Conservation Collier Land
Acquisition Program, at a cost not to exceed $35,500.
2) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Norma Depestre-Coba for 4.54 acres under the Conservation
Collier Land Acquisition Program, at a cost not to exceed $72,800.
3) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Alina Gonzalez for 2.50 acres under the Conservation Collier
Land Acquisition Program, at a cost not to exceed $40,300.
4) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Harold Mir for 2.50 acres under the Conservation Collier Land
Acquisition Program, at a cost not to exceed $40,300.
5) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Manuel Palacios and Aida Jauregui for 4.93 acres under the
Conservation Collier Land Acquisition Program, not to exceed
Page 19
December 16,2008
$79,100.
6) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Richard F. Berman, as to 50%, and Frank J. Celsnak and Marlene
J. Celsnak, as Trustees U/D/T (or U/A) dated December 27,1991, as
to 50%, all as tenants in common, for 1. 14 acres under the
Conservation Collier Land Acquisition Program, at a cost not to
exceed $19,300.
7) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Ronald Jack Bortnick and Sherry K. Bortnick, also known as
Sherrie K. Bortnick, for 5 acres under the Conservation Collier Land
Acquisition Program, at a cost not to exceed $13,100.
8) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Charles A. Darby and Charlotte T. Darby, Trustees of the Darby
Revocable Trust, U/T/D November 7, 1997, for 5 acres under the
Conservation Collier Land Acquisition Program, at a cost not to
exceed $13,100.
9) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Ola Phillips Griffin, also known as Ola Mae Griffin for 5 acres
under the Conservation Collier Land Acquisition Program, at a cost
not to exceed $13, I 00.
10) Recommendation to approve an Agreement for Sale and Purchase
with Bernard D. Schaab for 2.5 acres under the Conservation Collier
Land Acquisition Program, at a cost not to exceed $6,900.
11) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve
an Agreement to provide a maximum expenditure of$47,115 from the
GAC Land Trust to the Golden Gate Fire Control and Rescue District
for the purchase of Fire Shelters and Radio Equipment.
12) The purpose of this Executive Summary is to gain Board approval ofa
long-standing staff practice of soliciting donations for a seasonal,
charitable program, which practice includes the use of the County's e-
mail system and soliciting cash donations from fellow County
employees. Should the Board not grant its approval, the employees
would be left to continue whatever charitable work they wish to
Page 20
December 16, 2008
engage in outside of County Government.
13) Recommendation the Board of County Commissioners approve
Change Order #1 to Contract #08-5073 with RW A, Inc. for the
Immokalee Master Plan and Related Services and approve $165,500
Budget Amendment as sufficient appropriation to fund a Public
Realm Plan in the Scope of Services. Companion to Item # 16G 1.
14) Recommendation for the Board of County Commissioners to adopt a
Resolution and approve a Lease Agreement with State Representative
Matt Hudson for use of County-owned office space for an initial two
year term at a total revenue of$20.
15) Recommendation for the Board of County Commissioners to adopt a
Resolution and approve a Lease Agreement with State Representative
David Rivera for use of County-owned office space for an initial two
year term at a total revenue of $20.
16) Recommendation for the Board of County Commissioners to adopt a
Resolution and approve a Lease Agreement with State Representative
Tom Grady for use of County-owned office space for an initial two
year term at a total revenue of$20.
17) Recommendation for the Board of County Commissioners to adopt a
Resolution and approve a Lease Agreement with State Senator Garrett
Richter for use of County-owned office space for an initial four year
term at a total revenue of $40.
18) Report and Ratify Staff-Approved Change Orders and Changes to
Work Orders to Board-Approved Contracts.
F. COUNTY MANAGER
1) Approve budget amendments.
2) Recommendation to approve a Certificate of Public Convenience and
Necessity for the Collier County Emergency Medical Services Dept.
3) Recommendation to accept payment for principal balances for ground
and air Emergency Medical Services charges in the amount of
Page 21
December 16, 2008
$7,054.20 and to waive the interest due for these transports in the
amount of$I,607.17.
4) Recommendation to authorize Budget Amendments for the
Conservation Collier Land Maintenance Fund (174) and Debt Service
Fund (272) to insure adequate cash balance for the January 1,2009
debt service payment.
5) Recommendation to approve a Memorandum of Understanding
amending and revising the Year 2006-2009 Collective Bargaining
Agreement with the Southwest Florida Professional Firefighters Local
1826 International Association of Firefighters, Inc.
6) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners adopt a
Resolution in support of the tourism industry position on drilling for
natural gas and oil off the shoreline of Florida.
7) Recommendation the Board of County Commissioners approve and
authorize the Chairman to sign Change Order #2 for Miles Media
Group Contract #06-4037 in the amount of$22,878.00 which includes
a Staff authorized expense of $7,964.00 for the 2008 Visitor Guide.
8) Recommendation to approve contract for RFP #08-5081 with Public
Financial Management, Inc., for Financial Advisory Services.
9) Obtain approval from the Board of County Commissioners to
authorize a second offering of a Voluntary Separation Incentive
Program, empower the County Manager to implement program and
authorize the Chairman to sign the enabling Resolution in an effort to
assist the County Manager's Agency in meeting financial goals.
G. AIRPORT AUTHORITY AND/OR COMMUNITY
REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
1) Recommendation to the Community Redevelopment Agency to
approve Change Order #1 to Contract #08-5073 with RW A, Inc. for
the Immokalee Master Plan and Related Services and approve a
$165,500 Budget Amendment sufficient appropriation to fund a
Public Realm Plan in the Scope of Services. This is a companion to
Item #16El3.
Page 22
December 16, 2008
2) Recommendation that the Collier County Board of County
Commissioners accept additional funds from Florida Department of
Transportation in the amount of$3,763 and provide a fifty percent
(50%) match in the amount of$3,763 for a total Budget Amendment
of $7,526 for design, permitting, bidding and construction oversight
for apron and parking lot expansion at the Marco Island Executive
Airport.
3) Recommendation that the Collier County Community Redevelopment
Agency Board (CRAB) adopt a Resolution establishing a performance
evaluation process for the CRA Executive Directors.
H. BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
1) Proclamation recognizing Irv Berzon for services to Collier County.
2) Commissioner Fiala requests Board approval for reimbursement
regarding attendance at a function serving a Valid Public Purpose.
Attended the ENCA Luncheon on November 20, 2008 at Carrabba's
on East 41 in Naples, FL. $21.00 to be paid from Commissioner
Fiala's travel budget.
3) Commissioner Fiala requests Board approval for reimbursement
regarding attendance at a function serving a Valid Public Purpose.
Attended the ENCA Luncheon on September 18, 2008 at Carrabba's
on East 41 in Naples, FL. $21.00 to be paid from Commissioner
Fiala's travel budget.
4) Commissioner Fiala requests Board approval for reimbursement
regarding attendance at a function serving a Valid Public Purpose.
Attended the Friends of the Library Sock Rop Dance on December
12,2008 at South Regional Library in Naples, FL. $10.00 to be paid
from Commissioner Fiala's travel budget.
5) Commissioner Henning requests Board approval for reimbursement
to attend an event serving a valid public purpose. Attended the Collier
Citizen of the Year 2008 dinner on 11/21/08. $35.00 to be paid out of
Commissioner Henning's travel budget.
Page 23
December 16, 2008
I. MISCELLANEOUS CORRESPONDENCE
1) Miscellaneous items to file for record with action as directed.
J. OTHER CONSTITUTIONAL OFFICERS
1) Recommend that the Board of County Commissioners designate the
Sheriff and Sheriff Elect as the Official Applicant(s) and Points-of-
Contact, accepters of the Grant when awarded, receive and expend
Grant funds, and approve and submit applicable budget and program
modifications for a United States Department of Homeland Security
Fiscal Year 2009 Operations Stonegarden Grant.
2) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners Approve
and authorize the Chairman to sign an Agreement authorizing the
Collier County Sheriffs Office to have Traffic Control Jurisdiction
over Private Roads within the VeronaWalk Subdivision.
3) Request that the Board of County Commissioners accepts and
approves capital asset disposition records for time period October I,
2007 through September 30, 2008.
4) Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners accept the
report of Interest for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008
pursuant to Florida Statute 218.78 and Purchasing Policy XIE, for the
fiscal year ending September 30, 2008. No interest was paid.
5) To obtain Board approval for disbursements for the period of
November 22, 2008 through November 28, 2008 and for submission
into the official records of the Board.
6) To obtain Board approval for disbursements for the period of
November 29,2008 through December 05,2008 and for submission
into the official records of the Board.
K. COUNTY ATTORNEY
1) Recommendation to authorize an Offer of Judgment for Parcel
115FEE by Collier County to property owner Norma Farmilo,
Individually and as Trustee, in the lawsuit styled CC v. Robbie L.
Page 24
December 16, 2008
Rayburn, et a!., Case No. 07-4268-CA (Santa Barbara Boulevard
Extension Project No. 60091) (Fiscal Impact: Ifaccepted,
$48,038.00).
2) Recommendation to Authorize the County Attorney to File a Lawsuit
on Behalf of the Collier County Board of County Commissioners,
Against Josefa De La Rosa in County Court in and for Collier County,
Florida, to Recover Damages in the Amount of$6,019.50.
3) Recommendation to approve a Stipulated Final Judgment in the
amount of $26,000.00 for Parcel I 64RDUE in the lawsuit styled
Collier County v. John Goddard, et aI., Case No. 07-3111-CA (Oil
Well Road Project 60044). (Fiscal Impact $12,870.00)
4) Recommendation to approve a Stipulated Final Judgment in the
amount of $39,000.00 for Parcel 184RDUE in the lawsuit styled
Collier County v. Helmut Hittinger and Lynda Hittinger, as Co-
Trustees of the Helmut Rittinger Revocable Trust dated April 29,
1991, et a!., Case No. 07-3898-CA (Oil Well Road Project No.
60044). (Fiscal Impact $27,800.00)
17. SUMMARY AGENDA - THIS SECTION IS FOR ADVERTISED PUBLIC
HEARINGS AND MUST MEET THE FOLLOWING CRITERIA: 1) A
RECOMMENDATION FOR APPROVAL FROM STAFF; 2) UNANIMOUS
RECOMMENDATION FOR APPROVAL BY THE COLLIER COUNTY
PLANNING COMMISSION OR OTHER AUTHORIZING AGENCIES OF
ALL MEMBERS PRESENT AND VOTING; 3) NO WRITTEN OR ORAL
OBJECTIONS TO THE ITEM RECEIVED BY STAFF, THE COLLIER
COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION, OTHER AUTHORIZING
AGENCIES OR THE BOARD, PRIOR TO THE COMMENCEMENT OF
THE BCC MEETING ON WHICH THE ITEMS ARE SCHEDULED TO BE
HEARD; AND 4) NO INDIVIDUALS ARE REGISTERED TO SPEAK IN
OPPOSITION TO THE ITEM. FOR THOSE ITEMS, WHICH ARE QUASI-
JUDICIAL IN NATURE, ALL PARTICIPANTS MUST BE SWORN IN.
A. This item reQuires that ex parte disclosure be provided bv Commission
Members. Should a hearinl! be held on this item, all participants are
reQuired to be sworn in. Recommendation to approve Petition A VESMT-
2007 - AR -12316, 1999 Gordon River Lane, to disclaim, renounce and vacate
the County's and the Publics interest in a that portion of a 25-foot wide
Page 25
December 16, 2008
drainage easement along the rear of Lot 1, Nature Point, as filed in Plat
Book 20, Pages 20-22 of the Public Records of Collier County, Florida,
situated in Section 35, Township 49 South, Range 25 East, Collier County,
Florida, the vacated portion being more specifically depicted and described
in Exhibit A and accept the replacement drainage easement also shown on
Exhibit A.
B. This item reQuires that all participants be sworn in and ex parte
disclosure be provided bv Commission members. CU-2007-AR-12619,
K.O.V.A.C Enterprises, LLC, represented by Tim Hancock, AICP, of
Davidson Engineering, is requesting a Conditional Use for a refuse system
in the Industrial (I) zoning district. The +/- 3.73-acre subject property is
located at 1995 Elsa Street, Section 11, Township 49 South, Range 25 East,
Collier County, Florida. CTS
C. This item reQuires that all participants be sworn in and ex parte
disclosure be provided bv Commission members. PUDA-2008-AR-
13494, Kite Kings Lake, LLC, represented by D. Wayne Arnold, AICP ofQ.
Grady Minor and Associates, P.A., is requesting a PUD Amendment to
modify the permitted commercial uses within the Kings Lake PUD.
(Ordinance No. 82-52) The subject property is located at 4890 Davis
Boulevard, in Section 7, Township 50 South, Range 26 East, Collier County,
Florida. CTS
D. Recommendation to adopt a resolution approving amendments
(appropriating carry forward, transfers and supplemental revenue) to the
Fiscal Year 2008-09 Adopted Budget.
E. Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners enact an
Ordinance amending Ordinance No. 87-55, as amended, Imperial Golf
Estates, Phase V.
18. ADJOURN
INQUIRIES CONCERNING CHANGES TO THE BOARD'S AGENDA SHOULD
BE MADE TO THE COUNTY MANAGER'S OFFICE AT 252-8383.
Page 26
December 16, 2008
December 16, 2008
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, if you'd please take your
seats.
Mr. Chairman, Commissioners, you have a hot mike.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Good morning. Welcome to the
Board of Collier County Commissioners' regular meeting of
December 16, 2008.
Today's invocation will be given by JR Pagan, International
Worship Service. And by the way, he's looking for a benefactor, if
anybody knows one. And after that we're going to do the Pledge of
Allegiance.
Would you all rise, please.
PASTOR PAGAN: Good morning.
Dear Creator of all things, we thank you. We give you all our
glory for everything you allow us to do. We thank you for this year
for all the work that this community and these leaders have put
forward, God, for the well-being of this county. I ask you that your
favor is with them in everything that they do.
God, I ask you also for every person that is over here that want to
bring this county and this society and this community forward. God, I
ask you that we do everything just to honor you and also to raise the
value and -- of people in our community, God.
I ask you all these things in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.
(The Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.)
Item #2A
REGULAR, CONSENT AND SUMMARY AGENDA-
APPROVED AND/OR ADOPTED WITH CHANGES
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Good morning, County Manager.
Would you please walk us through today's change list.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, I will.
Page 2
December 16, 2008
Agenda changes, Board of County Commissioners, December
16, 2008.
The first item is to add on Item 4A. It's a proclamation
recognizing I-HOPE, Inc., for its contributions to Collier County and
the residents of Immokalee and for their continuing efforts in
rebuilding homes and lives in Immokalee. This item is added on at
Commissioner Coletta's request.
There is another proclamation add-on. Commissioner Henning,
you want to talk about that while we're right there at that section.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I was trying to look it up. Over the
weekend in Naples Daily News, Sunday's paper, one of our employees
is in Iraq, and she used to be a MedFlight personnel. And we're
working up a proclamation to get that on the agenda and get it over to
her before the holidays.
MR. MUDD: Okay. Commissioners, I don't believe that -- the
proclamation is being drafted. I don't think we have an official copy.
So in this particular change, I believe the chairman's asking for you,
his authority so he can sign that proclamation and give it to her at
Christmastime.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And actually what we're going to do,
we're going to read it, I want to create a video and get it over to her.
There's -- I'm sure there's a lot of employees that would like to say
hello.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signifY by
saymg aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
Page 3
December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, next item on the change sheet is
Item 5A. Also presenting this item will be Reg Buxton, the President
of the United Way of Collier County, and that clarification's at staff
and presenter's request --
The next item, which you do not have on your sheet, okay -- so
it's Item 6A. It is a public petition request by Larry Basik to discuss
small scale GMP amendment on U.S. 41 East and Trinity Place. That
petition has been withdrawn at the petitioner's request. So 6A has
been withdrawn.
Next item is Item 7 A. This item, conditional use
2008-AR-13201, was continued from the October 28,2008, BCC
meeting rather than the November 18,2008, BBC meeting. That
clarification's at staffs request.
Next item is Item 7B. This item, variance 206-AR-II064, was
continued from the December 2,2008, BBC meeting. Again, that
clarification is at staffs request.
Next item is Item 7C. This item, Moraya Bay Beach Club,
conditional use 2006-AR-ll 046, was continued from the December 2,
2008, BCC meeting and is further continued indefinitely. That's at the
petitioner's request.
The next item is Item lOA. It's regarding the Port of the Isles
Marina acquisition. The agreement for sale and purchase agreement
was executed by the owners and signed by the county attorney as to
form and legal sufficiency, and it has been distributed and made
available for review. That's at staffs request.
Next item is Item 10G. The title on the executive summary in the
recommendations should read, recommendation that the Board of
County Commissioners approve the 2008 incentive review and
Page 4
December 16, 2008
recommendation report as required by the Florida Statute 420-9076
(4), and authorize staff to bring back an amended impact fee deferral
ordinance as outlined in the report or per direction of the Board of
County Commissioners.
You'll receive the report, and then today you'll tell staff how you
want us to go about changing the ordinance.
The next item is to withdraw Item ION. Intent to protest
received. Also note that the dollar amount has changed and the title
should read, recommend approval by the Board of County
Commissioners to award bid 09-5148 to Subaquatics Services, LLC,
in the total amount of$I,556,419.26 rather than 1,772 -- $1,755,096.
That request -- that clarification's at staffs request. Again, the item
has been withdrawn from today's agenda because of a bid protest.
The next item is 16A2. The resolution attached to the agenda
packet references the date of March 1, 2008. Under paragraph 1, it
should have read, March 1,2009. That clarification's at staffs request.
The next item is to move 16A3 to 10Q. That's a recommendation
to grant final approval of the roadway (public) and drainage
improvements for the final plat of Arrowhead reserve at Lake
Trafford, Phase 1, with the roadway being maintained by the county
and the drainage improvements being privately maintained. That item
is being moved at Commissioner Henning's request.
The next item is Item 16A15. The plat map on Page 6 of6 of
this agenda item has been replaced with the revised map that notes the
preserve setback. Copies have been distributed this morning and
made available for review. This clarification's at Commissioner
Henning's request.
Next item is to move 16A16 to 100. This item to be heard at 5
p.m. It's a recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners
approve option three and take no action on the public petition request
to change allowable uses in the Randall Boulevard commercial
subdistrict with the Golden Gate Area Master Plan and the MirMar
Page 5
December 16, 2008
PUD. This item is being moved at Commissioner Coletta's request.
The next item is 16B4. The title of the item, including the
executive summary and the resolution, should reference Gail
Boulevard, and the proper spelling should be G-A-I-L Boulevard.
That clarification is the request of Commissioner Fiala.
The next item is to move 16B 11 to 10R. It's a recommendation
to approve the purchase of improved property parcel number 132FEE,
Jerry L. Mitchell and Barbara Mitchell required for Vanderbilt Beach
Road extension project, project number 60168, fiscal impact
$729,104. This item is being moved at Commissioner Henning's
request.
The next item is withdraw Item 16C2, intent to protest received.
That was a recommendation to award bid number 08-5123 for
purchase of hauling of disposal of lime sludge services to Pro-Lime
Corporation in the estimated amount of $150,000 annually. This item
is being withdrawn at staffs request. Again, we received a bid protest.
The next item is to withdraw Item 16D30 and to withdraw
16D31. Both were companion items. And this had to do with the
Golden Gate Senior Meals Program and a lease with the Messiah
Lutheran Church. The item is being -- those items are being
withdrawn at staffs request.
The next item is to move Item 16D37 to 1 OP, 10 papa.
Recommend that the Board of County Commissioners approve and
authorize the chairman to sign change order number 1 to work order
C3T6 -- excuse me -- C3TS-FT-4153-08-02 for the design consultant
C3TS for the Manatee Park design in the amount of $50,000 on a time
and material not-to-exceed basis to provide the Site Development Plan
and the required South Florida Water Management District permits.
The net contractual value of the services will total $243,950. This
item is being requested to move to the regular agenda by
Commissioner Coyle.
The next item we need to scratch off the list. I had
Page 6
December 16, 2008
communications with Commissioner Henning, and he's okay with the
item being left on the consent agenda, and that is 16F8. So the request
to move it to 10S has been withdrawn, and we're going to keep it on
the consent agenda.
The next item is Item 16G 1. This item is a companion item to
16E 13 rather than 16E 14 as stated in the title of the executive
summary. That clarification is at Commissioner Fiala's request.
Next item is to move Item 17C to 8B. This item requires that all
participants be sworn in and ex parte disclosure be provided by
commission members. It's PUDA-2008-AR-13494, Kite Kings Lake,
LLC, represented by D. Wayne Arnold, AICP ofQ. Grady Minor and
Associates, P.A., is requesting a PUD amendment to modify the
permitted commercial uses within the Kings Lake PUD, ordinance
82-52.
The subject property is located at 4890 Davis Boulevard in
Section 7, Township 50 south, Range 26 east, Collier County, Florida,
CTS. This item is being moved at Commissioner Fiala's request.
You have two time certain items for today's agenda. It's Item
100, originally 16A 16, to be heard at 5 p.m., and that is the
recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve
option three to take no action on public petitioner's request to change
allowable uses in the Randall Boulevard commercial district within
the Golden Gate Area Master Plan and the MirMar PUD. Again, that
item was moved at Commissioner Coletta's request.
The next time certain item today is Item 14A to be heard 4:30
p.m., Tuesday, December 16, 2008, per the Collier County
Community Redevelopment Agency Board to give direction to the
Bayshore/Gateway Triangle CRA executive director concerning three
proposed purchase contracts for multiple real estate parcels within the
Bayshore Drive and Gateway/Triangle portions of the CRA area.
David Jackson, your executive director of the Bayshore/Gateway
Triangle, will present that item. This item's time certain was requested
Page 7
December 16, 2008
by Commissioner Fiala.
That's all I have, Mr. Chairman, Commissioners.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
County Attorney?
MR. KLATZKOW: Nothing, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Before -- we have one speaker on
today's consent or summary, but before we do that, let's get ex parte
communications, any further changes.
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I have no further changes to the
agenda. With respect to the consent agenda, I have no disclosure.
With respect to the summary agenda, I have disclosure for 17B. I
received correspondence concerning this item, and for 17C, I've had
meetings, correspondence, emails; I've met with Rich Y ovanovich,
Wayne Arnold, and Eric Strickland concerning this item.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Good morning, ladies and
gentlemen.
I have no changes to the consent agenda nor the summary
agenda, and my ex parte for the consent agenda, I have no disclosures
on the consent agenda.
As for the summary agenda, I have one item, and that is 17C,
which has been moved to 8B later on, but I've had emails in regards to
this. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I have no ex parte communication on
today's summary or consent agenda except for talking to staff.
And further changes on the agenda, on Item F -- or 16F8,
recommendation to approve the public financial management. The
county manager had the fiscal language, fiscal impact language
change. Is that included in today's changes?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. Let me just get the piece of paper.
For the record, we had a conversation with the county attorney,
Page 8
December 16, 2008
and we -- and on 16F8 -- just let me find it, sir. The second sentence
of the fiscal impact should state, the county manager or his designee
must authorize -- must authorize any special project work, and added,
as approved by the Board of County Commissioners.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Right. And furthermore,
recommendations to additions to that summary agenda, that the
agreement will have an appendix on the cost --
MR. MUDD: On the costs that--
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- on the costs as far as the RFP--
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- that were -- and then the final
change that I have is to move back on the consent agenda 16B 11.
That was on the change list to go to lOR.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
MR. MUDD: So you want 16B 11 to stay on the consent agenda?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct, even though I have concerns.
I'm sure they can be addressed.
Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. I have no ex parte on the
consent agenda. On the summary agenda, on 17C, I have spoken
many times with people in Kings Lake, also planning -- planning
commissioner for that area and with Rich Y ovanovich, and if he -- is
he in the audience?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Ifhe was in the audience, I
would have been able to leave it on the summary, because what we're
trying to do it just tighten that up to protect the people in that area. But
he isn't here, so I'll have to leave it on the regular agenda. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, thank you, and good
mornmg.
Page 9
December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Good morning.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I have no other changes to the
agenda, and with the movement of the 17C to the regular agenda, I
have nothing to declare for either the summary agenda or the consent
agenda.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay, thank you.
We have a public speaker on today's summary or consent agenda.
MS. FILSON: We have a public speaker for Item 16J2, Barry
Gerenstein.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Come up to the mike, sir.
MR. GERENSTEIN: Good morning. I'd just like to thank the
commissioners, the Sheriffs Department, and the county attorney.
This is the traffic agreement for Verona Walk. It's long needed and
wanted by the residents of the community, and we're glad that it's
finally at this point.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Your name for the record, please?
MR. GERENSTEIN: Barry Gerenstein.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MR. GEREN STEIN : Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Entertain a motion to approve today's
agenda as amended.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So moved.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Halas,
second by Commissioner Coletta.
All in favor of the motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any opposed?
Page 10
December 16, 2008
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Page 11
AGENDA CHANGES
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS' MEETING
December 16. 2008
Add On Item 4A: Proclamation recognizing I HOPE, Inc. for its contributions to Collier County
and the residents of Immokalee and for their continuing efforts in rebuilding homes and lives in
Immokalee. (Commissioner Coletta's request.)
Item 5A: Also presenting this item will be Reg Buxton, President, United Way of Collier County.
(Presenter's request.)
Item 7A: This item (CU-2008-AR-13201) was continued from the October 28,2008 BCC meeting,
rather than the November 18, 2008 BCC meeting. (Staff's request.)
Item 7B: This item (V A-2006-AR-11 064) was continued from the December 2, 2008 BCC meeting.
(Staff's request.)
Item 7C: This item (Moraya Bay Beach Club CU-2006-AR-11046) was continued from the
December 2, 2008 BCC meeting and is further continued indefinitely. (Petitioner's request.)
Item 10A: Regarding the Port of the Islands Marina Acquisition, the Agreement for Sale and
Purchase ("Agreement") as executed by the owners and signed by the County Attorney as to
form and legal sufficiency, has been distributed and made available for review. (Staff's request.)
Item 10G: The title on the executive summary and the Recommendation should read:
"Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners approve the 2008 Incentive Review
and Recommendation Report as required by Florida Statute 420.9076(4) and authorize staff to
bring back an amended Impact Fee Deferral ordinance as outlined in this report." (Staff's
request.)
Withdraw Item 10N (Intent to protest received): Also note that the dollar amount has changed and
the title should read: "Recommend approval by the Board of County Commissioners to award
Bid #09-5148 to Subaqueous Services, LLC in the total amount of $1,556,419.26. . ." rather than
$1,755,096). (Staff's request.)
Item 16A2: The resolution attached in the agenda package references the date of March 1, 2008
under paragraph 1. The date should read March 1, 2009. (Staff's request.)
Move 16A3 to 10Q: Recommendation to grant final approval of the roadway (public) and drainage
improvements for the final plat of Arrowhead Reserve at Lake Trafford Phase One with the
roadway being maintained by the County and the drainage improvements being privately
maintained. (Commissioner Henning's request.)
Item 16A15: The plat map on page 6 of 6 ofthis agenda item has been replaced with a revised
plat map that notes the preserve setback. Copies have been distributed and made available for
review. (Commissioner Henning's request.)
Move 16A16 to 100: This item to be heard at 5:00 p.m. Recommendation that the Board of
County Commissioners approves Option 3 and takes no action on Public Petitioner's request to
change allowable uses in the Randall Boulevard Commercial Subdistrict within the Golden Gate
Area Master Plan and the Mir Mar PUD. (Commissioner Coletta's request.)
12/16/2008 8:51 :56 AM
Item 16B4: The title of this item, including the Executive Summary and the Resolution, should
reference "Gale" Boulevard as "Gail" Boulevard. (Commissioner Fiala's request.)
Move 16B11 to 10R: Recommendation to approve the purchase of improved property Parcel No.
132FEE (Jerry L. Mitchell and Barbara Mitchell) required for the construction of the Vanderbilt
Beach Road Extension project. Project No. 60168. (Fiscal Impact: $729,104.) (Commissioner
Henning's request.)
Withdraw Item 16C211ntent to protest receivedl: Recommendation to Award Bid Number 08-5123
for purchase of hauling and disposal of lime sludge services to Pro-Lime Corporation in the
estimated amount of $150,000 annually. (Staff's request.)
Withdraw Item 16030: Recommendation that the Board of County Commissioners recognize and
approve the expenditure of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funds in the amount of
$84,375.00 for the Golden Gate Senior Meals Program which is administered by the Department of
Housing and Human Services (HHS). This program is an expansion to an existing HHS program
which provides nutritious meals to low-income seniors in Collier County. (Staff's request.)
Withdraw Item 16031: Recommendation to approve and execute a Lease Agreement with
Messiah Lutheran Church, Inc. of Golden Gate for space to accommodate the Housing and
Human Services Senior Nutrition Program. (Staff's request.)
Move 16037 to 10P: Recommend that the Board of County Commissioners approve and
authorize the Chairman to sign Change Order #1 to Work Order C3TS-FT-4153-08-02 for design
consultant C3TS for the Manatee Park design in the amount of $50,000.00 on a time and material,
not-to-exceed basis to provide the Site Development Plan and the required SFWMD permits. The
net contractual value of services will total $243,950.00. (Commissioner Coyle's request.)
Move Item 16F8 to 10S: Recommendation to approve contract for RFP 08-5081 with Public
Financial Management, Inc., for Financial Advisory Services. (Commissioner Henning's request.)
Item 16G1: This item is a companion item to 16E13 rather than 16E14, as stated in the title ofthe
Executive Summary. (Commissioner Fiala's request.)
Move Item HC to 8B: This item requires that all participants be sworn in and ex parte disclosure
be provided by Commission members. PUDA-2008-AR-13494, Kite Kings Lake, LLC, represented
by D. Wayne Arnold, AICP of Q. Grady Minor and Associates, P.A., is requesting a PUD
Amendment to modify the permitted commercial uses within the Kings Lake PUD (Ordinance No.
82-52). The subject property is located at 4890 Davis Boulevard in Section 7, Township 50 South,
Range 26 East, Collier County, Florida. CTS. (Commissioner Fiala's request.)
Time Certain Items:
Item 100 10riQinally 16A16l to be heard at 5:00 p.m. Recommendation that the Board of County
Commissioners approves Option 3 and takes no action on Public Petitioner's request to change
allowable uses in the Randall Boulevard Commercial Subdistrict within the Golden Gate Area
Master Plan and the Mir Mar PUD. (Commissioner Coletta's request.)
Item 14A to be heard at 4:30 p.m.. Tuesday. December 16. 2008: For the Collier County
Community Redevelopment Agency Board to give direction to the Bayshore Gateway Triangle
CRA Executive Director concerning three proposed purchase contracts for multiple real estate
parcels within the Bayshore Drive and Gateway Triangle portions of the CRA area. (David
Jackson, Executive Director, Bayshore Gateway Triangle CRA). (Commissioner Fiala's request.)
12/16/2008 8:51:56 AM
December 16, 2008
Item #2B, #2C, #2D, #2E, #2F, #2G, #2H, #21, #2J, #2K and #2L
MINUTES OF THE NOVEMBER 5, 2008 - VALUE
ADJUSTMENT BOARD HEARING MEETING WITH SPECIAL
MAGISTRATE MAZUR; NOVEMBER 7,2008 - VALUE
ADJUSTMENT BOARD HEARING MEETING WITH SPECIAL
MAGISTRATE PELLETIER; NOVEMBER 13,2008 - VALUE
ADJUSTMENT BOARD SPECIAL MEETING WITH SPECIAL
MAGISTRATE WATSON; NOVEMBER 14,2008 - BCC/PRE-
LEGISLATIVE SESSION WORKSHOP; NOVEMBER 17,2008-
VALUE ADJUSTMENT BOARD SPECIAL MEETING WITH
SPECIAL MAGISTRATE PELLETIER; NOVEMBER 18, 2008 -
BCC/REGULAR MEETING; NOVEMBER 21, 2008 - VALUE
ADJUSTMENT BOARD SPECIAL MEETING WITH SPECIAL
MAGISTRATE MAZUR; NOVEMBER 21,2008 - VALUE
ADJUSTMENT BOARD SPECIAL MEETING WITH SPECIAL
MAGISTRATE WATSON; NOVEMBER 24, 2008 - VALUE
ADJUSTMENT BOARD SPECIAL MEETING WITH SPECIAL
MAGISTRA TE PELLETIER; NOVEMBER 25, 2008 - VALUE
ADJUSTMENT BOARD SPECIAL MEETING WITH SPECIAL
MAGISTRATE PELLETIER; NOVEMBER 26, 2008 - VALUE
ADJUSTMENT BOARD SPECIAL MEETING WITH SPECIAL
MAGISTRATE WATSON - APPROVED AS PRESENTED
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Entertain a motion to approve
November 5,2008, Value Adjustment Board special meeting with
Special Master Mazur; November 7,2008, Value Adjustment Board
special meeting with Special Master Pelletier; November 13,2008,
Value Adjustment Board meeting, Special Master Watson; November
14,2008, BCC pre-legislative workshop; November 17,2008, Value
Adjustment Board special meeting, Special Master Pelletier; 2000 --
November 18,2008, BCC regular meeting; November 21,2008, value
Page 12
December 16, 2008
adjustment (sic) special meeting with Special Master Mazur;
November 21,2008, Value Adjustment Board, Special Master
Watson; November 24th Value Adjustment Board special meeting
with Special Master Pelletier; November 25,2008, Value Adjustment
Board special meeting with Special Master Pelletier; November 26,
2008, Value Adjustment Board special meeting with Special Master
Watson.
Is there a motion?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Fiala,
second by Commissioner Halas.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that will bring us to -- we have no
service awards for today. That will bring us to proclamations.
Item #4A
PROCLAMATION TO RECOGNIZE I HOPE, INC. FOR ITS
CONTRIBUTIONS TO COLLIER COUNTY AND THE
RESIDENTS OF IMMOKALEE AND FOR THEIR CONTINUING
EFFORTS IN REBUILDING HOMES AND LIVES IN
IMMOKALEE - ADOPTED
Page 13
December 16, 2008
The first proclamation was on the change sheet, and that was an
add-on. It was Item 4A. It's a proclamation recognizing I-HOPE, Inc.,
for its contribution to Collier County and the residents of Immokalee
and for their continuing efforts in rebuilding homes and lives in
Immokalee. This item was added on at Commissioner Coletta's
request.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you. It's, indeed, an
honor to be able -- Mr. Hears, you can come right up front here for
now. Please, everyone connected with I-HOPE. It's good to see
everyone here.
There's been a lot of effort ongoing in Immokalee. I don't know
how many people realize the -- what I-HOPE and what the different
organizations have combined to accomplish, but it's been absolutely
amazmg.
Whereas, Immokalee, helping our people is emergencies,
I-HOPE, Incorporated, was founded in January of2006 with the
mission statement to meet the needs for ongoing coordination in
Immokalee, Collier County, Florida, providing support for people
whose lives have been impacted by local disaster. I-HOPE,
Incorporated, will also provide collaborative leadership for planning,
recovery, rebuilding, mitigation, and advocacy for people in this
community; and,
Whereas, I-HOPE, Incorporated, came into existence in the
aftermath of Hurricane Wilma that struck the west coast of Florida in
the early morning hours of October 24,2005, with winds in excess of
130 miles per hour whippeting the coastline. The storm was the first
hurricane to strike this area of Florida in several decades; and,
Whereas, vanloads of Amish workers from Indiana, Iowa, and
Michigan arrived in January, 2007, and stayed through early March
living, working, and getting to know the wonderful people of
Immokalee. Other Presbyterians, Lutherans, Methodists, and United
Church of Christ volunteers from Eerie, Pennsylvania; Oregon;
Page 14
December 16, 2008
Florida; and North Carolina, joined hands to reach out repairing roofs,
rebuilding the inside of homes, helping place FEMA mobile homes in
place and saw first hand devastation that rivaled terrible living
conditions in other areas of America. Many of the restoration work is
anticipated to be completed by the end of2008; and,
Whereas, One-on-One Leadership Foundation of Southwest
Florida supported the I-HOPE director for eight months until funding
could be obtained to assist this rural community from the destruction
suffered from Hurricane Wilma; and,
Whereas, I-HOPE, Incorporated, has implemented a disaster
preparedness plan that incorporated private citizens, farm laborers,
business, and educational institutions working together to prepare our
community for future disasters; and,
Whereas, Immokalee CERT, Community Emergency Response
Team, consists of 19 members that have been certified to work with
the Immokalee fire department and local health department in case of
local emergencies, including hurricane, tornadoes, wildfires, and
pandemic flus; and,
Whereas, I-HOPE, Incorporated, is part -- in partnership with St.
Matthew's House, distributed $25,000 worth of food vouchers to
needy senior citizens; and,
Whereas, I-HOPE, Incorporated, in partnership with
One-On-One Leadership Foundation is rebuilding for clients homes
free of charge to the families using CDBG/DRI funds, SHIP funds,
federal home loan Bank of Atlanta, and faith-based donations totaling
$607,000; and,
Whereas, I-HOPE has rehabbed 400 homes, has set up 34 mobile
homes for families in Immokalee, and is in the process of completing
the installation of another 35 mobile homes for Wilma-impacted
families in need.
Now, therefore, be it proclaimed by the Board of County
Commissioners, Collier County, Florida, that I-HOPE, Incorporated,
Page 15
December 16, 2008
be recognized for their contributions to Collier County and the
residents of Immokalee and for continuing efforts to -- in rebuilding
homes and lives in Immokalee.
Done and ordered this, the 16th day of December, 2008, signed
by our chair, Tom Henning.
And I make a motion for approval.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coletta to
move the proclamation, second by Commissioner Fiala.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
(Applause.)
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Please, say some words.
MR. HEERS: It's truly an honor for me to be here with my staff
and a couple of our board members today. Board chair, Ann
Goodnight, sends her regrets for not being able to be present with us.
She had previously -- previous commitments that made it impossible
for her to be here, as well as Pastor Sully, our vice-chair. But we're
grateful to have Nancy Freeze, our board treasurer, and also Dick
Rice, our board secretary, that are here along with our -- some of our
staff; Esther Montero, case manager; Janie Vidaurri, my assistant; and
my direct assistant supervisor who volunteers and case manager, is
David Grove.
I was reading some material by Bill Pollard, who's the CEO of
ServiceMasters. You know, they oversee companies like Merry
Page 16
December 16, 2008
Maids and TruGreen and Terminex, and he was quoting Peter Drucker
on the subject of leadership when he says, leadership has very little to
do with charisma or even so-called leadership qualities, or even with
the accomplishments of the leader, and much to do with the
accomplishments of the followers, the direction that they're being led
and who they are becoming in the process.
Leadership is all about serving. And I think it is noteworthy that
because our -- naturally the funding is going down for recovery
efforts, even though our work still continues, work that has been
helpfully funded by the Board of County Commissioners with our
permitting costs being picked up by other funds that you have
provided.
One of our employees, who's worked with us since we started,
has said to me that even though there's no funding for their position
next year as of December 31 st, that it is their intent to continue to be a
full-time volunteer doing the work that they have done so capably.
That is the true testimony of leadership when there are those who are
taking that kind of responsibility.
And without the partnership of so many people -- I couldn't even
begin to name them all, but you folks are one of those partners --
we've been able to accomplish a great work out in Immokalee, and
we're going to continue, as God provides, to do the work to help the
poor and disenfranchised out in our community.
So thank you for this recognition. We receive it with humility
but with great honor today.
(Applause.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well spoken.
MR. MUDD: I'm sorry?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well spoken.
Item #5A
Page 17
December 16, 2008
PRESENT A TION TO THE BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS OF A CHECK TO PURCHASE A NEW
VEHICLE FOR THE VETERANS TRANSPORTATION
PROGRAM. THE CHECK WAS PRESENTED BY JIM ELSON,
PRESIDENT, COLLIER COUNTY VETERANS COUNCIL; AND
ERNIE BRETZMANN, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, UNITED WAY
OF COLLIER COUNTY - PRESENTED; PRESIDENT OF THE
UNITED WAY REG BUXTON ALSO PRESENTING
MR. MUDD: That brings us to our presentation part of the
agenda. The first presentation to the Board of County Commissioners
is a check to purchase a new vehicle for the veterans' transportation
program. The check will be presented by Jim Elson, president of the
Collier County Veterans Council; Ernie Bretzmann, executive director
of the United Way of Collier County; and Reg Buxton, the president
of the United Way of Collier County.
Gentlemen, if you could please come forward.
MR. ELSON: Gentlemen. It's always nice to bring the
commissioners money. We have a lot of people involved in this
project, and we've invited many of the people that have worked on the
project, but also the drivers who deliver the people to their medical
appointments.
Commissioners, with this group and with this ceremonial check
that I have in my hand, I'm very pleased to present you with
$23,360.40 so that a new van can be purchased to use and help deliver
our veterans to their veterans' appointments at Bay Pines Hospital in
Tampa and in Ft. Myers, Homestead, Fort Lauderdale, and Miami.
We drive nearly 5- to 7,000 miles a month, and a new, safely
equipped van will make that much more pleasant, but most
importantly, more safe.
So with that, I make this presentation.
(Applause.)
Page 18
December 16, 2008
MR. ELSON: Of course, this could not be done without the help
of the United Way, and I'd like to let Ernie say a few words about that.
MR. BRETZMANN: Thank you, Jim. We're very proud to
sponsor this.
As an employee of the United Way of Collier County and a
veteran myself, I'm very proud that the board of directors of the
United Way of Collier County voted unanimously to support this
initiative and to help ensure that our veterans receive the healthcare
which they deserve. Thank you.
(Applause.)
MR. ELSON: One last note I'd like to make is this also came
from a year-long effort from the citizens of Collier County. Checks
coming in in the amount of 10 or 25 or 50, or some in the amount of
500 or 1,000. But this is from a broad-based support of all of the
people within Collier County, and I thank them.
(Applause.)
MR. ELSON: And I guess I'll give this to Colonel Mudd?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That's great.
MR. ELSON: He's in charge of all the important things, correct?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you so much, Fellows.
MR. ELSON: I would like to just say one more little item to
what I said earlier. It was Jim DeLony who came to me -- it was Jim
DeLony that came to me nearly a year ago with the idea that this
could be done saying that the United Way was behind us. I really was
a little doubtful that this much money could be raised in a time of the
economic situation that we have.
But it is with the hard work of lots of people, many of them
veterans, that came together to make this all happen. So I want to
thank Jim DeLony especially. Thank you.
(Applause.)
Item #5B
Page 19
December 16, 2008
SANT A BARBARA BOULEVARD SIX-LANING FROM DAVIS
BOULEVARD (SR-84) TO COPPER LEAF LANE AND RADIO
ROAD FOUR-LANING FROM SANTA BARBARA
BOULEV ARD TO DA VIS BOULEVARD, CONTRACT 06-0442.
(PROJECT #62081) - UPDATE BY NORM FEDER;
CONTRACTOR WAS AT THE JOB SITE AND UNAVAILABLE
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, the next presentation is the Santa
Barbara Boulevard six lane from Davis Boulevard State Road 84 to
Copper Leaf Lane and Radio Road four laning from Santa Barbara
Boulevard to Davis Boulevard, contract number 06-0442. It's project
number 62081.
And Norman, how you doing?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Contractor must be working today.
MR. FEDER: Contractor working.
Commissioners, our contractor should be here, but in lieu of that,
I'll give you a brief overview and then wait for them to arrive.
What I will tell you is the project right now is actually a little bit
ahead of schedule. They've got 81 percent of the work completed in
71 percent of the time. They're continuing the effort. And while they
have until fall of next year to complete, we're looking at the prospects
of, if we maintain the schedule, June or July next year for completion
of the project.
The original budget was -- is still maintained. The revised
budget shows no increase in costs at this time.
You pretty much know the typical cross-section. And so what I
will do is open it to any questions you have and apologize. The
contractor's typically here, Mr. Morgan, but I don't see him, so I will
respond to any questions that you have.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions by the board? I have a
question.
Page 20
December 16,2008
MR. FEDER: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I notice that there is a storage of large
amounts of dirt on vacant lots. When will that be cleaned up?
MR. FEDER: In the project they're using that, and most of that
will be brought down to the extension project, which also Astaldi has.
They're bringing that over to the area just south of Davis as a start to
moving on that project.
So I imagine now that they've started up -- we gave them notice
to proceed the beginning of this month on that project -- that you'll see
a lot of that moved down. Some of it's going to be utilized for the
medians and issues on the project itself on Radio and Santa Barbara,
but most of it's going to the extension project.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Is that part of the right-of-way?
MR. FEDER: Yes. Where they are right now is either in
retention pond or in our right-of-way.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, but to give you a more definitive
answer about when, Norm will get with the contractor and give you
the specifics on an email to give you -- to let all the commissioners
know when --
MR. FEDER: Be happy to do that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you, Mr. Feder.
MR. FEDER: Thank you.
Item #6B
PUBLIC PETITION REQUEST BY CYNTHIA DENNIS TO
DISCUSS WAIVER OF LOAN IN THE AMOUNT OF $19,173.98
IN ORDER TO PREVENT FORECLOSURE - COUNTY
ATTORNEY'S OFFICE TO WORK WITH PETITIONER ON THIS
ITEM
Page 21
December 16, 2008
MR. MUDD: Commissioners, that would bring us to our first
public petition. Again, 6A was withdrawn this morning.
The next item is 6B. It's a public petition request by Cynthia
Dennis to discuss waiver ofa loan in the amount of$19,173.98 in
order to prevent foreclosure.
MS. DENNIS: Good morning.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Your name, please.
MS. DENNIS: Cynthia Dennis. I am a resident ofImmokalee. I
am requesting to speak on behalf of my house that is scheduled for
foreclosure on the 18th.
I am -- I can save my home -- my home can be saved, but I need
the permission from the county commission, I'm sorry, to either waive
its loan or accept a partial or half. I take care of my elderly father,
which I also have to say he is a veteran also.
I -- the loan amount is 19,000, and if I don't try to save it, they
will foreclose it. I'm quite sure that I'll be homeless. And I'm here
today because I'm asking that the county commissioner (sic) will
waive or partial it. And that's basically more -- that I can -- you know,
that I can say, and that is why I'm here today.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, I'm sure we have questions. If
you don't mind --
MS. DENNIS: Of course.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- we could go to the commissioners.
Commissioner Coletta, do you have any questions?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I do. Thank you, Commissioner
Henning.
You're saying that you have half the money to be able to pay
this?
MS. DENNIS: What I'm saying --I'm sorry. What I'm saying is,
I have someone to help me save my home. My father, he's elderly,
which I take care of him. And who's going to help me is reverse
mortgage.
Page 22
December 16, 2008
And so I feel like that was my only -- that was the only hope that
I had to go there.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, forgive me.
MS. DENNIS: It's okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETT A: Yeah. You're going down the
path of no return with a reverse mortgage. I'm sorry to hear that that
was your only option. That's just grasping at straws. It will buy you a
little bit of time, but eventually it catches up with you and you have
nothing to show for it.
This is -- this would be a new precedence if the commission went
in this direction. I don't believe we've ever taken it upon ourselves to
offset a -- this is a SHIP loan for impact fee deferrals or something?
MS. DENNIS: Yes, and 1 got some repairs did on my home.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Can you help us with this, Mr.
Klatzkow? Do you know what this loan's about?
MR. KLATZKOW: No, I'm quite confused actually. Who's
foreclosing on the home?
MS. DENNIS: Yale Mortgage.
MR. KLATZKOW: I'd be happy to sit down and work with Yale
Mortgage.
MS. DENNIS: I've tried to work with them.
MR. KLATZKOW: I would be happy to sit down and see in
could work something out with respect to the SHIP loan.
MS. DENNIS: Okay.
MR. KLATZKOW: I mean, we can subordinate this SHIP loan.
That's not an issue. I don't think we can just waive it though.
MR. MUDD: The problem you have is -- the problem you have
is the federal program. You can't waive it. You could take money out
of ad valorem and you could pay it, but you can't waive it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'm a little confused here. Is this a
loan to offset the impact fees? Is this what this is about it. It sounds to
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December 16, 2008
me like this is part of impact fees or what?
MR. MUDD: No. Marcy, if you could please get up and
describe the loan.
MS. KRUMBINE: Yes, thank you. For the record, Marcy
Krumbine, Director of Housing and Human Services.
This was a loan to assist in doing some rehab work for an
income-qualified individual on an owner-occupied house, and it's a
federal program. It's the HOME program.
And there are some very clear strings attached to any of our
programs, and this -- some of the strings that are attached to this is,
one, the house remains owner-occupied and in the name of the
individual slid and, two, that it remains affordable for a certain length
of time based on how much money we used to rehab the home. And
in this case, it's a 10-year affordability, and the loan was taken out in
2006.
And then lastly, because it's a federal program, we are bound to
recapture the money if there is any reason why these things are not
kept -- any of these stipulations are not kept up.
And currently Ms. Dennis does -- no longer owns the home. She
quitclaim deeded it, and so she's already -- she's already not in
compliance with the terms of the agreement that we had with her.
And by our agreement, the county is bound to recapture the money.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And so this is why the -- I'm
sorry. I'm speaking out of turn.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No, please, Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So the way I understand it, this
loan wouldn't be due at all at this point in time if it wasn't for the
quitclaim deed.
MS. KRUMBINE: Well, no. The loan would be due -- really
what we need to do with the county attorney's office is to pursue
getting the money back, because it's under her name but she no longer
owns the home.
Page 24
December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, I understand what you're
saying. So in other words, if it's in her father's name, that's the reason
why he's eligible for this extended type of payment back --
MS. DENNIS: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- where, what do they call it,
the reverse mortgage, he would be the one that would be eligible for it,
right, I would assume?
MS. KRUMBINE: I'm not sure about that. Probably ifhe's a
senior citizen, then yes, that might be, but then that loan would also
have to be under his name.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, it might not hurt to have
the county attorney just make a general inquiry to the bank itself to
see if there is something. That home will have no resale value at this
point in time under these circumstances, you know, and the market
being what it is. So I would think it would behoove the bank to try to
come up with a working arrangement.
But in any case, we are required to get back the full amount of
the loan at this time; is that what it is?
MS. KRUMBINE: We're required to recapture the money or
make the effort to recapture the money because it's no longer being
used for the purpose that we gave it --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And how do you do that --
MS. KRUMBINE: -- and for the individual.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- by -- with a loan on the prop-
-- with a lien on the property?
MS. KRUMBINE: That would be the county attorney's
responsibility. They would --
MR. KLA TZKOW: We have a lien on the property as it is.
That's not the issue.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. And that lien is the
reason why funds can't be drawn down from other sources?
MR. KLATZKOW: Commissioner, I really don't understand
Page 25
December 16, 2008
what the story is. I'd have to get with the petitioner here and her bank
to understand what the story is. I just don't have enough information
right now.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Commissioner Halas?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I'm sorry. Commissioner Halas
wasn't finished.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Did this person qualify for this loan
with -- at the point in time when it was administered to her?
MS. KRUMBINE: Are you asking if she qualified for the
mortgage or the rehab loan?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, the rehab loan.
MS. KRUMBINE: Yes. She -- well, she doesn't have to pay that
back. She had to income-qualify for the program, and she did.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. So what's been the change
here? Do you have a -- you don't have a job at the present time?
MS. DENNIS: I have ajob at the present time. My job is very
slow. I'm a CNA/HHA. My hours is cut tremendously. My husband
lost his job, and I was -- I was asked -- someone presented this to me,
and that is why I went along with it.
And my father, in doing the -- I mean, doing the -- changing the
quit claim, they told me that's what I would have to do in order for me
to qualify, which I didn't investigate it enough. It was like I was doing
something to save my home. And that is why things was changed
over, and that is the reason why. I thought I was doing the right thing
about, you know, going that road, you know, of doing the reverse
mortgage.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Is the federal loan subordinate to
the mortgage, or do you have any idea?
MR. KLATZKOW: This particular one, they generally are--
they generally are subordinate to the first mortgage, yes.
Page 26
December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: They are. Okay. We don't have
any idea what the first mortgage is, how much it is?
MR. KLA TZKOW: (Shakes head.)
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. There are too many
unanswered questions, and I -- I'd like to see the commissioners do
whatever they can to help Ms. Dennis make the right decisions in this
respect, and I think the county manager -- the county attorney has
made a good offer. Let him work with Ms. Dennis and the bank to see
what can be worked out, and then he can come back and report to us
what the actual facts are.
MR. KLATZKOW: I'll come back.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Because we don't have the
authority to waive it. There's nothing, absolutely nothing we can do.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala, is that okay with
you?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. It's really hard for me to
understand it, but I'm glad that the county attorney might be able to
guide Ms. Dennis along and, you know -- and maybe at least give her
some answers on this issue.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That's fine with me as far as the
direction.
Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'm all done. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Had a majority of the board
asking -- requesting the county attorney to work with the petitioner
and see what we can do. Thank you.
MS. DENNIS: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you, ma'am.
Okay?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. It's just -- the only thing I can -- my
expertise, outside of being -- staying at the Holiday Inn Express last
night, has to do with a commercial by Robert Wagner, the guy that
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December 16, 2008
used to play the lead role on It Takes a Thief -- he basically talks
about reverse mortgages and they'll buy it back and then the person
can stay in the particular house until they are no longer with us, and
then they take possession of the house.
I believe there's probably a clause in there that says the home, on
reverse mortgage, needs to be free of all liens before they'll do that,
and I believe that's what the issue is.
But again, my expertise comes from a commercial. And, you
know, it's truth in advertising. But the county attorney will get into it
in great detail.
Item #6C
PUBLIC PETITION REQUEST BY JOHN MARTINOWICH TO
DISCUSS BILLING, SURCHARGES AND FEES FOR UTILITY
BILLING ACCOUNT - MOTION FOR UTILITY DEPARTMENT
TO FOLLOW POLICY AND TO WORK WITH PETITIONER IN
TERMS OF A PAYMENT PLAN - CONSENSUS
The next item is Item 6C. It's a public petition request by John
Martinowich to discuss billing surcharges and fees for utility billing
account.
Sir, if you could please come forward.
MR. MARTINOWICH: Good morning.
MR. MUDD: State your name for the record.
MR. MARTINOWICH: My name is John Martinowich. I'm a
resident at 886 Wyndemere Way. And I thank the commissioners for
this opportunity to address a problem I have at the Collier County
utilities department.
I have a dispute with the department which I've been unable to
resolve. For the billing period of June 18th through July 18th of this
year, we received the bill for 124,000 gallons of water. We were not
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December 16, 2008
in residence in the house.
The month prior to that bill of 124,000 gallons, our usage was
zero. The month after the 124,000 gallon bill, our usage was zero.
I have not received any reasonable explanation from the utilities
department of how we could have consumed 124,000 gallons of water.
To put that in perspective, 124,000 gallons is 10 times the
amount of water in my swimming pool, which is an above-average
swimming pool. The explanations I got from the utility development
was, somebody left an outdoor spicket running. The property's
patrolled on a daily basis by our security people. I have two neighbors
who check the house at least once a week.
And to give you some perspective also, our landscaping company
was unable to cut our lawn at one period in time when I left the hose
on outside for a 12-hour period overnight, and we had only used about
2,000 gallons of water. 124,000 gallons of water would have left
water streaming onto the street.
The second explanation I got is that there may have been a leaky
toilet. We did some tests inside the house. They're rudimentary. But
in our sink in the kitchen, we used -- if we do a test, we can do -- the
discharge rate is about two gallons per minute, which is less than
100,000 gallons a month, and they claimed we used 124,000 gallons.
The discharge out of the toilet is about two gallons every one
minute and 45 seconds, which equates to about 60,000 gallons of
water.
The county -- or excuse me -- the utility department says, well,
the ordinance is what it is and we cannot give you any relief. I've
asked them to explain in any reasonableness how this could have
happened, and the only thing that I can conclude was that when they
read the bill for the month of July, they were unable to get a successful
reading.
And they normally read the bills by what they call a radio, an RF
transmitter. The RF transmitter was not working. They did a manual
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December 16, 2008
reading of the bill. And at the time of the manual reading, there was
no water running through the meter, and we got -- subsequently we
got billed for the 124,000 gallons.
After the manual reading, everything went back to normal. And
it seems inconceivable to me that we could have used over 4,000
gallons of water a day, per day from the time they did the last reading
till the time they did the reading for the 124,000 gallons and
mysteriously it corrected itself. I mean, I just find this unreasonable.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions by the board members?
Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I'd like to hear from our water
department. I understand -- I agree with him. It sure is mysterious,
especially when nobody noticed any water going anyplace, and it
automatically shut off for the next reading. Doesn't sound right. Could
we hear from our water department.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. Before we do that, I have a
question --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- for the petitioner.
So you were gone a month? You were gone approximately a
month?
MR. MARTINOWICH: We were gone approximately six
months.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Six months?
MR. MARTINOWICH: Uh-huh.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
MR. MARTINOWICH: And--
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Now you said you had somebody
checking on the property?
MR. MARTINOWICH: Yes. We had our next-door neighbors
and my other neighbor, who is Dawn Sally York, who probably some
of you know, checked the house on a regular basis.
Page 30
December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: So they walked around the house?
MR. MARTINOWICH: They walked around the house, and on
a weekly basis they would actually put some Clorox into the toilets
and flush them so they would stay -- so -- and they claim that there
were no leaky toilets.
And as I've already stated, even a leaky toilet couldn't have used
that much water.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Commissioner Fiala wants to
hear from staff. Who wants to do it? Mr. Bellone?
MR. BELLONE: Commissioners, for the record, my name is Joe
Bellone. I'm the Manager of the Utility Billing and Customer Service
Department.
I have a record of the correspondence that we have with this
particular customer and the -- kind of the day-to-day.
I do want to start out by saying that we did do a radio read on
June 17th, and the meter reading at that time that we took
electronically read 50, meaning 50,000 gallons was reading on the
meter.
On July 18th, the meter readers went out a second time for that
month's cycle reading, and the electronic read, again, read 50.
We have certain protocols within the water department and utility
billing, whereas, if a meter reads the same as in the prior month, we'll
send a utility technician to that site to see if it's a matter of, is the radio
frequency transmitter not functioning properly or is the meter stuck?
There are reasons why you might get a similar read from month to
month.
So a utility technician went out on July 21 st and did two things.
One, they took another electronic read, and it read 50 again. Then
they looked at the register of the meter, which is the dial that has the
numbers on it, and it showed that the reading at that point, manually,
was 174.
So if you look at manual reading of 174 compared to the month
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December 16, 2008
before of 50, would say that 124,000 gallons of water passed through
the meter.
Because the manual read and the electronic read did not match is
an indication that the RF transmitter was not working properly. And
so at the same time they took the manual read, they also changed the
radio frequency transmitter.
Based on the phone calls that we had from the customer
sometime in August, August 28th, we sent the utility technician out
again to do an electronic read and to do a manual read. And at that
point, the electronic read was 175 and the manual read was 175,
indicating that in that time period from the end of July to the end of
August, 1,000 gallons had passed through the meter, and that the radio
frequency and transmitter was working properly since the manual read
and the electronic read were the same.
We have Mr. Mattausch, who's the director of our water
department, can explain to you the parts of the meter and how they
work together so that you understand how the meter works, if you
will.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Is that the kind of detail that you
wanted, Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, I just -- I don't know if!
wanted that much detail, but it sounds like they had a malfunction
there and the billing is wrong, from what I'm hearing, and so --
MR. MUDD: No, ma'am, that's not what you're hearing. What
you're hearing is the transmitter was broken and the meter had a
change read. The meter, the physical meter, was at 174 even though
the transmitter was sending out to the van that the collected data said
50. Now, you always go with the manual meter in the ground in order
to come up with that.
So there was a difference in the amount of water on what the
manual -- what he was billed prior at 50,000 and the 174 that the
manual read in the meter.
Page 32
December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Just a couple questions.
The meter itself, was it -- the transmitter nonfunctional for months; in
other words, you were getting the same reading continuously? For
how long?
MR. MATT AUSCH: The -- for the record, Paul Mattausch,
Water Department Director. And I have a meter here in my hand and
I have a transmitter, what we call an ERT.
The meter has a register on it, and this continues to work in the
event of a failure of that transmitter. The transmitter only takes the
signal from the electronic register and transmits it to the equipment in
the van as they drive down the road and obtain radio reads.
If this fails, this continues to work, and it's this electronic register
here that is -- that we went back and read at a later date.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, Paul, let's go back to the
question. How long had the reader been reading the same? In other
words, over how long of a period had it showed the -- whatever it was
-- what was it, 50,000 or whatever? Is that -- that's like the base mark.
How far back does that go where that didn't change?
MR. BELLONE: Commissioner, in -- in the reading in May
showed that the reading was 49. As I explained earlier, the reading --
the June reading was 50. And then because the July reading was 50 as
well, that's when the utility technician arrived on scene to actually
look at the register on the meter.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Is there anyone that could
tamper with that meter by magnets or some other way to be able to
make it give a false reading?
MR. MATTAUSCH: No, sir. The meter really is -- it's a sealed
register, it's electromechanical, and it -- it's -- as I have up on your
screen, it meets -- it's compliant with the standards for meters, and that
also includes design and verification, which means that these meters
are pretty tamper proof.
Page 33
December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, this meter that the water
goes through, is this the meter also that supplies the irrigation for the
lawns, or is that something separate?
MR. MATT AUSCH: I don't know what the irrigation is there.
MR. BELLONE: Commissioner, it's a separate irrigation system.
So this is just potable service for the home itself, for the home, the
pool, et cetera.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. Now, the analogy that he
gave us as far as the usage of water, is that correct as far as, you know,
it's impossible to get up to those kind of number in one month's
period?
MR. BELLONE: Yes. You know, there are -- I mean, there are
comparisons. A WDI (sic) has some comparisons. Paul, if you want
to move down to the bottom. Okay.
A running faucet -- and this would be a normal faucet. There are
low- flow faucets as well. Certainly we don't understand the fixture
that the customer has, you know, within the home. But a running
faucet will use three gallons a minute. If that was running for 27 days,
inside the home, it would be 121,000 gallons.
A running toilet, normal toilet, maybe six gallons a minute. A
low-flow would be two-and-a-halfto three gallons a minute. A garden
hose, typically on a three-quarter inch connection, would use 600
gallons an hour. That would take about eight days to use 122,000
gallons.
And I have a personal story, if you'll allow me. I was on
vacation last October. My pool company comes on Thursday to do
my pool. Apparently they must have cleaned my pool and put water in
the pool, started the hose running on Thursday.
And I got home on Saturday night and my -- luckily I was there,
and I found the hose in the pool. And my normal bill is 8,000 gallons,
roughly, and I had in excess of 40,000 gallons for two-and-a-half
days. The pool wasn't overflowing. The outflow, the drain was work
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December 16, 2008
properly. There was no -- there were no signs, no physical signs that
the pool had overflowed. So I know -- luckily that I was there, that I
saw within two days, two-and-a-half days, you know, that, you know,
my bill-- and I got my money back from the pool company.
If! had been away another week, that would have run another
week, and I'm sure the bill -- it would have been a mystery. The pool
company would have come, put the hose back in its case, and I never
would have known where it went. So it's difficult to say.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And the short of it is, is that you
can't think of any circumstances that caused this meter to come up
with this reading other than to have water pass through it?
MR. BELLONE: That's correct, Commissioner.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So basically the other months that
the meter basically stood still with the transmitter, the RF transmitter,
he didn't get billed anything?
MR. BELLONE: Well, he'll get billed the --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Minimum amount.
MR. BELLONE: The minimum amount. He won't get billed for
consumption, but he will get billed for the availability charges, and
those are being paid on a regular basis all year long. He's paying his --
those bills he's paying regularly.
The other thing I want to mention to the commissioners is that
when we have the complaint, we did send the technician out, and we
have what we call an in-ground test, a 1 O-gallon test. The utility
technician will run a fixed amount of water through the meter, and
then they'll read the dial and compare the reading on the dial to the
amount of water they pass through the meter. It's called a 10-gallon
test, and that showed that the meter for that limited test was
functioning properly.
We did offer to have the meter tested, do a bench test, that would
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December 16, 2008
require pulling the meter out of the ground. We can either test it
in-house with our own utility technicians -- and there's a cost for that
as defined by the ordinance -- or we can actually send it back to the
manufacturer for an independent test, and there's a cost for that too.
Now, if the merit -- if the results of that test show that it's not
within standard accuracy, that test is then free and we'll credit the
account back to normal usage. But if it shows that the meter is
accurate, in addition to the existing water consumption that's on the
bill now, we also would add the test fee as well.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. You know, what I'm seeing
here, there's a lot of time being spent on this one case, and that doesn't
leave me with a lot of comfort.
How much is his bill going to be, over $1,000?
MR. BELLONE: In this particular instance, for 124,000 gallons,
water and sewer together is $1,150.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: $1,150. That isjust unreasonable.
You know, the burden of proof should be on the government to prove
that he did not use this amount. Here comes another one. I mean,
there's gobs of money, I'll betcha over $1,000, just in staff time just on
this one issue.
MR. MUDD: There must be 800 of these a month. That's what
he's going to probably tell you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All right. Then that tells me that we
have a global problem here.
MR. DeLONY: Sir, Jim DeLony, Public Utilities Administrator.
Sir, the bottom line of this situation is, the government provides -- you
used the word government. I use the word utility. The utility provides
a service. That service is bonded through the usage as flows and
measured by this meter. We've talked to the details of this.
Once the material or the product goes through the meter, what
happens on the back side of that meter we have no control over. We
can speculate what happens on the other side, we can try to explain.
Page 36
December 16,2008
We have an adjustment policy.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I didn't ask a question.
MR. DeLONY : Yes, sir. I thought there was a question. I
apologize.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: It was a statement.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir, I understand.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I didn't ask a question.
MR. DeLONY: I apologize then. I'll wait for the question.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You know, there was no question.
MR. DeLONY: I'm sorry.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And, you know, the thing of it is, if
there are 800 of these going on, we have a problem. I don't believe
that we have a residential problem. And what you're -- what you're
doing, you're going from a transmitter to reading the meters, but who's
to say those meters, when you set up the transmitter, wasn't recorded?
Do you have any proof of that?
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir, we do. We have the audit trail with
regard to all the meter reads up to the point of concerns, we have the
meter read subsequent to the read by the meter reader --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: When was the--
MR. DeLONY: -- and then we have the follow-on months. So I
think we have our excellent audit trail with regard to that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: When was the transmitter installed?
MR. DeLONY: Joe, didn't you say that was done in the month of
July?
MR. BELLONE: The electronic transmitter was replaced on
July 21 st.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: When was it installed originally?
MR. BELLONE: Probably been in there a while. I can check the
records. If I go back for the -- consumption --
MR. DeLONY: Again, in may. To answer your question
directly, the transmitter is only a device to send a signal to what's on
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December 16, 2008
this meter here. This doesn't change except for flow through it. So if
this fails, this remains active and accurate.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Oh, I understand what was said
earlier.
MR. DeLONY : Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I mean, I got that.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: But you had a -- you used to have
meter readers go around to every one of the meters and, you know,
record the numbers on there, and then you went to the transmitter
when they only -- or the responder when they drove by. When was
that? When did we start that?
MR. DeLONY: It was early 2000s, late 1999,2000, somewhere
in that area, that we made the transition, and it took us a series of years
to retrofit all of them in. But we were full up and running, Jim, I
guess when you came here in 2001 ?
MR. MUDD: No. We basically -- we were in the process. We
did the first installment -- excuse me. We did the first installment, and
I think it was the spring of 2000, and then when I got here in October
of 2000, we finished it up and had a series of four more installments
and finished up the whole program. So it started around 2- -- at the
beginning of2002.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Here's a question for you.
MR. DeLONY : Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: When was -- prior to in June, when
was the last time you physically read this meter?
MR. DeLONY: Do you have that information, Joe?
MR. BELLONE: It wasn't physically read.
MR. DeLONY: As long as we are seeing through our, what we
call an exceptions report, that the meter is not showing any type of
equal reads, what Joe described earlier, we would take the read strictly
from the UR T (phonetic), from what was transmitted to the van. So I
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December 16, 2008
cannot answer the question when it was physically read except at the
time of the meter installation itself, we registered there for the first --
from the beginning. So that would have been the only answer I would
have for you on that one, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct, and -- I mean, $1,000 to--
for a month, a water bill for a single-family home, is -- just is not
reasonable. And the only thing that I'm saying is, you got to go back
from the beginning. And what -- in between the time that the
electronic transmitter was installed, what was the meter at that time
and what was the gallonage uses? And, you know, bring it forward.
But, you know, I can't -- we're getting more and more complaints
about these outrageous water bills, and there has to be more than the
reason of, well, the toilet's not work right or, you know, left the hose
on in the kiddy pool or something like that.
I can tell you, when I leave -- when it rains in my pool, I know
when it overflows. I can see it out the discharge. So, you know, it's
either an internal problem -- it's not an external problem.
The gentleman said he had residents going there. There's no --
there's no doubt in my mind, anybody with any common sense
entering a home can hear water running, whether it be a toilet or
whether it be a sink.
Commissioner Halas, commissioner Coyle --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, I think that--
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: -- there is a burden on the
homeowner in regards to what the Florida Statutes say in regards to
water usage. Obviously he wasn't being used (sic) any water when
they took some other readings, so there could have been a malfunction
at that point in time and it wasn't really caught by the water staff until
at such time as they realized that something was amiss, because if he's
got a pool, there's got to be water put in that pool every week.
So ifhe wasn't being charged, if the meter still retained from the
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December 16, 2008
transmitter that was sending the information and that hadn't moved,
then obviously there was water being consumed.
And then when the problem was found, then this was all
compounded by the fact that they got one bill, and that was because
the other months prior to that was not showing up -- was not showing
up in the manner it should have been.
So I think that you have to look at what the Florida Statutes are.
And, yes, we probably got some more of these issues that are coming
forward, but this is a utility. And if you start going in this manner
where you want to give restitution to this, then it's going to be -- the
burden's going to be put on all the other people who are paying the
water rates.
And so I think you're -- you can't be -- you've got to be fair with
everyone in regards to this, and I don't feel it should be a burden put
on all the other users who pay every month and would notice that
there's some kind of a flaw if they don't get billed for proper water
usage and if they have a pool and whatever other amenities that they
have that use water.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: There's way too much
inconsistency here for me to be able to make a decision on the
information that has been presented.
Mr. Martinowich has -- gave us a period for this usage, which is
at significant variance from the period that was stated in his letter and
in the water usage report from the utilities department. And, in fact,
the water usage -- the utilities department has started from the
beginning. They give us the entire year's readings, month by month,
of water usage for this entire period of time.
And for July the 30th the reading was zero. It was the only time
during the entire year that there was no usage of water in the
petitioner's home but yet the petitioner says that somebody was living
in the home for eight days from July the 23rd through 31 st.
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December 16, 2008
Somebody was living there. So why didn't they use water? I don't
understand that. So the water usage was zero on July 30th.
MR. DeLONY: Again, sir, I can only tell you what we have in
our billing records.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, I understand that.
MR. DeLONY: We know that specifically because that's the --
that's what we're responsible to provide.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Then what I would say then
is that Mr. Martinowich has said that for eight days, from July 23rd
through the 31 st, the house was occupied; is that correct?
MR. MARTINOWICH: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But yet there's no indication any
water was used during that period of time.
MR. DeLONY: By the applicant?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: By the applicant.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That doesn't make any sense to me,
okay. And it's something that somebody's going to have to clear up
before we can make a decision on anything.
MR. MARTINOWICH: Commissioners, can I have a minute or
two rebuttal of some of the things that they've said?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, it's not my call. It will be up
to the chairman.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, go ahead. Just two minutes,
that's all. We've got to get this thing finished.
MR. MARTINOWICH: Personally we've heard some stories
about the pool. The pool was monitored. The pool was not
overflowing during this period.
In my previous employment, I was the senior vice-president of
customer service in business development for United Water
Resources, which is the large -- was at the time the largest private
utility in the United States. It served 40 million people in 19 states.
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December 16, 2008
Most of our utilities, you had access to a public service, a public
utilities commission that are customers, and we work on
reasonableness of the charges. There's no reasonableness in this.
They can't demonstrate how that much water could have been used --
could have been used. I mean, 124,000 gallons of water on your lawn,
somebody would have noticed it.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay, thank you. I guess I'm next.
And what I want to do is --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I hadn't finished.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, you hadn't finished. Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Ifwe're going to use some
deviation of reasonableness here, you've got to factor in how much
water someone might have used since they lived in the house eight
days in the last week or so of July. That's going to be probably at least
1,600 gallons. Is that not true?
MR. DeLONY: Sir, I can't say that because I don't know what
goes on behind that meter.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes.
MR. DeLONY: I don't know the status of lengths of showers.
We've got an anecdotal story about pools. If you're going to have a
problem using water wisely in your home, it's probably going to be
that pool and your pool service, which, you know, will bring it up --
will, you know, very unscientifically throw a hose, turn on the tap, to
raise it to a certain level.
And unlike Commissioner Henning's pool, I don't know where
my outlet is, so I've had that problem, too.
We know that over a period of time, running toilets are very --
and we have some statistics here that they cause significant water --
and it's not usually one event that causes this problem. It's usually a
combination.
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December 16,2008
We know there was some people in the home and we know
people were checking it. We just don't -- we only know what the
meter tells us, truthfully. And our adjustment policy and -- that we
have, by ordinance, says, look, we depend on the accuracy of the
meter to describe and to prescribe the billings on the account. If
there's a dispute about the accuracy, we have a resolution process for
that in our adjustment policy, and that's what we've got. In this
particular case, this customer decided that he didn't want that
adjustment policy to pursue that matter.
With all candor, sir, being reasonable from my view deals with
what passes through this meter is what we know. What happens
beyond it we don't know. I've looked at a lot of utilities here in the
course of this last six, seven months to see what they're doing in terms
of adjustment policies.
Mrs. Fiala recently had one in her district that we worked through
together. Mr. Halas has had a couple in his district we've worked
through together. Mr. Henning's had a few that we've worked through
with his customers. In working through -- and in every single case,
the meter was the thing we knew. What happened behind the meter
was all anecdotal or evidence that was determined subsequent to what
the meter said.
We've pulled a few meters through the adjustment policy and we
have not found a problem with our meters. I'm not saying -- you
know, I'm just telling you, the accuracy is what Mr. Mattausch
described.
We want to make sure that we are reasonable, but the chart -- the
problem with this is that once it passes through this meter, the cost of
distribution, treatment is all done. I mean, the cost has been spent. It's
like going to a gas station, filling your tank up and going in and
paying, because we charge in arrears not in advance with regard to
water and water services.
So we have to depend on this meter to provide us that indicator,
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December 16, 2008
and through our ordinance we have an adjustment policy, which I
believe levels out that fairness. Now, we can't control what happens
behind the meter, and I can only speculate. And I certainly empathize
with anybody with a high water bill, include the DeLony family. And
-- so that's the reason we've been aggressive which regard to our water
conservation programs to help me. But that's where we're at, sir. In
terms of reasonableness, that's our application.
We have spent a lot of time with this matter because we feel
every one of these matter, every one of these have consequences for
families, and that's what we've attempted to do, sir.
I hope I've answered your question.
MR. MARTINOWICH: Can I make one final point?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: After we go to the commissioners.
And first of all, we have Commissioner Fiala, Commissioner Halas,
and Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Mr. DeLony--
MR. DeLONY: Yes, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- you were great when you worked
with the people that -- in my district who had a problem. They, too,
were out of town, and I guess their bill was over $4,000.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir -- ma'am, it was.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And you were able to work out an
agreement. We did not want to dismiss the bill because that wasn't
right, but you were able to work something out. Can you do that with
this gentleman?
MR. DeLONY: Yes, ma'am. If I may take a moment -- and
there may be a lot of people listening that are going to be in this
position, so ifI may, I'd like to take a moment about our adjustment
situation, if I may.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, we'll have to replay it back
because ComCast is not working. The channel's moving.
MR. DeLONY: Okay. We're moving today.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No, it's not.
MR. DeLONY: Well, just for the benefit that -- of those that are
here. What we'll do is, is when you get in arrears on your water bill
and it's a big number, we'll sit down with you one-on-one and we'll
look at that and we will work with you on establishing a payment
plan, normally a year, interest free.
In other words, let's say you owe $1,200 in arrears. We'll take
that and what -- that $100 a month for the next 12 months on top of
your current consumptive bill, and as long as you pay your current
consumptive bill, you know, your current bill, and that $100, you're a
customer in good standing with the firm, even though you are in
arrears for your large bill. We're -- that's about all we've got in the
way of extension.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Wasn't there something with the
sewer that you were able to eliminate?
MR. DeLONY: Right. We make sure that ifthere's an excessive
use of -- first of all, you only pay for the first -- up to the first 15,000
gallons of sewer charges. You pay for the sewer on your water bill,
and after the first 15,000 gallons, there's no sewer charge to be
subscribed.
So we've worked with folks to do that and make sure that the --
what they're paying for is just the water. And then we provide -- we're
requested or, you know -- the payment plan I described.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: But you reduced the bill somewhat?
MR. DeLONY: Yes, ma'am, we do. Any way we can justify a
nexus between benefit and cost, we're going to do that.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So what I'm getting out of this
whole scenario is that when you realized that something was amiss
because the recorded amount was zero from the previous month, then
you realized that maybe there was a problem, then you went out and
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December 16, 2008
replaced the transmitter, and obviously things then started to work
correctly.
And the meter itself is an analogue meter, so it records --
continues to record the gallons, whether the transmitter is working or
not. It still records the gallons. When there was a complaint about
this, you went out in the field, or your service technician went out in
the field, and made a quick assessment of -- if the meter was working
properly by extracting or running through there 10 gallons of water.
And at that point in time, the 1 O-gallon test passed with flying
colors. And you then asked the person that owned the property here,
this Mr. Manowich (sic), Martinwich--
MR. MARTINOWICH: Martinowich.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah -- that he has the obligation
here of having the meter pulled and put on the test bench, either your
test bench or to send it back to the manufacturer for 250, and he
decided not to; is that correct?
MR. DeLONY: Well, to date, so far, we -- he has not -- to my
understanding, has not agreed to that bench test.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. So as far as you're
concerned, the meter is working properly. Now, suppose the meter is
pulled out of service, he decides to pay the $250, you send the meter
back to your lab or you send it back to the manufacturer, then what's
the scenario that comes forward?
MR. DeLONY: You know, it's an up or down call. If the meter's
accurate --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Then the bill's there?
MR. DeLONY: It's over.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: If the meter is not accurate --
MR. DeLONY: We'll adjust it to -- as Joe had briefed earlier,
we'll adjust it back to historical usage, and we'll chalk this up to meter
error.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So you'll find out what the error in
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December 16, 2008
the meter is and then credit him for that amount of error?
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Ifhe provides the $250?
MR. DeLONY: That's correct. Well, ifhe--
MR. MUDD: No.
MR. DeLONY: No, if the meter's accurate, we suck that up.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. DeLONY : Yeah, we take that on, yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. DeLONY: The adjustment policy that Joe spoke to -- and,
excuse me, Mr. Mudd, did you have anything you wanted to say?
MR. MUDD: No. I just want to make sure --
MR. DeLONY: Yeah, okay.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. DeLONY: With regard to the adjustment policy -- you
know, I found that this is very unusual, by the way, in utilities to have
adjustment policies like this, we'll go out and pull the meter, test the
meter, and then have an adjudication on the accuracy of the meter as
part of it, very unusual. We're glad to have it, because we don't want
people's money that we're not supposed to have.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Right.
MR. DeLONY: So yes, sir, that's the policies we got. And it's --
and it's essentially -- you know, if it's right, then you pay; and if it's
not right, then we'll adjudicate the bench fee. It will be on the utility,
and we'll go back to the historical uses patterns and we'll move on.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Got it.
MR. DeLONY: Customer in good standing.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. DeLONY: And that's our adjustment policy.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Who was next?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I think I am.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Oh, Commissioner Coletta, I'm sorry.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I'm not next. I already had my turn.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Just a couple of
observations. If this was the other utility, the Florida Power & Light,
everything that comes on the other side of the meter you're responsible
for. There's never any question about it.
If you got your pool pump, it doesn't go on the timer, for some
reason it just continues to go and you're gone, it's going to continue to
run and, you know, you're going to have a much bigger bill than you
have had before.
Now, here's some of the problems that come up with this whole
thing. The petitioner wasn't in control of the situation all the time.
There was other entities out there that he was depending upon to be
able to do a check on a weekly basis. It was probably a pool company
that came and left. There's a lot of different hands that come into play.
Unless the meter is at fault and the problem lies with the meter
not on the other side of the meter, then the county has some
responsibility. Am I correct on that?
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir, that's correct.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Once the water goes through the
meter and activates it and it turns a number, it comes out the other end,
that becomes the responsibility of the customer.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That doesn't mean that we don't
have to have some compassion in this, and I think you're doing a good
job as far as the compassion goes with coming up with some working
arrangement to be able to make this a little bit more workable.
But the whole thing is, there's some things that are out of our
control. We can't prove what happened to the water once it got past
the end of the meter. We can prove what happened when it went
through the meter. Past that point, there's no reason why we have to
get involved with having to prove that the water was dispensed
through the pool, on the ground, down the toilet, down the drain.
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December 16, 2008
That's not our responsibility. We can't possibly do that.
As long as you're sure the meters were correct and remain correct
and that -- and I agree with the petitioner, there's probably absolutely
no reason to have the meter, you know, tested and pay $250. If it
passed the 10-gallon test, it's probably going to pass everything else
that's out there. I doubt it could be wrong, but maybe a fraction of a
percent probably that wouldn't make any difference.
So, you know, we've got to be realistic about this. Whatever kind
of policy we come up with now or whatever we direct you to do is
going to give other people the ability to come back if their bill is $25
over what it was the previous month, and be able to have an argument
based upon actions we take here today.
We either have equipment that works or we have equipment that
doesn't work. Now, one thing that Commissioner Henning brought up
that gave me some concern, he said, you're getting an abnormal --
well, and I'm using the exact words. And forgive me for that. I don't
mean to quote you when I can't remember the words. But he indicated
there was more complaints than there have been in the past; is that
correct?
MR. DeLONY: 1 don't -- sir, we have -- we are just a reflection
of the economic status in this community. If there's a downturn in
employment and jobs and income, people have a hard time paying
their utility bills, whether it's me or FP&L or any other service
provider in town.
And we've had -- we've had some activity. We always have
activity, if you've -- and I guess my staffs scrambling behind me to
give me the numbers with regard to meter lockouts -- what we call
lockout where a bill is in default more than two billing cycles and we
go out there and we're not able to resolve with the customer the
payment of the bill and we have to do that cutoff thing, and, yes, that's
on the rise. There's no question about it.
We probably are looking at a third more on a monthly basis in
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December 16, 2008
the last two months than what we had last year at this time. I don't
have the numbers in front of me, but that's -- the trend is up. That is a
problem certainly, and that would be -- I don't know a matter of a
complaint, but more of a reality.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, meanwhile, the petitioner
is our customer.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So I myself, you know -- and I
don't know if my fellow commissioner is going to agree, would direct
you to go back and try to work out some arrangement that will be the
least obtrusive as possible with them, keeping in mind that, you know,
what you have done in the past in applying that at this point in time.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Why don't we see if we can get a
consensus --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- with that. Are you okay with that
direction?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And I'm okay with that direction.
Commissioner Halas, Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: (Nods head.)
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I have a problem with that, because
if we start giving -- looking at each one of these things and saying,
okay, we feel sorry for you because what -- we don't have control on
the other side of the meter, and somebody doesn't want to accept the
responsibility of when somebody else is living in his house -- I'm a
ratepayer. Somebody's going to have to pay for that water that's being
consumed, and it's going to end up me because I'm one of the utility
ratepayers.
And I got to tell you, if! -- if we're going to sit here and give
people breaks because it's something beyond our control, then my
water bill's going to go up, and I got a problem with that. Fair --
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, Commissioner Coletta didn't
suggest that at all.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, that's kind of the way I was
looking at this.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No, not at all.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No, no, no. I have a question. Do
you have any kind of measuring device pre the household meter?
MR. DeLONY: I'm sorry. I don't understand the question, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, do you have a meter at the
community, or do you have a meter at --
MR. DeLONY: Oh, for an individual meter? We know what
comes out of the plant, that big number. We may know, depending on
the distribution system at a certain node, like, for example, storage
tank. We'll know what the queue is with that, but the pipe -- but no,
generally speaking --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. The answer--
MR. DeLONY: This is what we depend on for individual
customers. Yeah, one or a larger one. That's how this is done.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: So the answer's no?
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir, that's correct.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay, great.
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I was just going to try to
clarify Commissioner Coletta's motion, and the motion really was to
follow our existing policy of working out a payment plan if the meter
is correct. And if the meter is not correct, then you make an
appropriate adjustment.
You're not going to do anything beyond that; is that essentially
what Commissioner Coletta had in mind?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Forgive me, sir, but I never
suggested the meter was incorrect. Since the petitioner didn't think it
was necessary to have the meter examined, I didn't think it was either.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So you've assumed the meter is
correct, so really what you're saying to the utility department, that they
get together with the petitioner, work out a payment plan.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Whatever they've done for other
customers in the past to try to alleviate the pressure, they should also
do for this petitioner.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Sir, you had your time at the
podium, and we're going to take a 10-minute break. And I'm sure
you'll hear from Mr. Bellone or Mr. DeLony and try to work
something out.
MR. MARTINOWICH: Okay. Can I make one final statement?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You have 30 seconds.
MR. MARTINOWICH: Okay. The bill is predicated on a
manual reading of that meter. That meter may be correct, but over the
10 years that that RF transmitter was installed, we know it was
defective when it was replaced. It could have been defective for eight
to ten years, and it could have been giving out a faulty reading.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And there should be a record on that,
that initial reading.
MR. DeLONY: It's right here. It's right here.
MR. MARTINOWICH: And I didn't own the house for those ten
years.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, sir. Again--
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Back in 2000 when, you know, that
was recorded, there should be a record.
MR. DeLONY: Yes, there is, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And I'm sure you'll go over that,
right?
MR. DeLONY: We will provide that data to him as we have it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Thank you. We're going to
take a 10-minute break, and let's -- well, nine-minute break. Let's be
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December 16, 2008
back at 10:40.
(A brief recess was had.)
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, if you'd please take your
seats.
Mr. Chairman, Commissioners, you have a hot mike.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I think we're ready for nine?
MR. MUDD: That brings us to our next public petitioner, and
Pastor Mallory, are you here?
(No response.)
Item #6E
PUBLIC PETITION REQUEST BY KATHLEEN REYNOLDS TO
DISCUSS FUNDING FOR THE EARLY LEARNING PROGRAM
(CHILD CARE SUBSIDY PROGRAM) - DISCUSSED
MR. MUDD: Okay. I didn't see him out in the hallway and I
haven't seen him yet. So, Commissioner, I'd ask your indulgence,
because he goes into default tomorrow, so we've got to hear this
particular item. We're not going to do it right now. We're going to
wait till he gets there, if that's okay.
And we'll go to the next item, which is 6E. It's a public petition
by Kathleen Reynolds to discuss funding for the Early Learning
Program, Childcare Subsidy Program.
Ma'am, if you'd just state your name for the record.
MS. REYNOLDS: Good morning. My name is Kathleen
Reynolds. I reside at 1685 Ludlow Road in Marco Island, and I'm
here to represent the Early Learning Coalition of Southwest Florida
which serves Collier, Lee, Hendry, and Glades counties.
We have offices in Naples at 201 8th Street South in Naples. We
also have offices in Golden Gate and at the workforce board in
Immokalee.
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December 16, 2008
First of all, I'm really appreciative of the opportunity to speak
with you, because I heard that someone from -- representing our
organization spoke with you a while ago, and you guys were not
familiar with us, and that's our fault.
So I think it's really important that I have the opportunity to kind
of introduce myself and our agency, which is the Early Learning
Coalition of Southwest Florida. We administer two programs. One,
the one that I want to speak to you about today, is called school
readiness. The school readiness program in Collier County serves in
excess of 1,100 kids from Collier County.
I don't think there are too many people who are going to come
before you today and say, we're looking for some support, for some
financial support, for the initiative that we run, and in return, for the
state's commitment of $3.5 million to Collier County.
The state asks for a $160,000 match. That match can come from
a lot of different places. It can come from charitable funding agencies,
it can come from private donors, but in most instances in the state, the
Board of County Commissioners does contribute at least a portion of
the required match.
In Collier County, for whatever reason, reasons I don't really
understand, our coalition has not historically approached the county
commission. I'm fairly new in my role, and so I am approaching you.
I'd like you to really understand what we do, and I'd like you to
understand the economic benefit that we bring to the community.
We also administer the VPK program. The VPK program, again,
I'm very surprised -- a lot of people do not know this, but every child
in the State of Florida, the year before they go to kindergarten, is
entitled to go to pre-K for free. That was an amendment to the Florida
Constitution, and that's an entitlement program.
But the program that I'm talking to you about today allows
low-income families to be able to get childcare, and by this ability to
get childcare they must be working. Both parents must be working at
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December 16, 2008
least 20 hours a week.
Ifwe did not have the school readiness services that we're able to
offer, 50 percent of these families' income would be focused on
childcare, and there would be no incentive to be employed.
What my associate has shared with you, the first page of our
handout -- did you pass them out to everyone -- lists the top 25
employers in Collier County who are employing people who are
receiving school readiness services. The school readiness services, to
the extent of $2.5 million that's distributed in Collier County, allows
these employers to keep these employees to come to work every day.
The next pages in your handout are a listing of over 100 small
businesses in Collier County. These are early childcare, early learning
providers, who are the direct recipients of school readiness funding,
which our agency serves as a pass-through.
So the impact of the $3.5 million, $2.5 million for school
readiness services, and an additional $1 million that goes to serve tana
(phonetic) families. Those are what we would have historically called
welfare, at-risk families, children who are referred by DCF to the
coalition placement in the childcare services, and special-needs kids.
So a total of $3.5 million in return for a requested match of $160,000.
Now, our partner agency, coordinated -- Community Coordinated
Childcare, is tasked with assisting us to raise the required state match.
To date, we've received $12,000 from Collier County. You can
understand that this is a particularly challenging year, even for in-kind
contributions, and that's why I'm inviting you to take advantage of this
opportunity .
And if you cannot help these providers, these children, these
families directly, then I would ask you to assist the coalition in
identifying other funding sources because the state this year absolutely
wants their $160,000 match.
On the next page you'll see a listing of the children in Collier
County who are enrolled, and you'll see that currently -- and this is --
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December 16, 2008
varies upon the day that we pulled the data. On the day that we pulled
this data, there were 1,102 children being served in Collier County.
On the next page you'll see of our $2,453,297 budget strictly for
school readiness, that's -- just by itself. In addition to that comes the
VPK funds, in addition to that comes the funds for T ANA families,
families at risk, and special needs families.
We've already expended over $1 million with these over 100
childcare providers in Collier County.
On the next page, which looks like this, you'll see that currently
in the coalition, which serves four counties, Collier, Lee, Hendry and
Glades, we have 4,346 children who are waiting for service; kids that
we simply can't fund because the resources are not there.
And then if you go to the next page you'll see that in Collier
County there are currently 1,128 children, of which 725 are below age
five on the waiting list.
Finally the very last page is a breakout by zip code, and it shows
you the number of kids that we're serving in each of these zip codes.
Deborah's now going to -- I'm trying not to kill too many trees here, so
I'm going to have Deborah -- we have two sets of the lists of over 400
employers in Collier County who are currently receiving school
readiness services. That means that their employees are able to go to
work because, through the funding of the Early Earning Coalition,
they're able to afford childcare.
And again, please understand, it is a prerequisite that families
who receive these services be working.
I've also given to you a breakdown by district. And so you can
see, for example, Mr. Henning, District 3, you have the largest number
of school readiness children that are being served in the county, 364
children; with District 5 -- Mr. Coletta's district being a close second
with 292 children. These are children that are currently being served.
We need to come up with a local match. Seems to me like a pretty
good deal.
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December 16, 2008
We are short at this moment $148,000 for the $3.5 million that's
being brought right now into Collier County.
And at this point I'd be ready to answer any questions that the
commission might have.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions, comments, by the board
members? Commissioner Halas, Commissioner Coy Ie, then I want to
go. Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: After you.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Ma'am, I think this is a well -- it's a
very worthy program. Have you approached the school board in
regards to this? Because this, I think, would be tied in with the school,
part of the school process, the learning process.
The other question I have is, have you gone to any charitable
organizations within Collier County like the United Way to see if they
could come forward with the funding on this?
MS. REYNOLDS: We have not approached the school board. It
is -- it's my understanding -- again, I'm fairly new in this role -- that
they are not one of the potential funders. Their funding is pretty much
designated to serve specific kinds of priorities.
We have approached many funding agencies and we are waiting
some responses. This year because of the pretty significant economic
challenges, our bosses, if you will, in Tallahassee, which is the agency
for workforce innovation, the Department of Labor -- because this is a
-- this is a work program, this is about putting people to work, taking
them off of welfare roles and giving them the opportunity to
contribute to Collier County's economy, they are requesting this year
that we have some definitive answers by December 31 st in terms of
the dollar match, and that's why it's kind of pushed up the agenda.
I've listened this morning to many issues of interest. This is
about small businesses in Collier County, over 100 childcare
providers, over 400 employers who are depending upon these funds
that allow their staff to come to work.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, maybe the 400 employers
could come forth with some money also that -- since it would be a
benefit for the whole community.
MS. REYNOLDS: Absolutely. And we will approach those 400
employers. But as I stated, in most of the coalitions across the state,
the county commission contributes a portion. The match, for example,
for Lee County is about $300,000. Last year the Lee County Board of
County Commissioners contributed $400,000 to the early learning
coalition.
This year the contribution is not quite as significant; however,
they have residual funds that can be carried over, because they have
been such significant contributors in the past. I truly believe that in
the priority list, someplace along that priority, keeping these over 100
small businesses working, particularly right now, and the 400
employees, must be someplace on the priority list for the Board of
County Commissioners.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, I think one of the things you
need to do is go to the school board and see -- that's one area I think
you need to see if they can assist since this is -- pertains to pre-school
and children so that they have the ability to learn about reading prior
to getting into the school system.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, I think Commissioner Halas
brings up a good point. If you've got 400 employees who have -- or
400 employers who have employees who take advantage of these
services, you know, $300 from each employer would cover the entire
amount of the match money that you're looking for. And it would
surprise me if those employers would not be willing to spend that
amount of money per year to support their employees' needs, so I
think they would be the first place to go to.
Unfortunately, government is not in a position in these severe
economic times to easily find and distribute money because our
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December 16, 2008
sources of income have been dramatically reduced by the state
legislature and by a tax amendment that was approved by referendum
by the taxpayers. They want us to reduce spending, not to spend
more. And it's very difficult for us to find money for really very good
purposes.
And we are further restricted in our ability to take money from
some existing funds and use them for something else. Most of the
funds we have, have restrictions on their uses so that we have to use
those funds for a very, very specific use and don't have any flexibility
with it.
But I'm not going to try to trouble you with our constraints, but
you must know that although government is frequently wasteful, right
now we don't have a lot of options with respect to money.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Question I had, what has Lee County
Commission provided your organization?
MS. REYNOLDS: In the last fiscal year, $400,000. In the
current fiscal year, it's about $150,000. But because Lee County
historically has contributed more than the match, they have residual
funding. So for Lee County we're actually in pretty good shape.
I do really appreciate and I understand that it would have to be a
redirection of funds, but as a citizen of Collier County, long-term
citizen, I guess I do have to wonder why is it that other counties can
support this work initiative and my county can't.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, to answer your question -- but I
want to expand upon my question. We have not funded organizations
on community benefits in the past. What we do is work with United
Way to assist those worthy needs like this one.
But my question is -- so Lee County gave approximately a
100,000 this year?
MS. REYNOLDS: About 150,000 this year.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And that could not be applied to the
grant?
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December 16, 2008
MS. REYNOLDS: No. Every county -- let me be clear about
that -- the $3.5 million that I'm talking about is specifically for Collier
County. Every county has a required match unless there are such high
levels of poverty in the communities, we then may request that there
be a waiver. So, for example, I am given permission to request a
waiver for Hendry and Glades. But even this year, the state is being
very demanding about that.
They're requesting, for example, exactly what Mr. Halas has
suggested, that I petition employers in Glades and Hendry to help us
to meet the match.
So the $160,000 match is strictly for Collier County. The match
for Lee County is significantly more.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, I'm still trying to understand
my question. The response my question.
MS. REYNOLDS: Okay. Let me be clear, because I'd really
like to answer it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Right. You're saying that Lee County
gave a match of $400,000?
MS. REYNOLDS: For FY-'08.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: For FY-'08?
MS. REYNOLDS: Right.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Lee County Commission did?
MS. REYNOLDS: Yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Previously you said it was
100,000.
MS. REYNOLDS: For FY-'09, which is the current fiscal year
was -- it was 150,000; however, they had residual funds from previous
years.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
MS. REYNOLDS: So they're able to make their match for this
year.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
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December 16, 2008
MS. REYNOLDS: Because -- you know, I understand
everybody's been hit. And I'm saying, if it can't be done, at least assist
us even if it's, you know, directing us to ways, for example, where we
can have good conversations with groups that can help us make the
match.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The numbers doesn't (sic) add up to
what's provided in our backup material -- I'm sure that was provided
by staff -- and what's being presented here. Even with the requested
amount and what the grant will do, it still far exceeds what you're
saying each student would receive, or each child would receive. I
think it's --
MS. REYNOLDS: I guess I'm confused. Help me. To -- I'd like
to clarify, if! could, Commissioner.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, it says that 1,800 -- total of
1,800 children in Collier County are currently being served. Here it's
1,100.
MS. REYNOLDS: Yes. I explained. We use the state's EFS
system, and it depends upon the day that you pull the data. So the day
that we pulled the data, which was at the beginning of the year, there
were 1,800 kids currently enrolled. I had this data pulled yesterday.
Yesterday there are 1,100.
Weare seeing a reduction in the numbers because, as I said,
parents have to be employed. Each parent has to be employed a
minimum of 20 hours per week in order to receive these services. So
the numbers fluctuate from day-to-day.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The -- and what I come out with for
the money, it's 15,500 based upon 1,800. That's what it could
potentially benefit children. And I think you can actually get -- enroll
your child in a private school for that amount of money. I mean, I just
don't understand.
MS. REYNOLDS: Again, I'm not sure I -- the cost to the
coalition for funding each child is about $3,000 a year. You can get
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December 16, 2008
school readiness service for about $3,000 a year.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, my math must be off then.
Commissioner Coletta, then Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Ms. Reynolds, one
observation you made and I don't think a reply came back at was
Collier County's lack of participation. You're right, your observations
are absolutely correct. What we have done in the past is we have
always recognized the fact that we have a very caring and giving
community that steps up to the plate; however, you know, I recognize
the fact that it's different out there now than it was before.
So let me understand correctly. You have already approached
the United Way, you have approached the Community Foundation,
you've gone to the Wine Festival? You have gone to all the local
organizations that have been giving in the past, and they either cannot
help you or they can't help you to any sufficient amount; is that
correct?
MS. REYNOLDS: We have approached the United Way. We're
still waiting on a reaction from that group. The Wine Festival has a
policy that they do not fund ongoing issues. They fund, for example,
the new school that's being built at the Edison campus, but ongoing
issues they do not fund.
We have approached the Community Foundation. We have
received a grant, I think, in the amount of $1 0,000 from the
Community Foundation.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And that was part of your
original amount that you said, what was it, $12,000 that you received?
MS. REYNOLDS: We have a total now, between the
Community Foundation and from Moorings Park, of$12,000. So we
-- at this point we need $148,000. And, again, I'd be grateful for even
direction of where to get --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And I'll tell you what my
thoughts are on this. And I don't know if I'm going to have enough
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December 16, 2008
support from my fellow commissioners. I believe incentivizing people
to do the right thing. In this case, who's the beneficiaries from this?
Of course it's the parents, the fact that they're able to support their
family and be able to operate at a low -- in a low-income environment
with jobs that pay very little. Their employers should be the ones
stepping up to the plate. They're the ones that benefit by these people
working there for substandard wages, not that I'm going to belittle
anyone that offers ajob today. I think it's wonderful we have
employment out there.
But how do you get them to come across? Now, $300 per
employee at this point in time -- and a lot of these -- some of these
here can easily afford it, there's no question about it. But there's a lot
of small organizations and nonprofits themselves, that $300 would be
a real stretch.
What I would propose, that we -- at least for discussion purposes
and maybe to be able to bring it back for consideration -- is that we
come up with an incentivized program whereby we would match
dollar for dollar half the amount for each child if the employer
matches it. In other words, if they put up 150, we would put up 150.
So our total outlay would be about 80-some-thousand dollars of the
total.
And at this point in time, if the employer isn't willing to step up
to the plate to be able to make up that difference -- and I would also
mention, this would be a one-time-only offer so that it doesn't become
something that becomes an entitlement for future years.
Because I mean, we -- I can't see this program dropping off. We
absolutely need this lifeline that we have to be able to keep these
children going in the right direction to break that train of poverty that's
been ongoing for a long time. That would be my proposal that -- for
consideration.
MS. REYNOLDS: Commissioner Coletta, I would be extremely
grateful. I would express my gratitude on the part of some of the
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December 16,2008
providers who are here today, and I will work assiduously with your
staff to make sure that we do solicit every one of these employers.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, don't get too excited.
MS. REYNOLDS: I know. You need to vote.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm just one commissioner up
here.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. Could you tell me what a VPK
program is?
MS. REYNOLDS: Oh. VPK is voluntary pre-K. It's a unique
program in the state. It's something we should be very proud of.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay.
MS. REYNOLDS: Every child in the State of Florida age 4 is
entitled to go to pre-school for free. That's an entitlement program.
It's not part of this budget. The more kids we can enroll -- and we
work hard to enroll them -- the more money comes to Collier County.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And the more children that get
childcare rather than be left home alone.
MS. REYNOLDS: That's right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And that is a big certain as well,
especially in this environment. You have to be concerned about the
parents who are eking out a living, many who have left town, maybe
that's why your figures have dropped so much from 1,800 to 1,100,
and the jobs -- a lot of the time they're getting less hours so that they
can at least keep a job, but then they don't have enough money to pay
the childcare, so I understand that.
You say that if you can raise $160,000, in turn the state will then
give you 3.5 million, right?
MS. REYNOLDS: That's right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. I said that correctly, right?
MS. REYNOLDS: Yes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And just for Collier County?
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December 16, 2008
MS. REYNOLDS: That's right, just for Collier County.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Now, when do you need
money? When do you need the $160,000?
MS. REYNOLDS: We absolutely need -- we already have a
$12,000 commitment for Collier, so I want to be clear about that. We
need to clean up our books by the end of the fiscal year, which is the
end of June. The state is looking for us to identify by December 31 st
where the money's coming from this year.
You can imagine, Commissioner Fiala, this year there's more
pressure to identify our funding sources.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And then I was wondering, Marla,
do you have any money -- and 1 know I'm catching you offguard. I
just thought of this myself. Do you have any money in the -- in like
the after-school program or any money in something through the parks
or through health and human services that might be dedicated to a
childcare effort to -- in order to get back $3.5 million or to help us get
it back?
MS. RAMSEY: For the record, Marla Ramsey, Public Services
Administrator.
Commissioner, the funds that we use for our after-school
program and our summer camp program are paid by user fees.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, okay. We don't -- I was
wonder- -- do we have any dollars that either of you know of that --
even if we come could come up with $50,000 to show an effort to help
them, and then tell the employers that, you know, we've come up with
this, and we need you to come up with the rest?
MS. KRUMBINE: Again, for the record, Marcy Krumbine,
Housing and Human Services. All of our federal and state programs
are -- you know, are to specific -- specific programs as well.
And I had begun conversations with this organization. And
although we have a grant application cycle, the portion that this would
fall into would be like a public service program. And the only way we
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December 16, 2008
fund those if it's a new or expanded service, not continuing operating.
And we've got the same issue that the Wine Festival would have is
they -- most grant programs won't provide funding for continued
operations.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you. I'm just looking for
anything we can come up with to try and figure out -- Mr. Mudd?
MR. MUDD: I wish I had -- I wish I was like the federal
government and I had control over the printing press.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, we could print money.
MR. MUDD: The -- we get to see monies that they come back.
Well, first thing I got to tell you is -- and I don't mean to put a damper
on this conversation, but Ms. Reynolds is not a registered lobbyist and
she's, indeed, lobbying you for money, and 1 figured --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, I'm not sure she's getting paid
though. Are you getting paid?
MS. REYNOLDS: I am paid. I did check yesterday actually
with A WI Agency for Workforce Innovation, and because it's very
clear about if I'm allowed to solicit funds. I am required in my job
description to solicit match funds.
MR. MUDD: I'm not arguing.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. We'll-- if you could just get
together with her --
MR. MUDD: Yeah, I'll get with her after.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- after that.
MR. MUDD: I just wanted to bring that to the board's attention
because it's a requirement that we do that.
The other piece I would say to you is, the really good news is,
this is a 23 percent return on investment, okay? You get a 23 -- you
get $23 for every dollar that you put into this, so that's not a bad return
as far as her figures are concerned.
But what I will also say to you is, there's something else going
on, and it's something that we probably -- you as a board need to be
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December 16, 2008
cognizant of and she mentioned it. The Wine Festival collects money
and does capital projects with it, and they do a very good. It's an
absolutely wonderful thing that goes on.
I have been approached on numerous times during this last year
and a half by two distinguished citizens -- at least two distinguished
citizens of this county, one, an ex-representative and one an active
councilperson from the City of Naples, looking for some way that they
could work on operational dollars, because she's not the only person
that's having issues with operational dollars, and the Wine Festival
proceeds are all on capital expenditures.
Well, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense if you're going to
spend money on capital expenditures and what you're expending it on
you have no way to operate it after you bring it on. So there's a major
disconnect there in that particular charitable organization in what's
going on in the ground right now.
They even talked to me about coming to this board with a
petition to go to referendum, okay, to increase the millage rate for that
particular cause for operational dollars.
And I might as well get it broached out because she's brought it
up, and it's a significant issue in the community. And so it's out there,
and it is a problem, and it's one that this board, this government, and
this community is going to have to wrestle with as far as how
voluntary dollars are paid for, what the United Way can come up with
in order to get some -- and I was glad to hear that Ms. Reynolds had
approached the United Way. It would be wonderful ifshe was
actually a registered recipient of United Way dollars so that she could
be part of that particular organization.
The only thing that you have in these particular cases are
reserves, and we do whatever the board desires. But I will tell you I
had some rather disturbing news, and I'll talk about that later just
before we break so that can give you something to look forward to
over Christmas.
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December 16, 2008
But the Department of Revenue hasn't been very good to us. We
have about a $2 million shortfall on taxes, and I've just got to look at
what our depreciation and housing values are going to be, and I'll let
you talk about that at the end of the meeting. So it's not very good
news for us by any stretch of the imagination.
The only monies that you have, though, Commissioner Fiala --
and that was the question that you gave to me, and I'm getting around
to it was, are there any dollars there? The only things the board has
are in reserves, and that's the appropriate reserve amount that you put
in every year to get you through hurricane season and whatnot.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Well, let's -- and I would
appreciate that update. But as far as the petition, that's another day.
And we're going to go to Commissioner Coyle, and then I want
to chime in. Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You know, this is not about
whether you deserve the money.
MS. REYNOLDS: I know.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: There's nobody sitting here who
wouldn't like to give you this money. It's about our policies and what
precedents we set.
There are standing behind you hundreds of people who feel
they're actually deserving and who perform very valuable services for
our community who expect to get some money if we give you money.
So there's going to be a very difficult problem if we set a
precedent here. And all you have to do is look at the governor's list of
potential budget cuts to understand what's going to happen to local
governments.
Most of the cuts involve depriving local governments of funding.
So we're going to be in very bad shape despite the fact that there are
many people here in Collier County who feel that landscaping is the
most important issue that we should be funding.
Now, if we go through the list of employers, let's not assume that
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December 16, 2008
this is an inordinate burden on employers. These employers have
employees who take advantage of this program, and you can
demonstrate that. You can tell them how many of their employees
take advantage of this program, and just go down through the list.
There's Target, Bob Taylor Chevrolet, Sam's Club, Bank of America,
Naples Community Hospital, Publix, Arby's, Edgewater Beach Hotel,
Walgreen's, Olive Garden, Pizza Hut, University of Miami, Naples
Jaguar.
Now, let's not pretend that by asking the employers to contribute
$33 a month -- not per employee, just $33 a month -- for these
services is going to put them out of business. It's not going to happen.
That is the place we get the funding first. And these employees
(sic) can, in fact, afford to pay $33 a month to help give you the
amount of money that you need to get the job -- get the matching
funds.
I hope you can do it. If there's anything we can do to help you to
do it, I'd be happy to do it. But it's not a matter of just voting for
money for you. It's a matter of voting for money for the hundreds of
other people who will come here after we do that. That's the problem.
And we try very, very hard to treat everyone the same. We can't
give one group special preference over another. It's a very difficult
problem, and it looks like a very coldhearted approach, but we don't
have many alternatives.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: What I'm hearing is a consensus to try
to work this out, you know, go to the employers and get those funds
from the employers and then come back. But I can tell you that more
and more employers are laying off their full-time employers (sic).
And those employees are looking for anything that they can get.
So this problem is not going to disappear by those employers
(sic) getting laid off. They're going to stay in this community because
they're vested. The problem's only going to get bigger. And we need
to find a way -- having a six-year-old child that went through the
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December 16, 2008
VPK, it is just a wonderful program that has lifted all those children
up to be ready for elementary school. It's a benefit -- a benefit to the
community .
So I guess what I'm hearing is, go out to the employers. And if I
can help you with that endeavor, I'd be happy to, and Commissioner
Fiala --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Me too.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- will-- said that she would, too.
So we're not making a decision today. What I'm hearing is, let's
do that, the ones that truly benefit from that, and let's bring it up at a
later date.
MS. REYNOLDS: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
MS. REYNOLDS: I will. And I am -- I didn't expect, truthfully,
you would say, here's a check, Kathleen. I didn't expect that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, good.
MS. REYNOLDS: But I will tell you that I'm grateful for the
opportunity to have spoken with you. I will follow up on your
recommendation. I will contact all of the employers.
I would ask -- I would like to be in communication with your
county manager and see if we can't be part -- if the coalition cannot be
part of those conversations, because it's true, the Wine Festival is
funding homes in Immokalee that are taking in children, and our new
school here in the Collier County campus. It's the Early Learning
Coalition that's funding the working poor to go into those homes,
which still requires the match.
So it's -- this juncture of operations and building buildings has to
-- we have to come to some agreement on it. So I will follow up with
Mr. Mudd, and I'll hope to be part of those conversations. I'll thank
you for your time.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MS. REYNOLDS: I'll take your direction, and I will be in touch.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Jeff, would you get together with Ms.
Reynolds about that and we'll get that squared away.
And the next petition?
MS. REYNOLDS: Thank you.
Item #6D
PUBLIC PETITION REQUEST BY REVEREND DAVID
MALLORY TO DISCUSS DEFERRAL OF IMPACT FEES-
PETITIONER TO WORK WITH COUNTY MANAGER AND
ST AFF TO RECALCULATE IMP ACT FEES - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Next petition is Reverend Mallory. I saw him
walk in. It's a public petition request by Reverend David Mallory to
discuss deferral of impact fees.
REVEREND MALLORY: David Mallory of First Assembly
Ministries. And, Commissioners, thank you for the opportunity to be
heard today.
For the past 20 years, we have, in some small way, tried to
address some of the social concerns of our community, hunger and
homelessness, those under the influence of life-controlling substances,
and we've just reached out as best we can.
For instance, this last month we have fed 640 different families
who are lacking sustenance in their lives.
About three years ago we were approached by a group called
ESP, Emergency Services Personnel group, along with MDG,
Incorporation, to sell 24 acres, and they were going to build 296
emergency service personnel residences.
We were very excited about that. And so the church released that
property, paid some bills that we owed, and then an amount was due
of about $5 million, and over the last year, interest payments were
received.
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December 16, 2008
About four months ago, five months ago, the interest payments
stopped, and then October 6th came when the final monies were due,
and that was not paid as well.
The problem is, the church kind of put all our eggs in that one
basket and we began to borrow against the closing of that property.
Since the money did not surface, we began cutting back. We had to
cancel our girls' program, or unwed mothers program, several of our
staff are no longer paid, we've had to face some layoffs, and we're in a
situation now where some of the mortgage payments on the church are
In arrears.
Tomorrow we have an impact deferral that comes due. At this
point we do not have the funds to surface that -- to service that, and so
we're just asking the commissioners for some guidance.
Weare still carrying on the ministries as best we can. Our
ministry, of course, is one of giving, and we're -- the coffers are
pretty-well dry. This, you know, situation is happening all over the
world, not just here in Collier County.
And so we're -- I'm just here to kind of layout our situation,
which is very critical at this point.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle, before I go to
you, I think the county manager might have a resolution to this, if you
don't mind.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I don't mind. I know what the
resolution is, and I think it's good.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Go ahead.
MR. MUDD: Okay. The staffs recommending that we
recalculate the applicable impact fees based on the actual use of the
four trailers currently on site, and that the 15 trailers that have been
removed, which is a rehabilitation facility -- if! say anything wrong,
Pastor, you let me know, okay?
In 2002, staff calculated the impact fees for the structures based
on the residential classification and thereby allowed the impact fees to
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December 16, 2008
be deferred through the affordable housing rental impact fee deferral
program; however, the use of the structures was and currently is
rehabilitation facility, which is an institutional/commercial use, not a
residential use for the purposes of assessment of impact fees.
The change in the calculation would remove the assessments for
the residential impact fees, parks, library, and schools. Impact fees for
transportation, EMS, and jail, et cetera, would be required to be paid.
The estimated amount due under this scenario is $23,473, okay.
What he owes under the present scenario is $82,899.34. My numbers
good?
REVEREND MALLORY: (Nods head.)
MR. MUDD: Okay. So that's a -- almost a reduction -- it's
almost a -- it's almost a 75 percent reduction in the impact fees that are
due. Let's say 20 percent for lack of better terms. Okay. It would be
$23,473 subject to the full review and recalculation.
Under this scenario, the BCC could still elect to transfer the
deferral agreement to the charitable organization impact deferral
program provided that the entity meets the eligibility requirements.
The First Assembly of God organization has informed staff that
the money is not currently available to pay the deferred impact fees
because the closing on the sale of their property to MDG Capital has
yet to occur; therefore, any remedy that requires immediate payment
of impact fees may not be financially feasible for Reverend Mallory
and may require legal action, which I don't believe this board wants to
do based on my conversations with the commissioners.
Additionally, as noted above, water and sewer impact fees have
been paid in full for the subject construction and deferral agreement.
So our recommendation is we re- -- as the staff recalculates, go
from the 88,000 that's due down to a 23,000 that's due, transfer it over
into the charitable impact fee category, Pastor Mallory will make sure
that he's eligible for the charitable piece, 501C3, or whatever it is.
And that has some resolution, and we'll work out the terms. But let us
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December 16, 2008
not default tomorrow on this particular organization. They do provide
a valuable service to this community.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'd like to make a motion to that
effect.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. There's a motion by
Commissioner Coletta, second by Commissioner Fiala, to direct the
county manager to recalculate the impact fees and the other stuff he
said.
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I still have my questions, okay.
Let me ask a question about that, then I'd like to talk to Reverend
Mallory about something.
What is the time frame for the deferral under that program?
MS. PATTERSON: For the record, Amy Patterson, Impact Fee
Manager.
A new program entering into the charitable organization impact
fee deferral program would have 10 years from the date of the
deferral. We'd seek direction on the term for Pastor Mallory. He has,
as of tomorrow, he's been deferred for six years. If you wanted to take
the term an additional four years for a total of 10 years or some other
variation there, that would be at your discretion.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Now, Reverend Mallory,
you understand that you cannot use this facility for residential
purposes?
REVEREND MALLORY: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: At any time during this deferral
program?
REVEREND MALLORY: Right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And if you do, the amount comes
due, right?
REVEREND MALLORY: Uh-huh.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And so you don't have any plans to
use it for anything other than a rehabilitation facility; is that correct?
REVEREND MALLORY: That's true, yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Is it your belief or do you
have the feeling that MDG Capital is not going to close on this
property?
REVEREND MALLORY: That's the feeling we have right now.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
REVEREND MALLORY: Okay. Other payments -- they're
keeping up all of their payments except the ones to the church, from
what we understand.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. I want to remind you of the
time when you came before us supporting this project, and I raised
some concerns about the potential success of this project. I
specifically stated that I felt that it was very thinly financed, and I had
great concerns about whether or not it would be a success.
Unfortunately, it seems that I was right. And I think we have to
be very cautious in the future with these kinds of proposals where
they're really -- they really are not established on a sound financial
foundation.
Now, the other -- other thing you said that caused me some
concern and I'd like to see ifthere's some way we can -- something we
can do to help, that the -- there are mortgage payments for the church
that are past due.
REVEREND MALLORY: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Do you have a solution for that or
is there some way that you can get some help relative to that?
Because you do a great job for our community, and we'd like to see
you continue to be able to do that.
REVEREND MALLORY: At this point we -- we're just
knocking on doors seeing if someone would help us with the mortgage
at this point. We cannot foreclose if we have a second mortgage on
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December 16, 2008
the 24 acres, but MDG has a $4.7 million first mortgage, which would
have to be assumed, and we can't afford to do that.
We started our structure borrowing against the 5 million that was
due us, and we now owe the Royal Bank, RBC, 3.2 million. Those
mortgage payments are about 30,000 a month, and we just -- just don't
have it right now, so we're not sure what RBC's going to do.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. So they, in essence, own the
property. And with the decline in potential value, there's probably not
much equity if anything left in that property --
REVEREND MALLORY: Right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- beyond the mortgage itself. So
you wouldn't -- you probably wouldn't get any funds if it were to go
into bankruptcy.
REVEREND MALLORY: No, I don't believe we would.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. So that would still leave you
in a very bad way.
REVEREND MALLORY: Right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Well, I wish you the best of
luck. Ifthere's anything we can do short of giving you money, please
let us know. And I have been afraid of this MDG financing process
from the very beginning. I am very, very concerned about what's
going on there.
REVEREND MALLORY: Well, you can pray for an angel.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'll do that.
REVEREND MALLORY: That does happen.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'll do that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any other discussions on the motion?
Seeing none, all in favor of the motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
REVEREND MALLORY: Thank you so much.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
Item #6F
PUBLIC PETITION REQUEST BY TIM HANCOCK TO DISCUSS
REZONE REQUEST BY NORTH NAPLES UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH - TO TAKE THROUGH THE REZONING
PROCESS AND COMP PLANNING
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to our next public
petition, which is a request by Tim Hancock to discuss the rezone
request by the North Naples United Methodist Church.
MR. HANCOCK: Good morning, Commissioners. Tim Hancock
with Davidson Engineering. I am a registered lobbyist and I'm not
asking for any money.
I am pleased to represent the North Naples United Methodist
Church, not just as a consultant, but my family and I have been
members at the church for years, and I serve the church in a variety of
volunteer capacities.
The purpose for today's public petition is to gain board direction
and input. The church parcel is approximately 13 acres located on
Goodlette-Frank Road just a quarter mile north of Pine Ridge Road.
You can see it on the visualizer in front of you.
And just to the north or to the top of that picture is the existing
church campus. To the right, if you will, is the tract at Pine Ridge
Middle School, and to the south a commercial infill subdistrict called
the Livingston Road -- I'm sorry -- the Goodlette Road/Pine Ridge
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December 16, 2008
commercial infill district.
The church bought this parcel several years ago from the
Colliers, strictly for the purpose of future church expansion. And in
doing so, we wanted to make sure we left our doors open. You never
know, as you've heard today, with all the funding issues the churches
are facing, what you mayor may not have to do in the future.
The church submitted a rezone in this parcel under the infill
commercial criteria, being that it's adjacent to an existing commercial
district on one side and was requesting an addition to church uses,
some very low-scale commercial uses on the property.
What you see before you obviously is your Future Land Use
Map, and you see about six of the categories in the upper right-hand
side that have been highlighted. There are 13 commercial subdistricts
created in the Growth Management Plan. Seven are called just that,
commercial subdistricts. Six are called commercial infill subdistricts.
Therein lies the problem the church has realized in the process of
our rezone. We're adjacent to one that has the word infill in its title
yet it's 31 acres in size, it has a Sweetbay Supermarket, four-story
office building. It's very much larger in nature than what you would
picture infill to be.
When the church purchased the property, they would have been
allowed to request commercial zoning or part of their property as
commercial zoning under the infill designation.
In 2007 this board approved a change in the Growth Management
Plan to the language under the infill designation. That change, in
essence, took the word adjacent to commercial and precluded any
properties that are adjacent to infill subdistricts from requesting
commercial zoning.
When we started the process and began master planning the site,
we could request commercial zoning. Due to this language change in
2007, this parcel, which previously would have qualified as infill, does
not, and the reason is because it's next to a subdistrict that's called
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December 16, 2008
infill.
The problem we have is we have a lack of consistency in how
that word infill has been applied. Show you an example. You have
two pictures here. On the right is a commercial subdistrict at the
corner of two six-lane arterial roads at Vanderbilt Beach and 951
approximately 30-plus acres in size. To the left is the Goodlette Road
infill subdistrict. It is at the intersection of two six-lane arterial roads.
It is approximately 30-plus acres in size.
The one on the right, the parcel that looks partially cleared just to
the left of it, was allowed to request commercial zoning under the
infill designation, but because of this change in 2007, and because the
church parcel is located adjacent to a subdistrict that, again, is almost
identical to the one on the right, we are now precluded from
requesting commercial zoning under the infill.
We have researched all six commercial subdistricts that are called
infill. This is the only parcel that's affected by this change.
Our request of you today -- we are in for zoning right now. If--
our alternatives are, number one, to request an amendment to the
Growth Management Plan which would take a minimum of 18 months
to two years before we could even get back with our rezoning at
extensive cost to the church in order to allow this 13 acres the
opportunity to come before you and request any type of commercial
zoning on the parcel.
And please understand, we're still trying to develop the church
and expand the church here, but there are certain quasi-commercial
uses that can be associated with churches, and I think we've seen that
at times.
One example may be to construct an administrative space
building where we might lease out some of the space until the church
is ready to occupy all of it. We're just trying to keep those doors open.
But what we're asking you today is to basically look at the 2007
change, and we're asking you to concur with us that we don't believe it
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December 16, 2008
was the board's intent to preclude a parcel such as this from requesting
commercial zoning simply because the piece next door had the word
infill in it. I don't believe that was the intent, and after looking back at
the approval process, I don't think it was pointed out to you which
parcels were affected by this.
And what we're asking is that you give that direction to staff, that
that was not the intent as it should apply to this parcel, so that we may
proceed through the zoning process and come before you with a
zoning application as opposed to waiting till that day to find out that
that was your intent and we stand there hat in hand with no options
available to us.
And that is the nature of my request, and I'd be pleased to answer
any questions you may have at this time.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions by the board members? I
have a question. Obviously, sounds like you took a look at the
minutes of the adoption?
MR. HANCOCK: Yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. And there was no references
why we were changing the infilllanguage?
MR. HANCOCK: There were references to it. And I don't --
won't purport to speak for Mr. Weeks on that. What I was specifically
looking for is, were the parcels that this change would directly impact
identified? And being that they were so limited in nature, that's what I
was looking for in the minutes, sir. I -- beyond that, I certainly don't
want to speak for the intent that the Compo Planning department had.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. And the Planning
Commission, did you take a look at their minutes?
MR. HANCOCK: I did not read the Planning Commission
minutes, no, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Commissioner Halas,
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think Mr. Coyle was --
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December 16, 2008
Commissioner Coyle was before me.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's okay.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Oh, weren't you?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I don't know.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Oh, okay. Have you asked for an
official interpretation by --
MR. HANCOCK: No, sir. And the reason that we didn't is, first
of all, I think Mr. Weeks will tell you, we have a good feeling for
what the official interpretation is going to say.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, I think that's the direction
you need to go really. That's what I'd feel comfortable with, is an
official interpretation of what this really --
MR. HANCOCK: The only reason that we brought this before
you today, sir, is that your compo planning staff is swamped, to say the
least. An 01 from their department, which would then be followed by
an appeal to this board, is going to be a six-plus month process, which
will put the zoning continually on delay.
And I felt this was an interpretative issue, and that delay, I think,
is significant to this project.
Like Reverend Mallory mentioned, we all, as churches, we face a
lot of funding issues, and a six-month delay could be costly to the
church in trying to get something done here. It's the only reason I
appear before you today, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle, then
Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I think I've got an official
interpretation. I think that's what -- it's not officially declared an
official interpretation, but it is a communication from the county
manager to the Board of County Commissioners that says you may
find this information useful during the public petition of Item 6F on
Tuesday, and it goes through the staffs reasons for making the
decision that they have made.
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December 16, 2008
And I can't imagine that if you asked them for an official
interpretation, that it would be anything different than this, and I think
that's exactly what you're saying.
MR. HANCOCK: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I -- this is a fairly complex issue
for us to try to take up in this meeting, but I would like to ask the staff
if they could address this issue and tell me how it is different -- how
these two properties are different, and what harm will result from your
proposed development if it is deemed to be in compliance with our
current Growth Management Plan. So can staff tell me that?
MR. WEEKS: Good morning, Commissioners. David Weeks of
your Comprehensive Planning Department, the Planning Manager of
that department. And amongst other things, I oversee the staff that
write consistency memos, such as the one that Tim has -- or has been
provided to each of you.
To directly answer your questions, Commissioner Coyle, I don't
think there is a significant difference between the two properties that
Tim has shown you this morning.
And secondly, it's a bit difficult, I guess, to say what the harm
would be. I'll say I don't think there is any harm. We're talking about
the Comprehensive Plan, a set of regulations, and I'd be hard pressed
to think of a scenario where I would say, yes, there's some harm if you
interpret the plan, generally speaking -- you know, not just this
situation, but in general -- to say, well, that will be harmful because
the Comprehensive Plan, principally, is guiding the development to
appropriate location.
But to say that, boy, if you allow development in that location it's
specifically going to cause harm, Commissioner, that's a difficult
scenario for staff to be able to say, yes, if you approve this, boy, that's
going to have all these really negative consequences.
So the short answer is no to both questions.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. So there would be no harm,
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December 16, 2008
and there really is no difference between the two of these yet
something was permitted in the one on the right that is not going to be
permitted in the one on the left; is that correct?
MR. WEEKS: That is correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I guess my overall feeling is that
the Growth Management Plan is designed to make sure we don't do
something that will be harmful to our community. And if we find that
there is a technical interpretation here that would not cause harm to
our community, to the extent the technical correction can be -- the
technical issue can be corrected by a decision by the Board of County
Commissioners without a Growth Management Plan, I wouldn't see
anything wrong with doing that.
My real question is, if there is no harm permitting this thing --
this development to go forward, what authority does the Board of
County Commissioners have to say that the change that was made in
December, 2007, was not intended to cause this result?
County attorney?
MR. KLATZKOW: Well, I sort of agree with you. I don't
believe there are unintended consequences for something like that
because the board can fix them because the board knows what its
intention was. But to get there, I think you're going to have to go
through the 0&1 (sic) process so that staff can lay it out. There's a
public hearing involved so that other interested parties can come
forward, and maybe they have a reason. I don't know.
And at that point in time the board can make a decision as to
where the board wants to go that, no, we didn't intend for this to
happen, go in, Mr. Developer, and develop, and that would be fine.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Now, what would be the time
frame and cost of doing that?
MR. WEEKS: I think the official interpretation -- though I
generally agree with what Tim said as far as the staff workload. Our
department is not suffering a lack of work as some within our division
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December 16, 2008
are. But because we have already, in essence, made an interpretation
in that memo you've seen, I think we could act on it rather quickly.
By rather quickly, I think I could say within a month of submittal we
could have an answer rendered, which would -- ultimately means the
end result would be, getting to you would be less than six months by
far.
I'm assuming that they would -- Tim would expeditiously appeal
that official interpretation.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, you know, you're telling me
that you're going to deny it and you're going to find that it's not in
compliance with the Growth Management Plan, which you've already
told us you have done.
MR. WEEKS: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Can't you tell us that tomorrow
morning rather than waiting a month?
MR. WEEKS: Well, I don't think you'll have his application in
tomorrow morning, Commissioner.
MR. HANCOCK: Along with the appropriate fee, I'm assuming.
MR. WEEKS: Of course.
MR. HANCOCK: So, yes, sir. I guess we have to spend $1,000
to hear "no" tomorrow.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, the Board of Commissioners --
MR. KLATZKOW: Well, the $1,000 is not for the no. The
$1,000 is also to help -- this is a public process, and people have to be
notified in that community that this is going on so that they can weigh
in on this. There are notice requirements here.
MR. HANCOCK: I understand. We -- I was hoping this was an
interpretative issue, when the inconsistencies were pointed out to this
body. If we're going to be forced through an 01 process and a Board
of Zoning Appeals process, then that's the process we'll do.
MR. KLATZKOW: The process shouldn't take that much time.
We already have our answer here.
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December 16, 2008
MR. MUDD: Yeah. We already have -- we already have the
answer. I don't believe Mr. Weeks or Joe's staff can do anything other
based on what's written in the book and what has been passed to
render any other opinion except what I gave you on the sheet on
Sunday night when I transferred the issue. I believe the public process
is important, okay, and the county attorney is dead on.
Now, we could take this and advertise, while he's doing his thing,
and advertise a public meeting. I believe the board is also making -- I
had this conversation with Tim.
I believe the board is also assuming that the church is going to
use all of that land to do what they want for the church, okay. I
wouldn't make that assumption if I was you. You might find out that
only a portion of that property is going to be used by the church, and
something might get sold off. And if it does and it has a higher
intensity than what you have right now on your books for this GMP,
then I believe the public has a right to listen to it to figure out what
that could be and what impacts it would have on their neighborhood.
I don't believe anybody has a problem with the church. We've
got lots of them, and they seem to be the only business in Collier
County that's expanding right now, and everybody's praying for a
recovery, I think that's the reason, and -- that's why they're getting
more people to show up.
But I will tell you I believe the public process is important here.
MR. KLATZKOW: Yeah. And the only other thing I would say
is -- so we don't prolong this more than necessary -- is whether or not
you want the Planning Commission to give you a recommendation on
this before you hear it, or do you want to hear this direct?
MR. WEEKS: Mr. Chairman, if! might. And it goes right to
what the county attorney was stating. One option they have is simply
let the rezone go forward through the usual process which includes
going through the Planning Commission and then coming to you. I
understand what Tim's perspective is and the church's is, they don't
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December 16, 2008
want to wait, you know, X number of months before the actual rezone
gets to you to find out that you disagree -- that you might agree with
the staff position and deny their application.
They're hoping -- I think the reason Tim's here, is he wants to
find out today, do you disagree with staffs position, so that they have
some sense of what the outcome is going to be when you do act on the
rezone petition.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, I think the board members
individually need to have a lot more information, and I think the
process -- it needs to go through the process, personally, so I can fully
understand all the issues.
And I didn't mean to jump in front of Commissioner Coletta, but
I just needed to state that -- my position.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, actually the discussions
that took place, you just kind of summarized it up, also covers what
my concerns was, was the due public process. We can't assume that
everybody's going to be in agreement with this, you know, without at
least touching base.
But any way we can simplifY this and speed it along and hold the
cost down, I think it would be advantageous for all concerned.
MR. WEEKS: We have established fees, Commissioners, to
cover the cost of staff time and public notice process. As I've
indicated, I believe we can act on it within a month of submittal, that
we can have it -- the official interpretation rendered and provide the
public notice, and then there's an appeal process that the church can
then file to get it in front of you.
MR. SCHMITT: The second option is proceed with --
MR. WEEKS: Right. Or again, the other option is, just stay the
course with the rezone petition. No additional expense involved but,
of course, the outcome still lies with you at the end.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. Tim, my perspective, I'd rather
try to settle that issue, the Growth Management Plan issue, before we
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December 16, 2008
discuss the rezone.
MR. HANCOCK: Yes, sir. I thank you for your time this
morning. We'll pass the plate a second time on Sunday, and we'll be
back before you sitting as the BZA, I would assume, as soon as
possible.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Tim, if it's any comfort, bars are
also doing quite well right about right.
MR. HANCOCK: So we're in good company or --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It kind of balances each other.
MR. HANCOCK: Again, Commissioners, thank you for your
time.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Did we --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yeah. Did we answer his question
about coming to the Planning Commission before us? I don't believe
we did.
MR. WEEKS: An official interpretation comes straight to this
commiSSion.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay, thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Can we -- I think we have a number
of speakers on an item on 9. Does the board have any objections to go
to that item before we go to lunch? Which item is it?
Item #9 J
RECOMMENDA TION THAT THE BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS FORMALIZE ITS INTENT AND DIRECTION
REGARDING THE ESTABLISHMENT OF NEW AND/OR
RECONSTITUTED ADVISORY COMMITTEES TO WORK
WITH THE OFFICE OF THE MEDICAL DIRECTOR-
DISCUSSION TO CONTINUE AFTER THE LUNCH RECESS
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December 16,2008
MOTION TO HAVE A 5 MEMBER COMMITTEE CONSISTING
OF AN ER PHYSICIAN, ER NURSE, PHARMACIST, EMS REP
AND FIRE REP AND SUNSETTING THE EMSAC COMMITTEE
- APPROVED
MR. MUDD: I'm assuming 9J, sir; is that correct?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: 917 Do we -- we have two public
speakers?
MR. MUDD: And that's a recommendation that the Board of
County Commissioners formalize the intent and direction regarding
the establishment of new and/or reconstructed advisory committees to
work with the Office of Medical Director.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. The -- I didn't get a sense that
we got a clear direction, Mr. -- we're a little bit late on that public
petition -- or that public comment.
The first one, if we can get through it. The EMSAC Committee.
It was reported to us it was 14. There was no direction whether the
board wanted to cut that down.
Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No. I wanted to speak on the other
one.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: On the other one?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: On the other one, yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Can we get a consensus on EMSAC?
We want to cut that down? Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I got just a suggestion. How about
if we sunset EMSAC and re-establish a newer comm- -- a new
commission?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: A new committee?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, a new committee.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. That's what I think we
should do.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I could agree, but I'd like some
more discussion on the number of people that are going to be sitting
on that committee. Fourteen is not a committee. It's a parliament.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, if we sunset the EMSAC
Committee as it is today, then we can re-establish a new committee
and then we can basically come forth on how many people we think
needs to be on that committee.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: A new one.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That sounds very reasonable to do
that, and maybe we ought to go to creation of a medical policy
advisory group.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yep.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And I think that's kind of where --
where I'm hearing my colleagues want to go. So if we can have that
discussion and then give some direction after public input.
Commissioner Coyle, then Commissioner Fiala.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I think that's the appropriate
process, and I think you need to get rid of a 15- or 14-member
committee. I seem to recall it was 15 members, but that -- you can't
get anything done with a l5-member committee. We just scaled back
the Habitat study group to considerably less at their own request
because they couldn't get anywhere with 15 people. And we heard
members of EM SAC say the same thing. So we need to get that down
to a small portion, and that should be an emergency medical services
policy committee.
The quality assurance and quality improvement committee is the
committee that, under our agreements with the fire districts, is created
and guided by Dr. Tober himself, and I don't think you need to create
that as a Board of County Commissioners' committee. Let them deal
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December 16, 2008
with that for lots of good reasons.
But let me say this right up front, that I am very disappointed that
we made a decision on November the 3rd to have a workshop that we
had in early December, and we spent three hours talking about the
solution here, and the county manager and the county attorney let us
walk away from that process feeling they did not have adequate
guidance from this board.
If -- I hope that never happens again. County manager and the
county attorney both told me that the two of them were looking at
each other shaking their heads at the conclusion of that meeting
wondering what we did.
Now, why one of them didn't step up and say, wait a minute, I
don't have clear guidance, I don't know, but this is an important issue.
It needs to get solved quickly, and we cannot continue to talk about
this over and over at subsequent meetings without getting a decision
made, and I hope that's what we're going to do today. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, I understand where you're
coming from, but conversely, now we've -- we talked with a lot of
people that day from all different walks of this Emergency Medical
Services community. They in -- then requested to go back to their
boards.
F or instance, my Marco Island fire guys, they wanted to go back
to the Marco Island City Council. They couldn't make any decisions
unless they get approval of city council, which they haven't been able
to do. Same with East Naples Fire Department. They had to go back
to their East Naples fire commissioners.
Now, this hasn't happened, and I feel that this is too quick. I
would like to put this -- I would like to place this on an agenda for the
beginning of January instead so these people have -- yes, I would --
these people have a chance to go there and then give their
recommendations to us.
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December 16,2008
I can't just speak for the fire departments until I hear what the
city council, for instance, on Marco Island -- and I don't believe that
your city council in the City of Naples has made a decision on this
either.
I believe that we need to hear from them before we march
forward, because I think we're going to be sorry that we did that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala has spoken.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good grief.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: We have three speakers.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta?
Why don't we go to the public speakers?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. I think that would be the
best idea.
MS. FILSON: Wayne Walldack. He'll be followed by Jim
Burke, who will be followed by George Agrella, Agurela (sic).
MR. MUDD: Aguilera.
MS. FILSON: Aguilera. Thank you.
MR. WALLDACK: Commissioners, my name is Wayne
Walldack, City Council, Marco Island. I'd like to compliment the
board on the open discussion they took (sic) that took place on
December 8th concerning the issue of positive role of the ALS engine
agreements.
As one of many elected officials at that meeting, I would like to
request that the -- the opportunity to report back to my council
members at our January 5th meeting. I'm sure that other elected
officials would also like to provide feedback to their respective
boards.
It would be appreciated that we be afforded this time prior to
your taking definite action. I supported Commissioner Coyle's
recommendation of a protocol development advisory committee made
up of ALS providers, Collier County EMS and emergency room
physicians, the review inventing of the protocols by the actual people
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December 16, 2008
in the street that do the job and the physicians receiving these patients
is an excellent model.
There are many makeups of EM SAC within the state. The
current board makeup was, within the past few years, changed by the
county commission to provide a fair representation of all affected
individuals.
I do have concerns of a medical policy advisory group as
discussed in the final minutes of the meeting. I do not feel that a
hospital administrator, a nurse, the medical and community (sic) -- and
county medical director, certainly all fine people, and one business
community leader represent the best interests of pre-hospital care.
Dr. Nelson, the state medical director, mentioned a few models
that might provide better policy guidance concerning pre-hospital
care. I think the commission should give some consideration to
looking at assistance from Dr. Nelson.
The discussion of quality assurance program contained within the
ALS engine agreement already exists. The major discussion centered
on regularly scheduled meetings of this committee for the purpose of
medical review.
In conclusion, as an elected official, I was encouraged by the
open discussion at the December 8th meeting. I would request and
ask the indulgence of the commission to consider the allowing elected
-- allowing elected officials to report back to their respective councils.
I look forward to continued involvement in this process. Thank
you.
MS. FILSON: Jim Burke. He'll be followed by George
Aguilera.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, George signed up late when the
discussion started, so does anybody have any -- want to deviate from
our policy?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think we ought to let him speak.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I do, too.
MR. BURKE: Commissioners, Jim Burke. I'm a recently
elected member of the North Naples Fire District Board of
Commissioners, but I want to make the point that even though I'm
only a month old on the job, I've been very active with that
commission for the past three years, as well as the countywide
steering committee.
So during that three years, I've formed a lot of opinions, and I've
observed quite a bit. And my take today is, I think you're on the right
path, but I -- my take is, is that you've been asked to referee this
intramural serious scrum that we're going through here. And I say
serious because it affects our lives, our health, our families, our
property.
But what we're going through, in my observation, doesn't surprise
me. I mean, it's the nature of the beast. It's what happens. And I went
through this a bunch of years ago with what was once the largest hotel
company in the world. It was in its final days, and our behavior during
those days was very similar to what -- similar to what we're doing
now.
We start tossing emails and letters back and forth and making
accusations and cutting up turf, and to no avail. It doesn't solve
anything.
So here we are today with our system which, in my mind -- and
I've said this in public -- it's creaking, it's groaning, and it's beginning
to collapse under its own weight. Time and turf have caught up with
this system. And I truly believe that it is time to move on into the 21 st
century with it.
Now, for me to get up here and tell you what the solution is
would be very presumptuous, but I think we all know the kind of
things we can work on so -- the other thing, in closing, I want to say
is, when you proceed with this new group -- and I agree with you
about the sunshining out of EM SAC -- don't exclude any of the
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December 16, 2008
players. Get everybody involved, all of the stakeholders in the
delivering of the service.
But I think you're on the right track, and I will support what it is
you're doing. So thanks for the time.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MS. FILSON: George Aguiler- -- I can't, sorry.
MR. AGUILERA: That's okay. Thank you for the opportunity
to speak. I, too -- we left that meeting quite confused as well with
what was the actual resolution.
But I'd like to bring you back to a meeting that occurred the
Friday before, on December 5th, with the state EMS medical director;
Dr. Tober, the local medical director, and members of all of the
stockholders -- stakeholders in the ALS engine program.
We did leave that meeting with some sort of an agreement, which
was kind of nice because we were comfortable that we opened up
some great dialogue, we thought, with the medical director, the state
medical director, and all the other providers.
I'd like to bring you to the two things that we actually agreed on,
is the state medical director recommend, and Dr. Tober agreed, that
we would have an office of the medical dir- -- advisory committee, a
little different than, I think, what the board has been talking about,
which is something to replace it as far as an EMSAC committee. This
was a committee that was going to work -- an actually working group
under the office of the medical director, under Dr. Tober, that would
fill the following different roles.
Number one is to discuss training issues, discuss training
schedules, protocol development, medications, field training officers.
It was a very distinct committee that was going to work basically as
staff or as assistants to the medical director to discuss these really
important issues that are today's issues.
We also discussed about creating a quality assurance committee,
and I think that was written in the current interlocals. The state calls it
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December 16, 2008
an emergency medical review committee. Again, participating of all
the stakeholders to meet to take a look at any of the quality or issues
or research that was being worked on in order to be able to
comprehensively provide direction countywide.
I think that those two things that we agreed upon to work directly
under the office of the medical director are very, very important, and
at a minimum, whether the discussion of creating a new EMSAC or a
version of the new EMSAC is also important.
I think that if we can get some direction that these two
committees or these two working groups, under the office of the
medical director, are supported by the county, and give direction for
those to happen, I think that those would start now. Those can start
paying dividends today, because those are the type of communications
that we need to start happening -- occurring with the office of the
medical director.
So with that, thank you, and hopefully that direction can follow
through.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Did you want to make a
motion?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. I'd like to continue this till the
first meeting in January so that we can -- all of the commissioners can
get input from our own respective districts and bring that back so that
-- like, for instance, George Aguilera just mentioned two committees,
and we're not even discussing that right now, but I think that that's an
important thing, both of them operating under the medical director,
each with a different mission, and I think that this is important.
This is going to affect the health of our community from here on
in. So let's wait until the beginning of January. My motion stands as
continuing this till the first meeting in January.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Good motion. I'll second it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Fiala,
second by Commissioner Coletta to continue this item.
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December 16, 2008
Who was first over here?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Commissioner Coyle.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, one of the reasons that we
elected to have the medical director report directly to the Board of
County Commissioners is because there was this ongoing fight
between the fire districts and the medical director.
Now, I don't know about some of the other commissioners, but
I've been involved in discussing this with the fire districts and the
medical director for the last six to eight months. We have all been
aware of this issue for a long, long time. It is our responsibility.
I don't recall that we go to any city council or any other
governmental body to ask about their input on appointments to our
Planning Commission, nor do I believe that our Planning Commission
operates under the direction of the county staff.
We did this because we wanted to elevate the position so that we
could begin to understand the problems and take responsibility for
them. And then if there was an issue, it was not an issue between the
fire districts and the medical adviser. It was an issue between the fire
districts and the Board of County Commissioners.
And secondly, we wanted to provide a public forum so we get
everybody involved in the discussion process. We cannot and should
never try to get every single stakeholder in Collier County represented
on a commit- -- an advisory committee. You do that the same way we
do it with the Environmental Advisory Committee and the Planning
Commission. You have public hearings. And the people come from
the public, anybody who wants to talk about an issue, comes from the
public, and they provide their input during that hearing.
What you want on that advisory board, you want the very best
minds concerning medical protocol and how it is to be delivered to the
best benefit of our community. That's what this committee would do.
We're not -- in my opinion we're not looking for a countywide
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December 16,2008
consensus on the makeup of the committee. It is our advisory
committee. We should decide who's going to be on it. I would even
recommend that we interview the members who apply for this
committee.
But we -- right now we have already directives from Dr. Tober
going to the fire departments saying, you cannot -- you cannot use
certain drugs. There are directives concerning levels of training for the
fire departments to continue advanced life support functions. There is
great confusion concerning that. Fire departments are concerned
about it, so is Dr. Tober.
There's a new policy concerning hyperthermia treatment for heart
attack victims. We're going to stand around and wait another month to
set up a committee that after -- will take another month and a half to
select the members that will then meet maybe sometime in March or
April to implement or to consider and implement these kinds of
things? I suggest that we are functioning as a significant impediment
to good emergency medical treatment for our patients, or our citizens.
And if that's what we're going to do, then we ought to say, I'm
sorry, we made a big mistake, let's put it back the way it was, because
you can't have a county commission who has to have meeting after
meeting after meeting to make its mind up about what it's going to do.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah. Responsibility of the
welfare of the citizens falls on this commission. We aired this in front
of everybody. Everybody had the opportunity to come that day and
speak on behalf of this. I think what came out of this discussion is that
we have one of the highest standards.
And what I take out of this conversation that we had with -- at
this workshop basically is that we want a dumbing down of the
system, and that's not where I want to go. In fact, we've got the best.
I want to excel it even better, and that responsibility falls on this
commiSSiOn.
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December 16, 2008
And that's where I stand on this, and I think we ought to be
moving forward instead of waiting to have other dialogue where we
have another workshop with 300 people here.
We went through this dialogue. We heard the airing. We heard
from the citizens. We heard from the medical community. We heard
from the fire department. Now we take all that stuff and I think we
move forward.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. There's a motion on the floor
and a second.
Further discussion?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. My understanding of the
motion was, is to be able to seek counsel, individually, commissioners,
and to be able to come back when we'd be able to air this whole thing.
Now, I'm in agreement with Commissioner Coyle for the most
part and Commissioner Halas. But Commissioner Fiala, would you
please elaborate on your motion one more time?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right. I don't want another
workshop and I don't want -- I mean, right now, people were knowing
this was here. We don't see the audience filled with people.
I just want to hear back from my constituents as to what we could
do. Now, George Aguilera made an excellent presentation here to tell
us, not one committee, but two, and what each should be comprised of
and what each of their functions should be.
We're not even talking about that. I think we need to consider
these things. And I'm willing to listen to our people. It's only two
weeks away, two weeks away, three weeks away, and I don't see that
three weeks is any -- we're not going to get much done through the
holiday season anyway. I would prefer to wait.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. One more question,
Commissioner Fiala, just to help me with this a little bit. What you're
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December 16, 2008
proposing is something that we normally do anyway, and that's to be
able to meet with our constituents --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- and other stakeholders out
there that may wish to be able to talk to us. That was your motion,
wasn't it?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, sir, it was.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I mean, we don't need the
permission of the commission to be able to do that.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So do you really think we need
the motion?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, I do, because what they want
to do is they want to form this policy advisory group with certain
people on there -- and no ALS people on there, by the way -- yet on
another issue here they're talking about existing ALS engine
agreements. I just want to hear what my people have to say. I went
out and asked, by the way.
When I talked with Mike Murphy, for instance, from the Marco
Island Fire Department, he said, I really can't tell you because I
haven't spoken to my city council yet. They haven't met. They can't
get back to me. I can't give you my advice.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And the reason for this
discussion now is because both the county manager and the county
attorney felt that we left the issue in the middle of the air.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: You know, I did too. When I left
that meeting, I talked with Jim Mudd. And I said, you know, I don't
know where we're going either. He said, neither do I.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, forgive me. I thought it
was intentional, but now I know it wasn't.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: We were just kind of floundering
and then -- and we didn't know whether somebody had this tail and
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December 16, 2008
was trying to shake the whole dog or what.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Forgive me. What is it about
Commissioner Fiala's motion that I should be concerned about?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. We started on this back in
October when we elected to have -- to put it on the agenda that we
wanted the medical director to report to the board. We then -- once
we accomplished that, then we put on the agenda a workshop to talk
about how we dealt with that.
We had the work shop.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Any commissioner on this board
has had months to talk to constituents about --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Not after the workshop. Excuse me.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I talked with people before the
workshop because I wanted to know what their impressions were
before we sat down to talk about it. I talked with people in January of
this year. I talked with people in October of last year.
When I saw the flurry of angry emails going back and forth
between the fire departments and our medical director, I talked with
the people about those two -- those things then.
I've been talking with them a long time. So I hope you can
understand my frustration when I hear somebody say, wow, this just
came up, and I don't know anything it. I need to talk with somebody
about it. We need to move ahead and get something done.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, let's vote on the motion and see
if it passes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, may I, just one last thing.
I'm sorry, Commissioner Henning. We might not even have a motion,
but I just --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, we do. You seconded.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, we do. I haven't -- I may
pull my second. Commissioner Fiala may pull it. I'm just trying to
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December 16,2008
clarifY something.
Help me with this. Suppose the motion fails or the motion's
pulled. What would be the next step?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, let's get that--
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, no. I want to know what
the other alternative is.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, I have somebody waiting for
me, and I'm not sure if we're getting anywhere.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, I'll be very brief and I'll be
finished. But I'm the one who asked for this to be on the agenda
today. If I hadn't asked for it to be on the agenda, we wouldn't be
talking about it today, and it would be another month before
something happened to it.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: But what?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So what I wanted to do today is to
clarify the guidance of the board so that the county attorney and the
county manager can begin to get the application requests out to people
to apply for membership of this meeting (sic). That's going to take a
month and a half or two months, and then we're going to have to select
people, and then they're going to have to start meeting.
So if we don't get started pretty soon, we're going to be into
spring of next year before we start promulgating any policy.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I withdraw my second because
your argument is compelling.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Why don't we continue this
discussion at 1: 16 this afternoon.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: We get a whole hour?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Pardon me.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: A whole hour?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yes. We're in recess for lunch.
(A luncheon recess was had.)
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Continuing on. The board's back
from lunch. Continuing on to 9J. Looking for direction on the current
EMSAC board and -- or creating a new board for medical policy for
the ALS and BLS.
The -- there was a motion and a second, and it was -- failed
because the second pulled the motion.
Is there any other guidance on this item?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I can make a motion, if you'd like.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Let's try it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: All right. Let me make a brief
explanatory statement. I'm not going to address -- you remember
there was some discussion about two committees. I'm not going to
address the other committee. That's the QAQI committee, which is
already established. It's up to the medical director to establish that
committee, and I don't think it's necessary that we get involved in that.
So the only committee I'm going to address is the emergency
medical policy committee. And I recommend that we create a
committee consisting of the following positions: Emergency room
physician, a pharmacist, emergency room nurse, to be appointed by us
from nominations made from the Medical Society of Collier County.
We'll then have a representative for the fire districts and a
representative for EMS. You notice that Dr. Tober is not -- I have not
specified Dr. Tober as being a part of that committee for the same
reason that we don't specify a member of our staff to be part of the
planning advisory committee or the Environmental Advisory
Committee.
Dr. Tober will be making his recommendations in concert with
the QAQI committee, and they will be reviewed by this committee,
and then we will act upon those recommendations.
So five members, and those are the members that I would
suggest.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And that's a motion?
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December 16,2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That is a motion.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'll second it if we are going to
sunset the EMSAC.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Oh, I'm sorry. Yes. That certainly
should be the case. We should sunset the EMSAC Committee.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. And I'll second that motion.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Discussion on the motion?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Could you name them one more
time?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes. An emergency room
physician, an emergency room nurse --
MR. MUDD: Pharmacist.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- pharmacist, EMS representative,
and a fire district representative.
MR. MUDD: And the emergency director, the pharmacist and
the emergency room nurse, you mentioned something about a
recommendation --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: They would be selected from
recommendations submitted by the medical society, and that takes us
out of the business of trying to sit here and decide whether a doctor is
qualified to be on that committee.
MR. MUDD: So they're basic- -- you're asking the -- you're
asking that the Medical Society of Southwest -- of Naples or
Southwest Florida recommend to this board an emergency room
doctor, a pharmacist, and an emergency nurse?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes, yes.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's part of my second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The -- and we can definitely get
something over to them.
Now, would this -- members of the committee have to reside
within Collier County, same --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Same procedure as with any other
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Same procedures.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But I don't know what you mean
by reside. I mean, they can be on another board if they want to be on
another board.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Oh, reside in the county.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Reside, live in the county. Yeah,
they've got to live in the county.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think so. I think members of the
Collier County Medical Society live or practice in the county. I'm
uncertain about that. Do we require it on all of our committees? I
believe we have some nonresidents on our committees -- other
committees.
MR. MUDD: You might have nonresidents based on specifics to
the committee, but Ms. Filson will be able to address it. Go ahead,
Sue.
MS. FILSON: There are a couple in Immokalee wherein they
have to represent a certain category, and that category doesn't have
anyone who resides in Collier County, and they reside outside of
Collier County.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So there are some. It's not a
precedent, but I don't feel strongly about it one way or the other. But I
would say to you, there are some very experienced emergency room
physicians at the Trauma Center in Ft. Myers. But whether they can
participate in meetings down here is a different question.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think we ought to just limit it to
this -- Collier County.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It's okay with me.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Now, would that be for the hospitals,
and that's a pleural, in Collier County?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, it would be wherever the best
qualified person is according to the medical society, which is
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December 16,2008
theoretically not an organization that's allied with any particular
hospital.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Right. So, you know -- okay. Well,
that's clear to me.
Any further discussion on the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saymg aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Now, Commissioner Fiala wanted to take 8 what, C?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: 8B and switch it with 8A.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: 8B, switch it with 8A.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Uh-huh. Whenever we get to 8, you
know.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Whenever we get to 8.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yeah.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Before we -- okay. We're going to go
to 7 now.
Item #7 A
RESOLUTION 2008-375: CU-2008-AR-1320l: VI LTD, LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP AND COLLIER COUNTY PARKS AND
RECREATION, REPRESENTED BY RICHARD D.
YOV ANOVICH OF GOODLETTE, COLEMAN, JOHNSON,
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December 16, 2008
YOV ANOVICH & KOESTER, P.A., REQUESTING A
CONDITIONAL USE IN THE RESIDENTIAL TOURIST (RT)
ZONING DISTRICT AND THE VANDERBILT BEACH RESORT
TOURIST OVERLAY DISTRICT (VBRTO) AND THE RMF-16
ZONING DISTRICT, PURSUANT TO LAND DEVELOPMENT
CODE SECTION 2.01.03.G.1.E, TO ALLOW FOR PUBLIC
FACILITIES (LIMITED TO PUBLIC RESTROOM FACILITIES)
THA T WILL BE CONSTRUCTED WITHIN THE PUBLIC
RIGHT-OF-WAY AND PARTIALLY WITHIN THE MORAYA
BAY BEACH CLUB PROPERTY. THE SUBJECT PROPERTY IS
LOCATED IN SECTION 29, TOWNSHIP 48 SOUTH, RANGE 25
EAST, COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA. (CTS) - ADOPTED
W/RETURN TO THE BCC REGARDING OPTIONS ON
ELEVATION AND FEMA
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. That would go to 7A, and this item was
continued from the October 28,2008, BCC meeting.
This item requires that all participants be sworn in and ex parte
disclosure be provided by commission members.
It's conditional use 2008-AR-13201, Six Limited, or it's VI
Limited, Limited Partnership, and Collier County Parks and
Recreation, represented by Richard D. Yovanovich of Goodlette,
Coleman, Johnson, Yovanovich, and Koester, P.A., is requesting a
continual use in the residential tourist zoning district and the
Vanderbilt Beach resort tourist overlay district, the VBRTO, and the
RMF -16 zoning district pursuant to Land Development Code section
2.01.03.G.l.e, to allow the public facilities, limit to public rest room
facilities, that will be constructed within the public right-of-way and
partially within the Moraya Bay Beach Club.
The subject property is located in Section 29, Township 48 south,
Range 25 east, Collier County, Florida. That's what I have.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Everybody wanting to
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December 16,2008
participate in this discussion, please rise, raise your right hand, and be
sworn in by the court reporter.
(The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Ex parte communication, starting
with Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Mr. Chairman, I have had meetings
with Mr. Dick Bing, or Dr. Dick Bing, and Jerry Griffin, and I've also
met with Bruce Burkhard. I have received correspondence, emails,
and telephone calls concerning this item.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes. I've met a number of times
with Dick Bing and Jerry Griffith (sic), and also with the people who
live up in Vanderbilt Beach area, and I have numerous meetings with
staff in regards to these items, and I've also had emails and phone calls
and other correspondence, and they're all located here in my book. As
you can see, there's been quite a few.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Oh, no. Just whenever you get to
speakers or somebody's on the board that wants to speak, I'd like to
speak.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. You're first.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Wait a minute. We need to do the
rest of the --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, yeah, I know that, but I just
wanted everybody to recognize Commissioner Coyle was first.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good, good. That's a good feeling.
I never get to go first.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: There's a reason for that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: You're on the clock.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The -- I had -- I met with the
petitioner, the petitioner's agent, I went down to the site, I have
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December 16, 2008
voluminous amount of email correspondence, and I talked to staff.
Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. I met with Bruce Burkhard, I
met with Janet Vasey, and we both went on a little tour of the place,
just by car, and then I met again with Richard Bing and Jerry Griffin
there and toured the place again, and then I have emails, I talked with
staff, I talked with a planning commissioner, and -- boy, I think I
mentioned it all.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Good.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. I'll repeat what Donna
just said. Meetings, correspondence, emails, phone calls, staff --
meeting with staff numerous times, I visited the site, Richard Bing,
Rich Y ovanovich, Wayne Arnold, Eric Strickland. I think that pretty
much covers it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Who wants to go first?
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. I guess I'm first.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Sure.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And we may as well get this out of
the way right up front because it probably will affect both of these
items. Whatever happens with this and however this works out, I
would merely ask that the other members of the Board of County
Commissioners join me in demanding that the staff seek the necessary
variances and not build a two-story outhouse with an elevator at this
location because I don't think it's necessary. It's an irresponsible waste
of taxpayer funds.
And so however we decide on this thing, I would hope that you
would -- that the majority of the commissioners would give staff
direction to get the necessary variances to keep from wasting taxpayer
funds on this huge structure.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I didn't know they were going to do
that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: They are. I think they can.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You know, Commissioner, if I could
respond to that. Ijust don't understand the State of Florida be (sic)
able to put permits -- build buildings at Wiggins Pass Park without
having to comply with the FEMA rules.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's right. Well, I think we -- we
can. I mean, I don't know what you're saying. But if you're saying
that we can't get a deviation --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: It's not a deviation, what I'm saying
is, because if others -- if others get it, it's just a matter of the
interpretation of the FEMA rules.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's right. So you're saying that
other people have gotten away with doing it. Why do we have to
waste our taxpayers' money on doing this, and I believe that the
county attorney will tell you that we can do this.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. I believe that we could be
putting ourselves in jeopardy as far as where we stand with the
insurance -- flood insurance premiums in this county. So just because
we'd like to keep this at one story, the end result may be an impact for
most of the taxpayers here in Collier County.
So I think that we have to look at this cautiously before we go
this direction. And I guess I'm going to look for guidance from the
county attorney.
MR. KLATZKOW: Yeah. I'll work with Mr. Schmitt. We're
going to have to bring this back. We'll have a full executive summary
as to what we can and what we cannot do, and then the board will be
able to make an informed decision on this. But we will look into, you
know, building this.
MR. MUDD: Let's make sure you clarify, bring it -- bring this
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December 16, 2008
back.
MR. KLATZKOW: It will be a variance.
MR. MUDD: The issue that Commissioner Coyle brought up
will require a variance. The variance would have to be advertised and
go through the variance issue.
This does not have any bearing right now on the conditional use
because you're basically putting a conditional use to put a bathroom
facility, a/k/a outhouse, in the right-of-way. That's what the
conditional use is all about, okay, and that right-of-way and the access
was given to you based on a settlement agreement.
But -- and then Mr. Klatzkow's comments are perfectly correct.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Can I make a comment?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: About that one?
MR. YOV ANOVICH: On this one, yes, since -- Rich
Y ovanovich on behalf of the petitioner.
The -- you're going to need to modify some exhibits that are
attached to the resolution because there's -- there are specific
elevations and heights contained in Exhibit C of the resolution
approving the conditional use.
So we would need to -- we need to modifY that. And then my
question is, what happens if you do not get the variance to go to one
story? This conditional use, would you want to adopt it as it is with
direction to try to reduce it to one story so we won't have to go
through this process again?
That would be my recommendation that you do that with
direction to redu- -- to try to reduce it to one story.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Mr. Chairman, if I could.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Sure.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: The only reason I brought it up
front is because -- that I understand that there is substantial
dissatisfaction from some of the residents about having this big
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December 16, 2008
structure there, and I just wanted to bring it up front because it might
impact the positions of people in the audience who are going to be
speaking for or against this project.
And, yes, you're right, we don't want to duplicate our efforts here,
so let's -- we'll approve it in its current form with -- I mean, if we do
approve it, we'd do so in its current form and -- with guidance to staff
to see what variances they can get to reduce the size of this outhouse.
Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. Okay. What we're talking
about is FEMA's rules that are requiring it to be elevated where it is, if
I understand correctly.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. And so the direction that
we're giving is that ifFEMA's willing to waive that rule, we'd build it
at near ground level?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. Is there any other
advantage to having this --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The cost.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. You don't have to put an
elevator in.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: The cost is less or more?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Oh, it's a lot less.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, building it at ground
level.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. And so -- yeah, that
sounds -- in other words, we go forward with the project, and if we
can modifY it to be able to put it at ground level, we'll do it. Okay.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, it will come back at another
meeting in regards to discussing all the options that are open for it.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No. Is that what you said? I
thought it wasn't going to come back.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No. That's what I said, because it
will have to come back for a variance, but what you don't want to do is
take this whole project and make it come back through the process.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, you can't do anything
with the project until you know what you're going to build.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes, you can. You can approve the
project with the structure as it's currently shown in the documents with
guidance to the staff that we will seek a variance to that requirement
and reduce the size of this -- and the cost of this structure, if we can.
If we can, we -- the variance will be coming back to us for
consideration. We will then, as the county attorney has said, we will
understand all our options, and then we can make a decision on
whether or not we want to do that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And that sounds fine. The only
one concern I may have is that FEMA has been known not to work in
any kind of reasonable timetable. This may be delayed for years.
MR. MUDD: I'm going to -- I just want to -- I just want to
interject myself. This variance is within --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Our variance.
MR. MUDD: -- within the power of the Board of County
Commissioners. The issue -- the issue is what Commissioner Halas
brought up, is how much risk do you want to accept on your flood
. .
Insurance premiUms --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: The citizens.
MR. MUDD: -- because you now have put a building --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: An outhouse.
MR. MUDD: -- a/k/a, an outhouse, okay, at sea level, so to
speak, versus being 17- foot above the ground, which is the floodplain
elevation that FEMA has designated for this particular area. That's the
issue that gets resolved during the variance, and the Planning
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December 16, 2008
Commission will get to see that. But you don't have to ask FEMA for
that variance.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Does this affect our rating
throughout the county?
MR. MUDD: It could, sir. We don't know.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Oh, okay.
MR. MUDD: That's the risk, okay, that needs to be -- needs to
be looked at and asked about as this variance goes through the
process.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And -- I mean, the variance
itselfs still going to depend on FEMA's determinations, too, right?
MR. MUDD: No. They've already made their determinations.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Their determination, it had to be
built, a second story.
MR. MUDD: The floodplain elevation is 17-foot, and so you've
got to have a second story. You have to have one blowout floor. But
you, as a Board of County Commissioners, can approve a variance of
that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Let's get this dog-and-pony
show underway.
Mr. Y ovanovich? And no offense.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: None taken. I believe we did a full
presentation the last go-round and we continued this to take care of an
item that you approved on the consent agenda today, which was the
actual conveyance of the sliver ofland that was necessary to have the
county total ownership of the land subject to the continual use.
Unless you want me to go through the presentation again, I -- I
would -- I would say we are where we are, and those are the elevations
of the worst-case scenario, as I'll call it right now, based upon your
discussion.
And with that, we're available to answer any questions you may
have.
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December 16,2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So on the consent agenda there is
an item on there -- I must have missed it -- about conveyance?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. It's 16D32.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. I know there was another
item on there in regards to paying for your time and effort and other
people involved in this.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: That was all taken care of on 16D32. It
was reimbursing expenses paid and the conveyance.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any other questions?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Nope.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Call the public speakers. Call the
public speakers.
MS. FILSON: Oh, I'm sorry. Bruce Burkhard.
MR. BURKHARD: Good afternoon, Commissioners. My name
is Bruce Burkhard, and I'm the Chairman of the Vanderbilt Beach
Residents Association.
We feel that the concept of the bathroom was a very important
element of the settlement agreement as it went forward. We feel that
it does, indeed, benefit all of the citizens of the county, not just
citizens in the immediate area. We think it's a good deal, and our
association fully supports it and asks you to support passage as well.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Mr. Burkhard, I have a question, if
you don't mind, sir.
On the issue about the clubhouse -- and I know it's a different
issue.
MR. BURKHARD: Well, that's been pulled, so I don't really
want to address it, I don't think.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No, I don't -- I'm pretty sure it's going
to come back, so I would ask you and anybody who objects to it to get
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December 16, 2008
together with the developer and see what kind of resolution you can
have before it comes back to us.
MR. BURKHARD: Sure.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MR. BURKHARD: You're welcome.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Staff presentation?
MS. DESELEM: Good afternoon. For the record, Kay Deselem,
Principal Planner of Zoning.
You have the executive summary and the staff report on file. We
are recommending approval with conditions.
Obviously, as the discussion has gone through today, those
conditions may need to be modified to reflect some direction. I don't
know exactly how you might do that. Perhaps just approve it as it is
conditioned now with staff direction being separate. But that's your
call, just so that we have it clear on the record as to what's being
approved.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: What conditions are you talking
about?
MS. DESELEM: There's just a condition that recognizes the
actual site plan.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'd like to make a motion that we
approve this.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Close the public hearing.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Oh, sorry.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah. I make a motion that we
approve this as it is today with the idea that this is to come back to us
on another time in regards to addressing the elevations and FEMA.
So the motion is that we approve it as it stands today.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second the motion.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And the exhibit shown may change,
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December 16, 2008
depending on further board direction.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's correct, that that's when it
comes back with us in regards to discussing the options that we have
with elevation changes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That was a motion by Commissioner
Halas, second by a Commissioner Fiala.
Is there discussion on the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signifY by
saying -- are you okay, Commissioner?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'm getting ready to say aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saYIng aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Item #7B
RESOLUTION 2008-376: V A-2006-AR-II064: VI L TD, LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP, REPRESENTED BY RICHARD YOV ANOVICH
OF GOODLETTE, COLEMAN, JOHNSON, YOV ANOVICH &
KOESTER, P.A. REQUESTING THREE VARIANCES FROM
THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE RESIDENTIAL TOURIST (RT)
ZONING DISTRICT AND THE V ANDERBIL T BEACH
RESIDENTIAL TOURIST OVERLAY DISTRICT (VBRTO) TO
ALLOW FOR A PROPOSED TRELLIS STRUCTURE. THE
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December 16, 2008
REQUESTED VARIANCES ARE AS FOLLOWS: 1) A
VARIANCE OF 25 FEET 4 INCHES FROM THE REQUIRED
BUILDING SEPARATION DISTANCE CALCULATED AS HALF
THE SUM OF THE TWO BUILDINGS (50 FEET 4 INCHES)
BETWEEN THE TRELLIS AND THE PRINCIPAL
RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURE TO ALLOW A 25-FOOT
SEPARATION; 2) A VARIANCE OF 20 FEET FROM THE
MINIMUM REQUIRED 30-FOOT FRONT YARD SETBACK FOR
THE TRELLIS TO THE NORTH PROPERTY LINE TO ALLOW A
lO-FOOT SETBACK; AND 3) A VARIANCE OF 2.5 FEET 4
INCHES FROM THE REQUIRED BUILDING SEP ARA TION
DIST ANCE CALCULATED AS HALF THE SUM OF THE TWO
BUILDINGS (12.5 FEET 4 INCHES) BETWEEN THE TRELLIS
AND THE PROPOSED PUBLIC RESTROOM BUILDING
ALONG THE NORTHERN PROPERTY LINE (BLUEBILL
AVENUE) TO ALLOW A 10-FOOT SEP ARA TION. THE
SUBJECT PROPERTY, CONSISTING OF 4.96 ACRES, IS
LOCATED AT 11125 GULF SHORE DRIVE, ON THE
SOUTHWEST CORNER OF GULF SHORE DRIVE AND
BLUEBILL AVENUE, IN SECTION 29, TOWNSHIP 48 SOUTH,
RANGE 25 EAST, COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA.
(COMPANION TO CU-2006-AR-II046) (CTS) - ADOPTED
W/CHANGE TO VERBAGE IN RESOLUTION
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, this brings us to our next item,
which is 7B. This item was continued from the December 2,2008,
BCC meeting, and it requires that all participants be sworn and ex
parte disclosure be provided by commission members.
It's variance 2006-AR-ll064, VI or Six Limited, Limited
Partnership, represented by Richard Y ovanovich of Goodlette,
Coleman, Johnson, Yovanovich, and Koester, P.A., requesting three
variances from the requirements of the residential tourist R T zoning
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December 16, 2008
district and the Vanderbilt Beach residential tourist overlay district,
VBRTO, to allow for a proposed trellis structure.
The requested variances are as follows: Number one, a variance
of 25 feet, 4 inches from the required building separation distance
calculated as half the sum of the two buildings, 50 foot, 4 inches,
between the trellis and the principal residential structure to allow a
25-foot separation; number two, a variance of20 feet from the
minimum required 30-foot front yard setback for the trellis to the
north property line to allow a 10-foot setback; and three, a variance of
2.5 feet, 4 inches from the required building separation distance
calculated as half the sum of the two buildings, 12.5 feet, 4 inches,
between the trellis and the proposed public rest room building along
the northern property line of Bluebill Avenue to allow a 10-foot
separation.
The subject property consisting of 4.96 acres is located at 11125
Gulf Shore Drive at the southwest corner of Gulf Shore Drive and
Bluebill Avenue in Section 9, Township 48 south, Range 25 east,
Collier County, Florida. And the companion item that's annotated was
continued indefinitely.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You need a break after reading that
one.
All wishing to participate in this item, please rise, raise your right
hand for the court reporter to swear you in.
(The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Ex parte, starting with Commissioner
Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. Okay. I have had --I've
had meetings, correspondence, emails, phone calls, met with Richard
Y ovanovich, Wayne Arnold, we talked about it -- we talked about it
then. I met with Strickland, also Richard Bing, and toured the site.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, same as I mentioned before,
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December 16, 2008
but I guess I have to go through them again for the record. So I went
and viewed the site. I met with Richard Bing and Jerry Griffin and
Bruce Burkhard, and spoke with staff members on this.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I visited the site, I spoke to the
petitioner and the petitioner's agent, and I have email correspondence
in my record if anybody would like to review.
Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes. The same goes for what I had
the last time. Met with the petitioner a number oftimes, met with Dr.
Bing, and also Jerry Griffith (sic), met with the people from the
Planning Commission at separate times, met with the residents, met
with staff, had meetings with staff and with the residents in the
community there, and I guess that's the whole gist of everything.
Anyway, it's all in my packet here as I showed earlier.
I tour the site almost every morning at 4:30 in the morning as I
walk by it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: He's going there for the rest room.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I've been looking for it. Hope they
put a half moon on that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I think we better leave that one there.
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I have talked with Dr. Bing and
Jerry Griffin and Bruce Burkhard concerning this, as well as staff. I
have received correspondence, emails, and telephone calls concerning
this item.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Mr. Y ovanovich?
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Yes. Good afternoon. For the record,
Rich Y ovanovich on behalf of the petitioner.
With me today are Jerry Griffin, Karen Bishop, Van Miller, and
Jay Westendorf to answer any questions you may have regarding the
vanances.
Mr. Mudd read to you all three variances that are required for this
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December 16, 2008
trellis. On your visualizer is actually, you know, the survey showing
where the three variances are being requested.
It turns out that a trellis is considered a structure under the
county's Land Development Code and, therefore, setback
requirements between the trellis and the condominium building as
well as the off-site public rest rooms would be required.
Up -- and I forgot my laser pointer, but behind Mr. Mudd is --
shows you the --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: There's a light sword.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: This is the trellis we're discussing today,
and the setbacks have to do with the public rest room, the setback
between the condominium building and the trellis, as well as Bluebill
is considered a front road, so we're asking for a setback for that as
well.
Your Planning Commission recommended approval of 8-1 for
approval of the variance, and I believe it's a nice feature for the
project, and the Planning Commission agreed that this would be a nice
buffer, if you will, from the -- from the public rest rooms to the
building, a nice transition and would better identifY the beach access
on the property through the trellis.
And with that, we're requesting the board approve our variance --
three variance requests as read to you by Mr. Mudd. And your staff is
supporting the variance as well.
And with that, we're available to answer any questions you may
have.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions by board members?
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Just a clarification on verbiage.
When you say a variance of25 feet, 4 inches from the required
building separation calculated as half the sum of the two buildings --
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- are you not saying, half the sum
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December 16,2008
of the height of the two buildings?
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Shouldn't that be in there to make
sure there's no misunderstanding, because that's the way we calculate
variances?
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Yes, sir. That's a good point.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. And that's true of a number
of the sentences in this stipulation.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It should be half -- half the sum of
the height of the two buildings.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Other questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Staff presentation?
MS. DESELEM: Good afternoon again. For the record, Kay
Deselem, Principal Planner with Zoning.
Again, you have the staff report and the executive summary. The
staff is prepared to give you our position on this.
The staff report goes into detail as to your findings for the
recommendation to support our recommendation of approval. And,
again, the only condition for this petition is that condition that
recognizes the site plan itself.
Other than that, if you have any questions, I'd be happy to
respond to them.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions by the commissioners?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
Public speakers?
MS. FILSON: Bruce Burkhard.
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December 16, 2008
MR. BURKHARD: Good afternoon again, Commissioners. My
name is Bruce Burkhard, Chairman of Vanderbilt Beach Zoning
Committee. And I would like to just say that in general, our
organization is trying to hold down the number of variances in our
area and keep it -- keep them to a very reasonable level so that the
county code is complied with in all instances rather than allowing
continual bending.
In this case, however, we feel that the bathroom is an essential
part of the settlement agreement, and we feel that this trellis
construction adds to the --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Ambiance?
MR. BURKHARD: -- beauty of the product that's being built,
and we think it's an enhancement overall for the site and, therefore, we
would recommend approval. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you, Mr. Burkhard.
With that, I'm going to close the public hearing. Is--
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Motion to approve the variances
that are requested by the petitioner.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Halas,
second by Commissioner Fiala to approve a variance and adopt a
resolution, but the resolution needs to be corrected, is that correct, to
where it says --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Height, half the height of the
building --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Between the trellis and the principal
residential structure required a one-half sum of two buildings to allow
a 25-foot height separation distance; is that correct?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Just the --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Sum of the height of the two
buildings.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The sum of the height.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, sum of the height of the two
buildings to give the 25-foot separation. And essentially the same for
all the other variations, too. It's just, we should be saying the sum of
the height of the two buildings rather than the sum of the two
buildings. I don't know how you sum two buildings.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I just wanted to write that down so
when the resolution comes through it's going to be -- I'll look for that
correction.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's correct.
MR. KLATZKOW: And does that include staffs
recommendation, the motion?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Includes staff recommendations,
exactly, yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Is that included in the second?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: (Nods head.)
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And --I'm sorry.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Could I just ask a question?
Is any change appropriate or necessary to this if the height of the
rest room facility is ultimately reduced?
MR. YOV ANOVICH: It will probably reduce the amount of the
vanance --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Variance.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: -- between the trellis and public rest
room, yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: The north side. It will probably
mean that is not a variance.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: We'd have to do the math, but it may not
-- it may -- or it will certainly be smaller. The variance will be smaller
for sure.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. That's all I have.
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December 16, 2008
MR. YOV ANOVICH: It affects that one only.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Discussion on the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Seeing none, all in favor of the
motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Moving right along.
Item #8B
ORDINANCE 2008-67: PUDA-2008-AR-13494, KITE KINGS
LAKE, LLC, REPRESENTED BY D. WAYNE ARNOLD, AICP
OF Q. GRADY MINOR AND ASSOCIATES, P.A., REQUESTING
A PUD AMENDMENT TO MODIFY THE PERMITTED
COMMERCIAL USES WITHIN THE KINGS LAKE PUD.
(ORDINANCE NO. 82-52) THE SUBJECT PROPERTY IS
LOCATED AT 4890 DAVIS BOULEVARD, IN SECTION 7,
TOWNSHIP 50 SOUTH, RANGE 26 EAST, COLLIER COUNTY,
FLORIDA. CTS - ADOPTED AS AMENDED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that would bring us to 8B, was a
request that Commissioner Fiala made.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct.
MR. MUDD: And 8B is now 17 -- used to be 17C. This item
requires that all participants be sworn in and ex parte disclosure be
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December 16, 2008
provided by commission members.
It's PUDA-2008-AR-13494, Kite Kings Lake, LLC, represented
by D. Wayne Arnold, AICP, ofQ. Grady Minor & Associates, P.A., is
requesting a PUD amendment to modifY the permitted commercial
units within the Kings Lake PUD, ordinance number -- excuse me --
ordinance number 82-52.
The subject property is located at 4890 Davis Boulevard in
Section 7, Township 50 south, Range 26 east, Collier County, Florida.
The item was moved at Commissioner Fiala's request.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All wishing to participate in this item,
please rise, raise your right hand and be sworn in by the court reporter.
(The speakers were duly sworn and indicated in the affirmative.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Ex parte communication?
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Hang on just a second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: We all received--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: 17C, I have met with Mr.
Yovanovich, Wayne Arnold, and Eric Strickland, and I have
correspondence and emails concerning this item.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: The only thing I've had to -- as far
as ex parte is, there's been emails that I received in my office in
regards to this issue.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And I have received correspondence
and emails.
Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. I've received emails,
correspondence, I've met with Rich Y ovanovich and talked with him
as well, and with Eric Strickland. I've also spoken with some of the
representatives from Kings Lake community as well as Karen Homiak
from the Planning Commission.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta?
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. I've had meetings and
emails.ImetwithMr.Yovanovich.Mr. Arnold, and Mr. Strickland,
and also discussed this with staff.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Mr. Yovanovich? Actually,
Commissioner Fiala, do you want me to go to you?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Sure. I can bring this to a fast close.
This is -- it's not a big deal at all. I've already spoken with Rich about
it.
Some of the things -- there were just a few other things that the
community wanted to add as far as restrictions goes to this -- to this
agenda item, and that is, they wanted to eliminate number 8744, and I
already spoke with Rich about this, which includes jails and
correctional facilities. They also wanted to eliminate number 24,
public administration, which would include things like housing
programs, resource programs, economic programs, et cetera, and they
also wanted to eliminate sales barns. We weren't quite sure what a
sales barn even was, so we thought maybe we ought to eliminate that.
And then there was -- under libraries, which should be just a
wonderful thing -- but under the libraries, it included things like
documentation centers and items like that. So those were things we
asked to have eliminated from this.
And once we hear from the petitioner that that would be okay
with them, then I would make a motion to approve.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: And they are. I just wanted to correct
one thing.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Your reference to Item 24 was public
administration. That's actually item number 23 in the list of uses. So I
wanted to make sure we have that correctly referenced.
And what we did is we deleted number nine, which is the
educational services, and that was the reference to libraries. And it
was a little confusing, but sales barns were always excluded, so that
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December 16, 2008
was taken care of.
And there was one thing you didn't read off but we didn't forget
that -- we talked about it, was on the accessory uses. We wanted to
make it clear that new outdoor seating is allowed. It says, new
outdoor seating shall be permitted; however, outdoor amplified music
or televisions shall be prohibited.
So we added that to the document. We ran it by your staff. So
we need to include that in any motion you bring to hopefully approve
with those changes, but we didn't want to leave that one off.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, thank you for remembering that.
Yes, that was a big discussion on that, too.
MR. YOVANOVICH: Yes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you, Rich. And so with that,
I'd like to make a motion to approve as amended.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yeah. We have to close the public
hearing, I'm sorry.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No, that's fine, Commissioner, I'll
recognize it. But let me go to the accessory structures. In the
ordinance, accessory structure use is customarily with -- permitted
with a principal use and structures. Sidewalk sales, outdoor seasonal
sales shall be permitted.
So tell me -- tell me what you're talking about, because I don't
see that in the ordinance now.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: We added that, Commissioner, based on
our discussion with Commissioner Fiala yesterday. And here's the
language we propose adding. It would be in number three that we
would add, and we've run this by JD.
We wanted to clarify that, yes, outdoor seating is allowed, and
there is some already, but there would be prohibitions on the new
outdoor seating to make it clear that there would be no outdoor
amplified music or televisions based on other instances in the county.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: So it's a new one.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. And that needs to go in the--
into the record --
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Correct.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- along with other people, whoever's
going to correct this ordinance, is going to have to have a copy of it.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Correct.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Is there any further questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any public speakers?
MS. FILSON: No, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Close the public hearing. Entertain a
motion.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, I make a motion to approve
this item as amended.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala makes a motion
to approve the --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Kings Lake Shopping Center.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- Kings Lake Shopping Center
ordinance, amended ordinance, with the added stipulations, and that
includes with staff stipulations, too.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, sir. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yep, that's correct.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All right. Are we clear on the item?
County Attorney, we're clear on the item?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Discussion on the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Seeing none, all in favor of the
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December 16, 2008
motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
MR. YOV ANOVICH: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you.
Item #8A
ORDINANCE 2008-68: AN ORDINANCE AMENDING COLLIER
COUNTY'S NOISE ORDINANCE (ORDINANCE NO. 90-17, AS
AMENDED) - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to 8A, and that's a
recommendation to consider adoption of an ordinance to amend
Collier County's, with an apostrophe S, noise ordinance, ordinance
number 90-17, as amended.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Mr. Wright?
MR. WRIGHT: Good afternoon, Commissioners, Mr. Chairman.
For the record, I'm Jeff Wright, Assistant County Attorney. And I'm
pleased to bring for your consideration, an amended noise control
ordinance.
I just want to have a couple remarks here, then I'm going to turn
it over to our noise consultant.
Back in the fall of 2007, the Board of County Commissioners
directed that staff look at the noise ordinance and review it to make it
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December 16, 2008
better. And pursuant to that direction, the code enforcement
department hired Lisa Schott, who's a noise consultant, in late 2007.
In April, 2008, a draft amendment was sent to our department for
legal sufficiency review and public input.
We had public input from the Sheriffs Office, the chamber of
commerce, staff, citizens, and the private sector. As it evolved, it
became tied to the outdoor seating effort, which was being reviewed
by the Planning Commission.
So the Planning Commission also looked at the noise ordinance,
and they looked at this time in July, again in October, and then in
November twice. The second time in November, they unanimously
recommended approval. That was on November 20th, of the
ordinance that's in your packet.
Some highlights of the ordinance. It was -- we basically did a
general update to reflect the ongoing evolution of legal, technical, and
enforcement challenges, and we tried to make it user friendly, because
we had a lot of concerns expressed that it was a real technical
ordinance that was hard to navigate through. So we tried to make it a
little bit more user friendly.
Specifically we added C weightings. That's -- and Lisa will
explain the impact of that. We've also added some qualifications to
our human voice exemption. We've added mixed-use provisions.
That was with the input of the development community. And we've
also, as a byproduct of this effort, have an increased cooperation in
phone lines available for noise complaints, and the cooperation is
between the Sheriffs Office and code enforcement. So they have a
pretty air-tight system for addressing noise complaints whenever they
come In.
It's not a cure for zoning incompatibility issues, and that's
something that we really want to illuminate, because a lot of the
questions that come up in noise control relate to zoning compatibility
issues, and we're not addressing that here.
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December 16, 2008
Like I said, there's a lot of competing interests, and this is our
chance to make the ordinance better and take all those various
interests concerned into the draft. Lisa Schott, as I said, is here. We
also have Kitchell Snow from code enforcement. Catherine Fabacher
has permitting expertise. The Sheriffs Office is here, Captain Mark
Baker. We also have Steve Hart from the Chamber of Commerce.
We've also gotten private sector input from Doug Lewis and Karen
Bishop, who are both here, and we also had a lot of input from
citizens. We really did try to listen to everybody.
And that's all I have, unless you have questions.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions by the board?
Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I just want to say that as I read
through this, I was very much impressed with all the effort that was
put into this, not only by staff, but also by the consultant that you
hired and also the amount of work and effort that was vetted by the
Planning Commission.
And I think the end result is we've got something here that's
going to be very favorable to the citizens here in Collier County.
And I just want to say thanks to everyone who worked on this to
bring this forward. This has been a huge problem within the
community. And as our community gets larger, I think there's going
to be more concerns about trying to figure out the best way to protect
the citizens from unwanted noises throughout the whole Collier
County area.
A lot of us have experienced this in the urban area. And I'm sure
that as the rural area gets developed, there's going to be more of these
issues.
So once again, I want to thank each and every one of you who
were involved in this, and along with the Planning Commission.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Jeff, this is not going to fix the
problems that we're having in some area shopping centers located near
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December 16,2008
residential, correct?
MR. WRIGHT: It's not going to fix those problems, but it does
attempt to address them at some level, and I could give you a couple
of examples. One that comes to mind is the human voice. We've
always had an exception for the human voice, but in this draft we've
qualified that to say that it's the reasonable use of the unamplified
human voice. So that's intended to be an objective standard that when
a court or a tribunal hears it, they can say, this is unreasonable use of
the unamplified human voice.
Not to say that the Sheriffs Office is going to go gangbusters
with that provision and start citing people for violation that are outside
making noise. But it is an attempt to address those problems.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: What about in the exemptions, M, in
Mary (sic)? It says it gives an exemption to existing businesses.
MR. WRIGHT: That's an attempt to address the problem of
coming to the noise. If, for example, there is an industrial operation
that's making a lot of noise but there's nothing around it, it's all ago or
industrial, nonresidential, and then through development, the
residential abuts that or adjoins that -- that manufacturing use, the
manufacturing use doesn't have to comply with residential standards
like it normally would.
Because it got there first, it goes with the higher levels, the
previous standard, the industrial standard.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: But it doesn't spell out industrial
standards.
MR. WRIGHT: Nonresidential is the term that we used, so it
would apply to whether it's a golf course or an ago use or industrial.
Anything that's not residential.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Is exempt?
MR. WRIGHT: If it came there first, it gets to go at the higher
level rather than the lower residential level.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. If -- okay. I understand what
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December 16, 2008
you're saying now. If the residential was first prior to the commercial,
this would not apply?
MR. WRIGHT: That's correct.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I see. Okay. I gotcha. How does the
board want to do that? Hear a full presentation or go right to the
speakers?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Motion to approve.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: There's a motion by Commissioner
Coyle to approve --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And I'll second that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- the amended noise -- or staffs
recommendation, second by Commissioner Halas. And--
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'd like to add that --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Why don't we go to public speakers.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: -- I think that the -- so that -- the
benefit of my commissioners being that that used to be myoid field.
When you use the C-weighted scale, basically what this is going to do
-- a lot of the issues that came up from the citizens was the lower area
of the audio spectrum, which is down in the 20 to, let's say, 100 hertz,
200 hertz range. This is the area that I think we're going to be
addressing, and that's in regards to the deep base boom, boom, boom
that drives you out of your house even though you've got the windows
closed and everything.
This is the area that I think that we're going to address, and that
seems to be the most obnoxious area in regards to the sound.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. I also appreciate all the
time and effort that went into this. This is what, the third or fourth
time that we have seen this since we've been in office?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah, or --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Eventually we've got to get it
right, right?
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Since 2002 anyways.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: But what I'd like to do is to be
able to have a better idea of what these two different instruments look
like, the C-weighted scale versus the --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: What's the other one called, the
COMMISSIONER HALAS: A-weighted scale.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Right. If we could have a
demonstration of that, the octane (sic) band versus the C weight and
why one has an advantage over the other.
MR. WRIGHT: Lisa Schott here has brought some equipment.
I'm not really sure how it works, but Lisa does know.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Great. I'm glad you're here,
Lisa.
MS. SCHOTT: Thank you, Commissioners. Good afternoon.
I would just like to make a few prefatory remarks, and then I'll
set up the demonstration, which will just take a minute.
As Commissioner Halas mentioned, their primary concerns of
community noise are audible noise and low frequency sound. And the
most common measure we use for measuring audible noise -- that
would be pretty much everything we hear in the environment;
amplified sound, voices, any type of noise could be called or
considered audible noise.
We measure that with what's called an A-weighted sound level,
or the units of measure are dBA. And you'll see in the noise ordinance
that there are dBA limits.
The problem with the A-weighted sound level is it doesn't give
much weight to very low frequency base noise, as Commissioner
Halas mentioned. And the reason is, the human ear doesn't hear base
noise as well, so the A weighting implies a large weighting to that
before it factors into the final number.
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December 16, 2008
But we can feel base noise and we can sense it coming down--
you've heard -- all heard loud cars coming down the street, and you
typically hear the base much sooner than you hear the audible sound.
So the way -- there are two ways of enforcing the low frequency
noise. One is with octave band sound limits. If you're familiar with
music, you might be familiar with octaves on a piano. It's -- octave
bands measure noise and individual frequencies.
The other way of enforcing low frequency noise is with the
C-weighted sound level. Either way is effective. The old version of
the ordinance has the octave band levels. The revised ordinance uses
C-weighted levels.
We have established the limits to be equivalent to each other.
Our C-weighted limits were calculated from the old octave band
limits. So the noise ordinance is not necessarily getting more or less
stringent in the low frequency; however, the benefit of going to the
C-weighted is that the instrumentation required to measure it is less
expensive, it's easier to learn how to use.
So not only will code enforcement be more able to easily enforce
it, but any user out there in the community, whether it be a citizen or a
commercial or industrial business trying to comply with the noise
ordinance, can buy a meter for $100 from Radio Shack or off the
Internet that will allow them to measure the A- and C-weighed levels,
and that's not the case with the octave bands.
So we've kept the actual sound level limits the same while still
allowing for protection of the citizens and ease of enforcement.
Some -- there was a question about sound levels and what exactly
they mean. If I could just have a minute to pull the loudspeakers out
to the middle of the floor, I'll give you a little demonstration.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: How many speakers do we have?
Two?
MR. MUDD: You want me to make sure I'm facing this to the
commissioners, right?
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December 16, 2008
MS. SCHOTT: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: You want Commissioner Fiala
to sing into that?
MS. SCHOTT: Maybe some Christmas music.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I couldn't do that to anybody.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm sure it would be beautiful,
like an angel from afar.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Commissioner, while she's setting
that up, I'd like to ask Jeff a question, if I could, Jeff Wright.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Sure.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: In the presentation it was stated
that this is going to be a joint effort by the sheriff and by code
enforcement. What have you done to make sure that there's
cohesiveness between the Sheriffs Department and code enforcement,
especially in off-hours? And what I mean by off-hours, I'm talking
like 10 o'clock at night to 1 o'clock in the morning or 2 o'clock in the
morning, and how's that going to be addressed?
MR. WRIGHT: Commissioner, I would -- if! could introduce
Kitchell Snow. He's better qualified to answer that question.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. SNOW: Good afternoon, Commissioner. For the record,
Kitchell Snow, Collier County Code Enforcement.
We have an agreement that has been established by our Director,
Diane Flagg, with the Sheriffs Department. There will be -- the
Sheriffs Department is a 24-hour service. We're not 24 hours. So
anything after the hours of when code enforcement closes, the
Sheriffs Office will usually address, or we will address next day.
That was one of the main concerns of what would happen, who was
going to enforce what.
Basically, the breach of peace the sheriff is going to do, and code
enforcement's going to handle the rest of that.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And the Sheriffs Department will
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December 16, 2008
be brought up to speed in regards to exactly how to make the
measurements, how to set up the equipment to make sure that either
they're in compliance or out of compliance, and then the sheriff has
the ability to issue a citation?
MR. SNOW: Yes, sir, they do. And, Commissioner, when we
went -- you and I went to class together -- we had four of the CCSO's
in there, so four of them are actually qualified to take meter readings.
And this ordinance specifically addressed what you're talking
about where there's instances where they are not going to have to take
readings when they can go ahead and issue a citation.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Good, okay.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Great question, by the way. Seems
that most of our complaints come during the night.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: After hours, yep.
MS. SCHOTT: Okay. Are we ready?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Very good.
MS. SCHOTT: Just as an interesting point, while Kitchell was
speaking, his sound level on that meter, where the microphone is
located, was ranging from 50 to 60 dBA. And the C-weighted sound
level was running at around 60 to 68 dBC.
Or daytime limit is 60 dBA, which is about the top of Kitchell's
voice range there and are 72 dBC. The nighttime limits are 55 and 67.
What I'm going to play for you first is the daytime sound level.
Okay. What I will play first is the daytime sound level, and I would
ask everyone to be quiet for a few minutes so we could just get the
sound of the speakers.
There is 60 dBA. This is the daytime sound limit at a residential
property line. Let's listen to the nighttime sound limit. This is
measuring 55 dBA right now.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And that's the C-weighted
equivalent?
MS. SCHOTT: Right now this is 65 dBC, which is two decibels
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December 16,2008
below the nighttime limit.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you. Public speakers?
MS. FILSON: Douglas Lewis.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Mr. Lewis?
MR. LEWIS: I'm going to waive.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Next speaker?
MS. FILSON: He'll be followed by Karen Bishop.
MS. BISHOP: Who's first?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You are.
MS. BISHOP: Merry Christmas. Karen Bishop, for the record,
representing Cemex. We were not involved in some of the changes on
the -- for this noise ordinance early on, and so some of the things that
were taken out we're concerned about, and we just wanted to put that
on the record.
Even though I've been assured by the county attorney that we --
that it means the same thing, I just want to make sure that we are
covered, which is section -- the exceptions that Commissioner
Henning brought up earlier.
All that that was scratched out discusses all the work that we did
when the original noise ordinance went into place, all the money that
we put into our facility to bring as close to compliance as we can with
that manufacturing, which is 24 hours a day there. And so I just want
to go on the record to make sure that if this gets taken out, that
everything that we've done to date, I guess the term is, grandfathers us
in at this point.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Is that a question?
MS. BISHOP: I'm guessing that is a question. He assured me. I
just want to make sure it's okay with you guys that we have the same
understanding.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's my understanding.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, let's just put it -- just put it on
the record. Mr. Wright? Is that Cemex the national?
MS. BISHOP: Yes. It used to be Krehling Industries when we
did that first, and now Cemex bought Krehling Industries, and now it's
Cemex, but specifically it's the Wiggins Pass plant, which has always
been the issue. Not our other plants. We're pretty much in industrial
areas.
But what he described is what happened to us. We were out in
the boondocks, and then everybody built next to us. We even have
units that look over the yard, and so we're just concerned that we can't
do anything more to this old facility. We've already spent a lot of
money doing this, and we can't make the noise levels get any better at
this point.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Mr. Wright?
MR. WRIGHT: Mr. Chairman, the reason that we moved--
removed that provision, that language -- it's four or so paragraphs I
believe, on Page 24.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Right.
MR. WRIGHT: It's to just make it a more concise ordinance.
There haven't been any problems with the Cemex factory. And that
new language that we added that we talked about earlier gives them an
additional allowance for the fact that they came there first.
I have no problem adding that language back in there, especially
if they expended money in reliance on that language. No problem at
all. Substantively it doesn't make a difference. But if she'd like that in
there, I would recommend going along with that, no problem at all.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: My concern is, this has been
vented (sic) very many -- quite a few times, and I'm surprised that is
the first time that this has come up that you, as a citizen, haven't been
involved in this, and it's been publicized quite readily.
But I don't foresee that you're going to run into a problem
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December 16, 2008
because we've basically said, hey, this is an established area in an
industrial zone, is grandfathered. So if this in an encroachment, as the
case with the Cemex plant up there, that that's already been taken into
consideration.
But what surprises me is the fact that this has been in front of the
Planning Commission a number of times, and it sounds to me like this
is the first time that you knew anything about this, and I'm quite
surprised.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Your time's up.
MS. BISHOP: I can speak to that. We actually knew that the
noise ordinance was going to be changed, but it was based on a
problem in a project. So we didn't assume that the level of changes
that are here was going to occur.
I was in the Planning Commission. That's how I found out that
these changes were made at the level they were. Unfortunately, I was
at the second Planning Commission when I got word of this. And so
rather than create a wave with what they were trying to do, I met with
the county attorney, we went over it. He assured me that this means
the same thing, so I'm just -- want to make sure that the commission
agrees that this is the same thing.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. I see it as same thing, and it
won't affect the project, the old Krehling plant.
MR. SNOW: Just for the record, Commissioners, we haven't had
a noise violation out there in two-and-a-halfyears, so I don't see --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, that wasn't the question.
MR. SNOW: I know, sir.
MS. BISHOP: Well, and we did buy -- I mean, as everyone may
or may not be aware, when the noise ordinance was changed
originally, Krehling Industries at the time, they -- we bought the same
equipment the county code enforcement has. We were trained by
exactly the same people so that we could -- we have an ongoing
program to monitor so that we don't disturb, but occasionally that does
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December 16, 2008
happen, and we did implement a lot of things to try to lessen the
impact on our neighbors.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Obviously if you haven't had a
complaint in two-and-a-halfyears, whatever you've done has
benefited the neighbors and the neighborhood.
MS. BISHOP: We try. Thank you, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Go ahead.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I'm just ready to continue the public
speakers.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Oh, yep.
MS. FILSON: That was the final speaker.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No. I'm fine. Call the vote.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any further discussion on the
motion?
All in favor of the motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Item #9 A
RESOLUTION 2008-377: RE-APPOINTING DARCY ANNE
KIDDER AND MITCHELL ROBERTS (W/WAIVER OF TERM
LIMITS) TO THE OCHOPEE FIRE CONTROL DISTRICT
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December 16, 2008
ADVISORY COMMITTEE - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, the next item is 9A, and that is
appointment of members to the Ochopee Fire Control District
Advisory Committee.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, motion to approve the
committee recommendations of Darcy --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Darcy.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Dusty (sic)--
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Darcy.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- Kidder and Mitchell Roberts.
MS. FILSON: Does that include waiving section 7B of
ordinance 2001-55 --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, that includes that.
MS. FILSON: -- because he serves on two.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And my second as well.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coletta,
second by Commissioner Fiala to approve the committee's
recommendations.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Item #9B
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December 16, 2008
RESOLUTION 2008-378: APPOINTING TAD BARTAREAU TO
THE HABITAT CONSERVATION PLAN AD HOC COMMITTEE
- ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Next item is 9B, appointment of a member to the
Habitat Conservation Plan Ad Hoc Committee.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Motion to approve Tad -- I better
put my glasses on -- Bartareau.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Fiala to
approve Tad Bartareau, second by Commissioner Henning.
All in favor of the motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Item #9C
RESOLUTION 2008-379: APPOINTING SUMMER WHEELESS
TO THE BLACK AFFAIRS ADVISORY BOARD - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Next item is 9C, appointment of a member to the
Black Affairs Advisory Board.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion to approve Summer
Wheeless.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Henning,
second by Commissioner Fiala.
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December 16, 2008
All in favor of the motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Item #9D
RESOLUTION 2008-380: APPOINTING RICHARD TAYLOR
AND PAM BROWN TO THE HISTORICAL AND
ARCHAEOLOGICAL PRESERVATION BOARD - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, next item is 9D, appointment of
members to the Historical/ Archaeologic Preservation Board.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, motion to approve the
committee recommendations of Richard Taylor and Pam Brown.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coletta to
approve committee's recommendations, second by Commissioner
Fiala.
All in favor of the motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
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December 16,2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Item #9E
RESOLUTION 2008-381: APPOINTING DOUG FINLAY,
REPRESENTING THE CITY OF NAPLES TO THE COLLIER
COUNTY COASTAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Next item is 9E, appointment ofa member to the
Collier County Coastal Advisory Committee.
MS. FILSON: And Commissioners, on this one, I had an
unsigned resolution in the backup. At five minutes till five last night I
got the signed copy, so I do have a signed copy.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Motion to approve Doug Finlay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Fiala to
approve Doug Finlay to the CAC, second by Commissioner Coyle.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
Item #9F
RESOLUTION 2008-382: RE-APPOINTING MAURICE JAMES
BURKE TO THE PELICAN BAY SERVICES DIVISION BOARD
- ADOPTED
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December 16, 2008
MR. MUDD: Next item is 9F, appointment of a member to the
Pelican Bay Services Division Board.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Motion to approve the committee's
recommendation of Maurice James Burke.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Halas to
approve committee's recommendation, second by Commissioner Fiala.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Item #9G
RESOLUTION 2008-383: RE-APPOINTING WILLIAM E.
ARTHUR (W/WAIVER OF TERM LIMITS) AND ELLEN R.
BARKIN (SHAW) TO THE GOLDEN GATE COMMUNITY
CENTER ADVISORY BOARD - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Next item is 9G, appointment of members to the
Golden Gate Community Center Advisory Board.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Make a motion that we appoint Ellen
Shaw, and second, Bill Arthur, William Arthur.
MS. FILSON: And does that include waiving--
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And waiving the ordinance of section
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December 16, 2008
B of2001-55.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Second by Commissioner Fiala.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: (Absent.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Item #9H
RESOLUTION 2008-384: APPOINTING DAVID H. FARMER
(W/WAIVER OF MULTI-BOARD APPOINTMENTS) AND PAT
HUMPHRIES TO THE GOLDEN GATE ESTATES LAND TRUST
COMMITTEE - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Next item is 9H. It's an appointment of members
to the Golden Gate Estates Land Trust Committee.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Motion to approve David
Farmer and Pat Humphrey (sic) and to waive the requirement
regarding section 5 for Farmer.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
MS. FILSON: And on this one, I have that the terms expire on
October 12th. That should be October 13th.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. Noted in the motion.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coletta to
appoint the committee's recommendation, second by Commissioner
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December 16, 2008
Fiala.
All in favor of the motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
Item #91
RESOLUTION 2008-385: APPOINTING KEVIN F. WALSH TO
THE ISLES OF CAPRI FIRE CONTROL DISTRICT ADVISORY
COMMITTEE - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, next item is 91, appointment of a
member to the Isles of Capri Fire Control District Advisory
Committee.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Motion to approve Kevin Walsh.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Fiala to
approve Kevin Walsh, second by Commissioner Henning.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
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December 16, 2008
Item #10A
AN AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH THE
ISLANDS MARINA, LLC AND PORT OF THE ISLANDS
PROPERTIES, LLC FOR THE PURCHASE OF CERTAIN
PORTIONS OF THE PORT OF THE ISLANDS MARINA
PROPERTY FOR A PURCHASE PRICE OF $5,488,000 WHICH
INCLUDES $4,750,000 CASH AT CLOSING AND A $738,000
SELLER CHARITABLE DONATION, TOGETHER WITH A
SECOND CHARITABLE DONATION OF FURNITURE,
FIXTURES AND EQUIPMENT VALUED AT $105,000, WITH
ADDITIONAL COSTS NOT TO EXCEED $95,800 - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, next item is lOA. It's a
recommendation to approve an agreement for sale and purchase with
the Isles -- with the Isles Marina, LLC, and Port of the Isles Properties,
LLC, for the purchase of certain portions of the Port of the Isles
Marina property for a purchase price of$5,488,000, which includes
$4,750,000 cash at closing, and a $738,000 seller charitable donation
together with a second charitable donation of furniture, fixtures, and
equipment valued at $105,000, with additional costs not to exceed
$95,800.
Ms. Marla Ramsey, your Public Services Administrator, will
present.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. I think we owe the court
reporter some time off. You want to finish this item?
THE COURT REPORTER: (Nods head.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Ms. Ramsey?
MS. RAMSEY: For the record, Marla Ramsey, Public Services
Administrator.
Commissioners, you did see this a couple of board meetings ago
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December 16, 2008
where we brought it in with a proposal for you, and staff has
negotiated with the owners, the Shucarts, and have brought to you a
signed agreement that 1 believe is past due yesterday. And at this time
we're seeking your approval for the purchase of this facility.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions by the board?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I make a motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Fiala to
approve staffs recommendations, second by Commissioner Coletta.
We have public speakers. Would you please call up the public
speakers?
MS. FILSON: Yolanda DeBartdo (sic). She'll be followed by
Jean Kungle.
MS. DeBARTOLO: Hi. Yolando DeBartolo, 25000 Tamiami
Trail. I am a resident of the Port of the Islands hotel/condo marina
area. I would like to request the board to postpone this $4.7 million
sale of the marina ship store.
There's lots of issues concerning this sale. I've lived through a
couple of sales of this area. It's a big area like this. It consists of a
hotel, a restaurant, a marina, and 140 dock slips.
Back maybe four years ago when the market value was very
high, the whole entire thing was purchased for less than like 4 million,
1 guess, and now the market is very bad, economic times are bad, and I
just can't justifY the county spending $4.7 million for a ship store the
size of this room. And they're getting no docks with the marina sale.
My -- I just represent myself, but I had spoken with my board.
The homeowners association are concerned with this. They'd like to
be present if they just -- if! could request to postpone this sale until
Christmas is over because they're all on vacation, and it's only two
weeks till Christmas, and they're all just finding out about this now.
And there's -- there's a lot of issues concerning this sale, and
there's other people involved other than just the owner. There's issues
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December 16, 2008
like reciprocal parking, parking spaces. There's 90 parking spaces
which are reciprocal parking from one another to another owner to
homeowners to tenants to the entire community. So 1 think it's a big
thing that needs to be looked into further.
That's my only request, to postpone it, the sale for today, the
approval of the sale. Thank you.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas has a question
of you.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I understand where you're coming
from because I've had some reservations. But I would hope that maybe
staff could give us a quick overview of exactly what we're buying here
besides a ship store, okay.
MS. DeBARTOLO: Right.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And I'm glad that you're here. As I
said, I had some reservations in regards to this. It's a lot of money in,
of course, the time that we have. But opportunities like this don't
come up all the time, and I think -- for the benefit of not only you, but
other people, so they have an understanding of what we're trying to
accomplish here or what's all involved with the sale of this, okay?
MS. DeBARTOLO: Well, according to this whole thing, it
seems to be valued at $20 million now.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, I think -- we need to do is see
an overview of what staff has, okay?
MS. DeBARTOLO: Okay, thank you.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And maybe that will help clear up
some questions for you, too.
MS. DeBARTOLO: Okay, thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Next speaker?
MS. FILSON: Next speaker is Jean Kungle.
MS. KUNGLE: Good afternoon, Commissioners. Jean Kungle.
I just want to say that I attended the CID, Community Improvement
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December 16, 2008
District special meeting last week. There were several residents that
did show up at the meeting. I was actually quite surprised, because
normally there aren't that many.
The overall consensus at the meeting was that it was a good
thing. The -- all of the contingencies were met, the attorney has met
with the county attorney, and the CID was totally onboard with the
whole program and the whole thing to go through.
Other residents -- I am at the real estate office, and they stop by,
we talk about it. And 1 haven't heard anything on the negative side of
that yet. And I would hope that the board would approve the finality
of the sale. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you. That's the final speaker?
MS. FILSON: Final speaker.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Ms. Ramsey?
MS. RAMSEY: Commissioners, if you want me to, I'll go over
the list. The -- on the overhead there is a highlighted area of the things
that we are purchasing.
The first thing is, there's approximately 2.4 acres of
commercially zoned waterfront land currently used for the boat trailer
and car parking and the boat trailer and storage area. It's highlighted
in the yellow. There's an oversized single boat ramp that's next to the
red spot there. There's approximately 15,400 square feet of submerged
land. This will allow us then to be able to tie off the boats during
loading, unloading, and fueling operations.
There's a nonexclusive use of a 94-space parking area, which is
the white one with the red line around it. There's approximately 1.46
acres of commercially zoned upland property, together with the
necessary easements for access and egress.
There is a fueling facility, a 7,400-square-foot marina building
that houses a ship store, bathrooms, offices, and a Manatee and 10,000
Islands education center on approximately 1.4 acres of commercially
zoned waterfront property.
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December 16, 2008
And then there's -- significant additional square footage exists
within the marina building so that we will be able to construct a
permanent Ochopee -- Ochopee, I'm sorry -- fire station and future
EMS capabilities at that location.
So those are the listings of the things that we're purchasing. Yes,
sir?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: The lady that spoke was concerned
about the 94 parking spaces it sounded like. Could you go into more
detail on this nonexclusive use parking spaces?
MS. RAMSEY: Yeah. There are -- basically the hotel, the ship
store, and those that have use of the marina, yeah, the wet slips, have
the opportunity to park in that 94 parking spaces on a first-come
first-serve basis.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: So is this going to, some way or
another, impact the community?
MS. RAMSEY: Not that I'm aware of, sir. I believe it's the same
arrangement that exists currently.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. MUDD: It would impact the -- it should impact the
neighborhood in a very positive way. Right now they don't have a fire
station so they have to come all the way from Ochopee to answer a
fire call.
Those residents in those condos, their fire premiums for
insurance are very high. They will be appreciably lower once that fire
engine is in this particular building, and that should be done in short
order.
The next issue is, if you take a look at this overhead and you look
at the yellow, you'll see some things on the perimeter of that particular
land. They're in the grass area. Those are boats and trailers that are
being stored, and they're -- and I have to admit, as they sit there,
they're a little unsightly if you look at what it is. You know, it's just
sitting there, and I guess it's their dry dock facility, so to speak.
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December 16, 2008
Those particular boats have got contracts with the Shucarts right
now for shortage storage. That is about $100,000 worth of revenue
right now on those existing contracts that will be transferred over to
the county.
In the interim, because we're putting the fire -- the fire station
here, along with the ship store, we plan to create an off-site facility for
those boats and trailers to park that aren't on the waterfront and by
those slips that those people would have, and it will appreciably
increase the ambiance of that particular ramp, the slips, and what the
people over here from the condo association will see.
So -- and oh, by the way, those people now will have some
security for their boats that are sitting on the perimeter that don't have
a fenced area to keep them secure in this particular facility. And
overall, 1 think it will be a better -- a better fit for the community and
everybody else, and plus it gives us, the Board of County
Commissioners, Collier County, it gives us some room, whatever you
want to do on that 1.42 acres that are sitting over here as that
commercial property.
If for some reason in the future this board and/or the community
gets bigger and they require two engines and an EMS facility along
with it, then we could move the whole operation on that particular
block and move the fire station out of the building, and you're still in
great shape.
So you've got some stretching room, so to speak, with this
particular purchase.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, Commissioner Halas needs to
finish up, and then we've got Commissioner Coletta, Commissioner
Fiala.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: In the sale we're going to get the
slips that are presently here, boat slips?
MS. RAMSEY: No, sir, no, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: No? Okay the boat slips then still
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December 16, 2008
belong to the seller; is that correct?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. If you remember, the original-- one of
the original offers from the seller, from the Shucarts, was to purchase
the boat slips, and we were -- and we were in the $9 million range on
this particular issue.
The boat slips are -- I want to say there's 30 or 35 ofthem that are
already sold, have private contracts on them, and there's about 140
that aren't sold. And Mr. Shucart, his family, as part of this deal, we
would provide them two office spaces in the ship store so that they
could sell the remainder of those slips, and I believe it's over a
nine-year period of time, and that's also laid out in the particular
agreement.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. 1 just want to say, I've
been talking to the people of Port of the Isles for one heck of a long
time on this, and when it first started out there was all sorts of
skepticism that this was going to beneficial. But I can tell you, with
the exception of one or two people, this has been totally embraced by
the community. It's a very positive thing. Everyone seems to be
coming out ahead on this one.
With the help of the offset with the facility as far as what we can
do for income, money that we can get from the fire department over
there to be able to offset the cost of the fire department locating there,
it becomes a real bargain. It's going to be there for generations to
come.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yeah. I still -- wanted to go back.
Jim, when you were talking about the benefits as far as insurance
goes, the lady back there who was -- did not want it didn't hear you
because she was talking with somebody else, and I thought, maybe
you could just repeat the very beginning of what you said about the
great reduction.
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December 16, 2008
MR. MUDD: Yeah. There's some great benefits in the fact that
you get a fire station at the Port of the Isles, which they have never
had. Each one of those condominium owners has a homeowners'
policy for insurance, and part of it has to do with fire.
Because they aren't located by a fire station and they don't meet
those requirements, their ISO rating, which is the official name for
having a fire station close or not and then it's rated, they probably have
one of the worst ISO ratings, i.e., they have the highest fire insurance
that they have to pay. Having that fire station there will decrease their
fire insurance premium drastically, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And there has been an appraisal on
the property?
MS. RAMSEY: Two.
MR. MUDD: Oh, yes, sir. We've had two appraisals. And at
this particular juncture, we're below what the appraised value would
be for what we're acquiring.
The appraised value for what we are acquiring would be
$5,488,000, and that's the lowest of the two appraisals.
And I basically got with the Shucarts and told them we just didn't
have the cash for that. They accepted the $4,750,000 offer from the
county, and our -- their counter was, could we please have a donation
piece of documentation for the IRS for tax purposes, for the donation,
the remainder between what we're willing to pay in cash and what the
lowest appraised value was for the property that we're acquiring.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: So tell me what's so ugly about a boat
and a boat trailer.
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: The owner.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The owner?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Tell me -- point to the things we
actually own --
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December 16,2008
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Are going to own.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- on this map.
MR. MUDD: Okay, Commissioner. Here we go. We will own
this property that's right here. It is a large parking area that sits here, a
lot of grassed area that can be converted and we can -- we can
redesign the parking area so it can take more vehicles and boat trailers.
We will acquire this submerged land piece right here, and the -- for a
boat ramp in the future. And it -- and I believe it would have enough
room in it for three boat ramps altogether, or wide enough in order to
do that, and that's on a seawalled facility.
We will get the riparian easement in red that's here. That's so
when somebody uses the existing boat ramp and they drop their boat
off, the boat can be tied off, they can take the truck, the trailer, car and
trailer, whatever it is, and park it over in this parking lot and then
come back, get on their boat and take off. We have a fueling station
that's right over on this side on the boat ramp.
We have some discussions in the agreement. That is a single-line
tank. By federal law it has to be removed before the last day of
December, 2009. We know that for a fact. We know, based on our
experience of replacing a fuel tank, single lined or double lined that
had failure out at Caxambas Pass, that it will probably cost the county
around $200,000 to pull that tank and replace it with a new one.
The part that's very expensive is -- and we're holding the seller
responsible for that; therefore, there is a $200,000 escrow that's there.
If there is any environmental damage to the ground under and around
the fuel tank that we're going to pull, they have put $200,000 in an
escrow account, and they will pay whatever remediation is required
and/or long-term groundwater monitoring from that.
So we tried to reduce the risk that the county would have on an
environmental circumstance that we do not know at this present time.
If there is no environmental consequence and everything is okay
and it's clean coming up and it's clean going in the ground before we
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December 16, 2008
put the new one on, then the county will return that $200,000 in
escrow.
We are also purchasing a seawalled area that runs from the fuel
station along this side all the way to this particular point from here to
here, and that seawall will provide a place for boats that are docking to
be refueled.
Weare acquiring a ship store, and 1 do not know what the square
footage is.
MS. RAMSEY: Seventy-four.
MR. MUDD: How much?
MS. RAMSEY: Seventy-four--
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Seventy-four--
MS. RAMSEY: -- hundred.
MR. MUDD: -- hundred square foot. The ship store is in this
particular area right here in the front. This side where my pen is has
three office places, two of those, the smaller ones from the far end to
the middle, will go to the Shucarts, and there is a present lease on the
one closest to this big bay.
This big bay, right now, is a place where the Shucarts now sell
docks. They will move to the smaller offices. We will convert this
big dock area right here in the center and part of the maintenance area
over in here to the fire station.
We are acquiring or getting an easement for New Port Road,
okay, so we can come in and out and the fire truck can go in and out
and get to 41 or go down New Port Road.
We are re- -- we are also receiving a vacant upland parcel that's
commercially zoned. That is this green area right here. And we've --
also have in the agreement an easement, a 40-foot easement, that will
let us go -- and this property out in front is owned by the Shucarts --
that will give us access to 41 in that particular direction, plus we'll
have some access into this nonexclusive use of 54 parking areas.
There is a temporary easement on this property until we use it,
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December 16, 2008
and that is for the Shucarts to have their easement that runs down this
way, and then the bound area. As soon as the county decides that
they're going to use this property, that temporary easement that we are
granting for the Shucarts will go away.
If we kept that easement on, it would burn up around 40 to 45
percent of our acreage that we've got. So if -- in the interim they can
use it, but when we decide what we want to do with it, then that
temporary easement to the Shucarts will expire.
We're also receiving a nonexclusive use of 54 parking spaces,
and that's basically overflow parking spaces for the hotel facility, the
condominiums that are off the slide, and for those folks that are -- that
have slips.
What we are also putting in the agreement is that these three slips
that are right here -- slips. These piers that are right here, docking
piers -- which have about, I want to say 30 each as far as slips are
concerned -- we're dedicating two unloading parking spaces at the
base of each one of those piers so that people can put their car up
there, unload the stuff that they're going to put on their boats, and then
they're going to hightail and park over in the nonexclusive parking
area.
I don't think I've missed anything. We receive -- we receive as a
gift all the furniture and whatnot that's inside the ship store, the
decorations on the wall and whatnot, and then Ms. Ramsey has the
ability to buy the inventory or whatever she wants, the inventory that's
presently in the ship store.
We also receive their tobacco permit, their alcohol permit, and
their lottery sales tax permit, and then we'll have to convert them to
county name after it's over.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any further?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay, yes. That's -- so what we're
really getting is one-and-a-half acres -- or four-and-a-half acres, but --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Five.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, I'm sorry, five-and-a-half
acres.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And only four acres are on the
waterfront?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: For $900,000 per acre, and we're
using it for parking and boat launch facilities except for that portion
that contains the ship store. That seems to be expensive for the uses
that we're going -- that we intend for those areas. But who is going to
operate the ship store?
MS. RAMSEY: The parks and recreation department is going to
be doing that, just as we do at Caxambas and Cocohatchee.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's what 1 was afraid you were
going to say. How do we know that -- what assurances can you give
us that this ship store will not be a continuing drain on taxpayer funds?
MS. RAMSEY: We run these stores as a profit center, and so we
adjust staff and prices in order to make sure that we're able to meet our
expenses. And we have anticipated about a $40,000 profit on an
annual basis at this store at this time.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And you're basing it upon accurate
historical sales and profit information?
MS. RAMSEY: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You have complete sales and profit
information for this store for what period of time?
MS. RAMSEY: I believe it was for a lO-month period of time so
far.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And where does the money come
from?
MR. MUDD: The purchase? The purchase, sir?
MS. RAMSEY: To purchase the entire site?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
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December 16, 2008
MR. MUDD: The purchase comes from $3.4 million that Marla
has for boat launch and beach facilities that the board put aside for the
boat and beach master plan that was several years ago.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Now, 1 can read that off the
executive summary. But what I'm asking you is, that money is there,
it's available, it just requires a budget transfer?
MS. RAMSEY: That's correct.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's all it is?
MR. MUDD: The only piece -- the only piece I physically don't
have in my hot little hand right now is the $585,000 from the South
Florida Water Management District. Mr. Dunnuck knows that I had to
have it by the 16th, and I'm waiting anxiously. He said he would have
it here.
This is an -- this is to meet an obligation that the board had with
an agreement the last time you had the joint meeting with them.
And so they're drafting that to make sure that that satisfies that
commitment, some kind of an agreement that comes forward with a
check.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And there's no problem --
complications with the transfer of money from reserves for the
Ochopee Fire Control District? There's no other capital improvement
that is adversely affected by that move?
MR. MUDD: None.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Coming out of their impact fee reserves and their
operational reserves. Most of that was being -- most of that was being
acquired, squirreled away, gathered, whatever you want to call it, so
that they could someday build the Ochopee fire station.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay, all right. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas, Commissioner
Coletta?
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Has this facility got a pump-out
facility because it's around the 10,000 Islands?
MS. RAMSEY: Apparently there is a pump-out on the marina
property, meaning up in the top, right? Over in this area right here.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'm talking -- well, do we have --
will we have access to it or do we have to put a pump-out station in?
MS. RAMSEY: 1 would have to research that, sir. 1 can't
imagine why the public can't utilize it. I think they currently are.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: We need a pump-out station in this
room.
MS. RAMSEY: I wouldn't want to duplicate it if it's available
for the public. But if it's not available, then I --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. Well, I just want to make
sure that if we're -- that if we're going to have people go down there,
that -- if they're going to go out in the 10,000 Islands area, that they
make sure that we address the issues of not dumping waste overboard.
MS. RAMSEY: Agree, sir. And you do remember that at
Caxambas and at Cocohatchee, we received a grant in order to put
those two pumps in. And so if for some reason we were unable to
have the public utilize this one, we would probably do the same then
and seek a grant in order to put a pump-out in.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And my last question is to the
county manager.
Jim, obviously, you realize that South Florida Water
Management has made promises to us in the past for about 640 acres.
Is this promise of the $500,000 just a promise? Because I believe
today they're in the process --
MR. MUDD: No, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: -- of trying to buy the sugar land
down there.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, you signed an agreement with that
board for that $585,000 over two years ago. That still exists as a
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December 16, 2008
requirement.
I have got Mr. Dunnuck -- the gentleman that was on the phone
with him was their attorney -- come on, help me -- was Mr. Barnett,
and I had Clarence Tears on the phone, Leo was in the room here with
me, and we talked about the 585, and Mr. Dunnuck and Mr. Tears
said, the check is coming.
And this is not one of those promises they're not going to go on.
And it's going to get tied to something, and I wanted to talk about that
during communications, but I'll bring it up now so that you
understand.
They're trying to meet the 640 acres, more or less, from the
original agreement that we should have received in October of 2003 or
'5, or something like that.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Three.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes, sir.
MR. MUDD: As time goes on, it's getting harder to remember
those days -- 2003, and they're having -- and they're having a tough
time doing that.
We are in conversations right now with a temporary facility in
Hendry County on land that's already owned by the South Florida
Water Management District. Commissioner Coletta's been our lead on
this and has been working with a Hendry County commissioner and
also our staff with their staff to get that resolved.
That particular land that's owned by the South Florida Water
Management District is relatively close to the 640-acre dump site that
was going to be at Lake Trafford. So that's out there, that's working as
the interim site for A TV s.
The long-term site for A TV s is out at the jetport. You know,
there's that airfield that's in Collier County but it's owned by
Miami-Dade County? Miami-Dade is getting a lot of pressure
internally to have off-road vehicles -- and I'll get this as fast as I can,
Commissioner -- off-road vehicles. We're under extreme pressure to
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December 16, 2008
get off-road vehicles -- Mr. McHann (sic)?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Brian McMahon.
MR. MUDD: And I don't know if Commissioner Coletta's been
out there yet but is -- has been involved and has looked in this
particular site. They are offering -- Miami-Dade is offering an ORV
site out there of over 2,000 acres, okay, with significant trails and
everything else that's there that will solve their problem and our
problem. Now, South Florida -- but they need access improvements
into the millions.
South Florida Water Management has come up on the net and
said, we will do the access improvements for that jetport but only if
that satisfies the agreement with Collier County, okay.
So now I have -- now I have told you everything I possibly can
about what's going on with the South Florida trying to resolve their
agreements and get them satisfied for you and the $585,000.
They know that the long-term improvements on the jetport is not
the agreement that they signed for 640 acres, but they're willing to
come back to you, talk that particular issue, and get you to -- get you
to agree to that to satisfY the requirements for everybody involved.
They are not going to jeopardize that with reneging on a
$585,000 loan -- or grant or whatever you want to call it for a boat
ramp that they promised you at the last time that we updated the
agreement.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. It's because of the fact that
this has been carrying on for so long. I sometimes get leery when
South Florida Water Management promises the citizens and us as the
Board of County Commissioners that they're going to do something,
and this drags on and on and on.
And 1 just want to make sure that if we go through with this deal,
that the money's going to be there. And as of right now, you don't
have the check in hand. But you say that the check is in the mail, and
we've heard that a lot of times about the check being in the mail.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Ifwe could stay on lOA, I'd
appreciate it.
Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Just briefly, I wanted to
recognize the efforts of Jim Mudd. It's been very remarkable how he's
taken a situation that probably was off the chart as far as affordability
and how he was able to put together the bigger picture, including the
fire department locating there and all the other elements to bring this
down into a cost-feasible project.
Also I'd like to recognize the fact that Brian McMahon who sat in
that meeting two years ago was the force that was suggested about the
water access issue, and it was their -- that's how we were able to get
them to agree to it.
So we do owe -- if this goes through, we do owe a debt to Brian
McMahon for helping to guide us in that particular venture.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. We have a motion by
Commissioner Fiala to approve staffs recommendations, second by
Commissioner Coletta.
Discussion on the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Seeing none, all in favor of the
motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
Now, we're going to take a 10-minute break, and then when we
come back, we're going to do the proclamation that was walked onto
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December 16, 2008
the agenda.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Can I just say one thing before we
break? It's going to be less than 30 seconds. And that is, I hope that
people realize that only once in a lifetime property like this comes up
for sale. And I understand the economic turmoil that we're in at the
present time, but I think in 20 or 30 years, we're going to be thankful
that the commissioners that sit at this dais 20, 30 years from -- maybe
it's some of you people -- are going to be happy and thankful that we
went through the process today to purchase this land.
Thank you.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So right, so right.
(A brief recess was had.)
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen, if you'd please take your
seats.
Commissioners, that brings us to 4B (sic), which is a
recommendation to adopt a resolution approving amendments
appropriate --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: 10.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: lOB.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm sorry, lOB.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No, we're going to a proclamation
that was added on.
Item #4 B
MOTION TO CREATE A PROCLAMATION AND VIDEO FOR
ST AFF MEMBER, TRACY EDMONSON, SERVING IN IRAQ-
ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Ah, I'm sorry, sir. You're absolutely correct.
It brings us to 4B, and this has to do with the proclamation for a
certain --
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Tracy Edmonson.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Recognizing Tracy Edmonson. And
Commissioner Coyle will read the proclamation.
And we would like for Tracy Edmonson's colleagues to come up
to accept this proclamation on her behalf.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Double time, guys.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I even put my Christmas lights on.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: It's something to do with response
time?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes, it does. No loitering. Pick
'em up and put them down.
MR. SUMMERS: We're extremely efficient in our response.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Thank you very much, gentlemen.
Whereas, Tracy Edmonson has been employed by Collier County
since the year 2000 as a MedFlight pilot with the Emergency Medical
Services Department; and,
Whereas, Tracy is currently stationed in Iraq serving her country
as a member of the National Guard Reserves; and,
Whereas, Tracy is a graduate of the Army Helicopter School and
has been in the Individual Ready Reserve since getting out of the
active Army in 1993 where she served 13 years as a warrant officer;
and,
Whereas, Tracy, as a reservist in Iraq, is flying CH-47D Chinook
helicopters, with one of her recent assignments being to transport mail
to soldiers for the holidays; and,
Whereas, Tracy was re-called to active duty on March, 2008,
deployed to Iraq in August, and is scheduled to return to Naples
around June the 1 st, 2009, and will be back on the job as a MedFlight
pilot next summer; and,
Whereas, we encourage Tracy's friends and coworkers to send
her a video -- video greeting through the Daily News web site by
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December 16, 2008
calling 263-4781 by noon Wednesday or by corresponding with her
directly at tracy.edmonson@yahoo.com. That's tracy.edmonson,
E-D-M-O-N-S-O-N, at yahoo.com; and,
Whereas, during the holiday season, everyone in Collier County
sends their best wishes, thoughts, and prayers to Tracy and all of our
men and women in uniform who are protecting our great country
during these perilous times.
Now, therefore, be it proclaimed by the Board of County
Commissioners of Collier County, Florida, on behalf of the citizens of
Collier County, that we enthusiastically extend our support to all of
our military men and women, and in particular, Tracy Edmonson,
EMS MedFlight pilot, now serving as a reservist in Iraq.
Done and ordered this 16th day of December, 2008, Board of
County Commissioners, Collier County, Florida, Tom Henning,
Chairman.
It gives me great pleasure to present this proclamation in honor of
Tracy Edmonson. We wish her a safe journey and return home soon.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coyle to
move the proclamation, second by Commissioner Halas.
All in favor of the motion, signifY by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
(Applause.)
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Who's going to get this to her?
MR. SUMMERS: I'll take it to her personally.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Fine.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: That would be an exciting tour.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Are you going by helicopter?
MR. SUMMERS: By helicopter.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. There's just one thing I need
to tell you about. There is a difference between the National Guard
and the Reserve. We're using those terms interchangeably here. Just
take a look at it to make sure you've written it properly.
MR. SUMMERS: Will do.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You're going to say a few words?
MR. SUMMERS: Yes, I will.
Commissioners, Dan Summers, Director of the Bureau of
Emergency Services. And MedFlight's one of the departments that I
get the opportunity to work with.
We were going to sing to Tracy today, but we care for her so
much that we elected not to sing to her a Christmas greeting. We do
send her our warmest regards.
I hope that she will be willing to fly a smaller helicopter when
she comes home. So we have not promised her a new ship or anything
like that when she gets back.
She's a great employee. We wish her all the best. It has been
very enjoyable. She's been bouncing emails, sending emails to the
staff, and we get some pictures of her from time to time.
So, again, she's in our hearts and prayers for a very safe tour and
a very speedy recovery, or speedy return home.
And, again, thank you very much for recognizing her. It's most
appreciated.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Mr. Chairman, could I just make
one request?
Dan, could you get with John Torre, perhaps, and communicate
to her what we're doing with respect to the Freedom Memorial to
recognize and honor people like her who are serving our country?
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December 16, 2008
MR. SUMMERS: Sir, I'll be glad to pass that along. That will
be a great thing for her to share.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good. Thank you very much.
MR. SUMMERS: Thank you, Commissioners.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And also, County Manager, we have
several employees that are serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. We need to
get all those together in one proclamation and to recognize that and
thank them, and our hearts and prayers are with them.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
Item #10B
RESOLUTION 2008-386: RESOLUTION APPROVING
AMENDMENTS (APPROPRIATING GRANTS, DONATIONS,
CONTRIBUTIONS OR INSURANCE PROCEEDS) TO THE
FISCAL YEAR 2008-09 ADOPTED BUDGET - ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to lOB, and this is a
recommendation to adopt -- this is really a companion to lOA. If the
board approved lOA, we had to have this particular resolution,
because there is an item on there that looks and acquires the $585,000
from the South Florida Water Management District, and that's why
that particular item is there.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coyle,
second by Commissioner Coletta to adopt the resolution.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
Item #10C
RESOLUTION 2008-387: RESOLUTION SUPERSEDING
RESOLUTION 2006-142 AND AUTHORIZING THE
ACQUISITION BY GIFT OR PURCHASE OF LAND AND
EASEMENTS NECESSARY FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF
ROADWAY, DRAINAGE AND UTILITY IMPROVEMENTS
REQUIRED FOR THE EXPANSION AND EXTENSION OF
V ANDERBIL T BEACH ROAD FROM COLLIER BOULEVARD
TO EAST OF WILSON BOULEVARD. (PROJECT NO. 60168.)
ESTIMATED FISCAL IMPACT: $32,910,600 - ADOPTED
W /CHANGES
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to the next item,
which is 10C, and that's a recommendation to adopt a resolution
superseding resolution 2006-142, and authorizing the acquisition by
gift or purchase of land and easements necessary for the construction
of roadway, drainage, and utility improvements required for the
expansion and extension of the Vanderbilt Beach Road from Collier
County -- from Collier Boulevard to east of Wilson Boulevard.
It's project number 60168. The estimated fiscal impact is
$32,910,600. And Mr. Norman Feder, your Transportation Services
Administrator, will present.
MR. FEDER: Commissioners, I'll be fairly brief.
There are three things in this superseding resolution that we're
seeking to do.
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December 16, 2008
The first is to extend the limits just east of Wilson out to the
Corkscrew Canal for the purchase of a project pond for retention and
treatment. The second is to bring it in conformance with
board-directed provisions for administrative settlement authority,
which is basically not to exceed 125 percent or 50,000, whichever's
less. That wasn't in the original resolution, and we're requesting that be
put in.
The third thing is, we're facing with the rapidly decreasing values
of property a situation where our appraisals are now coming in lower
than the just value from the property appraiser for taxing purposes.
What we've been recommended by our folks in legal and with my
staff in right-of-way is that we're coming to you and asking that we be
in a position under the administrative negotiations to offer that just
value from the property appraiser if that results in a closing.
While that's higher than the appraisal at the moment -- and I
realize it's paid in arrears, the value from the property appraiser, plus
the taxes. What we're trying to do is acquire the corridor, especially
now while the costs are down, and it should be a savings for us, both
in the condemnation costs later when we're ready to move on the
corridor and the costs at that time that that probably would be back up
as the market comes back.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. I have some real concerns,
what you're asking, but let me go to my colleagues, if they have any
questions before I do.
Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think what you're -- just to
paraphrase what you said is that the estimates may be coming in lower
than the appraised value of the land, so that the person who presently
owns the land, and with the decrease in the value of the property, we
still want to make sure that the tax bill for the property that we're
going to acquire is not putting a burden on the seller; is that right?
MR. FEDER: No, that's a little bit different issue that we're
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December 16, 2008
having on a different front with our corridor preservation.
What we're saying here is, as we're going out to acquire this
property, with the reduction in property value --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. FEDER: -- we're running into situations where our
appraisal price now is below the just value from the property
appraiser, the value that the property is being taxed upon at this time.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Right.
MR. FEDER: What we're told to be able to negotiate the closing,
rather than leaving it out or waiting until we're ready to move on the
corridor condemnation, that it might be viable for us to offer -- and
there is some legal precedent if we end up in condemnation -- that we
would have to offer at least what the just value is from the property
appraIser.
So we're asking that we have the opportunity to offer that,
understanding that's an unusual circumstance because of the market
falling now, but that that value at the just value would be a good
purchase price for the county and for the property.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's what I thought I said, but I
guess I didn't.
MR. FEDER: Okay. I'm sorry.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. My problem is that the just
value is established on a historical basis, and a current appraisal is
established on the current basis, so the current appraisal should more
accurately reflect the cost of the property.
I'm a little concerned about giving blanket approval to use
historical values which are always going to be higher than today's
appraisal under the current market conditions.
Now, I don't have a problem if you put together a settlement
package of some kind that says, look, we can get a settlement with the
buyer at this price, but if we have to go through court and pay
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December 16, 2008
attorney's fees and all these things, it might be this amount of money,
so let us make a decision to go with the little higher price. I can deal
with that because there's rationale and there's potential savings to the
taxpayers by doing that, but I can't just say, let's buy it at a price that
was established by the property appraiser a year ago because that--
there's no logic. Okay.
MR. FEDER: Understood. And what you're saying, and I think
appropriately so, is that rather than that have -- be an administrative
settlement option, be an option that we bring to the board if we find
that it's still a better option and make that case to the board.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes. I would say that with this
caveat, that we have the legal right to do that.
MR. KLA TZKOW: These are voluntary purchases.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
MR. KLA TZKOW: So, yes, we have the legal right to do that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay, okay. Then I don't have a
problem dealing with it that way, but I don't want to just transfer to
you the right to do it based upon the tax appraiser's figures of a year
ago.
MR. FEDER: And that's why we brought this to the board to ask
you how you wanted to handle it. And so I would ask -- and our
recommendation would be the first two items I mentioned, extending
the limit and, of course, bringing it into conformance with your
direction on 125 or 50,000, whichever's less -- 125 percent or 50,000,
whichever's less, that those two actions be taken in the superseding
resolution, and the portion about offering just value, if it's -- if our
appraised value is lower, it be removed from this action.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Now, explain to me the
effect of the hundred and -- you said 125 percent or 50,000?
MR. FEDER: Yes. Board policy and clarification which came
in after this particular resolution, but -- was that you did not want us to
offer more than 125 percent of the appraised value or 50,000,
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December 16, 2008
whichever's less.
So in other words, if you have a property where 125 percent, it's
over 200,000, you can't offer more than 50,000. And if it's only 1,000,
you don't offer 125 percent -- or you don't offer 50,000. You only
offer 125 percent at the max.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And this is --
MR. FEDER: Board administration.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- because -- that whatever we do
when we take somebody's property, we're causing them inconvenience
-- they're having to move, I presume, in many cases.
MR. FEDER: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And if we wish to provide them a
little more money to compensate them for our actions, then I'm all for
that. But you need to bring it to us with rationale, in my opinion,
rather than just arbitrarily saying, I'm going to give you 125 percent
more.
MR. FEDER: The up-to-50,000 is a limiting factor, so it would
never be more than 200,000 over, was to take many of the very small
purchases and make sure every one of them didn't have to come to the
board, unless, of course, we exceeded those attributes, either the
lowest of either of them.
The only thing we're trying to do here is bring that board
direction that you've previously given us for just that and make sure it
got included in this superseding resolution, because it wasn't in the
original.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I understand. I could buy that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Before I go to Commissioner
Coletta, when do you plan on constructing this road?
MR. FEDER: Right now we don't have construction in our five
years. We're hoping in about six or seven to be in that position.
Really it depends upon what happens in the market and the revenue
stream.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And in the meantime, a lot of these
houses you're allowing the owners to stay in them.
MR. FEDER: In some of them, and you had one today, we're
allowing some short-term occupancy as is necessary for them to move
on.
Typically we're removing the homes if we don't do that, because
the cost to maintain and manage is high, keep the electricity on and
other issues, so we usually remove the facility if we don't have
somebody in it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, I've heard a lot of my
colleagues want to lower impact fees, and what you're recommending
is for us to pay far in excess of what the real value is.
MR. FEDER: No, I'm not, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, sure you are.
MR. FEDER: No. I'm telling you that on very small purchases,
the process you've given me for all corridors and all acquisitions I'm
trying to include in here. I am including one extension for a pond for
that first phase.
And the other issue that we just raised, I've told you that I'm
pulling that out. We will bring it back to the board if we feel that we
can show you that it's a value to consider offering something beyond
the appraised value relative to just value, or whatever the case may be
on this corridor or any corridor, but not over 50,000 or over 125
percent of the value, whichever's less.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The one that is on the consent agenda,
would this quality in what you're recommending?
MR. FEDER: No. That had nothing to do with just value. It had
to do with the appraised value.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No, no, no. Would the purchase, the
sale purchase, quality what you're saying now, what you want us to
adopt now?
MR. HENDRICKS: For the record, Kevin Hendricks,
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December 16, 2008
Right-of-way Acquisition Manager. The purchase that you approved
on the consent agenda today was at the lower of two appraised values.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That isn't my question.
MR. HENDRICKS: Just value.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Right. That isn't my question.
MR. HENDRICKS: I'm sorry. What is your question?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Let's say that wasn't even on our
agenda, but let's say that person, it's in the right-of-way. Would he
quality for the -- under this superseding resolution?
MR. FEDER: Yes. Anyone along that corridor or any other
corridor. What we've done now with taking out just value issue with
the three items is to bring it consistent with the policy direction you've
given us in the past on all of our right-of-way acquisitions.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. You know, government -- I
think that we ought to be consistent. I mean, we do it -- we do it with
all the other purchases that we do, including Conservation Collier.
MR. FEDER: We are being consistent, with all due respect, Mr.
Chairman. Again, as was noted, we had two appraisals. We offered
the low of the two appraisals.
Typically we look to be in the middle of the two appraisals as an
item and bring that to the board. If it's over -- 50,000 over an
appraisal or 125 percent, whichever's less, then we bring it to the
board.
We had one issue we're raising to you on this corridor that we
seem to be finding. I think the board's direction is no, you don't want
to authorize the consideration of just value if it's over appraised value
and over those limits. You want -- if we feel any of them are
reasonable to -- you consider, to bring those to you for consideration
for acquisition.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, maybe I'm misunderstanding
what you're asking.
MR. FEDER: Okay. That may be. I'm sorry.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: What I understand from the
superceding resolution is to allow to use the property appraiser's
value; is that correct?
MR. FEDER: The original request was for three things, one of
which was that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Well, let's--
MR. FEDER: I've now sensed that the board doesn't want that to
be the case.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. So we're going back to the
getting two appraisals?
MR. FEDER: We always were there, and we're there on the
other issue. But again, that is being pulled out of this request. The
superseding resolution no longer contains the issue of just value.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think I can explain it. Norm is
saying that he's backing off using the appraiser's just value.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay? He agrees, we won't do
that. But he does believe that there is a value -- there's good rationale
for giving him the authority to pay up to 125 percent of the appraised
value for property as long as it doesn't -- or $50,000, whichever's
smaller.
So all he's saying is he'll take the appraised values, and if there is
good rationale for offering 25 percent more than that, he will do so as
long as it doesn't exceed $50,000 or 125 percent of the -- of the
appraisal.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And he's doing that just to give
himself a little flexibility so that if he can avoid a lawsuit, avoid taking
it to court, he can save the county some money by going up that
amount in the prices. Did I describe that properly?
MR. FEDER: Perfectly, Commissioner. And I need to point out
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that actually bringing that provision into this resolution is to bring it
consistent with prior board direction. That is your direction to us. It's
already been established as policy upon all of our right-of-way
acquisitions. It just wasn't in this original resolution that was
superseding.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Well, I didn't hear that the
property appraiser's valuation was taken off the table.
MR. FEDER: That issue we are taking out here. We're
recommending to you only two --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I understand.
MR. FEDER: -- actions in this superseding resolution now. One
is to extend the limit to allow us to include a pond for retention and
treatment for the first phase of the project, the second is to bring it in
conformity with current policy direction by this board relative to 120
(sic) percent or 50,000, whichever's less.
The third issue we are asking be stricken from our request, and
that is the effort to use property appraiser's just value if it turns out our
appraisal is lower than that just value.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, thank you.
Yes, Mr. Feder?
MR. FEDER: Yes, Commissioner.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Dealing with this situation, what
are we talking about that's different than what it's been before?
MR. FEDER: Only one thing is different than it's been before,
and that is that we're asking to extend the limits of the original
resolution.
The other thing we're trying to do is, I will call it a scrivener's, is
since we are bringing one thing back up for your consideration, is to
make it in conformance with your policy relative to 125 percent or
50,000.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's what we've been doing in
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December 16, 2008
the past?
MR. FEDER: We have -- yeah, we have -- and that's what we've
been doing at board's direction.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay, okay.
MR. FEDER: But it was a scrivener to bring that in since we
were updating this resolution.
The third thing we had requested, I think we've gotten our
direction from the board.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, you haven't yet, sir. I
mean, you heard from a couple commissioners. I hope you -- before
you make that judgment decision that we have enough time to make a
discussion on it.
MR. FEDER: With all due respect, yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: We're talking about people's
lives, people that have had something imposed upon them. It's not
Collier -- Conservation Collier where it's a voluntary purchase where
they come out of wherever it is and they offer their land up for sale
and we negotiate it. These are people who have a road corridor
imposed upon them for the good of the greater community. These
people have been put upon in some way. And how do you make them
whole?
So I think probably your idea as far as the -- using the tax
assessor's adjustments -- because let's say it. What's the realities of
this world? What you pay taxes on is really the value of the land as far
as we're concerned.
How are you going to be able to make them whole based upon
that? That's a concern. I'm not -- and I just want to make sure that
whatever we do, that we're not going to shortchange that public,
because right now it may be a couple roads in District 5. Tomorrow
it's going to be other roads in other districts, too, and we'll have a
uniform policy to be carrying forward, and it's got to be fair. It's got
to be fair no matter what part of the county it's in.
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December 16, 2008
So I offer that for discussion because I -- I don't think we're
talking about a tremendous difference in cash, are we, Mr. Feder?
MR. FEDER: No, we're not.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Between the appraiser's
suggestion and leaving that in there as a responsibility for
consideration?
Does this commission have the latitude to be able to make a
decision based upon anything that comes before us?
MR. FEDER: Yes. And what I was saying -- basically what I
heard originally -- but of course I'll wait for the full board to direct me
-- was that, what we're asking was that ability under an administrative
action. What I think I heard was, we need to make our case to the
board if we feel that that's viable and an issue out there.
So I think maybe both of us are saying some of the same thing.
The only difference is, we can't unilaterally take that action with the
board's guidance.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah.
MR. FEDER: We have to come back to the board and present it
and make our case for it.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: In other words, you were talking
about doing it administratively?
MR. FEDER: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Now, the only problem
with doing it administratively is that it loses that human element we
should be dealing with. That's my concern. You know, if -- how much
does it add to the process? It's -- you have to put it on the agenda,
come before the commission, brief discussion generally on these
things. So it really doesn't add a lot, but it puts the responsibility back
on the commissioners and also gives members of the public a chance
to be able to say, you know, you're charge -- you're paying too much
for this land or you're not paying enough. So I like the idea of each
one of these things coming back, if anything, at least on the consent
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agenda where we can pull them if necessary.
MR. FEDER: And I would submit to you, Commissioner, that if
you took the attached resolution, and under paragraph 5 -- one, two,
three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine -- the ninth sentence down in
paragraph 5 that starts out "in the alternative" where the Collier
County Property Appraiser's just value -- and the remainder of that to
the end of paragraph 5, and strike that, then we would have
accomplished what I think I've heard so far from all the
commiSSIOners.
MR. HENDRICKS: If! may, Commissioners, I just consulted
with Assistant County Attorney Heidi Ashton because I thought that it
was true that a property owner is allowed to in an eminent domain
proceeding, admit as to evidence of full compensation the property
appraiser's just value if it's higher than the appraised value, so --
MR. FEDER: And again, that's in eminent domain. Right now
we're in negotiations. I think we can bring that to you knowing that
we're trying to settle these through negotiation. If they don't get
settled, then they go to condemnation, then that issue will come into
effect.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And the cost goes up.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Are you complete?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, not really. I did have a
couple more things, if I could.
Mr. Feder, so in other words, if negotiations took place, the
difference between the lowest of two appraisals or the average of two
appraisals, plus the 50,000 maximum or 25 (sic) percent, whatever's
the lower.
MR. FEDER: 125, yeah.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: When you start dealing with
those kind of numbers against the appraiser who's one year behind, but
you're paying taxes based upon that, how much of a difference are we
talking about as far as a tool goes? Is it something that's substantial?
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December 16, 2008
MR. FEDER: Before the property values were coming down so
rapidly, we didn't have the issue. Now that they're coming down, we
find that we are coming in with appraisals that are lower than the
property appraiser's just value because of the precipitous decline in
values.
Having said that, Commissioner, again, if you strike as I
mentioned here, we can still deal with those issues if we feel it's still a
good provision for negotiation, for the property appraiser and for the
county, and the board can make that decision.
It just takes it from being an administrative activity, and we're
fine with that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And you've done a wonderful
job so far. How many -- just in talking about homes. That was the
main concern of this commission in the past -- how many homes have
actually gone to condemnation at this point in time?
MR. FEDER: I believe we're at 15 right now of the original 19,
and then became 21. Then you had two that also were brought to you
outside of that that the board told --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. But I mean, 15 of them
that went through the court system or 15 that we settled?
MR. FEDER: No. None of them have gone through the court
system.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Exactly. That's the point. You
have had enough tools in your toolbox to be able to make sure we
could do it.
Now, changing economic times the way they are, if they can go
to court and pull this rabbit out of the hat as far as the just valuation
according to the tax assessor, now we might have more of them going
to court, and then our cost actually goes up.
MR. FEDER: Not necessarily, Commissioner, because, again,
this issue's been out there. We recognize that it's going to be harder
for us to negotiate it with somebody maybe under the just value. They
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December 16, 2008
may decide to wait until we get closer to the actual construction and
then -- whether or not we negotiated it further at the condemnation,
but we still have the ability, if we think it's a good purchase price,
current conditions, and the like, to bring it to you rather than wait until
we get close to the condemnation where the property values may go
up, because that appears to be the way things are going.
We don't have to negotiate it immediately. We do not have
construction going, but we're trying to address these people in this
corridor as this board directed us because they didn't ask for this
corridor to be established, and we're trying to make them whole.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you, Mr. Feder. Thank
you, Commissioner Henning.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I'll just mention quickly, trying to
put a personal note to it, because you have to think of the people and
what's happening to them. We have a guy downstairs named Mike.
Three years ago he bought a house for $150,000. Pretty dilapidated,
but that's all he and his wife could afford. And he bought it and he put
$100,000 into fixing it all up, and it's looking good now, and its
property value is worth 75,000.
Now, what do we offer him in our -- if somebody was going to
take his property? I mean, being that he's got 250,000 in it and it's
only worth 75- according to the property appraiser, even a $50,000
increase wouldn't get back his initial loan.
MR. FEDER: Again, the property appraiser's in arrears, so we
would look at it. We'll do appraisals. In our appraiser we take into
account the true value the property is.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Commissioner?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'd like to make a motion, Mr.
Chairman, that we approve this resolution with the exception that we
will strike the last sentence in paragraph 5.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I think there's more than one sentence
there. The last sentence says, such purchase approvals are herein
referred to as administrative settlement.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No. I'm talking about the one --
the sentence that starts in the alternative --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- and then it goes all the way
through the end of that paragraph. And I'm -- I would strike that entire
sentence, and that is consistent with what Mr. Feder has recommended
to us.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'll second that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Motion by Commissioner
Coyle, second by Commissioner Halas to approve the resolution as
amend.
Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, I'm sorry. I didn't hear
Mr. Feder make the recommendation. I heard him give us
alternatives. It's going to be a little hard to vote for something like
this. I'd like to be able to keep the tools in the toolbox, allowing
negotiation to take place, and then we can make the final decision
when the time does come.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's what this does.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Then, no. You've removed the
ability to be able to use the appraiser's valuation, just valuation,
haven't you?
MR. KLATZKOW: This is -- this is establishing an
administrative procedure where Norm does not have to come to you
for these purchases.
Now, this was important in the days where we were hot and
heavy to build the roads because Norm just didn't have the time.
Norm has at least seven years before he's building this road, so he
has the time here. You don't have to give him this administrative
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December 16, 2008
procedure here if you don't want, and you can see every purchase
come forward to the board if that's what you want.
But what he's asking you for is the ability to not come to the
board on certain purchases, provided they meet certain monetary
parameters.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And we said no, we want it to come
to the Board of Commissioners.
MR. KLA TZKOW: That's not the motion.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That's not the motion.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: No. Let me try to -- let me try to
clarify this one more time. What we're saying is we're giving Norm
administrative authority to offer 25 percent more than our appraised
value for the property or $50,000, whichever's less, but anything else
has to come to us for review.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Forgive me.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. So it forces all of those
others to come to us, people get a public hearing, we can make a
reasonable judgment as to what we should do, and Norm can say to us,
look, we're paying -- we're offering more than the appraised price, and
here's the reason we're offering more than the appraised price. And if
it seems reasonable to us, we will here it in public, everybody will get
their say, and we can make a decision.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm with you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm with you. Thank you.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Just one question.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Didn't we give away something
else? We gave you the right to do something else without coming to
the board within the last month; what was that?
MR. FEDER: That was exactly this, Commissioner, and it's a
little bit longer than a month ago, and all we were doing is bringing
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that vision into this resolution. That 125 and 50,000, whichever's less,
is what you directed us previously. We were just trying to get this
resolution conforming to that. And I shudder because I know there's
been confusion, but I appreciate the board's indulgence.
The sentence here, as the commissioner pointed out, in the
alternative, we would recommend eliminating that sentence from
paragraph 5 if that's what you're trying to seek to do. I would ask, if
we could, the last sentence says, such purchase approval be remained
-- retained in, refers to the issues prior.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Right. Do you want to amend that?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. I can do that. Yeah, I'm
beginning to see a period emerge right after apply. You just have to
look at it long enough.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. That's why I use these.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So -- yeah. The second to the last
sentence in that paragraph we strike and we leave the last sentence
which reads, such purchase approvals are hereinafter referred to as
administrative settlements.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Does the second agree to that?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Discussion?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. Just a quick question back
to Commissioner Coyle. What just took place now still agrees with
your original statement you made?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yep, yep.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Just reinforces it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any further discussion on the
motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saymg aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
MR. FEDER: Thank you.
Item #10D
RECOMMENDATION FOR THE COLLIER COUNTY BOARD
OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS TO APPROVE A FARE
INCREASE AND LIMITED REDUCTION IN SUNDAY SERVICE
TO ADDRESS THE REDUCED COLLIER AREA TRANSIT
FISCAL YEAR (FY) 2008-09 BUDGET - MOTION TO ACCEPT
OPTION "E" - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, next -- stay there, Norman.
Next item is 10D. It's a recommendation for the Collier County
Board of Commissioners to approve a fare increase and limited
reduction in Sunday service to address the reduced Collier Area
Transit fiscal year 2008-2009 budget. Mr.--
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Do we have any pubic speakers?
MS. FILSON: No, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Second. What are the options?
MS. ARNOLD: Well, there's a couple options that you have to
decide on.
For the record, Michelle Arnold.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Staffs recommendations, the Board
of Commissioners authorize the reduction of service on Sunday by,
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let's see, 137,000 and some change, transit budget reduction resulting
in the modification of.
MS. ARNOLD: Yes. We're here to ask for a reduction in
service as well as an increase in fares, and we have five options for the
increase of the fares, and that's what you need to make a decision on.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Oh. That's not in the
recommendations.
MS. ARNOLD: No, no. Do you have -- anybody have a
recommendation?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I do.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes. I looked at this, and I think
it's still a great buy if we look at option E.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yep.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And I'll include that in my motion.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: There--
COMMISSIONER HALAS: The reason is that the cost of
running vehicles, maintenance and everything else, is still high, and
even though we have a lull in gas tax -- or price of gas or diesel, it's
going to go up.
And so I think that -- and this also takes a lot of the burden off of
the taxpayers that do not use the transit system. So I really looked at
option E as the way to go on this.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Does the second agree?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And if I -- yes, I do.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That's a part of your motion?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. And if! could just add to
that, is that it is the option that really essentially rewards the people
who ride the transit more frequently --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yep.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- because of the weekly passes,
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which are really very good.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yep.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes, just a question. In option B is
says something -- it says also -- fare increase, full fare transfers.
MS. ARNOLD: Yes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: That means they have to pay
double, right? Instead of -- every time they transfer a bus -- and we
have that -- they don't have that much of an issue in Lee County, but
we have that issue a lot here because nothing is through so they have
to transfer.
And according to your figures on Page 7, that's $2.50 more per
day if they have to pay for these transfers; is that correct?
MS. ARNOLD: That would be -- yes. But the option, in my
understanding, is E, is the recommendation.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
MS. ARNOLD: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And E says --
MS. ARNOLD: E would be a 75-cent transfer, and -- they would
pay $ I .50 when they get on the bus, and if they have to transfer, they
would pay 75 cents to transfer.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: For each transfer?
MS. ARNOLD: Yes, for each transfer.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: So that the, what -- so how many --
MS. ARNOLD: Well, some people -- if some -- if you have one
transfer, then you would be paying $1.25 -- no, I'm sorry.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: A buck and a half.
MS. ARNOLD: 2.25, and then if you were to transfer a second
time, you would have to pay another 75 cents.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Another buck and a half extra.
MS. ARNOLD: Right.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And for people that make five and a
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quarter an hour and can't afford a car, that's a lot of money.
MS. ARNOLD: That would be $3 for that one trip.
MR. FEDER: Commissioner, I do need to note -- and I think the
commissioner mentioned it -- people that are traveling frequently on
the system -- first of all, at board's direction, the monthly fare is not
changed at all. There is the provision of a new weekly fare, which is
also at a pretty good rate to try and get some of our tourists on and to
address some folks that can't afford the monthly fare cost at one time.
So I think that you've addressed the people that are using the
system quite a bit, but you are getting other folks at a rate that's more
commensurate with others around us.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Then my last question, and
I'll stop. But the transfer fees were the one things -- the one thing that
was very objectionable to the people who took the survey, correct?
MS. ARNOLD: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: And so if we find now that we have
to lose passengers because they can't get to -- and they can't get to
work, what are we going to do about that? Are we going to be
monitoring that? And then, of course, by that time they've lost their
job anyway, so then, you know -- and I don't know how good that is,
because usually these people also have childcare to pay, and childcare
is an awful amount. It's just so difficult for people.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: They can't take them on the bus
with them. They couldn't afford it. If I may?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yes, please.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, thank you. Okay. A
couple of things. One, I am having a problem with the total cost, and
one big jump. I think that that's going to really raise havoc. You had
-- generally the people you met with was a pretty small crowd that
showed up. They seem to be accepting increasing fares as long as the
service maintained itself, but they were against transfer fees. Or
wasn't that a problem either?
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MS. ARNOLD: Yeah. We had a smaller crowd than we had
hoped, and the sentiments of the crowd was -- and we've had a couple
different public meetings. The most concern that the riders have is the
reduced route. They don't want to lose service at all.
Those people that attended the last public meeting were not
opposed to an increase in the fare. The sentiment was to not have a
transfer fare if they could avoid that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Okay. Now, another
question, too. I'm looking at your fare structure sheet that you have
here. And if you go across, it shows youth day passes, elderly, and so
on, and it's got like $2, and then it shows under option A, it's $2,
option Bit's $2, option C, $2, option D, $2 and --
MS. ARNOLD: Those are the day passes, so if you --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. But what about transfer
charges? Is there going to be a transfer charge of $2 for these people,
too or--
,
MS. ARNOLD: No. If you buy the day pass, that's what you
pay.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Oh, okay. I understand now.
MS. ARNOLD: So we're not eliminating any of the passes that
we have. And as Commissioner Coyle said, it's encouraging folks to
purchase the passes. And a little bit more --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And it is. And those people that
can come up with that much money at one time. And I'll tell you
something. You're doing an absolutely wonderful job of maintaining
bus service for, what is it, over a million riders?
MS. ARNOLD: Yes, we do.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It's tremendous. This is
something that when we first came into office we were told by many
people this wouldn't make it. It would fail. People would never ride
the bus. Well, by gosh, we proved them wrong.
I think this is -- we're going in the right direction; however, I
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December 16, 2008
can't accept this transfer fee of75 cents. I think we're putting an
exorbitant expense upon them. I could go with 25 cents, but that's just
-- that's heavy for people that are working very hard to make ends
meet.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any other discussion on the motion?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You know, we can't have it both
ways. You can't say that people are going to lose their jobs because of
these fares, because the people who are using it the most are the
people who are getting the best deal. It's costing them about 40 cents
a day to ride the bus if you buy a monthly pass.
Monthly pass costs you -- I'm sorry, a weekly pass.
MS. ARNOLD: If you buy the weekly pass.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So if you -- you can have a
monthly pass or a weekly pass and it's a real bargain when you get
right down to it. You don't have to pay the transfer fees, right?
MS. ARNOLD: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You've got a pass. So the people
who use it the most are getting the best price. The people who use it
only occasionally, like Coastland Mall, as many of them do on that
route, and spend the day at Coastland Mall, will have to pay the full
fare unless they are buying a weekly or monthly pass.
So those people are not going to be hurt because they don't use it
all the time to get to and from work. But the people who do use it a
lot to get to and from work have a great price deal, and we haven't
changed it on them at all. We haven't forced them to pay a transfer
fee, we haven't increased the cost of a pass. And so we've changed
nothing with respect to people who depend the most on this kind of
transportation.
MS. ARNOLD: And that was the reason for introducing the
weekly pass, to give folks an option outside of the monthly pass, and
the weekly pass may be beneficial to those using the service here
year-round and to our visitors.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Question, if! may.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Sure.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah, Michelle, what is your
evaluation? In other words, when you put this -- if you put Item E
into place --
MS. ARNOLD: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- what do you foresee as far as
people having to pay the transfer fee or else going the other way with
the weekly? Do you have any idea? Do you have any kind of
projections?
MS. ARNOLD: You know, we didn't come up with an estimate,
you know, whether or not it's going to be 25 percent or 50 percent or
those types of things, because we may have some folks that go
towards the monthly pass because they use it, you know, seven days a
week, and that was what -- one of the things that our survey showed
us. So there'll be a split probably between a weekly pass and the
monthly. What percentage, you know, we really can't speculate.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: But at this point in time, you
don't have a weekly pass, just a monthly pass.
MS. ARNOLD: Exactly.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. What percentage of your
business is monthly passes versus, you know, pay-as-you-go
ridership?
MS. ARNOLD: A small percentage is the monthly pass right
now. Mostly it's some of the Marco Express, the folks going down to
the hotels, and some of those hotels are purchasing that for the -- their
employees.
We think with this fare increase, those passes -- the purchase of
those passes will definitely go up.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: But wouldn't it make more
sense to start off with maybe a smaller transfer fee to see if that does
draw people into the weekly pass as an option? I'm just afraid that the
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December 16, 2008
people that are working day to day trying to make the ends meet might
try to find themselves -- I mean, it's kind of hard for us to realize it --
but finding it hard to come up with the $7 for the weekly pass. Is that
what it is?
MS. ARNOLD: No. It's $ I 5 for full fair; 7.50 for a reduced rate.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. We really don't know?
MS. ARNOLD: That was -- right now, if they are not purchasing
a pass with our current fare system, you know, they would purchase
that in a couple of -- two days.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you, Michelle.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any further discussion on the
motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Seeing none, all in favor of the
motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries 4-1; Commissioner
Coletta dissenting.
MS. ARNOLD: I just wanted to say that we -- I will be bringing
back a resolution that will memorialize your decision here today.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Put it on the consent, please.
Next item?
Item #10E
AWARD OF BID #09-5142 TO MITCHELL AND STARK
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC., FOR THE LEL Y AREA
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December 16, 2008
STORMW A TER IMPROVEMENTS PROJECT (LA SIP) PHASE
1B, PROJECT NO. 51101 IN THE AMOUNT OF $3,530,719.90
PLUS A TEN (10%) CONTINGENCY, TOTALING $3,883,791.89
- APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to 10E, and that is a
recommendation to approve award of bid number 09-5142, to Mitchell
and Stark Construction Company, Inc., for the Lely Area Stormwater
Improvements Project, LASIP, Phase 1 bravo, project number 51101
in the amount of$3,530,719.90, plus a 10 percent contingency totaling
$3,883,791.89.
And Mr. Norman Feder, your Transportation Services
Administrator, will present.
MR. FEDER: Commissioners, this includes not only 1B phase
for the LASIP project but also the second portion of the Treviso Bay
project.
As you remember, we had a developer contribution agreement
for them to build, and then we'd pay back 95 percent, and 5 percent
was their application use.
They had finished their first portion of that. The question was
raised, aren't we better off if the county is out there on all developer
contribution agreements and doing the bidding in-house by the
county's procedures, even though they had gone through a bidding
process.
With that in mind, we took that second portion of the Treviso
along with 1 B and bid it out, and that is the project you see in front of
you today.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Henning to
approve staffs recommendation, second by Commissioner Coyle.
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December 16, 2008
Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saymg aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
Item #lOF
AN AMENDMENT TO THE TREVISO BA Y WATER
MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT ALLOWING FOR
COORDINATION BETWEEN TREVISO BAY DEVELOPMENT,
LLC AND COLLIER COUNTY TO COMPLETE
CONSTRUCTION OF THE LEL Y AREA STORMW A TER
IMPROVEMENT PROJECT LOCATED WITHIN AND
ADJACENT TO THE TREVISO BAY DEVELOPMENT,
PROJECT NO. 51101- APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to our next item,
which is 1 OF. It's a recommendation to approve an amendment to the
Treviso Bay Water Management Agreement allowing for coordination
between Treviso Bay Development, LLC, and Collier County to
complete construction of the Lely Area Stormwater Improvement
project located within and adjacent to the Treviso Bay Development
project number 51 101. And again, Norm Feder, transportation
administrator, will present.
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December 16, 2008
MR. FEDER: Very quickly, Commissioners. As I just noted, we
had structured under the developer contribution agreement for the
developer, having gone out to bids, to build it and then we pay back
95 percent. By us going out and bidding out the second portion, we
now needed to change the agreement such that we build it and they
pay us 5 percent, and that's what this does.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay. Motion to approve the first
amendment to the Treviso Bay Water Management Agreement and
authorize the chairman to sign that amendment.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Second.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Fiala to
approve item 1 OF, second by Commissioner Halas.
Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saYIng aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
MR. FEDER: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The next item, do you think we can
get through it in a half an hour?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: We can get through it in about five
minutes.
Item #10G
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December 16, 2008
RECOMMENDA TION THAT THE BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS APPROVE THE 2008 INCENTIVE REVIEW
AND RECOMMENDATION REPORT REQUIRED BY FLORIDA
STATUTE 420.9076(4) AND DIRECT STAFF TO BRING BACK
AN AMENDED IMP ACT FEE DEFERRAL ORDINANCE AS
OUTLINED IN THE REPORT - MOTION TO APPROVE REPORT
AND INCENTIVES (PROXIMITY WITH RESERVATION OF
INFRASTRUCTURE AND STRENGTHEN BANKING
CONSORTIUM) FOR STAFF DIRECTION - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. I think we can -- you can, if you'd just
concentrate on that matrices and say, we like this or we don't like that,
and tell us which one of those you want us to come back with. I think
we can get through it, and we just take them one at a time.
This is lOG. It's a recommendation that the Board of County
Commissioners approve the 2008 Incentive Review and
Recommendation Report as required by the Florida Statutes and
authorize staff to bring back an amended impact fee deferral ordinance
as outlined in this report and/or changed by the Board of County
Commissioners as we go down that matrix, and that's the important
part, what you're comfortable with and what the board wants to do.
Go down that matrices and say, we're locked, no, I don't like this;
you take a motion. We'll get through this in short order.
And I believe that Buddy Ramsey, your public -- from the public
services administration, will present.
MR. RAMSEY: Good afternoon, Commissioners. For the
record, Frank Ramsey, your Housing Manager, and I will keep this
brief.
We're here today to provide you a brief presentation on the 2008
Incentive Review and Recommendation Report. Revisions in 2007
required communities receiving state initiative partnership program or
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December 16, 2008
SHIP dollars to prepare this report every three years and present it to
you.
We reviewed a total of 15 incentives, and of the 15 we reviewed,
the following nine are not requesting any board action today:
Expediting permitting of approvals, density flexibility, parking and
setbacks, reductions, flexible lot configurations, modification of street
requirements, ongoing oversight, preparation of a land bank inventory,
transportation enhancement, and an infrastructure investment program.
The following six items are requesting board action: Impact fee
waivers and modifications. We are requesting you to authorize staff
to work with the impact fee deferral department and the County
Attorney's Office in reviewing the current ordinance for a potential
future amendment to the -- increase the deferral period for rental units
from 10 years to 15 years. Approval of today's report would not
amend the existing ordinance.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Can we vote on these as we go
along?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
MR. KLATZKOW: If! could just make a comment. The County
Attorney's Office is not going to be in favor of increasing it from 10
years to 15 years. We've talked to outside consultants on impact fees,
and 10 years is about as long as, legally, we can go. We can look at it
if the board wants, but really we've had this discussions before, and 10
years is about the maximum.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Especially with rental properties.
MR. KLA TZKOW: All properties.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. The first one is expediting
permitting. Do you want to take them all at once?
MR. RAMSEY: No. The committee believes the program's
operating as intended, and we're not recommending any board action
on that item.
MR. MUDD: This is your Affordable Housing Committee andp
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December 16,2008
their recommendations that Mr. Ramsey is basically putting out.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And the impact fee waivers and
modifications, I have to go along with what the county attorney said,
that I think we ought to leave that where it is today, and that's 10 years
instead of going to 15.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I agree.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I agree.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And does that -- we don't -- we don't
waive impact fees now.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: This is the--
MR. RAMSEY: No, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: This is the impact fee deferrals, not
waiving. This is just a deferral program from the -- 10 years to 15
years is what's been suggested. But we're saying no, waive impact
fees.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: They're use the wrong term, I
think.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, it's deferrals, not --
MR. RAMSEY: Oh, I'm sorry, Commissioner. The term came
from the state in their report format, but you are correct, the county
does not waive impact fees. We only defer them.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: See, the state's wrong.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: See, I told you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: The state's wrong.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. You have consensus on that.
MR. RAMSEY : Yes, sir. The next item asking for board action
is the reservation of infrastructure. This would authorize staff in the
Affordable Housing Commission to work in drafting a report and
proposal for the reservation of infrastructure to ensure sufficient
capacity for future development of affordable housing.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. One of the things that we
discussed when Marcy Krumbine gave her report just recently, we
talked about it. And just like we said earlier in this meeting, we never
came up with a conclusion when we talked about oversaturation, and
that enters right into this, doesn't it?
And what I would like to do is make sure that we bring back an
ordinance that really establishes an affordable housing oversaturation.
So as we're reserving infrastructure for the future, we make sure that
we're not tipping that scale and that that infrastructure is shared
equally throughout the county.
MR. RAMSEY: Yes, ma'am.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Is there any further direction on this
one?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Other than that I would agree with
Commissioner Fiala, that is it the -- the housing commission take a
look at that and then come back to us with some recommendation
sometime in the future, but I don't see any need for a decision right
now.
MR. RAMSEY: Yes, absolutely. None of the items I'm asking
for would involve action or charges today. It's simply authorizing the
staff and Affordable Housing Commission to do further investigation
on these items.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Could -- Mr. Chairman, could I just
add something to that? The reservation of infrastructure is very
closely tied to the other item on the second page called proximity.
If you're going to talk about reservation of infrastructure, you
must also give consideration to proximity to sources of employment
where people would likely live. So if we're going to ask them to take
a look at the first reservation of infrastructure, we should clarify it to
make sure that you also, when you're looking at it from the standpoint
of reservation of infrastructure, that you're looking at it from the
standpoint of proximity to work locations.
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December 16, 2008
MR. RAMSEY: That's an excellent point, also one that we felt
proximity should be looked at when looking at a density bonus
program as well.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But we're not making a decision
now. We're just saying, if you're going to look at it, look at them both
together and come to us with a recommendation.
MR. RAMSEY: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coletta, Commissioner
Fiala.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes. As far as the idea of
oversaturation and trying to come up with some sort of plan that
equally distributes it throughout the county, in theory, I think it's a
wonderful idea. I'm a little bit concerned that we might have the plan
built on the heavy side where we'll say, you know, that when
saturation comes, it can't go in these areas, and then the other areas
don't accept, which means there'd be no affordable housing.
You know, that becomes a real issue. If we can -- when we look
at it, if they can look at this, how can you come up with a balance? In
other words, you have a demand for affordable housing that might be
100 units, for discussion's sake. And the oversaturated areas can't take
it because of the fact we passed an ordinance saying it is, you've still
got a need for 100.
So somehow you have to have a mechanism to make sure that
100 go into the undersaturated area. If you can't do it, then where do
you go from there? And that's a good question that has to be asked
when you go into the process.
MR. RAMSEY: Absolutely. That's why there definitely needs
to be more investigation into these -- all of these items today before
you.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala and
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December 16, 2008
Commissioner Halas.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. Also with proximity. Right
now -- well, maybe not -- probably affects you, too. I'm looking at the
three who handle most of the affordable housing right here, and it says
close proximity to work, but yet the work is in the other two's districts
because that's where the hotels and the restaurants are located, but
they don't have any room to put any affordable housing, really,
because they're all built out.
So I don't know how you're going to do that, but -- because we're
not close to any work. We're trying to attract some, but we haven't
been able to do that as yet. Good luck with that.
MR. RAMSEY: Thank you.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Merry Christmas, too.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, I think there's affordable
housing injust about every area except maybe one area, but anyway.
Two areas that I know of.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Three areas.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: But you have to be careful that we
don't get involved in some issues that are -- that are under the federal
guidelines. So you're walking on a thin tightrope. But I understand the
concerns that a couple of my commissioners stated.
So we have to make sure that we're fair to everybody and that we
don't run into any particular issues that could get the county in some
serious problems.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Absolutely, especially violating any
state statutes or anything. That's right.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Federal statutes.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right.
MR. RAMSEY: And I would say to that, Commissioner, that
these items, 11 of the 15 items were required by the state to be
reviewed, and this was one of them, so --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Accessory dwellings.
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December 16, 2008
MR. RAMSEY: Yes. The next item requesting board action is
accessory dwelling units. We're requesting you authorize staff and the
Affordable Housing Committee to identify areas within Collier
County that may be suitable for the inclusion of affordable accessory
residential dwelling units, sometimes referred to as mother-in-law
suites.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Mr. Chairman?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I think this is a boobie trap.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Sure, it is.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You know, we have an excess of
dwelling units in Collier County that are vacant right now. The
market is flooded with relatively low-priced homes. Our objective
should be to try to deplete that inventory of vacant low-priced homes
before we start taking action to create a whole 'nother layer of homes,
low-priced homes. And I think now is not the time to start designating
mother-in-law units in Collier County.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Oh, let me totally agree with
everything he's saying, because we -- one of the things we've said is
we wanted you to try and do what you could to fill those extra units,
take some of that blight off our streets, and not only that, the little
ancillary effect is, we don't have to defer impact fees so that -- so that
when impact fees are coming in again, we don't -- you know, these
things are off the market already. We -- I totally agree.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Now, did you record that, Terri? She
totally agrees with Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Put it in caps, underline it.
MR. RAMSEY: It's an excellent report -- an excellent point. I
believe the intention of the state was just to make -- force communities
receiving funding to think long-term planning and, perhaps, not a
short-term solution.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: We're always trying to force
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December 16, 2008
somebody to do something.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And I think that was the last item?
We already talked about proximity.
MR. RAMSEY: We covered proximity.
MR. MUDD: I'll make sure I got this right. No action on
accessory dwelling units; is that right?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct.
MR. RAMSEY: The -- there's two more. The final one is--
while the county has an affordable housing trust fund currently that
developers may make contributions to, during the discussion, the
committee believed that authorizing staff and the committee to draft a
report and proposal for a dedicated funding source to that trust fund
that would not negatively impact the county's funding would be a
worthwhile mission at this time, and so we would ask for that
authorization.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Sound's like tax to me.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's what it smells like.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I think we're -- in this day and age
and prices dropping in the Vanderbilt Beach extension corridor and
other places, that we don't need to make this a priority today, and we
have to review it every year, correct?
MR. RAMSEY: Every three years.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Every three years.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I agree.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: There you go.
MR. RAMSEY: And the final item that we were asking for
board on today is to authorize staff and the Affordable Housing
Committee to survey the community to assess the support of
affordable/workforce housing through an inclusionary zoning
incentive.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And this goes along with the other
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December 16, 2008
one. We've got such a large number of vacant homes at affordable
prices now. I believe our primary focus should be to get those homes
occupied again, and however you can help us do that, I think, is the
best way for you to serve the community.
MR. RAMSEY: I think you'll be very pleased when -- once we
receive our neighborhood stabilization program money, probably
sometime in February, with the efforts of the number of homes that
are foreclosed that we'll be able to acquire and rehabilitate.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Good, wonderful.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Fiala?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes. I don't know if you can add
something to this or not, but a friend of mine just bought two places,
one a two-bedroom, two-bath and the other one three-bedroom,
two-bath, both of them in a swimming pool complex.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Speculators.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: One for 57,000 -- that's exactly
right. That's where I'm going -- and another for 65,000. Now, she's a
speculator, just as Commissioner Coyle said. And I said, these are
prime places for young families to move.
But when I talked to Marcy Krumbine about it, she said, the
problem is, the banks won't give them a loan. And so maybe -- maybe
there's something the Affordable Housing Commission can do to work
on the banking consortium. According to Marcy, there's only three
members left.
And so these people, in order to follow the thrust that you've
heard from this commission today in trying to get these homes that are
sitting there vacant now -- some in wonderful condition, some not in
very wonderful condition -- occupied, we need to have a banking
consortium to work with us.
So I don't know if your Affordable Housing Commission can
work on that, but I think it would be a good objective.
MR. RAMSEY: I agree.
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December 16, 2008
MR. MUDD: If that's the board direction. It doesn't necessarily
have to be in this one. It is your Affordable Housing Commission,
okay. I want to make sure that you understand that as a board. If you
want to give them direction to try to strengthen the banking
consortium --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Yes.
MR. MUDD: -- so that--
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Well, I would.
MR. MUDD: -- so that we can get some more people to lend
money to qualified people, why not? Frank can take that back to the
committee.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I think you have a consensus.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yep.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yep.
MR. MUDD: I want to make sure I got exclusionary zoning. I
believe I saw two -- at least two nods that say we don't want to go
down this road, but I need a third.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Right.
MR. MUDD: I just now have my third.
Ms. Filson, do we have any speakers?
MS. FILSON: No, sir.
MR. RAMSEY: That concludes my presentation. We have
Steven Ruby, your Chairman of your Affordable Housing Committee,
here to answer any questions and say a few words.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any questions of the chairman of the
affordable housing board?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No questions.
MR. RUBY: Questions? I'd like to make a little bit of comment
on behalf of the advisory board. For the record, my name is Steven
Ruby. I'm Chairman of the Affordable Housing Advisory Board.
I totally agree with you and our advisory board agrees with you
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December 16, 2008
that we need to deal with the foreclosures and the glut of existing
property on the roles right now.
The purpose of this report, yes, it was mandated by the state, but
it also includes a raft of other initiatives that were brought to us by
you, by the EDC, by the ULI, and we formed a subcommittee in order
to look at these in a more comprehensive way, not to solve the
immediate problem here, but looking further on.
As we re- -- come out of this recession and out of this housing
problem, we're very confident that we're going to have a different type
of crisis. The paradigm in the housing market is going to change.
Just as you said, Commissioner Fiala, the housing out there is
affordable now. It's affordable to our workforce. It's not attainable.
The mortgage crunch, the high -- harder to get mortgages,
underwriting criteria is higher, down payments are more like we, you
and I, had to pay when we bought our first house at 15, 20 percent.
Our workforce can't -- won't be able to handle this. They fear
their jobs, they're losing their jobs, they don't have savings, and the
mortgage money will not be accessible. So just because the products
out there are affordable, they're not going to be able to attain it.
As we come out of this recession, housing prices are going to
start to elevate, and we're still going to have a demand, a big demand.
If we don't have the tools in place -- and I think what we're trying to
do here, what your advisory board is trying to do is look at best
practices and tools, have them ready. No, don't put them in place
now. Put them in place when you need them and have them in the
back door.
You hit the ground running with the NSP program, this $7.2
million that you're getting. I do this around the country, and I've
talked to people all over the state. There is no municipality as well
prepared as you are right now to handle that. Why? Because you saw
the initiative back in June and July, took some excess CDBG money
and created that program.
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December 16, 2008
Work it out, have the county attorney work out all the procedures
and the legal ramifications, and you're ready to hit the ground running.
There are municipalities, large municipalities, who don't know what to
do with it right now. I'm just scrambling.
You're six to eight months ahead, so why shouldn't we be ready
in three years or four years after we're coming out of this recession to
have the tools in place so we can hit the ground running for the next
crisis that we're going to have in the housing market?
That's a recommendation from our advisory board. If you have
any questions?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Questions?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MR. RUBY: You're welcome.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Next item?
MR. MUDD: No. I think we need to go down this one more
time because I didn't hear a vote. It's a recommendation that the Board
of County Commissioners approve the 2008 Incentive Review and
Recommendation Report.
You just approved the report that you got, okay. And the
direction we received was to work on two items on the matrices,
proximity and infrastructure, plus go back and see if we can't
strengthen the banking consortium.
So the direction we have, I just need you to approve the report
that you received.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Make a motion to approve the report
and also approve the incentives as amended and by the comments of
the Board of Commissioners.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, the direction. I got it.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Correct.
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December 16, 2008
Discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saYIng aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
MR. MUDD: Now you've satisfied the state requirement.
Item #10H
RECOMMENDATION TO APPROVE THE PURCHASE OF
GROUP HEALTH REINSURANCE COVERAGE FOR
CALENDAR YEAR 2009 - APPROVED
MR MUDD: Brings us to 10H, which is a recommendation to
approve the purchase of group health reinsurance coverage for
calendar year 2009. Mr. Jeff Walker, your Risk Management
Director, will present.
The reason this is on your agenda, we do this annually. It is over
the $1 million figure. The total cost, $1,310,124.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coyle to
approve staffs recommendations, purchase health insurance, second
by Commissioner Halas.
I just have one question. We are insuring 2,1 50 employees or
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December 16, 2008
thereabouts?
MR. WALKER: Approximately, yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I thought we had far less than that.
MR. WALKER: Well, we cover not only the board's agency, but
also four of the five constitutional officers.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Oh, okay, all right.
Any discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No further discussion, all in favor of
the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Good report, Jeff.
MR. WALKER: For the record, Jeff Walker, Risk Management.
Item #101, Item #10J and Item #IOK
A WARD BID #09-5157, SEATING FOR THE COLLIER COUNTY
EMERGENCY SERVICES CENTER TO MARCO OFFICE
SUPPLY IN THE AMOUNT OF $123,411.39 - APPROVED
AWARD BID #09-5 I 58, SYSTEMS FURNITURE FOR THE
COLLIER COUNTY EMERGENCY SERVICES CENTER TO
CORPORATE EXPRESS IN THE AMOUNT OF $106,153.37-
APPROVED
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December 16,2008
AWARD BID #09-5 159, CASEGOODS FOR THE COLLIER
COUNTY EMERGENCY SERVICES CENTER TO THE BEAUX-
ARTS GROUP IN THE AMOUNT OF $239,702.77 - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, the next -- how you doing? Okay.
The next item, I took all three items that had to with furniture requests
off the consent and moved them on the regular agenda because we --
the board had a requirement in a previous discussion on a comment
and/or public petition by Mr. Penzo from Marco Office Supply. He
had some questions and some issues.
The board told us to go back based on their directions in
September and bring back a discussion item. They're all three here for
the discussion item, and Mr. Steve Carnell, your Purchasing Director,
will present.
MR. CARNELL: Yes. The items are, again, items I, J, and K,
are all bid invitations that were issued in parallel using the same
business process, and they all pertain to the emergency services
center.
One is for the purchase of seating; one is for the purchase of Case
Goods, which includes desks, tables, file cabinets and those types of
things; and the third would be the systems furniture itself, the panels.
In each case we followed the same bidding process. We issued a
two-step bid process. If you'll remember our discussion from
September, one of our concerns in this whole area, particularly of the
modular project, is being able to buy product that's like to like in
common, recognizing that the manufacturers are very distinct and
separate in their product.
So what we did was we took the product design that had been
developed based on the original approach for this building, and we
converted it into a basis of design document where we itemized every
single piece or item being purchased. We then put a, what we call, a
more equal clause into the bid document that allowed the competing
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December 16, 2008
furniture manufacturers to bid their product, their comparable product,
but we took product information in the first step only so that we could
compare the product information and make sure that it was
comparable or equal to what we had specified.
And based on that process, in the first step we receive nine
responses from -- for all three of them we received nine envelopes in
which people provided their product detail information.
The staff reviewed these submissions, and this included the
architect of record for the emergency services center working with the
facilities management purchasing staff, and determined that in the case
of the seating bid, that five of the nine bidders had provided a product
that was equal, and so we invited them to then submit a price proposal.
In the case of the systems furniture, seven of the nine were found
to be equal, so they were invited to participate and provide a price
proposal in the second round.
And in the case of the Case Goods, four of the nine were deemed
to be responsive in the first round. So we invited those groups to then
give us price envelopes. Those envelopes were all opened on
November the I 7th and evaluated.
And based on the pricing evaluation step, we are recommending
award for each one of the three bids today in the case of the seating.
Recommendation is to award to Marco Office Supply in the amount of
$123,411.39.
In the case of the systems panels, $105,918.17, and that would be
awarded to Corporate Express, and then the Case Goods would be
awarded to Beaux-Arts Group in the amount of$235,497.73.
Now, these are the three largest purchases involved with the
emergency services center project. And in addition to that, we also --
prior to issuing these bids, we also solicited informal quotes for what
we call the work station pods. These are the units that actually literally
get built into the floor of your new emergency operations center.
If you picture the first floor of building F right now, and you
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December 16, 2008
picture yourself here during a declared disaster, and you walk in that
room and you see all the people conferring with each other? This is
the new building's version of that work area.
And this one's a little different because in this case the furniture
had to literally be nailed to the floor and built into the floor as part of
the construction. And because of that, we needed to get it done earlier
and sooner. We wanted it done while the general contractor was still
on site.
So we put that out as a separate package. It was a much smaller
package in terms of dollars and cents. And we awarded that based on
staff authority and the purchasing policy and the direction you gave
back on September the 9th.
Now, we actually received eight price quotes and awarded that to
the lowest responsive quote in the amount of $53,000 and change.
We've also taken -- if I can go over to the South Regional
Library. We have four purchases there that are all part of this
discussion in terms of what you directed us to do back in September.
There was the purchase of auditorium seating, and there's also
been -- right now we're in the process of placing the order for what we
call the library shelving units. Those are the -- those are the items that
the board, in November, directed us to buy directly from the state
contract and not go through the competitive bidding process.
And then we have two other smaller orders that we're in the
process now of putting out to bid. One is for office furniture within the
private offices of the new library, and the remaining one is for
furniture for Case Goods for common areas within the library facility.
Those are considered less urgent.
If you'll remember our discussion back in September, we were
trying to award the bids without delaying the opening of the library
facility. And those -- we can do those last because we don't need
those to open the facility.
All that said, what I'm here today to do is to ask for you to award
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December 16, 2008
these three bids that are listed in items I, J, and K. I think I may need
three separate motions to do that. If you can award to recommended
bidder in each case, that would be what the staff is asking you to do
today, and we'll answer any questions you have at this point.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Recommendation for approval of
Item I.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coyle,
second by Commissioner Fiala to recommend awarding the bid to
Marco Supply, Item I 01.
And do we have public speakers for 10I?
MS. FILSON: I have a speaker for 10K.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The answer is no.
Any discussion on the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saYIng aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Carries unanimously.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Motion to approve Item 10K.
MR. MUDD: Which is a recommendation --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: J.
MR. MUDD: -- to award bid number 09-5158, systems furniture
for the Collier County emergency services center to Corporate Express
in the amount of$106,153.37.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion by Commissioner Coyle to
approve IOJ, second by Commissioner Fiala.
All in favor of the motion?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And we don't have any speakers?
MS. FILSON: No, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Any opposed to the motion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
MR. MUDD: Next item is 10K. It's a recommendation to award
bid number 09-5 I 59, Case Goods for the Collier County emergency
center -- services center to Beaux-Arts Group in the amount of
$239,702.77.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Motion to approve.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Is there a second to the motion?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Second by Commissioner Coletta--
MR. MUDD: You have a speaker.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- to approve 10K, and we have a
public speaker.
MS. FILSON: Philip Penzo.
MR. PENZO: Philip Penzo with Marco Office Supply, I live at
201 Majorca Court, Marco Island. Thank you for your time.
At the last commission meeting I brought to your attention the
new library, that the purchasing was awarding without board approval.
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December 16, 2008
I don't see that on today's agenda either. If purchasing had gone with
the low bid for the chairs, the county would have saved $21,000 on
those stack chairs.
On September 9th the commissioners said that all furniture
purchases for those two projects would be brought to you for approval.
Marco, also supplying HON, was able to save 21 percent, a $34,000
savings on the chairs that you needed for your new EOC building.
We would like to do the same on the Case Goods you need. We
were not allowed to submit pricing on the Case Goods even though
you told purchasing to include us in the mix.
We were told by purchasing that you were unclear -- we were--
that they were unclear as to what exact products we were wanting to
bid in step one of their multi-step process.
We provided the same information in the same way in all three
bids. Why was this fine for chairs but not the Case Goods? The bid
called for state-contract discounts. There is absolutely no need for
such formality in the state contract purchase. That is the whole
purpose of the state contract, to save everyone time and money over a
complicated bid process.
Why did they make the process of comparing prices so
complicated? Why was the local preference ordinance thrown out on
such a formal bid?
I've read over the state contract and been unable to find any terms
or conditions overriding local law. If Marco Office Supply is allowed
to provide the Case Goods, we are confident we would save the
county over $50,000.
Please hold off on awarding this bid until you have a HON quote
to compare it to. Thank you.
MR. CARNELL: Let me address both of those issues. First off,
let's talk about the item that you made your motion on, because he
spoke to that. Again, we received nine proposals in step one. Marco
Office Supply was one of the nine.
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December 16, 2008
Now, I need to correct Mr. Penzo on something he said that was
not factually correct. He said that Marco Office Supply submitted the
same information for all three bids. That is not a correct statement.
In the case of the seating, the bid that Marco Office Supply -- you
just adopted for award, the bidders were all asked to provide detailed
information regarding the various line items in the bid. We wanted
them to name their product and the specific product they were bidding
to meet that assigned line number in the -- line item number in the bid,
and they were to provide detailed information, literature, brochures,
and other information.
In the case of seating, we got that from Marco Office Supply. In
the case of the Case Goods -- he keeps mentioning case of the Case
Goods. But in the instance of the Case Goods, we did not receive that
from Marco Office Supply. All we received was a brochure. Nothing
else. Did not identify what product they were actually bidding. If
anybody'd like to see it, I'll show you the physical difference between
what they submitted in one instance and what they submitted in the
other.
So we were not able to compare or determine all these line items
we named, what actual items they were offering for competition, so
that's why they were not advanced to the second round.
Now, in the case of the library seating, the instance there, we --
the library director, working with the architect of record for the south
library, selected a product that is broadly available. It was available to
Mr. Penzo to bid. It's an open line product. It's not specific or narrow
to one dealer. It's on the state contract, and it was a product that the
library director and the architect thought was appropriate for the
intended use.
This is going to be seating for the auditorium at your new south
library. It's going to be used for a number of different events, many of
which are going to be all-day training and teaching events with the
community. And they selected a chair they though would fit that
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December 16,2008
setting and would be appropriate and comfortable for patrons and
members of the public to sit in.
So we specified that product. And Mr. Penzo, Marco Office
Supply, bid an alternative product. Now, it just so happened, we had
to requote this because we all learned something in the quotation
process the first time, that we were originally attempting to get the
award -- actually have the delivery in December so that the library
could be used for a social event out there.
Well, as it turned out -- we didn't know this until we took the bids
that there was a $2,400 upcharge for what the manufacturer deemed to
be early delivery . We didn't know this, the architect didn't know this,
the bidders didn't know it. Half of them did not even include the
upcharge in their bid, so we ended up with a mishmash. So we had to
requote it.
Now, the reason I mention that is, that at that point in time we
informed Marco Office Supply that they had not met the specification.
And they asked if they could file a protest. Well, we told them there
was no protest process. There isn't for quotations less than $50,000.
There is no formal process for quotations. But we did extend Marco
the offer to write a letter to the purchasing director and -- prior to
submitting his second bid, if you will, and that the purchasing director
would take that up with the architect, and we would look at his issues
and concerns.
Well, we never received a letter from him, and the quotes came
in a second time. And Marco Office Supply bid the same product
again. And, again, if you want more detail as to why that product
didn't meet specifications, the architect and Marilyn Matthes are here,
and they can help explain that to you.
But in a nutshell, that's what happened in both those instances.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I think we're beyond part of what you
were talking about. Can we get --
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, you are. That last explanation that Mr.
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December 16, 2008
Carnell talked about as far as library stacking chairs is over and
beyond what Item 10K is, absolutely.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. Can we stay on 10K? Okay.
Because you lost me on the other. I just shut it out.
MR. CARNELL: Okay.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. So where are we at with the
Case Goods and Marco Office Supply? Where we at with that? Were
they allowed --
MR. CARNELL: Oh, with the Case Goods, what I just said a
moment ago, Marco Office Supply did not submit the requested
information. Remember we allowed people to submit alternative
products. We specified a product rather than redesigning from
scratch.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: But we said and we were told that
these furniture bids, HON would be included in all bids. .
MR. CARNELL: And they were. They were invited to submit
their product in the front end. They did not give us enough
information to be qualified to advance to the second round. They did
in the seating, and they were awarded the seating.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. But we're --
MR. CARNELL: They also did so with the systems panels.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- saying two different things. I'm
saying that we were told that HON would be including (sic) in the
pricing when it comes up to the Board of County Commissioners.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And you're saying something
different.
MR. MUDD: No. What he's saying to you is, there's two
categories -- there's two qualifications. There's the qualification that
you meet the specification of the line of product, and then you submit
your pnce.
And what Mr. Carnell said is they didn't meet the qualification on
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the product so, therefore, they were disqualified for submitting the
price. Because he was going to submit -- I can't say it for sure because
he -- as Mr. Carnell said, there wasn't enough specifics on the
brochure that he submitted. So I don't know what his price would be
for the different piece. But he never did specify what the product was
that was going to meet the requirement so that he could submit the
pnce.
MR. CARNELL: And all the other bidders did, sir. And I
believe the direction of the board was to give HON a shot, and that is
what we did. But we're not able -- everybody needed to play by the
same rules. All the other bidders did. They provided us the material
we asked for so that we could know.
When we're -- again, we're talking about the Case Goods. This is
desks, this is tables. These are things that you could bid a HON
product, you could bid something else. We can't assume what your
product would be just off a piece of literature. We need to have you
name the actual item, and they did not.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. When Mr. HON --
MR. MUDD: Mr. Penzo.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Mr. Penzo, at the last public
comment, it was directed to get the minutes of that meeting so we can
see exactly what the understanding of the board was. Do we have
that? I mean --
MR. CARNELL: I have a copy of the minutes here.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I don't know if it's relevant. I thought
we'd have it well in advance. Can we deal with it real quick?
MR. MUDD: Sure. You go ahead, Steve. You can read it from
there.
MR. CARNELL: All right. If you look in the middle of the page
where you see Mr. Mudd's comment. He says, Penzo did state he's on
the state contract for HON furniture. Mr. Carnell's -- his methodology
for under 100,000, over 100,000. That was part of the executive
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summary, that purchasing would get quotes under 100,000. We'd
have formal bids over 100,000.
Mr. Mudd's making reference to that. He says, my
recommendation to the board is, let's put HON into the mix. And if
you have an interconnection problem -- that would be the systems
panels -- we'll bring it up and we'll come back to the board and say,
hey, we've got an interconnection problem. We couldn't go that way.
But if we don't and if they have good quality and the prices, well,
then our recommendation is, then that's what we'll do.
And the chairman said, is there a motion? Mr. Mudd says, I can't
make a motion. Commissioner Fiala, says, yeah, I'll make a motion
that we go out to bid for the purchases that are coming up until you
have a settlement or conclusion from a local contractor who -- or, I'm
sorry. You called him local contractor -- but then give you
recommendations as to how we proceed with the purchasing of the
furniture.
Now, the actual motion came on the next page in the minutes.
That statement was made, and then on -- if you look at 226 now,
again, pick up where Mr. Mudd's talking. What I'm basically saying is
put HON in the mix, okay, and go to the third -- the third vendor
beyond the state contract and then bid them out, and then you've got
all three coming in and we'll use state contract to determine the lowest
bidder and quality, and we'll come back to the board and tell you what
we find.
And then if you look right beyond that, Commissioner Fiala says,
well, there's nothing fairer than that, so I would make a motion to do
exactly that. "I will second the motion." Chairman Henning.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. So you feel that you put HON
in the mix?
MR. CARNELL: That's correct. We gave them a chance to
compete on qualifications up front with everybody else.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, that wasn't my understanding. I
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thought we'd have something in our agenda packet saying, okay,
here's HON's price. But -- any discussion, further discussion?
I've got a motion and a second on the floor. All in favor of the
motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
Aye.
Motion carries 4-1, Commissioner Henning dissenting.
We have a 4:30 time certain.
Item #14A
FOR THE COLLIER COUNTY COMMUNITY
REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY BOARD TO GIVE DIRECTION
TO THE BA YSHORE GA TEW A Y TRIANGLE CRA EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR CONCERNING THREE PROPOSED PURCHASE
CONTRACTS FOR MULTIPLE REAL ESTATE PARCELS
WITHIN THE BA YSHORE DRIVE AND GATEWAY TRIANGLE
PORTIONS OF THE CRA AREA - MOTION TO BRING BACK
CONTRACTS FOR REVIEW - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, and that is 14A. It's for the -- for the
Collier County Community Redevelopment Agency Board to give
direction to the Bayshore Gateway Triangle CRA executive director
concerning three proposed purchase contracts for multiple real estate
parcels within the Bayshore Drive and Gateway Triangle portions of
the CRA areas.
Mr. David Jackson, your Executive Director of the Bayshore
Gateway Triangle CRA, will present.
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December 16, 2008
David?
MR. JACKSON: Point of order. Need to switch the gavel to the
CRA board.
MR. MUDD: Thank you, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. We need to table the BCC
meeting and open up the CRA meeting. So table the BCC. You do
what you do.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: CRA board is now open.
MR. JACKSON: Thank you, Madam Chairman. David Jackson,
Executive Director of Bayshore Gateway Triangle CRA, the CRA
component of it.
At the last meeting I was given guidance to go out and advertise
for up to a $20 million line of credit for the CRA, and that has been
advertised. We're waiting for results to come back in on it. Also was
given guidance to go out and see if there was other properties that
would be of interest that met the redevelopment plan and bring them
back to the board. I'm bringing that back to the board today.
With me I have also Mr. Lindsey Thomas, the advisory board
chairman here, who may wish to speak later on, and also Mr. Hal
Cannery (phonetic) from PFM from financial management ifthere's
any questions involving that.
So I'm here to receive your guidance.
I would like to give you a little bit of background other than
what's in your packages there; that way you can make an informed
decision, and I will be brief.
Up on your visualizer there on your scope, you'll see that there's
a CRA boundary, and there's two sites that we're looking at presently.
And the sites in the red one is up in the Davis triangle area. And,
Commissioner Fiala, that's in your district. And the yellow area is
down in the Bayshore Drive area. Commissioner Coyle, that's in your
district.
Looking at the one down in the Bayshore district area there, you
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December 16, 2008
can see on the map in the headings the location. The CRA currently
owns 18 acres off of Bayshore Drive, and you can see that there's a
cutout parcel in it. And this is the site that is the subject, and we've
been looking at it for over two years.
Here's a drill down into the aerial, and you'll see the 18-acre site
owned by the CRA. That pretty much borders about 10 acres of
uplands with about 8 acres of water, and it's around Lake Kelly.
If we acquire this site, it will then give us about 820 feet of road
frontage, which makes it very attractive to a developer at that point
without the cutout parcel, and this has been identified, as is shown in
your packages, as a catalyst project location.
In 2006, we offered to buy the property from a man. It was
appraised at 1.2 million. We had it appraised this October, and it --
because of the economy and the land values decreasing, it's valued
now at 660,000.
Pressing on. I'm going to go back up to the Davis triangle. And
again, just to give you the lay of the land. The area that we're going to
be looking at -- this is Commissioner Coyle's district. This is
Commissioner Fiala's district, and this is the location of the site. It's
right at the point there. So you can see where that -- the site that we'll
be looking at.
This is a visual -- this is an aerial taken from overhead, the City
of Naples looking to the west, and this is the triangle area. It's called
the mini-triangle that we're looking it. It's about 14 acres of site
development.
Give you another perspective of the location. You're now over
what would be about the Gate -- Gulf Gate Plaza area, right at the
intersection of Bayshore and u.s. 41, looking out over the site.
You can see the triangle is the dotted area, and there's two subject
parcels in there. The red one and the blue one. And you can see the
development that's happened on the other side of the City of Naples
city line in that, and the airport to the north.
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Drilling down, we take a look at the site. You can take a look at
it, this 14-acre site. You don't see much on it, okay. A lot of parking
lot, a lot of older buildings. And I'm going to tell you why it's a
focused interest in it. This graphic here, if you'll look at it, it's two
colors. The color is the light green and the color is the light gray.
The light green is where the property value is greater than the
value of the improvements that are on the land. The gray areas is
where it's just reverse. The improvements are greater than the land
value.
Over time that's the way things happened, and I'll point this out
later. The things that are on this land don't -- aren't very -- great value.
They were built in '60s, '70s, and '80s.
So we'll go back to the aerial here, and the first site is -- if you
remember back January of2007, we worked with -- the Burger King
site's 1.6 acres. Back then it was appraised at 3.5 million. We had it
under contract. Strand case came into effect. It's now been appraised
this October at 2.55 million, a million dollars less. You can see its
location.
Due to the Land Development Code -- that site is pretty small --
you could not building anything to get a return on value on that site
because of the restrictions the Land Development Code put on it.
You'd probably have to acquire the light green parcel also with the old
Bob Taylor Chevrolet in order to get enough land and massing and
cost to be able to build something that would give return to value on
an investor or developer.
The only building on the blue site is the old Burger King
building, about 6,000 square feet.
The parcel directly to the east and bordered in red has been
assembled by a family. It's seven parcels, about 6.29 acres. And in
that parcel there, there is, again, multiple pieces that the man was
going to assemble in 2005. The economy changed. He stopped the
property assembly and sat on it and since then is trying to recoup his --
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December 16, 2008
enough money to pay his debt service on it.
This is the buildings that are on there. These buildings are old
prefab metal buildings. They don't have great value, pretty much
knockdown, but they served their useful purpose, and that's why the
land is of greater value than the property.
Looking at it from a total site of this acreage here, 6.29, you can
see how much it takes up of the 14 acres. Of the thing -- to look at it,
if it -- why it's important to us is because of the economy and the man
that owns it right now. He's had two offers to divide the property back
up into seven parcels again.
The first parcel is a cell tower. The cell tower's owned by
AT&T. They're renting the space and the land. Makes economic
sense to buy the land. And I tell you what, if an A TT or cell tower
owns the land, they're never moving. They're going to be there
forever, okay.
The other parcel's a man that's currently renting the Bob Taylor
Chevrolet. He's found out through economics, return on investment,
that if he buys that land, he gets better investment out of it than renting
it for the next 15,20 years to run his business.
So if you look at the Burger King and you bought it alone and
didn't pay attention to the red sectors, you have two parcels right in the
middle that are going to be gone, okay. Then you'll never be able to
assemble it for a very long time.
So the thing to look at is, if you think the mini-triangle's
important to you as a CRA board, if you think it's important to the
redevelopment and creating a higher tax base and putting
higher-quality development after many years, you need to look at all
7.95 acres as assembled, and then you can see with the white dotted
line around it that it is a significant portion of it there.
Now, the CRA doesn't have enough funds to go out and buy all
14 acres. We just don't have it. So we -- I wanted to lead you down a
thinking path here for you to make an informed decision.
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December 16, 2008
The catalyst project, there's three -- the first four things in there
are centrally located, zoned properly, got an overlay district, and 168
residential density. The thing that needs to be done is these three
things. We're at the nexus now to decide to do something or decide to
do nothing, okay? And there is a risk involved with both and there's a
recourse involved with both of them.
So when you look at it, if we can assemble it, find an end user
and get some specific needs for that 14 acres, there's four different
things that you possibly could find on it.
Right now, what is needed to bring the developer/investor in is
zoning, permits, impact fees, enterprise initiatives from the EDC
brown fields designation, government participation. And the thing is
that if you don't bring these on board, it is what it is.
And without the above, it will stay what it is for a long time, and
that's a conscious decision that needs to be made by the CRA board if
you want to leave it as it is or do something different.
So going back to the parcel there, if you look at it, he says, well,
what about the people on the perimeter? Well, if you look at what's
happening here, is these people have talked to us in one form or
another over the last two years of either saying, I will sell, I will
contribute my land or my building in some force to be part of the
development, or I will relocate, and that's what we would do if we got
together and put enough incentives in the right package in this location
to make it happen.
Here's a view of what was -- something would have if you had a
multi-story building there of some form. But one of the things that we
sell every day in Collier County, it's a great place to live, okay.
So if you take a look at it, several things. Goals. CRA, we're
supposed to stimulate investment. We need to position ourself to
market ourselves when the market recovers.
What is our desired outcome? Spend money to get involvement
or provide significant incentives to get private investment. What are
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December 16, 2008
your options?
Invest in public infrastructure throughout the CRA, land bank for
the future redevelopment, or do both. So some things for you to
consider.
Now, quickly I'm going to go through an analogy here, sports
analogy. There's three participants in a football game. There's the
crowd, there's the coach standing on the sideline, and there's the
players.
If we do nothing, we're in the crowd. You're sitting there all
alone, and you're just watching, and you'll hope things will happen.
If you'll be the coach, you're on the sideline, you're the regulator,
and you try to regulate what goes on there, but it's privately owned by
a private person, and they can do what they want with their property
rights. Your only control is the Land Development Code, fees, and
permits.
Or you can be the players. And if you are the player, you have
the controls. When you own it, you control it, you control the
intensity, the density, and the design, and the end-user.
So I'm going to summarize. The Bayshore property, $660,000.
In the mini-triangle, you have the Burger King. Right now, I've talked
with the owner. The owner is willing to accept an offer. He hasn't
given me a price. It is appraised at 2.55.
The Coradi property, 6.29 acres. You purchase it for 9.5 million.
Currently appraised at 9.7 million as is. He's willing to take a 2.5
million hit to give it up if the CRA buys it as a package. Basically, it's
appraised at $35 a square foot. We would get it at $27 a square foot.
The good thing about it though is it currently has leases. It brings
him about $440,000 in leases each year to help service the debt.
Okay. eRA loan debt, if we absorb the $6-million line of credit
with the new line of credit and you did do the math at the bottom
there, those are estimates. We don't know what the bid is that's
coming in on it. You'll end up with some money to service the debt.
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December 16, 2008
It will be about 300,000 to 500,000 a year annual to service that debt
to make a go from there.
So that's where we're at. The choice is up to the CRA board on
where you want to go. I'm here for your direction. We have three
parcels, or we have three owners offering us multiple parcels, and
where do you want to go with it, what do you feel is most a priority.
Before you speak, I will give you my priorities. First is go for
the red one because it's the biggest one, it's in the middle; go for the
Burger King second; and the one on Bayshore go for third. And I
don't know what the answer will be when we get the contracts out to
them.
I'm here for your guidance.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Commissioner Henning?
COMMISSIONER HENNING: The CRA district, what kind of
debt can it encumber in service?
MR. JACKSON: The financial manager's looked at our debt
service numbers, and they feel we can handle up to $20 million. If we
take all $20 million in debt service, that really limits and restricts how
much work we do in infrastructure and other programs. It will be -- it
will be a thing, Commissioner, we'll have to stay within our budget,
and we'll budget accordingly. The first thing taken off the top is the
debt service, and then if we get personnel and also into other
infrastructure improvements.
How much can we handle? Finan- -- Hal Cannary's here -- is
here if you want to have him speak to that subject on how much we
can handle.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Are you saying we can do a $20
million debt service and still keep you employed and your staff?
MR. JACKSON: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay. You just -- your
flexibility goes away. What was the advisory board's
recommendation?
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December 16,2008
MR. JACKSON: The advisory board in 2006 recommended we
go up to the Shadley property on Bayshore Drive as part of that
catalyst project. We've been working that for two years.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: That's kind of changed. What --
MR. JACKSON: For the mini-triangle, the advisory board has
given unanimous approval to go after the Burger King and the red
properties -- the blue and red properties in the triangle. And they did
that on December 2nd.
MR. MUDD: And the red property is Caradi's?
MR. JACKSON: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: And the Bayshore property, did
you broach that topic?
MR. JACKSON: That is an ongoing discussion with the
advisory board, and they know that we've been trying to work on that.
And I give them monthly reports on my discussions with the Shadley
family.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
MR. JACKSON: It's a family trust, and there are some health
issues with the patriarch, and they're working through that. And right
now it looks like the children are beginning to get control of that, and
that's why the discussions are finally coming to a decision point.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
MR. JACKSON: So all three -- all three parcel -- all three
properties of multiple parcels are still on the advisory board's radar
scope to acquire.
eOMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, I'm not sitting as a BCC
member, but I know as BCC member our limitations to assist in any
endeavors. In my opinion, if the CRA can handle a debt like that, I
don't have a problem with it.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. David, don't you have
something that says, here's my current debt, here's how much debt I
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December 16, 2008
would incur if! buy these properties, and here's how much remaining
borrowing power I will have, and here's how much I'll get from
leasing the property that I've purchased? You know, don't you have
something, you know, that sort of nets this out for everybody, so we
can see exactly what we're talking about?
MR. JACKSON: I apologize, sir. No, I do not, not at this
moment, but I can get that for you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: All right. Let's walk through it
then. We've got to get through it at this meeting or you're going to be
talking about another month delay. How much debt do you have right
now?
MR. JACKSON: Six million.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You've got 6 million in debt?
MR. JACKSON: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: How much can you handle total?
How much debt can you actually handle and service a debt?
MR. JACKSON: Twenty.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Twenty million?
MR. JACKSON: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. JACKSON: Our revenue stream is 2 million, and subtract
personnel from that, operating and capital and the debt service, and we
would have, you know, a minimum amount in reserves. The pro
forma numbers that I'm looking at is a -- on a full 20 million line of
credit.
We really don't want to do that. We want to bring it to about 17-.
It's about $900,000 a year for principal and interest.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. You're mixing up too many
things for us to follow. Let's take it one step at a time.
You've got $20 million -- you're capable of servicing $20 million
of debt. You currently have $6 million of debt already. That leaves
you with $14 million.
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December 16, 2008
MR. JACKSON: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: If you buy the Caradi property and
the Burger King property, you're talking about --
MR. JACKSON: 10.1 million.
MR. MUDD: Ten million, you take -- subtract 10 from the 14,
you still have just a little less than 4 million.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. So that leaves you 4 million
of additional debt service, okay. So if you wanted to go to the other
property on Bayshore Drive, how much is that going to cost you?
MR. JACKSON: 650,000.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. So you're still looking at
300 -- $3.4 million. And you're going to get $400,000 in cash flow if
you purchase the Caradi property; is that correct?
MR. JACKSON: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And you're already getting $2
million, did I hear you say --
MR. JACKSON: That is our--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- revenue?
MR. JACKSON: That's our annual TIF.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay, all right. So it appears --
and I'd like someone to verify the conclusion I'm about to draw here.
It appears you can afford to spend that kind of money on this property
and service the debt without any difficulties.
Under those circumstances, this is very much like the marina
property that we talked about earlier today. It's a perfect time to buy it
if we've got the money to buy it, because the price is lower. Ifwe wait
until the market turns around, we might lose some of this property, in
which case this golden opportunity will probably disappear forever.
So I would agree with you that we should proceed with
purchasing the property in the mini-triangle first, and then we begin to
look at the property along Bayshore Drive once we've sorted out how
much the first purchase is going to cost us, and we'll just reassess our
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December 16, 2008
financial position at that point in time. And I think the timing is
probably pretty right for it to happen in that sequence.
But I agree with your conclusions. I think it's a good strategy,
and it will be a wonderful benefit for the community.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: You know, it sounded like you were
making a motion in there.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I will make a motion for approval.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I'll second it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And -- yeah, that you come back to
us with --
MR. JACKSON: With contracts.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- with contracts at least 30 percent
below what you're suggesting.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: I have a motion on the floor by
Commissioner Coyle and a second, but I have a speaker.
MR. THOMPSON: I'll waive.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Waive?
MR. THOMPSON: Everything's been said.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Very good, very good. Any other
comments?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Excellent motion, excellent. Thank you.
All those in favor, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: (Absent.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Opposed, like sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: And with that, I'll close the CRA meeting
and open back up the BCC meeting.
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December 16, 2008
And we move on to?
Item #100
RECOMMENDATION THAT BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS APPROVES OPTION #3 AND TAKES NO
ACTION ON PUBLIC PETITIONER'S REQUEST TO CHANGE
ALLOWABLE USES IN THE RANDALL BOULEVARD
COMMERCIAL SUB-DISTRICT WITHIN THE GOLDEN GATE
AREA MASTER PLAN AND THE MIR MAR PUD - MOTION TO
REISSUE THE APRIL 18,2008 ZONING VERIFICATION
LETTER AND PROPERTY OWNERS TO BE NOTIFIED BY
RWA REGARDING AN APPEAL HEARING - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, that brings us to -- that brings us to
our five o'clock, okay, because -- I have a lot of people waiting for gas
and energy, but you've got a five o'clock that -- but I don't think you're
going to get to finish.
So five o'clock is 100. 100 is a recommendation that the Board
of County Commissioners approves Option 3 and takes no action on
public petition request to change allowable uses in the Randall
Boulevard subdistrict within the Golden Gate Area Master Plan and
the Mir Mar PUD.
This item was requested to be moved from the consent to the
regular agenda by Commissioner Coletta.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Before we go any further, Terri, do
you need a break?
THE COURT REPORTER: After this.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, it might be a break until
tomorrow.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: This shouldn't take that long,
should it?
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I don't know.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: It could take an hour and a half.
Just joshin'.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Let's go.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Put him on the clock.
MR. WEEKS: Commissioner, I'm David Weeks of your
Comprehensive Planning staff. This is a presentation today as a
follow-up to your November 14th public petition item regarding the
allowable uses in the Randall Boulevard commercial subdistrict within
the Golden Gate Area Master Plan and also the Mir Mar PUD, which
is one of the two PUDs that comprises that subdistrict.
Specifically the discussion on the public petition was, how can
the uses be expanded? How can additional uses be allowed in that
Randall Boulevard commercial subdistrict? Also, there was a
question about a zoning verification letter that had been issued to the
property owner earlier this year in which 16 uses were referenced,
whereas the subdistrict has a total of 13 uses identified.
And I think it will be helpful to have some background,
Commissioners. I'll be as brief as I can. And let me start with that
discrepancy and put that aside. The reason staff has identified a
longer list of uses than was identified in the subdistrict in the Golden
Gate Master Plan is because some of those uses listed in the master
plan actually are comprised of multiple use.
In the executive summary I give an example where one of the
listings is shoe repair, TV repair, and so forth. Well, shoe repair is
distinctly different from those types of appliances. That will be
viewed as a separate use. So that one alone comes from one uses to
two. That's where the discrepancy comes from.
As I said earlier, there are two PUDs that comprise this
subdistrict, the Mir Mar PUD, which the public petitioner has interest
in, and the Randall Boulevard Center PUD. Let's start with the --
again, briefly, some history.
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December 16, 2008
The Randall Boulevard Center PUD was approved first before
there ever was a subdistrict on this property. It was approved in
accordance with the 1983 Comprehensive Plan. And at that time that
plan limited the uses to convenience/commercial type uses. It's a
limited use.
In 1989 when the county adopted the present Growth
Management Plan, the same list of so-called 13 uses that were
approved in that PUD were carried over into the subdistrict and to the
Growth Management Plan. That is how we ended up with such a very
specific list of land uses which is unique in the Golden Gate Master
Plan. Even the neighborhood centers, which have a lot of specificity,
do not have this level, this zoning level of a list of allowable uses.
The Mir Mar PUD was approved a few years after the Randall
Boulevard based upon the same subdistrict that had that same list of
specific uses identified in the master plan. So those very same uses
got listed, with one exception. On the entry that says office uses,
professional offices, it also specifically stated, including branch banks.
I could only conclude that the board at that time determined that a
bank was a type of professional office. I can tell you that today staff
would not view it that way, but nonetheless that occurred back then.
And on Page 3 of your executive summary for this item, I've
listed a table that shows you the list of uses in the subdistrict and each
of those two respective PUDs. So you can see for yourself how they
are identical with the exception of the branch banks.
Another exception, which is not really relevant, is the fact that
the Randall Boulevard CUD -- PUD mentions a 25,000-square-foot
limitation that is not included within the Mir Mar PUD.
I will also tell you that, going back to the Randall Boulevard
eenter PUD, when it was approved in ] 986, not only was -- were we
dealing with a different Comprehensive Plan, but also the zoning
ordinance at that time listed a shopping center as a use. Today we
don't treat it that way in the zoning code. It is a type of structure with
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December 16, 2008
a certain number of units and/or a certain square footage.
But at that time it was listed in the C2, 3,4 and 5 zoning districts.
Shopping center was listed as a use. And the types of uses allowed in
the shopping center would only be those uses found within the zoning
district in which the shopping center was listed.
For example, if you're in the C3 zoning district, your property is
zoned C3. You want to develop a shopping center, you could only
develop C3 uses in that shopping center. You can't jump over and
grab a C5 use and put it in your shopping center. So it was in
alignment.
The same thing for that Mir Mar PUD. Shopping center is listed
as an -- allowable uses, but the only uses allowed there are those uses
listed in the PUD. There's no ability to reach out and go to some other
zoning district, grab a use, and place it within that shopping center.
I think that's important because shopping center is -- it's unusual
to see it listed this way as a use. But that is based on past practice in
the former zoning ordinance.
Commissioners, there's a few options here, one of which would
be for the property owner to -- excuse me -- for you to direct staff to
issue to the property owner another zoning verification letter, just as
occurred earlier this year.
Why would you do that? Well, if you chose to do that, that
would allow the property owner to have a time period in which they
could file an appeal to that determination, which would come before
you as the Board of Zoning Appeals.
Another option, of course, is you could direct staff to initiate an
amendment to the Growth Management Plan to broaden the list of
uses. That is a more comprehensive approach. Any amendment to the
Comprehensive Plan or Growth Management Plan will be a more
comprehensive approach, because that is the ability to add many uses
to the subdistrict, whereas, the official zoning letter, the zoning letter
verification letter, is key towards a specific use or uses.
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December 16, 2008
Similarly, the property owner could file for an official
interpretation, an 01, which, again, would be subject to appeal to you
as the Board of Zoning Appeals. But that, again, is tailored towards a
use or few uses as opposed to an amendment where we open up the
entire subdistrict and potentially could add a lot of uses to it.
Another option the board could take though is to take no action,
and that is the action that staff recommends to you. There are
processes in place, including that official interpretation or the
applicant. The property owner could file for a GMP amendment to
change those list of uses.
As far as the fiscal impact goes, Commissioners, going this
process where the property owner went to the public petition and then
you directed staff to bring this back to you, we've estimated an
expense of approximately $1,200 to date. That's due to the necessary
research and prepare this executive summary to bring to you today.
A Growth Management Plan amendment is expensive and it's
time consuming, but that is, again, the most comprehensive approach.
And I think for the property owner, if they want to put this issue aside
once and for all, broaden the list of uses, that is the best approach, and
that would have to be followed by a subsequent amendment to the
PUD to also add additional uses.
Again, staffs recommendation is that you take no action.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. That's it. Questions?
Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'd like to hear the attorney for
the petitioner or the -- excuse me, in this case --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I don't think he's been demoted.
MR. NADEAU: Mr. Yovanovich might take offense.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No offense.
MR. NADEAU: I approach you with a little bit of material that
may help you --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Good fan.
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December 16, 2008
MR. NADEAU: There you go.
For the record, my name is Dwight Nadeau. I'm Planning
Manager for R W A. I'm representing Pack of Collier, the owner of the
Mir Mar PUD, Armando and Maria Cabrera.
I think staff did a very good job with their $1,200. They did
some very accurate research. The '83 adoption of the Randall
Boulevard PUD did provide for convenience stores as well as gas
stations, and the lowest order level of goods and services. It's
important to understand the term goods and services. Services could
be more like professional services. Goods being that which you
would buyout of your convenience store or out of a shoe shore, those
land uses that are provided for in the Mir Mar PUD.
Your staff report does go along and say that the Mir Mar PUD
was adopted in 1998, and it was found consistent with the Growth
Management Plan at that time.
David already explained how shopping centers were associated
with the zoning districts in which a shopping center land use was
permitted.
The staff report does -- or excuse me. The executive summary
on Page 4 provides you an opportunity, Commissioners. It says in the
middle of the first paragraph on Page 4, conceivably the uses from the
C 1 through C3 zoning districts could be allowed similar to the
neighborhood center subdistrict in the Golden Gate Area Master plan.
Well, as you heard in Mr. Weeks' presentation, he was telling
you what has occurred in the past. He's saying that we had a Randall
Boulevard commercial subdistrict adopted at the same time as the
neighborhood centers within the Golden Gate Area Master Plan as a
part of that adoption.
Well, the neighborhood centers were basically serving the same
service area, two to three miles, and they were providing for those
range of uses in the C 1 through C3 land use categories, zoning
districts.
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December 16, 2008
Well, here we are 25 years after the Mir Mar P- -- after the
Randall Center PUD has been adopted, and things have changed in
our community. Maybe it's that the Randall Boulevard Commercial
Center subdistrict is functioning like a neighborhood center, and with
this opportunity provided for in your executive summary, you may
want to consider that.
You may want to make a policy statement and say that it's our
opinion today that the Randall Boulevard commercial district is so
similar to a neighborhood center that it should be afforded the same
range of uses, Cl through C3.
Well, now there could be some concern about what is permitted
in Cl through C3, thus I gave you this document. And you can see
here that the C2 district is intended to implement neighborhood center
district of the Golden Gate Area Master Plan. You can also see that
the commercial intermediate C3 district is that area -- are those land
uses which you typically would see in a shopping center.
Well, if we take a look at the criteria on the next page of my
handout, it says, the criteria for neighborhood centers are as follows:
Commercial uses shall be limited to intermediate commercial to
provide a wider variety of goods. These uses shall be similar to C2
and C3 zoning districts outlined in the Land Development Code.
Are there concerns about what the land uses are in C2 and C3?
I've provided them for you in a form that's easy to read. Our current
Land Development Code, 04-55, as amended, puts it in table form,
and it's not that easy for you to read.
This is in a listing form. I've gone through these land uses in C2
and C3. C2, many of the uses that are in C2 are already permitted in
the Mir Mar PUD and the Randall Boulevard commercial subdistrict,
including apparel stores, with some limitations.
The C3 land uses still provide for convenience stores and gas
stations, but it has restaurants similar to what's permitted in the Mir
Mar PUD. It's permitted to have general merchandise stores.
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December 16, 2008
Now, group care facility, probably not. It's a 2.38-acre site. The
site itself would preclude that type ofland use. Hardware stores are
already permitted in the Mir Mar PUD.
Your C3 uses, you might have some automotive service, but
you're already allowed to have automotive gas stations. You're
allowed to have veterinary clinics but no outside -- no outside
kenneling is permitted. So we could -- we can basically say that we're
not going to be impacting the neighbors with barking dogs and --
barking dogs. Cats don't bark.
So with this, Commissioners, on behalf of the property owner,
we'd like to be brought up to date. And given the limited amount of
resources that this landowner has, we'd like to be brought up to date
with some simple measures and policy statements by this board this
evening, and that would be that you consider or view the Randall
Boulevard commercial subdistrict and the Mir Mar PUD as a
neighborhood center, and they should be permitted to have -- and be
afforded to have the land uses in the C 1 through C3 zoning districts.
And this can be accomplished without having to amend the PUD.
We could put a note on the zoning map and say, by adoption or policy,
potentially by resolution, the board has determined that Mir Mar
PUD's allowed to have Cl through C3 uses.
And in the next cycle of -- or in a cycle of your choosing, you
could amend the Golden Gate Area Master Plan to add a note to the
Randall Boulevard commercial subdistrict that says it's being treated
as a neighborhood center, or you could even redesignate that as a
neighborhood center and have the C 1 through C3 land uses provided
for in that area, and we wouldn't have to make any global changes to
the document. I offer you -- offer myself up for questions.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I want to go to Commissioner Coyle,
then Commissioner Coletta, and then Commissioner --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Mr. Chairman, it seems to me that
we had a similar request earlier today where we were being asked by
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Mr. Hancock to make a policy decision that would shortcut this
process, and it was the decision of the majority of the board that there
is an established process for accomplishing these changes and you
have to go through that process.
Now, whether I agree with it or not is irrelevant. The point is, we
need to treat people essentially the same.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yep.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You can't refuse one person the
right to make a -- you can't refuse them the expectation to have the
Collier County Commission make a policy statement concerning our
Growth Management Plan intent and then later in the day grant the
very same thing to another petitioner.
So I don't see how we can, in all fairness, proceed with this other
than to accept the staffs recommendation of item -- alternative three.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes, thank you. There's a vast
difference between earlier this morning and what we see before us
now, and I'm very familiar with the history. I've shared the original
master plan that put this togeth- -- put together a lot of the rules and
regulations that go throughout that area. And I can tell you it was
never the intention of the group at that time to become so restrictive as
far as uses go.
This is an existing commercial area. The one we looked at
earlier, if we remember correctly, was an open space for an infill;
completely different.
What we're looking at is adding some uses here that would be --
fall right in lines with the neighborhood.
What I would suggest and what I'd like to see done as a matter of
policy, have this brought back at the next meeting with -- bringing this
up to what you're allowed to do up to C3. At that point in time, it can
be advertised, get the public's input at the meeting, and we'll also be
able to view all the uses for C2 and C3 to make sure they're really
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December 16, 2008
conducive to what takes place.
But let's try to simplify this. Let's -- it's getting to be so
convoluted that it's unreal. Okay.
And Mr. Klatzkow, help me with this so that we can get this
done.
MR. KLA TZKOW: Okay. I'm not entirely sure what it is that
you want. You want us to come back at the next meeting with a
public meeting for C3 zoning; is that it?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: To be able to recognize the fact
that this is -- this should be allowed to be declared C3 zoning in place
of what it has now for some very limited uses, which makes absolutely
no sense.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. I'm not sure, Commissioner --
if you don't mind. I'm not sure if that statement is true. If you -- and I
remember that, you were on the original committee. And I remember
going to a couple meetings. I figured, I don't want to get involved if
Jim Coletta's involved. Just kidding.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Merry Christmas.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: What -- a shopping center is not a
use. A shopping center is a business or is a building where you put the
uses on. So why or what was the intent to put shopping centers in a
use?
Now, Mr. Weeks said, used to -- if you were designated a
shopping center, you had particular uses in the '83 Land Development
Code -- if I'm saying that right, David. Is that a summarize (sic) of
what was done in the '80s?
MR. WEEKS: You're off by one year, but otherwise correct.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. It was what, '82?
MR. WEEKS: '82 zoning ordinance, yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. And I have one of those in my
office. So if the intent was to have those uses in the shopping center
and it was identified in the Golden Gate Area Master Plan but never
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December 16, 2008
caried over to the Land Development Code, that's where the mistake
came m.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. The master plan
recognized the fact that these uses were needed.
MR. KLATZKOW: If! may -- because my office has done
research on this a month ago, all right, in preparation for the initial
public (sic).
To get back at what Commissioner Coletta was getting at, I think
we should bring this back, okay. And I happen to think C2 zoning is
the correct zoning on this one based on the old codes, all right.
But we have a mechanism to do this, and that would be Option 1,
which is that the zoning verification letter gets reissued. The applicant
can then appeal it. Necessary notices can go out to the adjacent
property owners so their voice can be heard. They may be in
opposition. I don't know, all right. And then Mr. Nadeau can come
forward with his review of this, our office will come forward with our
review of this, and then it will be a matter for the board to interpret
what it is that the code says and what it is that the Comprehensive
Plan says, and we'll have the dually advertised public meeting. Any
decision of the board, in my opinion at that time, would be upheld.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Could I just add
something to that and finish up? Yeah, I -- Jeff, I think we're close to
where we need to go. We're talking about a time element. We're
talking about cost.
What I would suggest, that we limit the actual cost related to the
required advertising and the notices that have to go out, and that might
get us to a point we need to be. What kind of a time element are we
looking at?
MR. WEEKS: Mr. Chairman, may I interject, please? For a
zoning verification letter, which is option one, there is no notice
requirement involved. That's strictly a communication between the
applicant and staff.
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~.------"--_.._.-->...~_..-.-".__._----
December 16, 2008
The official interpretation request, which can then be appealed,
that's the process that includes public notice.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Why not reissue the letter of
April 18, 2008, just reissue that letter --
MR. WEEKS: That could be done and appealed, but I'm saying
that there's no noti- -- the only notification process is that letter going
to the person that's requesting it. No surrounding properties are
notified. No type of public notice of any type. That's a totally
different process than the official interpretation process.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, what I'd like to do -- let
me try to cut to the chase so we can get to the discussion.
Make a motion to direct staff to reissue the April 18, 2008,
zoning verification letter and if appealed by the applicant, which, of
course, it will happen, that the county attorney review the appeal and
issue an opinion as the permitted use ofMir Mar PUD, and that
applicant's cost be limited to the actual cost related to the required
advertising and notice.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: I'll second the motion.
MR. KLATZKOW: And ifthere is no required advertising,
we're done.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Well, you heard the motion
and the second. So if there is any cost in advertising, then they're to
be the actual cost.
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Are we saying we're going to make
this change without a public hearing?
MR. KLATZKOW: There will be a public hearing. It's going to
come back to the board.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It will be advertised to the adjacent
property owners and there will be a public hearing.
MR. KLA TZKOW: I think it should be advertised, and I think
there should be a public hearing, yes.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But did Commissioner Coletta's
motion do that?
MR. KLATZKOW: I think it does, yes.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Now, explain to me how that is
different than what we refused to do earlier today, or is it the same
thing?
MR. KLATZKOW: I think it's pretty much the same thing what
you did earlier today. I think you're being consistent.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's what I'm concerned about,
because what we did earlier today is exactly the same thing as we're
trying to do here. So if we're being consistent, I'm okay with it, but if
we're not being consistent, I'm not okay with it.
MR. KLATZKOW: I think you're consistent.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I need a clear answer.
MR. KLA TZKOW: I think you're consistent.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MS. ISTENES: I disagree, respectfully.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Hang on, hang on, hang on. Hang on.
One at a time. Commissioner Coyle has the floor.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Well, tell me -- tell me what
you disagree with then?
MS. ISTENES: The -- my understanding of the action you took
this morning was the applicant was directed to do an official
interpretation. With that process, you have a required notification,
both a publication in the newspaper and a required mail-out to
surrounding property owners of a stated distance in the code.
With a zoning verification letter, which is what the motion maker
suggested now, there is no requirement in the LDC for public
notification.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And that was the zoning
notification letter of 1982?
MS. ISTENES: No.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's what the --
MR. MUDD: The zoning verification letter was an attach- -- was
attached and it was dated -- and it would be dated -- the draft letter
would be dated December 16, 2008.
MR. SCHMITT: Page 7.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Wait a minute. Commissioner
Coletta specifically said, reissue the zoning notification letter of 198-
what --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: No, I did not.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: No, he didn't.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: April 18, 2008.
MR. MUDD: 2008.
MS. ISTENES: The reissuance will then start the clock for the
30-day appeal process, which is why we're suggesting it be reissued,
because that 30 days has expired.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MS. ISTENES: So it will give the ability of the applicant to
appeal if they wish.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Are you talking about issuing a
zoning verification letter or reissuing a zoning notice?
MS. ISTENES: Reissuing the zoning verification letter that was
previously issued.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And then that will prompt a public
advertisement and a public hearing.
MS. ISTENES: There will be a -- if the applicant files an
application for an appeal, the appeal itself will be notified -- noticed in
the newspaper, but the -- there will be no -- similar to what you do in a
rezoning, there will be no mail-outs to surrounding property owners.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: See, I'm not buying that. You
know, I think we've got to do that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. Would you buy it if!
include that in my motion that the immediate property owners be
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December 16, 2008
notified?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: If we're going through the full
process of notifying property owners and having a public hearing and
the costs are going to be paid for by the petitioner. Is all that true?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, I'm sorry. Let me -- the
motion that I made was pretty simple. It was to try to simplify the
process but still have due process in it.
Adding the particular about notification out there, I think that's
something that we could do, but I --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Now Mr. Nadeau, from what I
understand, is saying they will notify the abutting neighbors.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, you know, once -- and I'm
not finished yet. You know, on several occasions today
Commissioner Coletta has said, I'm concerned about making sure that
the public gets notice and that there are public hearings.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Now, what we're describing
here, unless we go a little further, will shortcut that process. I want to
make sure that we're not shortcutting it.
So please tell me what steps we have to take and what sequence
we have to take them in, in order to assure that there is a full and
complete notification of property owners and the public so we can
have a public hearing on this issue.
MS. ISTENES: There's two options -- well, probably three. But
I'm going to state the two that are clearly stated in your code, because
what we're attempting to do is create a hybrid here that's not stated in
the code.
So the two options that are stated in your code would be the
official interpretation process whereby the applicant pays a fee,
submits an application, the application is analyzed, a response is
provided, and then the property -- surrounding property owners are
notified of the response and the ability to file an appeal, as well as an
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December 16, 2008
advertisement is placed in the Naples Daily News with the ability to
file for an appeal, and that ability lasts for 30 days from the date of the
last advertisement, which I usually count as the newspaper ad. That's
usually the last. That's one option.
The other option is to do the -- what staff recommended was
basically that the applicant can come in and amend the Growth
Management Plan and rezone the PUD. Both of those are public
hearing processes that are dually notified.
MR. KLA TZKOW: Your staff option in your executive
summary was to reissue the April 18th zoning verification letter. If
the only issue is notice, would the petitioner be willing to send out
written letters to the adjacent property owners in the same manner as
MS. ISTENES: He said he would, but -- yeah, but I just want to
make sure that we're, again, attempting to create the hybrid process
here that doesn't exist, and I think I'm reading that as your concern.
So that's all I needed to say about that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah, okay. I've got it. I
understand.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Commissioner Halas?
MR. NADEAU: If! may put it on the record. Again, Dwight
Nadeau. The applicant is more than willing to send out property
owner notification letters, and we have no objection to paying for the
advertisement in the Naples Daily News.
We know that there is a $1,000 fee that's associated with the
appeal of the zoning verification letter. So that would be $1,000 out
of my client's pocket, the cost to prepare and mail the letters, as well
as to pay for the newspaper ad. It will be properly public noticed.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah. And I think what we
discussed this morning -- and correct me if I'm wrong -- but we talked
to the point to where this may have to go before the Planning
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December 16, 2008
Commission.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, a -- no. A notice -- an official
interpretation --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Right.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: -- does not go to the Planning
Commission.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: No, but if the -- in respect to what
took place this morning was that there was -- you'd almost have to
have a GMP amendment in regards to addressing this particular issue;
am I correct?
MR. WEEKS: Commissioners, the -- you're correct that the most
full and open process is amend the Growth Management Plan and then
follow up with the PUD amendment. Both of those processes require
the most notice of any processes you have. Both of those go through a
review process that will include the Planning Commission and then
finally this body.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: That's what -- I think we came up
with the determination this morning.
MR. WEEKS: This morning that was one option. The other
option, which I believe the -- Mr. Hancock indicated he was going to
pursue, was an official interpretation.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. WEEKS: That's what Susan identified, which can then be
appealed to this body as the Board of Zoning Appeals, and that
includes a notice process.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Good.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Well, I'm going to support the
motion, so I think there's enough to do the process of the zoning
verification, and then notices -- the enhanced version of notices,
putting it in the newspaper and mailing out in the neighborhood.
MR. NADEAU: Yes, Mr. Chairman. And if! may, there was
backup material in the executive summary package where the draft
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December 16,2008
appeal letter has already been prepared.
So if this April 18, 2008, zoning verification letter were reissued
next week, we would be able to response to that, and the appeal could
be rapidly provided by staff because it's already been drafted.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Can we go to public speakers?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It's okay with me.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
MS. FILSON: I have two public speakers. Vivilan (sic) Jimenez.
She'll be followed by Paul Candi -- Landi. It's a C or an L.
MS. JIMENEZ: Here or here?
MS. FILSON: Doesn't matter.
MS. JIMENEZ: Hi. I'm Vivian Jimenez. I'm a Realtor. I've
been here since 1998. And just to let you know, the neighboring
surrounding community property owners have asked me to help Mr.
Armando and Maria Cabrera to try to get zoning differences for the
shopping centers, as they want to rent, and currently their use does not
supply what they want to put in.
I know that one of the things that wanted to be in the shopping
center was a karate school, and the current zoning does not allow that.
That's what I have to say. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Paul Landi.
MR. LANDI: Hi. How are you guys? I own L'Appetito, the
Randall location. I feel that we need tenants out there. I mean, it
helps the economy. The economy is in disarray right now. And it
takes a community of the plaza to help the plaza be successful. And
right now, everybody's struggling out there. As you guys are aware,
the economy is hurting, and we need great tenants out there to support
that neighborhood.
And I think it's -- a karate school out there would by great for
kids. It's a great -- it's a great idea. After school interacts with us as a
business and interacts with the neighborhood. That's it. Thank you.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Thank you.
You know, I don't understand -- well, I'm just going to make a
statement here. We have what is a -- in the PUD and in the Golden
Gate Area Master Plan a use of shopping, and a shopping center is not
a use, but we know what is traditionally in shopping centers.
And if you have an area, especially in Golden Gate Estates, that
wants business, why aren't we helping them? Why aren't we helping
them so they don't have to travel so far, use our infrastructure, and
make it happen? I mean, it's a quality of life for them. It's a quality of
life for, in this particular case, for people who live up and down
Immokalee Road who those residents have to travel across. And it's
just a win-win for everybody if we can make it happen.
Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Commissioner Henning,
you're right. And I was troubled a little bit by this when I talked to
staff and I was told why I couldn't do it. I talked to Mark Strain, and
Mark Strain also agreed with what we're saying here today, that this is,
what do you call it, insignificant and it doesn't require -- shouldn't
require the kind of review, that it should be something that we could
do by policy.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: But we're taking that extra step with
the zoning verification letter, plastering it in the newspaper, which
nobody out there reads anyways, okay. I mean, they read the Golden
Gate Citizen. That's the one that they read. They don't read the
Naples Daily News, and then notifying (sic) it. So we're going way
above board to do a good thing.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And the letters, too. Don't forget
about that.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, yeah, the letters going to the
neighbors. But anyways, there's a motion and a second on the floor.
Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. Once again, my only
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December 16, 2008
concern is that we are being consistent in the way we're treating
people.
Now, will somebody tell me whether this is consistent with the
way we treated the petitioner this morning? Because in my mind,
these are identical situations.
MR. WEEKS: Commissioners, in my opinion, this is not the
same. The -- as Susan said, we're creating a hybrid process. We're
saying, let's do a zoning verification letter, but let's add a notice
requirement. Well, you already have that process. It's called an
official interpretation with an appeal process. It's there, it's in the
code, everybody can see it. That's what the rules are. But it certainly
seems to have -- to staff that you're, on the fly, creating a new process.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Creating a new process where, with
this motion?
MR. WEEKS: With this, yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. That's my point, okay?
That's my point.
MR. KLATZKOW: Let me just -- if! may. What is the
difference between your zoning verification letting and an official
interpretation? Because you've already ruled on the issue. I mean,
you can call it -- you can call it whatever you want, but you already
ruled on the issue. If they asked for an official interpretation of the
same issue, how's it going to be any different than your zoning
verification letter?
MR. SCHMITT: Let me clarify. For the record, Joe Schmitt.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I think that's a good question that
needs to be answered.
MR. SCHMITT: I'm fighting with my two managers and my
director. This morning had to do with a Compo Plan and a Compo Plan
interpretation. That was different. This is a Compo Plan, but it also
deals with zoning.
On Page 7 of your executive summary, one of the items we
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December 16, 2008
offered to do is to reissue the zoning, zoning verification letter.
Now, understand that that is a very narrow process. It only had
to do with, was a clothing store allowed at this shopping center. And
my concern is -- and I think where Jeffwas coming from -- under
option one, the zoning verification letter is a very, very simple
administrative process. Applicant comes in, says, can I do this within
the PUD? The zoning staff says yes or no.
Under your Code of Laws and Ordinances under section 250-58,
they can appeal a decision of a government official, which is a
different type of appeal than what Tim was going to do this morning
under the 01, official interpretation.
This appeal would be very specific. It would be an appeal
basically saying, can I open the clothing store at this location.
Dwight wants to introduce new uses. And I don't know -- again,
I'm concerned about that becoming part of the appeal process. But
your zoning verification letter we redrafted. It's in your executive
summary, Page 7. It's a new -- it's a new zoning verification letter,
and what it does is just says that a clothing store is not allowed.
Dwight would then have to appeal that, specifically concentrating
on that one issue, and then he could bring in the issues having to do
with C2 or 3 -- C3, but then you may be entering what is kind of
slippery slope of almost amending an existing PUD.
If you feel that this use is allowed and you believe that it's a use
that certainly is acceptable, I would just say, so directed, and we'll do
it. Now, that may be a problem legally or otherwise. But if that's the
consensus of this board, we'll follow the consensus of the board.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Well, why didn't you tell us the
same thing this morning when Mr. Hancock was making his appeal for
essentially the same kind of issues?
MR. SCHMITT: Mr.--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It was a Growth Management Plan
issue.
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December 16, 2008
MR. SCHMITT: Right. This is a Growth Management Plan
issue, but it also is a use based on an existing PUD. Tim was trying to
get a policy decision to actually amend how to apply the Growth
Management Plan having to do with the enlargement or expansion of
an infill district.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It was more specific than that. It
was merely trying to get us to make an acknowledgment that a change
in 2007 was not intended to cause the effect that is being caused for
his client.
You're saying the same thing here. You're saying that you want
us to make an interpretation that we didn't intend for certain things to
happen or not to happen here.
You're asking us -- or the petitioner's asking us for a policy
decision on the fly. It is exactly the same thing. And I still don't
understand what you're telling me.
MR. SCHMITT: I understand your logic.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. SCHMITT: And what you're saying is basically that you're
-- this is asking you for a policy decision just the same as Tim --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's right. That's exactly the
same thing.
MR. SCHMITT: -- was this morning.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Now, you give me the same
process and I'll support it. You give me a different process, and I'm
not going to support it, but I don't know that it makes any difference.
MR. SCHMITT: Then that process, to be consistent with what
was this morning, would be Option 3, and that is where the -- you take
no objection. You leave it up to the petitioner to basically ask for an
official interpretation. They would send -- under an 01, ask for how to
apply both the GMP and basically, in this case, the guidance in the
PUD. They would submit for an official interpretation, which they
then could appeal if the ruling did not come to their favor.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: But -- and what you said to us
earlier, was if you do it through a zoning verification, it would have to
be a very narrow issue that had to do with the use of one specific
business or use?
MR. SCHMITT: That's correct, that's correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: In order for them to get changes
that would be productive for their facility, they're going to have to
look at other changes.
MR. SCHMITT: That's correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And so what you're suggesting is,
they're going to come in and try to sneak in those other changes during
this debate over the zoning verification letter, and that's exactly what
will have to happen if they're going to have a successful business
there?
MR. SCHMITT: That's correct. I think--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So why not do it right?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That's not the motion.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's right. The motion is not
right.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: So you may vote no or you may vote
yes, but let's call the motion and see where it goes from there, okay?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's the way it works.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: All in favor of the motion, signify by
saymg aye.
Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries, 2-1.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: 3-1.
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: 3-2.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: 3-2.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: 3-2.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: We'll get it right.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: No. The pontification that's going on
in these discussions, it's just unnecessary, and we could get a lot more
things done.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I just think we're going -- it's on
down a slippery slope here.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And that's what I'm talking about
here. I have 15 minutes to go, and then I have an engagement.
Item #IOL
RECOMMENDATION TO: DEVELOP A LANDFILL GAS- TO-
ENERGY FACILITY THAT WILL BENEFICIALLY USE
LANDFILL GAS FROM THE COLLIER COUNTY LANDFILL
TO GENERATE ELECTRICITY AND, IN TURN, GENERATE
NEW REVENUE FOR THE COUNTY'S SOLID WASTE FUND
BY (A) ENTERING INTO A LANDFILL GAS SALES
AGREEMENT AND GROUND LEASE AUTHORIZING WASTE
MANAGEMENT INC. OF FLORIDA TO DESIGN, PERMIT,
CONSTRUCT OPERATE AND MAINTAIN A LANDFILL GAS-
TO-ENERGY FACILITY AT THE COLLIER COUNTY
LANDFILL; (B) AMENDING THE COUNTY'S LANDFILL
OPERATION AGREEMENT WITH WASTE MANAGEMENT,
INC. OF FLORIDA; (C) APPROVING THE FACILITY
THROUGH THE SITE DEVELOPMENT PLAN PROCESS; (D)
DIRECTING THE DIVISION ADMINISTRATOR FROM
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AND ENVIRONMENTAL
SERVICES TO EXPEDITE THE PERMIT AND REVIEW
PROCESS, AND (E) AUTHORIZING THE CHAIRMAN OF THE
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December 16, 2008
BOARD TO EXECUTE THE AGREEMENT AND THE
AMENDMENT TO THE LANDFILL OPERATING AGREEMENT
- APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, I think we can do -- I think we can
do 10L, because we've got some people that are here that have been
sitting here. That has to do --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: I don't know how long --
MR. MUDD: Excuse me. That has to do with the
recommendation to develop a landfill gas-to-energy facility that will
beneficially use landfill gas from the Collier County Landfill to
generate electricity, in turn generate new revenue for the county's
solid waste fund by, A, entering into a landfill gas sales agreement and
ground lease authorizing Waste Management, Inc., of Florida to
design, permit, construct, operate, maintain a landfill gas-to-energy
facility at the Collier County Landfill; B, amending the county's
landfill operation agreement with Waste Management, Inc., of Florida;
C, approving the facility through a Site Development Plan process; D,
directing the division administrator from community development's
environmental services to expedite the permit and review process; and
E, authorizing the chairman of the board to execute the agreement and
the amendment to the landfill operating agreement, and Mr. Dan
Rodriguez, your director of solid waste, will present.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Discussion?
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Do you need anything on the
record?
MR. MUDD: No. The reason -- the only reason that he needs to
have CDES expedite is so that we meet the threshold, the time cutoff
for the incentives, and that's the reason for that one.
Outside of that, everything else is clearcut and it seems to be a
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December 16, 2008
pretty good agreement that was negotiated. But Commissioner
Henning could disagree with me.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: You know, it is what it is.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: (Absent.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Motion carries unanimously.
How late does the board want to go?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I'd like to finish it up.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. I pulled an item off the
agenda, if we can go to that.
Item #IOQ
RESOLUTION 2008-388: GRANTING FINAL APPROVAL OF
THE ROADWAY (PUBLIC) AND DRAINAGE IMPROVEMENTS
FOR THE FINAL PLAT OF ARROWHEAD RESERVE AT LAKE
TRAFFORD PHASE ONE WITH THE ROADWAY BEING
MAINT AINED BY THE COUNTY AND THE DRAINAGE
IMPROVEMENTS BEING PRIVATELY MAINTAINED -
ADOPTED
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. That would be -- that would be 10Q, and
that would be --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Did we do M?
MR. MUDD: No. We're trying to get the ones done because he
has a six o'clock. He received a memo that he has a prior engagement
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December 16, 2008
that he has to go to, I believe.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay.
MR. MUDD: And I'm looking. 10Q used to be 16A3. It's a
recommendation to grant final approval of the roadway (public) and
drainage improvements for the final plat of Arrowhead Reserve at
Lake Trafford, Phase I, with the roadway being maintained by the
county and the drainage improvements being privately maintained.
That item was pulled at Commissioner Henning's request.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And the reason I pulled it is, we just
did a Land Development Code amendment not to do these things -- is
to approve the -- in PUDs, whether they be public or private roads,
that we would not maintain them, and that's why I pulled the item.
And Mr. Schmitt, I see, is gone. It's one of his items.
MR. MUDD: Go ahead, Norm. You were there part of the
decision that the board made prior. Go ahead, Norman, and then Joe
will follow.
MR. SCHMITT: Apologize. We were clearing up some
guidance for Dwight.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: We're working on the -- on the -- I
guess the Arrowhead issue.
MR. SCHMITT: Yes, sir, Arrowhead.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And the Board of Commissioners in
the Land Development Code meeting says we're not going to take
over any more roads in PUDs.
MR. SCHMITT: That was the most recent round of LDC
amendments, yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Right. So that's why I pulled this so
-- it's different than when the board approved the LDC amendment.
MR. SCHMITT: Yes, sir. This goes back to a 2002 PUD and a
plat that was approved, and I don't have the date in front of me here.
The plat was later approved both identifying it as such, and I've got --
this goes back to a -- and it was amended again in '05. 2005 ordinance
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December 16, 2008
is on top. But under transportation, under paragraph I, it notes, roads
will be public and dedicated to county at the time of platting, and that
has been in that PUD since the PUD was first adopted in 2002.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Well, it didn't say -- they could be
public. Doesn't mean that we have to maintain them.
MR. SCHMITT: That's correct. There's nothing that states that.
Now, Jim, if you could zero in. That's the -- on the plat itself -- and it
does highlight. But that's correct. They could be public, but it doesn't
state anything about maintaining -- if they're maintained by the county
or by the residents. But the PUD did state that they would be public
roads.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Right. Well, let's just talk about the
maintenance of it.
MR. SCHMITT: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That's the concern. This was
approved in 2003. This plat was approved in 2003.
MR. SCHMITT: That's correct, yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And I have the item, the executive
summary item, and there is nothing in here that's saying that the
county is going to maintain these roads. The board did not approve,
give consent to staff, that we would maintain these roads. Do you
agree with that?
MR. SCHMITT: I agree. There's no --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: But yet this plat was recorded saying
that the county would maintain these roads, correct?
MR. SCHMITT: Yes.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: That -- the staff does not have the
ability to make those fiscal decisions. It's only the Board of
Commissioners.
Now, this is the reason why I took my signature away, for these
very things. The Board of Commissioners approved things, and what
is signed is not what the board approved.
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December 16,2008
MR. SCHMITT: This plat --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: My signature's on this plat.
MR. SCHMITT: Yes, sir.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Commissioner Coletta?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. Commissioner Henning,
what you're suggesting is that we don't keep these roads in repair after
we told the people that we were going to do this, that we --
CHAIRMAN HENNING: We never told--
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Or is it just a question of whose
signature went where or when it went?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Nobody told anybody, these people,
that we were going to maintain these roads. Nobody said that. We
said they'd be public, but we didn't say we'd maintain them.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Okay. So every road that's
public out there that's within any kind of community, we no longer
have to maintain them? This makes no sense.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: The Board of Commissioners
approved an LDC amendment that, unless the board directs
differently, we're not to maintain any road if they would come to us
for maintenance within a PUD.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Is this date prior to the time that
Arrowhead was established?
MR. SCHMITT: Yes. Normally we do not apply LDC changes
retroactively. If the -- whatever agreements were made at the time of
either PUD acceptance or the recording of the final plat normally
carrIes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Let me tell you what's going to
happen here. I'm very familiar with Arrowhead and what's taking
place there. At this point in time, they're in serious trouble, just like a
lot of communities, more so there than you could ever expect. They
only got about 20-some percent of the people contributing to their
homeowners' fund that they have. The -- what do you call it, the
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December 16, 2008
assessments? The place is falling in disrepair, and ifthe county all of
a sudden decides that they're no longer liable for the roads within one
gated community, I can guarantee you that they're not going to keep
them up and repair them. There's no way they can.
It's a desire situation. The understanding was, is that it was going
to be taken over by the county. It was brought up to a certain
standard. Am I wrong about this? The roads were brought up to a
standard?
MR. SCHMITT: They were required to be designed to the
county standard, yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Right. With the anticipation
that the county was going to take them over when they reached that
point. And now if we do a reversal on this, it's going to be extremely
detrimental to that community.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Who -- let me ask you. Who
approved to make the county responsible for maintaining these roads?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Commissioner Henning, I can't
tell you who did what along the way, but I can tell you the expectation
for all these communities out there that enter into these kind of
agreements is that that's what happens. It's happened in the past, and it
was expected to happen in the future.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. But are these agreements a
one-party agreement?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Commissioner Henning, I don't
have those agreements in front of me.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Second.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: We have some public speakers?
MS. FILSON: I have one speaker. George Hermanson.
MR. HERMANSON: Good evening. I'm George Hermanson,
partner with Hole Montes. We represent the petitioner. He's -- sends
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December 16, 2008
his apologies. He's under the weather today, so I was called at the last
minute when this was taken off the consent agenda.
The statement that I wanted to highlight is the one in question,
that is the plat of Arrowhead Unit I which was recorded in '05, April
of'05. That was before this Land Development Code amendment was
in place.
At this time this was recorded there were both publicly and
privately maintained roads allowed in the county. We went through
the process, as anybody did. The roads were required to be built to
county standards. The right-of-ways are to county standard. The plat
went through the review and went through the county commission at
the hearing and was approved and recorded.
So I'm not here to tell you what you have to do, but I am telling
you that's what the documentation says.
The developer, when we went through the process, even
considered a gated community, but he was told that with a gated
community they would be private roads and privately maintained.
With open roads they'll be publicly maintained. So he chose that
option.
I will tell you that Lincoln Boulevard, which is the main road,
does connect at both ends. It can be used by the public.
So -- and as far as the economics of the situation are concerned,
Commissioner Coletta, you're right, there are budget problems. They
have not budgeted for road maintenance. They have 44 homes under
foreclosure right now. The roads -- they will have great difficulty
maintaining the roads. But that's a side argument. I think the
documentation indicates, with all due report, that the county
commission approved the roads to be publicly maintained.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. Thank you. Mr. -- Nick, I
have a question of you. In your research, can you tell me what the
board approved?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: Sure. For the record, Nick
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December 16, 2008
Casalanguida with Transportation.
Going back into the PUD, you're correct, it says to be dedicated
to the public, but it doesn't speak to maintenance. And from going
through the documents, there's really no recommendation either way
of whether it would be maintained or it would not be maintained for
the public.
We just had that fiscal workshop with the board. And one of the
recommendations we'll make as things like this come upon is, there
should be a fiscal impact analysis that's done when we accept a public
road.
That exhibit that's on there right now -- and excuse my voice. It's
going a little bit. There is a public road that runs from one end to the
other that connects two other roads. Then there are half a dozen other
dead-end roads that serve really no public purpose.
In our research, we spoke to our road maintenance department
and said, over a 15-year life cycle, what kind of fiscal impact are we
looking at? It's about 50- to $60,000 annually that the county would
assume by taking on those roads. So it's not that, as staff, we support
or don't support. That's not for us to make that decision. For staff, we
just want to make the board cognizant that every time we make a
decision, it comes with a fiscal impact.
And so you're looking at that with a semi-public through road,
but then a bunch of private kind of roads that kind ofT off that really
serve no public purpose, that if this goes forward, we would be
maintaining. And so that's just information for the board to consider,
that as these plats go forward, we should have a good fiscal impact
number that you understand what you're incurring in the future.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Did anybody tell you in this approval
process that you're going to maintain these roads?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: The plat went through transportation
for review, and the road maintenance reviewed them. It was, I guess,
implied that the public dedication would include public maintenance,
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December 16, 2008
but no one told us that that was going to be the case.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Was it in the executive summary?
MR. CASALANGUIDA: No, sir, it was not.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Okay. That's why I have the
problem. I don't see where we have the ability or staff has the ability
to make those kind of judgment calls. Thank you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: We've got a motion though.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: There's a motion by Commissioner
Coyle to approve this item, second by Commissioner Coletta.
All in favor of the motion, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Opposed?
Aye.
Motion carries, 4-1, Commissioner Henning dissenting.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I think we might have some
people that were here for the public comments that -- can we hear
them today rather than make them come back tomorrow?
CHAIRMAN HENNING: Yeah. I think that was the last item
that -- the only item that I pulled off the agenda.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. That's the last item you had that you
pulled off.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And if you don't mind, the vice-chair
will take over.
(Chairman Henning left the hearing room.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Sure, sure. After the public comment
though, we will close the meeting and then resume tomorrow with the
other things on this agenda.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: What?
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, you only have --
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You've only got two items.
MR. MUDD: You have one --
COMMISSIONER FIALA: We have item--
MR. MUDD: You have two items.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: -- M and we have --
MR. MUDD: P.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: -- P.
MR. MUDD: That's it.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: So do you want to do all those -- you
want to do those two?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Should take about five minutes.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: All right then.
Item #IOM
A WARD OF BID #08-5136 TO THE LOWEST QUALIFIED AND
RESPONSIVE BIDDER, QUALITY ENTERPRISES USA, INC.,
FOR THE CONSTRUCTION CONTRACT OF THE 951 BOAT
RAMP PARKING LOT EXPANSION PROJECT NO. 80071.
($1,393,279.65) - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Next item's 10M. It's a recommendation for the
Board of County Commissioners to approve the award of bid number
08-5136 to the lowest qualified and responsive bidder, Quality
Enterprises USA, Inc., for the construction contract of the 951 boat
ramp parking lot expansion project, number 80071, $1,393,279.65.
Mr. Gary McAlpin, your Coastal Project Manager, will present.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Motion to approve.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Second.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Okay. I have a motion on the floor and a
second. That was a no-brainer, you're right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yep.
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Any further -- any discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: All those in favor, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Opposed, like sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Very good.
Item #IOP
AUTHORIZING THE CHAIRMAN TO SIGN CHANGE ORDER
#1 TO WORK ORDER C3TS-FT-4153-08-02 FOR DESIGN
CONSULTANT C3TS FOR THE MANATEE PARK DESIGN IN
THE AMOUNT OF $50,000.00 ON A TIME & MATERIAL, NOT-
TO-EXCEED BASIS TO PROVIDE THE SITE DEVELOPMENT
PLAN AND THE REQUIRED SFWMD PERMITS. THE NET
CONTRACTUAL VALUE OF SERVICES WILL TOTAL
$243,950.00 - MOTION TO BRING BACK WITH
CLARIFICATION - APPROVED
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, next item is lOP, which used to be
16D37, and that is a -- that is a recomm- -- that's to recommend that
the Board of County Commissioners approve and authorize the
chairman to sign change order number I to work order
C3TS-FT-4153-08-02 for the design consultant C3TS for the Manatee
Park design in the amount of $50,000 on a time and material
not-to-exceed basis, to provide the Site Development Plan and the
required South Florida Water Management District permits. The net
contractual value of services will total $243,950.
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December 16, 2008
This item was asked to be on the regular agenda and pulled from
the consent agenda by Commissioner Coyle.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Very quickly. I don't have
the slightest idea what you're doing with this thing.
MR. McALPIN: Commissioner--
COMMISSIONER COYLE: If you'll turn to that section that
says caveat, an entire paragraph of caveats. I need to understand what
the implication is as far as what you're asking the contractor to do.
MR. McALPIN: Commissioner, what we originally set up to do
was put a design-build contract on this. And during -- in that process,
the contractor would develop the design package up to a point, and
then he would bring it, and then we would -- where we would clearly
identify the scope, and then we would put it out for a qualified
contractor to finish the rest of the design, get the permitting, and do
the construction.
And we did that because of the relative straightforward nature of
this job. It was basically just site development for Manatee Park.
Pretty straightforward. We thought this would be the most
economical way to do this project, but that implies that we're going to
have enough money to move forward with the funding of the
construction for this job.
As we looked at our impact fees, they continued to get tighter
and tighter, so we realize that we're not going to have enough money
at this point in time to move forward with the design-build contract.
So we're looking to change the scope of this project back to a
traditional project where the design is done by a consultant, and we
take it all the way through the design and permitting process so we can
wrap a ribbon around it. That would take about 18 months for us to
complete at this point in time. We'd have all the design and all the
permitting complete. And then at that point in time we would make
the decision whether we would move forward with the construction at
that point in time if the funds were available.
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December 16,2008
We're recommending to do that. There's no -- there's no loss in
terms of -- as long as we have the permits in hand, there's no essential
loss from throw-away associated with this job, and that will allow us
that -- during this period of 18 months, which is the -- which is the
lead time, get the design done, get the permitting in place, and then
hopefully at that point in time our impact fees and the economy will
start to recover, and then we can go out for bid for construction.
That's what we're trying to accomplish.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. But let's start from the top.
The original work order amount was $193,950.
MR. McALPIN: Correct.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You're coming in for an additional
sum of $50,000.
MR. McALPIN: Right.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: How much have you already spent
on the project?
MR. McALPIN : We've spent -- as of last month we've spent
approximately $86,000. So we would take the balance, which is
approximately $107,000 and add $50,000 to that, complete the whole
design of this project and all the permitting associated with the
infrastructure and also the community services building.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. You're going to take the
86,000 you've already spent, and you're going to add 107,000 to it?
MR. McALPIN: The original contract was for 193-,
Commissioner.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Right.
MR. McALPIN: We spent 86-, which meant we had a balance
left --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Of 107-.
MR. McALPIN: -- of 107-. If we take the $107,000 and we add
$50,000 to it, and we're not -- and we would reuse the 86,000, so we
would get to a total price of243-, okay --
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December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
MR. McALPIN: -- for the total job.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Now, you've got a $243,000 budget
here. Now, let's go to the caveats. The person who's going to do this
work -- well, maybe it's not that person at all, but -- yes, it is.
MR. McALPIN: C3TS.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes. Collier County Community
Development/Environmental Services has indicated that the transfer of
property from the school to the park would trigger the need for an
SDP amendment to the school property before review could ever
begin on our SDP application. Has that happened yet?
MR. McALPIN: No. Commissioner, no. We haven't transferred
the property from the school to the park. That caveat was based on
one approach; that would be that we would have a deed simple, a
transfer of the property on the lake to the school, from the school to
us. We could also approach that from where they would just grant us
a -- the reservation of the stormwater capacity in that. And so that's
another approach that we could take on this, and which we would be
looking at.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Gary, you've a project amount of
$243,000. I want to know what you are going to do and what you're
recommending, not what you could do under different scenarios.
So for that -- that project for that amount of money, what is being
proposed?
MR. McALPIN: What would be proposed, Commissioner, was
that we'd look at -- when we look to do the stormwater, there's two
options we could take. One is, if there was a fee simple transfer of the
property to us, what -- how that would affect our SDP. We haven't got
into that with the CDES or South Florida Water Management District.
We have another possible solution with that. It's just part of the
permitting process that we go through, Commissioner, when we deal
with South Florida Water Management District. We haven't gotten to
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December 16,2008
that issue yet.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So the one thing that could
substantially delay this project, we haven't even made a decision about
yet, transfer of school property?
MR. McALPIN: We have reached preliminary agreement with
the school board that they would transfer the property for the lake to
us, and there's no -- no question about that.
The issue came up relative to whether that would involve or
trigger when the school board wanted to expand their facilities, if that
would involve a global rework of their -- of their capacity for
transferring the water -- the stormwater. And we haven't gotten into
that.
There's a number of ways we could do that. They could reserve
the capacity to us and not trigger that transfer. We just haven't gotten
to that yet.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. The contractor is telling us
that his proposed approach does not include efforts to address any
modifications to the school SDP. That's another contract change that
we're going to run into if you -- if you proceed that way. But you
haven't decided which way you're going to proceed so we don't have
any idea what this is going to cost us.
Now, secondly -- well, thirdly, our -- it says, the preliminary SDP
discussions identified significant limitations on traffic impacts that
would be allowed. Our approach assumes that the traffic study will be
performed by Johnson Engineering outside of our contract and that the
traffic aspects of the SDP can be addressed with limited input from us,
the contractor that you're working for.
This is an open-ended contract for, perhaps, hundreds of
thousands of dollars of change orders. I can't sort through this stuff,
okay. It's incomprehensible to me that we would proceed on a
contract with all of these open questions.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Commissioner Coyle, may I
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December 16, 2008
make a suggestion? Probably should make a motion to bring it back
to the next meeting.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Well, I'll just make a
motion to deny it, and then they can bring it back.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Well, no. That kills it, doesn't
it, if we deny it?
MR. McALPIN: Just deny the change order request.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah. You know, I want some
decisions to be made about how you're going to approach the project
because without that, nobody's going to be able to tell you how much
it's going to cost, and we're going to be talking about this again when
you want another 50- or $100,000 to do something. This is not the
way to get a good price for a project, okay.
Well, I will recommend that we bring it back with the decisions
made about what we're going to do and how much it's likely to cost.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'll second that.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Okay. Any discussion on that?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Okay. All those in favor, signify by
saymg aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Opposed, like sign.
(No response.)
Item #11
PUBLIC COMMENTS ON GENERAL TOPICS
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Very good. Now we'll go on to public
comments.
MR. MUDD: Public comments on general topics, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Uh-huh. How many speakers do we
have, Sue?
MS. FILSON: Three -- four. Burt Saunders. He'll be followed
by Kenneth Thompson. I believe he's gone. He'll be followed by
Dean Starnes.
SENATOR SAUNDERS: Madam Chairman and
Commissioners, I appreciate your courtesy in hearing me this evening
very briefly. My name is Burt Saunders. I am with the law firm of
Gray Robinson, and I'm representing Orangetree Associates. And
we're here because of a very hyper-technical issue that the commission
can solve for us that will result in a very much needed project going
forward out at Orangetree, and that's the development of a CVS
pharmacy.
The problem basically is that we're waiting for the issuance of an
SDP from the county. County staff is ready to issue that SDP. There
are no issues associated with that. But there -- we're also waiting for a
modification to an existing ERP from the water management district.
I want to emphasize modification.
We already have an ERP that was issued by the water
management district, but because of some changes to roadways and
things of that nature, there's some modifications to that ERP that are
pending before the water management district.
The water management district has told us, there are no problems
with this ERP modification. They're just slow. And the problem that
we have is, under the contracts that Orangetree has with CVS, the
pharmacy, they can terminate this contract if the SDPs are not issued
by the county before the end of the year.
And so I asked Commissioner Coletta if he would be kind
enough to add this to the discussion this afternoon. The pharmacy
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would be in his district. It's something that's very important for the
district. And this really is a very hyper-technical issue. It's something
that -- we're going to get the ERP modification, we're going to get the
SDP, but we have this timing problem.
And so what I would suggest is, ifthe commission would simply
advise staff that it's permissible to issue the SDP, we will not pull any
building permits per student to this SDP until the ERP modification is
issued. We should get that ERP modification within the next 60 to 90
days, and the CVS pharmacy can be built out there.
This will mean about $700,000 in impact fees that would be paid
and a very important project for that part of the county; otherwise,
CVS is going to pull the plug on it and not build that pharmacy.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And they very well may
because of the fact of the economics being what it is, and I know that
community's looking for it. There is nothing like that for -- all the way
between Immokalee until you get --
SENATOR SAUNDERS: That is correct. And ultimately the
plan is to have a Publix grocery store out there. It will be very nice for
the community, but we have to get this portion --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: If! may, I'd like to go to Joe
Schmitt to see what we can do. Is this as benign as it sounds?
MR. SCHMITT: Just for clarification, what Burt is actually
asking is that the LDC prohibits us from issuing the SDP until the
ERP is issued by the water management district. That way we
validate that the ERP and the SDP match.
In this case, he's asking for the board to grant me the authority to
issue the SDP with a stipulation to await the subsequent issuing of the
ERP.
Now, understand what he just said. This is a modification. So
there was a previous environmental resource permit, a water
management permit for this site. All they're doing is a modification.
And I just need the board's approval to allow us to stipulate, which is
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really what it's doing is waiving a portion of the LDC that says we
cannot issue the SDP until the water management district permit has
been issued.
I don't -- there's very little to low risk in this. And I see no
problem with it. I just need your concurrence.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'd like to direct staff to do so.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yes. What was the changes out
there that caused -- that you had to go back to water management for
another ERP?
MR. SCHMITT: Go ahead. I know what it was, but I'll let Tim
MR. HANCOCK: Commissioner Halas, for the record, Tim
Hancock with Davidson Engineering. Primarily it dealt with turn lanes
that were required as a part of the transportation improvements as part
of the project.
A second issue was that the previous permit had an outfall
location that doesn't meet current standards. So we're just bringing it
up to date under current standards. There really were not material
changes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Is this -- basically stormwater
issues then, right?
MR. HANCOCK: Yes, sir. There are no environmental issues
associated with this project.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. And the changes that were
made -- even though you don't have the ERP permit, what is the
feeling by South Florida Water Management in regards to the changes
that were made? Has this caused them to scrutinize this more slowly?
MR. HANCOCK: No, sir. Actually, we -- the water
management system, as a part of this change, is better and closer to
standards. And in fact, we would have already had the ERP issues,
but there was a transfer of ownership of one of the parcels within the
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project, and that caused us to go back to the district for that issue
alone. So literally, this is a very insignificant issue with the district
pending issuance.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. So what you're telling me
now is that it's really not a stormwater issue as such? It's a feel about
where the parties transferred property to someone -- another party?
MR. HANCOCK: I apologize. I'm saying both. The thing that
initiated the need for modification was stormwater related. That had
been addressed, reviewed, and was ready to be issued; however, they
then noted a change in ownership, which caused the application to
have to be modified. That's the issue that's at hand right now.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And have they given you any idea
of how long it will be before they can put their signature on this for an
okay?
MR. HANCOCK: Based on the communication we've had with
the district, we believe we're in our last review at this point, which
puts it inside of a 30-day window.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay. And so you just need
something to cover you between now, which is the 16th, and the 31 st?
SENATOR SAUNDERS: Commissioner, if! may answer that.
Under the contract that CVS has with Orangetree, if the SDP isn't
issued by a certain period of time, they can cancel the contract and
walk away from the project. So we want to make sure that doesn't
happen.
If the SDP is issued, that solidifies the contract and we move
forward with the pharmacy. If the SDP isn't approved, there will be
no pharmacy out there. That basically is the problem. It's a very
technical issue in terms of the LDC, and it's a very technical issue as it
relates to water management district.
We're going to get the ERP modification. We're going to get the
SDP. It's just a matter of, we don't get the SDP now, we're going to
lose the pharmacy, and that's the whole issue.
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December 16, 2008
MR. SCHMITT: I will just add that it's both my responsibility
and the district's responsibility, we'll make sure that it's built in
accordance with the approved plan. So whatever is built will be built
in accordance with the district permit and the subsequent final
approval of the SDP. All this will do is allow them to proceed
contractually and also to start initial work on site.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I got one other question.
MR. SCHMITT: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And I'm being the devil's advocate
here.
MR. SCHMITT: Yes.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: If the pharmacy company
obviously has made a survey and they realize that the potential out
there is going to be profitable for them, I don't understand why they
would decide to pull the plug on this when there's no other pharmacy
out there. That's what I don't quite understand.
SENATOR SAUNDERS: Commissioner, that's a good question.
I think it's a matter of simple frustration. This has been going on for
well over a year. And, Commissioner, I think Tim Hancock kind of
gave us the timeline, but this has been going on for a very long time.
They've grown frustrated, and that's the problem.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Burt, what's been dragging it out?
Why has it been going on a long time?
MR. HANCOCK: Commissioner, unlike many times when this
is the opportunity to throw the staff under the bus, I'm not going to do
that because that's not really been the key case here. The issue has
been, we have been coordinating -- we have two buildings going in
under current SDP. One is a CVS, the other is a Florida community
bank, a local bank branch.
We've been coordinating with multiple architects, and we've been
the organizing engineer bringing all those things together. Have their
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been some review comments we've felt were somewhat redundant at
times? Sure. That happens in the process, and it does cause things to
drag out, but there have been coordination issues all along.
And I will also tell you, some of the transportation issues that we
would resolve in the first review would come back in the third or
fourth review because of the lag of time. So it's multiple issues
feeding on each other.
Weare literally on the one-yard line here and just simply asking
for you to grant Mr. Schmitt the opportunity to still hold our feet to the
fire but allow the order to occur in a little different fashion.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. What's the -- Joe, I think
you're going to have to give me an answer to this question. What is
the downside? Let's suppose we approve the SDP, and then CVS
pulls out anyway. What is the exposure? What happens?
MR. SCHMITT: He's -- there is little to no exposure to the
county. The applicant and the developer is still responsible for
building the property and building the site in accordance with the
approved plan and with the district permit.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Will the plan have to change if
they need to accommodate another business?
MR. SCHMITT: Then that would trigger an SOP amendment or
another process where they would come in and actually go through
and start the process again.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: So there's no risk to the county in
doing this?
MR. SCHMITT: The only, only risk and this is -- is if they all
walk. I mean, that's --
COMMISSIONER COYLE: What do you mean, they all?
MR. SCHMITT: I mean they, the developer picks up his toys
and says, I'm not going to finish this site. But that risk exists
anywhere we issue a site plan. I mean -- and then we go in and we
will, through code or some other action, direct that the site be
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basically reclaimed or re- -- reclimated.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: So Commissioner Coletta, you have
asked us to move forward?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yes.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Do we need a motion on that?
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'll make a motion.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Do I have a second?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Second.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Okay. I have a motion and a second.
Any further discussion?
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: All those in favor, signify by saying aye.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Aye.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Aye.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Aye.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Aye.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Opposed, like sign.
(No response.)
CHAIRMAN FIALA: That's a 4-0. Thank you.
SENATOR SAUNDERS: Thank you. Madam Chair, thank you
very much. And if I don't see you all before the Christmas holiday
and the Hanukkah holiday and the new year, happy holidays to all of
you. Thank you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You, too.
(Commissioner Fiala left the hearing room.)
MS. FILSON: Dean Sarns. He'll be followed by Doug Fee.
MR. SARNS: My name is Dean Starns. I moved to Naples in
1979. I live at 3211 58th Street Southwest in Golden Gate. Thank
you, Commissioners, for hearing my concerns.
My concern is the 75-foot wide nonconforming lots in Golden
Gate Estates. Taxes are assessed at the same dollar level per square
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foot for nonconforming 75-foot wide lots as conforming larger lots.
There are no allowances for a homesite.
If a few nonconforming homes get sold in our area, all home
assessments go up by the same percentage of increase. What about
unpermitted remodels? Sixty thousand dollar kitchen remodels do
happen.
To protect Collier County that unknowingly get entrapped into
unpermitted nightmares by buying a house, we need a home sale
permit that stamps on the property that all improvements are to code
and permitted at time of sale.
Next, Golden Gate assessments need to be such as $100,000 per
buildable homesite and may be a dollar per square foot lot size to have
equity between 75-foot nonconforming lots.
The 30-foot mowing ordinance just passed must be rescinded and
put up for public decision in the Planning Commission. If your
neighbor enjoys a seven-and-a-half-foot setback, does that condemn
your property? Do you have to mow what is now his yard on your
property, maybe even clear trees and bushes, too? This is imminent
domain.
All lots in Golden Gate should be required to have a 30-foot side
and rear yard setbacks (sic), outbuildings such as sheds included.
Were there -- in the -- is a will there is a way to accommodate a
30-foot setback. This could include staggering lot lines or front and
rear lots with deeded easements.
An MTSU subjecting on Golden Gate Estates alone needs to be
created to provide funds for individuals who would like to assemble
two nonconforming lots into one conforming lot. Home sales would
provide funds for the county. Home sale permits would also provide
the property tax assessor to do a reappraisement (sic).
Home sale permits would provide protection for citizens, sellers,
and buyers. Seventy-five-foot-wide Golden Gate Estates lots are
unfair. They -- there has to be a tax lowering adjustment for the
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owner of a large lot if the neighbor enjoys a seven-and-a-half-foot
setback.
Repeal the 30-foot mowing ordinance, please.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Thank you. I took over as the
immediate past chair.
MS. FILSON: The next speaker is Doug Fee.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Has the timer been working, Sue?
MS. FILSON: Those are not working. They ordered a new one.
Mine does.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Oh, yours does. When it gets to that
time, can you go bing, bing?
MS. FILSON: It does.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Oh.
MS. FILSON: Don't you hear it?
CHAIRMAN COLETT A: You kidding me? I got a hearing
loss. That's why I got a volume control on my speaker over here.
Okay, Doug.
MR. FEE: Yeah.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Go for it, man.
MR. FEE: Okay. I'll be done in a minute. Good evening,
Commissioners. For the record, my name is Doug Fee. I'll try to be
brief because I know you've had a very long day.
What I'm here to speak about tonight is a NRP A. And I handed
out about three pages, four pages. Exactly five years ago, December
15,2003, there was an article in the newspaper in reference to
Wiggins Pass and trying to bring up the subject ofNRP A.
The second page that I handed out obviously describes the
NRP A, the purpose and intent, and it says, the purpose and intent of
the natural resource protection overlay district is to protect endangered
and potential endangered species by directing incompatible land uses
away from their habitats, to identify large connected, intact, and
relatively unfragmented habitats which may be important for listed
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speCIes.
And I won't go and read further, but I want to point out that back
when the county was establishing the Growth Management Plan in
1989 and in '90, they designated certain areas. There was a final
order, a lawsuit where the county wasn't, I think, designating these
areas. So in the final order, the county then designated, and they were
blessed, and 10 and behold, we have our GMP.
In the GMP process -- I have up on the visualizer two maps. One
is of the Pelican Bay area, okay, and that is to the right, and the second
area is of the Wiggins Pass area. What I want to point out is Pelican
Bay has a NRP A. It was established. And as you can see by the map,
these are drawn by the graphics department at the very same level,
okay. They're the same height. And I believe you probably have 50
percent more environmentally sensitive land up in the Wiggins Pass
area as you can see in the Pelican Bay area.
I'm very much in support of putting this overlay for the future in
the documents that I read down at the county. What they stated was
that they would reanalyze this at the future -- in other words, they
designated some areas, but the county would have the ability in the
future to see if there weren't any other areas to be considered.
We have an RLSA process we're going through right now. It's a
five-year review. My question is, how could we possibly consider the
Wiggins Pass area for an NRP A? I know it doesn't necessarily have
any relevance to the process you're going through in the eastern lands,
but is that possibly a time that we can consider this? Obviously it
would have to be heard by the --
MS. FILSON: Beep, beep, beep.
MR. FEE: -- CCPC. It would have to be heard by the EAC.
One of the benefits I see is you could go to the landowners who
actually are in this area, private landowners who may have to maintain
that in perpetuity, and one of the things about the NRP A is there's
acquisition, and what can I do further --
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December 16, 2008
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Well, let's ask our fellow
commissioners here if they have any questions for you.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think this is a great idea. I'm not
sure what direction we can give you to check with staff on this and see
if there are possibilities to establishing a NRP A here, since this is in an
area also that has outstanding Florida waters.
And so I think it's an area that we need to look at and see ifthere
is a way to address a NRP A to protect this area. But again, I'd have to
get -- the three commissioners that are sitting here would have to give
you a nod to have the staff look into this, and county manager.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: May I make a suggestion just for
thought, then we'll go to County Manager?
MR. MUDD: My answer to this one is, Doug needs to go to the
EAC. The EAC needs to tell you if this is a good idea or not and give
you a recommendation, come back to the board, and then the board
gives us direction, because this is going to cost money, and it's --
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Mr. Mudd, I think you should first go
through Commissioner Halas' organization, some of the other
associations down there, and then bring it forward. The last thing I
want is something coming directly to our -- one of our committees
without sort of public support behind it. Bring the public support
where Commissioner Halas can probably give you some better
directions on that. I think you'll be where you need to be.
MR. FEE: And I appreciate that, Commissioner Coletta. I -- to
be honest with you, about two weeks ago, I did go to the Planning
Commission and mention the very same thing. And sometimes you
wonder, should you go from the bottom up, or do you go from the top
down.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Bottom up.
MR. FEE: Bottom up. And I had said that very same thing. And
they said, well, you really need to go to the Board of County
Commission. And if they view this as something to be considered,
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they can then direct. But I'm hearing you say, go to the EAC, go to
Commissioner Halas' district meeting, which I attend, and come up
with some support. And then would you say come back to the board,
or would you say go back to the EAC or the CCPC?
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Well, work with Commissioner Halas
from that district.
MR. FEE: Okay.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: And he'll help to give you some
direction on it.
MR. FEE: Okay, that's perfect. Thank you very much.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Great. With that, let's go on to --
that's --
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I've got one other question. When
you were talking about cost, do you have any idea what something
like this would --
MR. MUDD: No, sir, but I can get you the answer.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Could you do that? I think that
would be --
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: I think that would also fit into the
equation, especially in this time -- economic time, okay. And I'd
appreciate that.
Item # 15
STAFF AND COMMISSION GENERAL COMMUNICATIONS
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Okay. Mr. Mudd, do you have you
anything?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir, I do. And I don't -- I'm not going to
belabor this. I'm going to go right to the chase, and I'm really not
looking for a concurrence or a nod.
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December 16, 2008
We are where we are. December 4th, the ad valorem estimating
conference from the State Revenue Commission basically gave their
estimates of what the 20 I 0 property tax or estimates on property
values are going to be, and it basically stated that Charlotte County
will be minus 13.4 percent, Collier County will be minus 14.3 percent,
and Lee County will be minus 13.4 percent.
What that basically tells you is the property values are going to
go down by 14.3 percent in Collier County. I issued -- just so you
don't get caught by surprise, I issued my administrators and my
department directors a letter that was dated 12 December, basically
said, I'm looking for a 15 percent -- minus 15 percent budget for --
based on what we got for property appraisals. They might as well
start working now. We're not talking about a couple percent. We're
talking about a 35 to $40 million cut in our ad valorem take.
Our ad valorem take that we received for '09 in our budget is 247
thou- -- $247 million. That's a pretty good chunk of change that's
coming out of the budget.
So I've asked them to start working on it. So what I'm going to
provide -- and I'll come back to the budget guidance. I'm just trying to
get ahead of the ball game a little because this is going to take a little
bit more time than we normally have, so I figured I'd get them started,
but provide a budget, and I'll -- again, I'm not asking for concurrence.
I'm just telling you what I'm doing right now. When we come up with
a budget guidance, I'll send it forward, but I want to make sure that
you understand.
We're going to provide a millage neutral, and we're going to
provide -- and we're going to provide a tax neutral, but both, and one
will have a -- around a 35- to $40 million cut ad valorem-wise, and the
other one will be the same amount of money that we had last year, and
the cut will not -- will not be there.
But what a tax neutral position would be with that kind of
depreciated property value, that would require a millage rate increase,
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December 16,2008
exactly what Marco Island and Naples did. Naples was more tax
neutral than Marco was. They had an overall 4.2 percent increase.
The next item I wanted to talk about -- I mentioned today about
all the ORV sites that we're working on right now. We will continue
to press that.
Another -- another item or another avenue that we're looking at
has to do with the Bonness quarry property off of Oil Well Road,
okay, and Commissioner Coletta knows about that one. They have
given us some estimates on what they would rent the property to us
for. Again, this is South Florida Water Management District's nickel.
So we're trying to find some short-term alternatives to an
A TV/ORV site and a long-range specific one that's out there at the
jetport that's owned by Miami-Dade, and that piece is out there.
Last, but not least. Yesterday, because of time constraints, every
municipal- -- I won't say that, can't say that. I would say a large
number of municipalities and states in this country are trying to come
up with lists that the president elect could use, i.e. President Elect
Obama, could use to allocate dollars for this stimulus package that the
federal government is trying to get out of the starting blocks as fast as
they can upon his -- right around his time that he gets sworn in as
president, which is the 20th of January. Doesn't give everybody a lot
of time.
What I did yesterday is I drafted -- and I sent letters to the staff of
Connie -- or Congressman Connie Mack, Congressman Diaz-Ballard,
Senator Nelson and Senator Martinez, and I gave him -- them the
preliminary list for Collier County where we can get projects in the
ground starting 90 to 120 days.
Our list is over $500 million strong, and most of those are ready
to go with permits in hand or within the next month.
In addition to that, we also provided them a list where, if we had
180 days to a year, we could also provide about another 100 to $150
million worth of additional projects.
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There's a lot of interest up in the capitol. Why? Because this
initiative is out there, and it's been stated by the president elect. And I
will tell you, based on what I've seen so far, the list of
ready-to-execute construction projects for the county are pretty slim.
Why? Because they don't have the permitting and they don't have the
designs done.
And they're having a tough time getting lists that are more than
76 billion strong. And the president's -- yeah, I find that very
unbelievable. I mean, it's a meager amount.
And so there's a lot of people in congress that are basically
saying, well, they don't have ready-to-construct projects to the
amount.
I provided our list to make sure that we were -- we were up front
and ready to go if those dollars are allocated and they saw fit to send
them to Collier County. I wasn't -- and these are projects that you've
already seen as a board that are either in your five-year transportation
plan and aren't ready to go, but we got the stuff -- got the permits
ready to do and/or we've got plans on the shelf right now with permits
in hand, but we don't have the dollars to execute.
I just wanted to make sure you knew that. I figured if we
languish too long we wouldn't get anywhere close to where we need to
be as far as dollars are concerned, and I know this board is out there
trying to find ways to stimulate the local economy. I can't think of a
better way to stimulate the economy than a $500 million injection.
That's all I have.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: County Manager, you said that you
had, right up front, enough projects to haul down about $500 million
here, and within 12 to 18 months you could probably come up with an
additional $150 million that could be used here to stimulate the
economy of Collier?
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. The instructions that everybody's been
given out of the federal side is the projects have to be ready to go 90
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to 120 days. I mean, contract has to be executed, the notice to proceed
issued, and you've got people working.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: My next question is, do -- does this
have to come through the state, or can we circumvent the state and get
this directly from the -- from Washington DC down here to Collier
County?
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, when you get earmarks out of the
federal government, you bypass the state.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Good.
MR. MUDD: And so -- but we're also taking our list and we're
giving it to the state so that the state can put it as part of theirs. But I
also wanted to make sure that your representatives in congress had our
list so that we could be ready to go.
I mean, it even had Gordon Pass dredging on it, which we still
need about $3 million for to get accomplished. That's even on the list,
and we've got the permits. We're ready to go on that one.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: How about the Everglades
interchange?
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, you don't have the permits to go on
that one. We're still in the planning stage. So, no, sir, it's not there.
And they talk about construction, ready to go with permits. You don't
have that on that interchange. I wish I did.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: How about some of the WRDA
bills, WRDA stuff that we're trying to get down here to do studies?
MR. MUDD: WRDA's an authorization. It's not an
appropriation.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Okay.
MR. MUDD: When you do a WRDA bill, you get authorization,
and your appropriation comes the year after that in the appropriation
bill. So that would be over two years out.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Anything else, Mr. Mudd?
MR. MUDD: No, sir.
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December 16,2008
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: How about you, Mr. Klatzkow?
MS. FILSON: No, I think it's late enough.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Okay. Commissioner Coyle?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yes, I have several things.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Okay. Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It's going to take me a few minutes.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: That's okay. Take your time.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: All right. And I'll go as slowly as I
possibly can.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: That's okay.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: I know how much you enjoy
staying here late at night.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: I had actually the same dinner
engagement Commissioner Henning had, but I think I better forget
about it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: With respect to our budgeting
policy, I think the county manager is taking the right steps, but can we
try to -- can we try to cut out the foolishness with our congressional --
or constitutional officers this year? I mean, getting turnbacks after the
end of the fiscal year and spending time in meetings in December
trying to decide how we're going to budget and spend money that is
turned back from constitutional officers because they intentionally
overbudgeted expenses and underbudgeted revenues so they can come
in here and say, look what we did for you. We're giving you back $5
million this year.
You know, the time has passed for those games. Let's see if we
can't get people to budget more carefully so that we know what we're
doing when we set the budget in June and July. You know, it is insane
to do it the way they're doing it, and there's no good reason for it other
than just to play the public relations game.
So we're beyond those kinds of games now. We need to do
something serious, we need to make serious decisions, we need to
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budget carefully, and we need all of the governmental agencies to do
that, including the constitutional officers.
So is there agreement here that we should include that as budget
guidance to the constitutional officers?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Commissioner Coyle, I think it's a
great idea because what happens is the constituency out there looks at
this as free money.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: And it's not free money, and so
that's why we get ourselves in a pickle saying, well, it's free money.
Now we want landscaping. And there's a lot of other things that we
need to address besides landscaping.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: And it's the same thing when we're
going through our regular budget cycle. I mean, we start budgeting
when, April, May, June? We work on budgets--
COMMISSIONER HALAS: March.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: March.
MR. MUDD: Commissioner, normally the end of February, first
of March I get your guidance.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay. We're working on budgets
all the way through from, let's say, February or March, all the way
through August and September, and there are people coming in here
saying we want more money because we know you got some coming.
You're going to get some in October and November.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: If it makes you feel good, I agree
with you, because ifthere's ever a time for heartburn, it's dividing up
that turnback money.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: That's right, that's right. We
shouldn't be in that position. We should be considering all of the
money we've got available during the time we're going through the
budgeting process so we can have the proper public hearings and try
to make sound decisions on where the money goes to --
Page 293
December 16, 2008
MR. MUDD: I got it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: -- serve our --
MR. MUDD: I've got three nods.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Okay, good.
And with respect to the federal funding, I applaud you for getting
those requests in. I think that's a great thing to do. But once again,
let's be realistic. That money's going to be divided up based on
political issues and not whether or not you've got a project that's ready
to go. But try, you know. That's all you can do.
MR. MUDD: Yes, sir. Ifhe's looking for 350 billion in projects
and all they can do is 76 and the meager county can come up with 500
million, I think we're doing pretty good.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: We're ready to go.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: You'll be -- we'll be lucky to have
any money left once they bailout the automobile companies and the
financial companies on Wall Street. There's not going to be much left
anywhere.
MR. MUDD: Our portfolios will be slim to none, yes, sir. I
agree with you.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It's going to be real slim, okay.
Thank you.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: Commissioner Halas?
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Well, I just want to say that it's
been a pleasure to work with each and every one of you this year.
Obviously we've got two commissioners that are missing right now.
But I just want to wish everybody a happy holiday season and
good health this coming year, and that's for staff also. You've endured
a lot this year with the budget cuts, and obviously you're back there
sweating already with the additional 14.3 to 15 percent budget cuts.
So I just want to make sure that everybody -- let's forget about
the austerity program over this holiday season, let's enjoy the joy with
our families and out-of-town guests, and then we'll get back at it the
Page 294
December 16,2008
first of the year. We'll try to figure out the best way that we can work
through the problems that are facing us.
So I just want to wish each and every one of you a very, very
merry Christmas, happy holidays, and happy new year.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Spend a lot of money over the
holidays. Rejuvenate the economy.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: That's it.
COMMISSIONER COYLE: Buy lots of Christmas presents.
MR. MUDD: Locally.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: One thing, Mr. Mudd, in order to be
able to get a complete appraisal for a financial picture, we have to
know how our investments are doing. Could we get the clerk to come
in here and make a report to us, an update of where we are.
COMMISSIONER HALAS: Yeah, right.
CHAIRMAN COLETTA: No, seriously. Is that too much to
ask?
COMMISSIONER COYLE: It is for him.
MR. MUDD: No, sir. I think you've asked that. I will draft a
letter up for the chairman's signature to try to get him to come in either
the first or second meeting in January to give you an update. Do I
have three nods on that particular issue? I have three nods.
CHAIRMAN HENNING: And with that, merry Christmas,
happy Hanukkah. We're adjourned.
*****Commissioner Halas moved, seconded by Commissioner
Coletta and carried unanimously that the following items under the
Consent and Summary Agendas be approved and/or adopted *****
Item #16Al
ISSUING COMMERCIAL EXCAVATION PERMIT NUMBER
60.010, AR 11983, TO BARRON COLLIER PARTNERSHIP,
Page 295
December 16, 2008
L.L.L.P. FOR THE PROJECT CALLED SOUTH GROVE LAKE.
THE PROJECT CONSISTS OF 158.68 ACRES, MORE OR LESS,
SITTING IN SECTIONS 17 AND 18 OF TOWNSHIP 48, SOUTH,
RANGE 29 EAST, COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA, MORE
PARTICULARLY SITTING ON THE NORTH SIDE OF
OIL WELL ROAD ABOUT TWO MILES EAST OF OIL WELL
GRADE AND WEST OF THE ENTRANCE ROAD TO AVE
MARIA - FOR A 42 ACRE LAKE EXCA V A TION (EARTH
MINE) AND A 89 ACRE LAKE EXCA V A TION (STORMW A TER
MANAGEMENT) ON THE 158.68 ACRE SITE
Item #16A2
RESOLUTION 2008-354: ADJUSTING THE REGULATORY
ASSESSMENT FEE FROM TWO PERCENT TO THREE
PERCENT OF GROSS REVENUES FOR NONEXEMPT
PRIV A TEL Y OWNED WATER AND WASTEWATER UTILITIES
SUBJECT TO LOCAL REGULATION, AS WELL AS ALL
OTHER WATER AND WASTEWATER UTILITIES BOUND BY
INTERLOCAL AGREEMENT, EFFECTIVE MARCH 1,2009, AS
APPROVED BY THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
IN THE FISCAL YEAR 2009 BUDGET AND AS APPROVED BY
THE COLLIER COUNTY WATER AND WASTEWATER
AUTHORITY
Item # 16A3 - Moved to # I OQ
Item #16A4
FINAL AND UNCONDITIONAL CONVEYANCE OF THE
WATER UTILITY FACILITY FOR TALL OAKS, PHASE 3 -
W/RELEASE OF ANY UTILITIES PERFORMANCE SECURITY
Page 296
December 16,2008
Item #16A5
FINAL ACCEPTANCE OF THE WATER UTILITY FACILITY
FOR VETERANS MEMORIAL BOULEVARD, SECTION 7 -
PHASE 2 - W/RELEASE OF ANY UTILITIES PERFORMANCE
SECURITY
Item # 16A6
FINAL ACCEPTANCE OF THE WATER UTILITY FACILITY
FOR VETERANS MEMORIAL BOULEVARD, SECTION 7 AND
12 - W/RELEASE OF ANY UTILITIES PERFORMANCE
SECURITY
Item #16A7
FINAL ACCEPTANCE OF THE WATER UTILITY FACILITY
FOR EDISON COLLEGE - W/RELEASE OF ANY UTILITIES
PERFORMANCE SECURITY
Item # 16A8
FINAL AND UNCONDITIONAL CONVEYANCE OF THE
WATER UTILITY FACILITY FOR NORTH COLLIER
HOSPITAL EXPANSION - W/RELEASE OF ANY UTILITIES
PERFORMANCE SECURITY
Item #16A9
RESOLUTION 2008-355: FINAL APPROVAL OF THE
ROADWAY (PRIV ATE) AND DRAINAGE IMPROVEMENTS
Page 297
December 16, 2008
FOR THE FINAL PLAT OF TERRANOV A AT PELICAN MARSH
UNIT ONE WITH THE ROADWAY AND DRAINAGE
IMPROVEMENTS BEING PRIV A TEL Y MAINTAINED -
W/RELEASE OF THE MAINTENANCE SECURITY
Item #16AIO
RESOLUTION 2008-356: FINAL APPROVAL OF THE
ROADWAY (PRIVATE) AND DRAINAGE IMPROVEMENTS
FOR THE FINAL PLAT OF TERRABELLA AT PELICAN
MARSH UNIT ONE WITH THE ROADWAY AND DRAINAGE
IMPROVEMENTS BEING PRIVATELY MAINTAINED -
W/RELEASE OF THE MAINTENANCE SECURITY
Item #16All
RESOLUTION 2008-357: FINAL APPROVAL OF THE
ROADWAY (PRIVATE) AND DRAINAGE IMPROVEMENTS
FOR THE FINAL PLAT OF TERRABELLA AT PELICAN
MARSH UNIT TWO WITH THE ROADWAY AND DRAINAGE
IMPROVEMENTS BEING PRIV ATEL Y MAINTAINED-
W/RELEASE OF THE MAINTENANCE SECURITY
Item #16A12
AN IMP ACT FEE REIMBURSEMENT REQUESTED BY
CHEFFY P ASSIDOMO WILSON & JOHNSON, LLP ON BEHALF
OF THE WEAKLEY FAMILY PROPERTIES, LLC, TOTALING
$249,107.61, DUE TO THE CANCELLATION OF FOUR
BUILDING PERMITS - FOR PERMITS #503780, #503781,
#503782 AND #503783
Page 298
December 16, 2008
Item #16A13
RESOLUTION 2008-358: ACKNOWLEDGING LOTS ALONG
RA VENNA AVENUE, AS SHOWN ON THE ATTACHED
EXHIBITS, AS LEGAL, NON-CONFORMING LOTS OF
RECORD - THE LOTS ARE GENERALLY 1.25 ACRES, THE
ZONING FOR THESE LOTS IS AGRICULTURAL, WHICH
REQUIRES A MINIMUM OF 5 ACRES PER UNIT
Item #16A14
RESOLUTION 2008-359: FINAL APPROVAL OF THE
ROADWAY (PRIV ATE) AND DRAINAGE IMPROVEMENTS
FOR THE FINAL PLAT OF TRAIL RIDGE WITH THE
ROADWAY AND DRAINAGE IMPROVEMENTS BEING
PRIV A TEL Y MAINTAINED - W /RELEASE OF THE
MAINTENANCE SECURITY
Item #16A15
RECORDING THE FINAL PLAT OF AMERIMED CENTER,
APPROVAL OF THE STANDARD FORM CONSTRUCTION
AND MAINTENANCE AGREEMENT AND APPROVAL OF THE
AMOUNT OF THE PERFORMANCE SECURITY -
W/STIPULA TIONS
Item #16A16 - Moved to Item #100
Item #16B I
A BUDGET AMENDMENT RECOGNIZING AN ADDITIONAL
$404,634.00 IN STATE PUBLIC TRANSIT BLOCK GRANT
Page 299
December 16, 2008
FUNDING FOR FISCAL YEAR 2008/2009 - FUNDING APPLIED
TOWARDS THE OPERATING COSTS OF COLLIER AREA
TRANSIT
Item # 16B2
THE PURCHASE OF FOUR (4) PARA TRANSIT VEHICLES
UTILIZING THE FY08-09 FEDERAL TRANSIT
ADMINISTRATION SECTION 5310 GRANT AWARD ($31,080)
- TO REPLACE HIGH MILEAGE VEHICLES THAT HAVE
200,000 TO 250,000 MILES
Item # 16B3
RESOLUTION 2008-360: REDUCING THE SPEED LIMIT ON
OAKES BOULEVARD BETWEEN V ANDERBIL T BEACH
ROAD AND IMMOKALEE ROAD FROM THE CURRENT
SPEED LIMIT OF FORTY-FIVE MILES PER HOUR (45 MPH)
TO THIRTY-FIVE MILES PER HOUR (35 MPH)
Item #16B4
RESOLUTION 2008-361: REDUCING THE SPEED LIMIT ON
COCONUT UNIT 3 RESIDENTIAL ROADWAY NETWORK
(BURTON ROAD, ESTHER STREET, BONNIE STREET,
LORRAINE AVENUE, KATHY A VENUE AND GALE
BOULEVARD) FROM THE CURRENT SPEED LIMIT OF
THIRTY MILES PER HOUR (30 MPH) TO TWENTY-FIVE
MILES PER HOUR (25 MPH)
Item #16B5
Page 300
December 16, 2008
RESOLUTION 2008-362: EXECUTING THE FEDERAL
TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION SECTION 5310 GRANT
APPLICATION, AND ACCEPTING THE GRANT IF AWARDED
- FUNDS TO BE USED FOR THE PURCHASE OF
PARATRANSIT VEHICLES TO PROVIDE TRANSPORTATION
FOR ELDERLY AND DISABLED RESIDENTS
Item # 16B6
RESOLUTION 2008-363: EXECUTING THE FEDERAL
TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION SECTION 5311 GRANT
APPLICATION AND APPLICABLE DOCUMENTS - TO
SUPPORT PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION ON THE IMMOKALEE
CIRCULA TOR ROUTE
Item #16B7
RESOLUTION 2008-364: MEDICAID CONTRACT
AMENDMENT NUMBER 8 BETWEEN COLLIER COUNTY
AND THE FLORIDA COMMISSION FOR THE
TRANSPORTATION DISADVANTAGED FOR A FUNDING
INCREASE IN THE AMOUNT OF $41,920.00 FOR THE
PROVISION OF TRANSPORTATION FOR QUALIFIED
MEDICAID RECIPIENTS - TO EXTEND THE AGREEMENT
FROM NOVEMBER 30, 2008 THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2008
Item #16B8
A BUDGET AMENDMENT RECOGNIZING REVENUE FOR
THE CONGESTION MANAGEMENT, TIS REVIEW, PUD
MONITORING/TRAFFIC COUNTS PIL, AND PUD
MONITORING/F AIR SHARE PROJECTS WITHIN THE
Page 301
December 16, 2008
TRANSPORTATION SUPPORTED GAS TAX FUND (313) IN
THE AMOUNT OF $630,271.32 - FOR FUNDS COLLECTED IN
FISCAL YEAR 2008
Item #16B9
THE PURCHASE OF ONE (1) PARATRANSIT VEHICLE
UTILIZING THE FY08-09 SHIRLEY CONROY RURAL AREA
CAPITAL ASSISTANCE SUPPORT GRANT AWARD ($59,400)-
TO REPLACE A HIGH MILEAGE VEHICLE THAT HAS OVER
165,000 MILES
Item #16Bl 0
THE NORTHEAST COLLIER COUNTY TRAIL FEASIBILITY
STUDY FINAL REPORT. DUE TO THE SIZE OF THE FINAL
REPORT, VOLUMES I AND 2, COPIES ARE AVAILABLE AT
THE COUNTY MANAGER'S OFFICE - AS DETAILED IN THE
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Item # 16B 11 - Moved to Item # lOR; Direction to remain on Consent
THE PURCHASE OF IMPROVED PROPERTY PARCEL NO.
132FEE (JERRY L. MITCHELL AND BARBARA MITCHELL)
REQUIRED FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE V ANDERBIL T
BEACH ROAD EXTENSION PROJECT. PROJECT NO. 60168.
(FISCAL IMPACT: $729,104) - FOR 6.2 ACRES LOCATED AT
755 27TH AVENUE NW, BETWEEN COLLIER AND WILSON
BOULEVARDS
Item #16B12
Page 302
December 16, 2008
A BUDGET AMENDMENT RECOGNIZING CARRY FORWARD
IN THE AMOUNT OF $3,583.99 AND RECOGNIZING
ADDITIONAL REVENUE FOR THE COLLIER COUNTY
TRANSPORTATION P A THW A YS PROGRAM IN THE
AMOUNT OF $23,550.08 FOR PROJECT NO. 690811 AND
DIRECTING STAFF TO PROCEED WITH THE DESIGN AND
CONSTRUCTION PHASE OF THE PROPOSED PROJECTS -
FOR FUTURE CONSTRUCTION OF SIDEWALK/BIKE PATHS
AND LANES
Item #16B13
CONTRACT #08-5107 TO DYER, RIDDLE, MILLS AND
PRECOURT, INC., PREPARING THE COLLIER
METROPOLITAN PLANNING ORGANIZATIONS 2035 LONG-
RANGE TRANSPORTATION PLAN UPDATE WITH AN
ESTIMATED PROJECT COST OF $505,159.00 (FUND 128, COST
CENTER 138334) - UPDATE REQUIRED EVERY 5 YEARS
Item #16Cl
A BUDGET AMENDMENT APPROPRIATING FUNDS IN THE
AMOUNT OF $61,760.60 REIMBURSING THE COLLIER
COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD FOR THE RE-ROUTING OF THE
LEL Y HIGH SCHOOL FORCE MAIN ASSOCIATED WITH THE
SCWRF RELIABILITY IMPROVEMENTS PROJECT, #72508
Item # 16C2 - Withdrawn
BID NUMBER 08-5123; PURCHASE OF HAULING AND
DISPOSAL OF LIME SLUDGE SERVICES TO PRO-LIME
CORPORATION IN THE ESTIMATED AMOUNT OF $150,000
Page 303
December 16, 2008
ANNUALL Y
Item #16C3
BID NUMBER 09-5145; PURCHASE OF CARTRIDGE FILTERS
FOR THE NORTH AND SOUTH COUNTY REGIONAL WATER
TREATMENT PLANT TO GEORGE S. EDWARDS, COMPANY
INCORPORATED IN THE ESTIMATED AMOUNT OF $500,000
- TO REMOVE DEBRIS AND SAND IN THE RA W WATER
SUPPLY
Item #16Dl
USE AGREEMENT NO. U-0344 BETWEEN BOARD OF
TRUSTEES OF THE INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT TRUST FUND
OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA AND COLLIER COUNTY - TO
ACCESS THE ST ATE PARK FOR THE DREDGING OF
WIGGINS PASS
Item # 16D2
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH ROLLY ST. JOUR (OWNER) FOR
DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMPACT FEES
FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT
LOCATED AT LOT 155, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES-
DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item # 16D3
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH NATALIE CONDE (OWNER) FOR
DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES
FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT
Page 304
December 16, 2008
LOCATED AT LOT 174, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES -
DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item # 16D4
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH SERGE MATHURIN AND
MICHELENE MATHURIN (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF
100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMPACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT
95, LIBERTY LANDING, IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING
$12,442.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D5
AUTHORIZING $75,000 FOR FY09, FYI0 AND FYll TO
CONTRACT #08-5082, FOR SEA OAT PLANTING FOR
COLLIER COUNTY COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT
(PROJECT 195-900441) - IN CONJUNCTION WITH DUNE
RESTORATION
Item #16D6
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH KENOLD PIERRE AND MARIE
GERTRUDE (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF
COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCA TED AT LOT
40, LIBERTY LANDING, IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING
$12,442.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D7
A CONSENT OF MORTGAGEE THEREBY ALLOWING EDEN
Page 305
December 16, 2008
GARDENS APARTMENTS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP (EGALP)
TO EXECUTE A GRANT OF EASEMENT TO LEE COUNTY
ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE (LCEC) FOR THE RESERVE AT
EDEN GARDENS - IN ORDER TO PROCEED WITH THE
ELECTRICAL INSTALLATION
Item # 16D8
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH MEDELSONNE GARRAUX AND
ROSE G. GARRAUX GEROME (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF
100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT
176, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES - DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN
IMPACT FEES
Item #16D9
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH MA YRA CARDENAS (OWNER)
FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMPACT
FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING
UNIT LOCA TED AT LOT 48, LIBERTY LANDING,
IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $14,987.08 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16DIO
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH CHRISTY MARIE FEGUEROA
(OWNER) FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY
IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE
HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 49, LIBERTY LANDING,
IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $14,987.08 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16Dl1
Page 306
December 16, 2008
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH REBECCA ANTOINE (OWNER)
FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT
FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING
UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 29, LIBERTY LANDING,
IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $12,442.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D12
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH MANUS LOUIS AND JUSLENE
LOUIS (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER
COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED
AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 170, TRAIL
RIDGE, EAST NAPLES - DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN IMPACT
FEES
Item #16D13
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH STYVE DESGROTTES AND
NAJAH M. DESGROTTES (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF
100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT
135, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES - DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN
IMPACT FEES
Item#16D14
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH SUZELLA JOSEPH (OWNER) FOR
DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMPACT FEES
FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT
LOCATED AT LOT 172, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES -
DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Page 307
December 16, 2008
Item #16D15
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH PHILOMISE FRANCOIS (OWNER)
FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT
FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING
UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 45, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES -
DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D16
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH KETTY MONTOBAN (OWNER)
FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT
FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING
UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 175, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES -
DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D17
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH MARIO DIAZ LUJAN AND JAEL
AVALOS PEREZ (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF
COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCA TED AT LOT
171, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES - DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN
IMP ACT FEES
Item #16D18
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH JEAN BAPTISTE SERGOT
SOUVERAIN AND MARIE EDITH SOUVERAIN (OWNERS)
FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMPACT
FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING
Page 308
December 16,2008
UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 38, LIBERTY LANDING,
IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $12,442.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D19
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH P ABILIEE ANOFILS (OWNER)
FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT
FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING
UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 119, LIBERTY LANDING,
IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $14,987.08 IN IMPACT FEES
Item # 16D20
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH FRANTZ DESGROTTES AND
ROLANDE DESGROTTES (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF
100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT
138, TRAIL RIDGE, EAST NAPLES - DEFERRING $19,372.46 IN
IMP ACT FEES
Item #16D21
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH IGNACIO ZARAGOZA AND
MARIA ZARAGOZA BENITEZ (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF
100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT
52, LIBERTY LANDING, IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING
$14,987.08 IN IMPACT FEES
Item # 16D22
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH MARTHA LUZ CARRILLO
Page 309
December 16, 2008
(OWNER) FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY
IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE
HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 108, LIBERTY LANDING,
IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $12,442.46 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D23
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH JOSE SANTOS AVELLANEDA
AND MARISOL MENDOZA (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF
100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT
51, LIBERTY LANDING, IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING
$14,987.08 IN IMPACT FEES
Item # 16D24
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH MARIE G. JORCELIN (OWNER)
FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMPACT
FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING
UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 50, LIBERTY LANDING,
IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $14,987.08 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D25
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH FRANCISCO VERA AND MARIA
JUANA VERA (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF
COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT
8, MILAGRO PLACE, IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $19,311.96
IN IMPACT FEES
Item # 16D26
Page 310
December 16, 2008
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH THERESE ST. CYR (OWNER) FOR
DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMPACT FEES
FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT
LOCATED AT LOT 2, MILAGRO PLACE, IMMOKALEE -
DEFERRING $19,311.96 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D27
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH AMALIA LUBREF AND
MENTORLIS LUBREF (OWNERS) FOR DEFERRAL OF 100%
OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT FEES FOR AN OWNER-
OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING UNIT LOCATED AT LOT
7, MILAGRO PLACE, IMMOKALEE - DEFERRING $19,290.73
IN IMP ACT FEES
Item #16D28
A LIEN AGREEMENT WITH LUCIENNE LAROSE (OWNER)
FOR DEFERRAL OF 100% OF COLLIER COUNTY IMP ACT
FEES FOR AN OWNER-OCCUPIED AFFORDABLE HOUSING
UNIT LOCATED AT LOT 18, MILAGRO PLACE, IMMOKALEE
- DEFERRING $19,290.73 IN IMPACT FEES
Item #16D29
THE ANNUAL CERTIFICATION FOR IMPLEMENTATION OF
REGULATORY REFORM ACTIVITIES BY THE STATE
HOUSING INITIATIVES PARTNERSHIP (SHIP) PROGRAM-
TO ENSURE THAT THE COUNTY CONTINUES TO BE
ELIGIBLE TO PARTICIPATE IN AND RECEIVE FUNDING
FROM THE SHIP PROGRAM
Page 311
December 16, 2008
Item #16D30 - Withdrawn
RECOGNIZING HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
(HUD) FUNDS IN THE AMOUNT OF $84,375.00 FOR THE
GOLDEN GATE SENIOR MEALS PROGRAM WHICH IS
ADMINISTERED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
HUMAN SERVICES (HHS). THIS PROGRAM IS AN
EXPANSION TO AN EXISTING HHS PROGRAM WHICH
PROVIDES NUTRITIOUS MEALS TO LOW-INCOME SENIORS
IN COLLIER COUNTY
Item #16031 - Withdrawn
A LEASE AGREEMENT WITH MESSIAH LUTHERAN
CHURCH, INC. OF GOLDEN GATE FOR SPACE TO
ACCOMMODA TE THE HOUSING AND HUMAN SERVICES
SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
Item # 16D32
AN AGREEMENT BETWEEN COLLIER COUNTY AND VI
LTD., LIMITED PARTNERSHIP REGARDING PROFESSIONAL
SERVICES FOR COLLIER COUNTY BEACH AMENITIES ON
BLUEBILL A VENUE THEREBY RATIFYING AND
CONFIRMING ALL ACTIONS TAKEN BY STAFF WITH THE
DEVELOPER IN THIS MATTER - TO PROVIDE BEACH
ACCESS AND PUBLIC RESTROOM FACILITIES WHERE
NONE PREVIOUSLY EXISTED
Item #16D33
Page 312
December 16, 2008
SUMMARY OF THE IMP ACT FEE DEFERRAL AGREEMENTS
RECOMMENDED FOR APPROVAL IN FY09, INCLUDING THE
TOTAL NUMBER OF AGREEMENTS APPROVED, THE TOTAL
DOLLAR AMOUNT DEFERRED AND THE BALANCE
REMAINING FOR ADDITIONAL DEFERRALS IN FY09 - AS
DETAILED IN THE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Item # 16D34
A SUBRECIPIENT AGREEMENT PROVIDING FOR A
HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) GRANT TO
THE PHYSICIAN LED ACCESS NETWORK (PLAN) IN THE
AMOUNT OF $40,000, PROVIDING MEDICAL REFERRAL
SERVICES AND PRESCRIPTION MEDICATIONS FOR LOW-
INCOME RESIDENTS IN COLLIER COUNTY - TO ASSIST IN
INCREASING THE NUMBER OF PATIENT REFERRALS
PROCESSED THROUGH THE PLAN
Item #16D35
BID #08-5134; THE LOWEST QUALIFIED AND RESPONSIVE
BIDDER WILLIAMSON BROTHERS MARINE
CONSTRUCTION, INC. FOR THE CONSTRUCTION
CONTRACT OF THE CAXAMBAS BOAT DOCK PROJECT
#80057.1 ($132,140.00)
Item #16D36
A DONATION FROM THE COLLIER COUNTY VETERANS
COUNCIL IN THE AMOUNT OF $23,360.40 FOR THE
PURCHASE OF A VEHICLE FOR THE VETERANS
TRANSPORTATION PROGRAM. BUDGET AMENDMENTS
Page 313
December 16, 2008
RECOGNIZING THE DONATION AND TRANSFER THE
FUNDS TO THE VETERANS TRANSPORTATION PROGRAM.
REFERENCE AGENDA ITEM 5A, DECEMBER 16,2008 - THE
VEHICLE IS TO BE USED FOR TRANSPORTING VETERANS
TO V A MEDICAL APPOINTMENTS THROUGHOUT SOUTH
FLORIDA
Item #16D37 - Moved to Item #IOP
Item #16D38
AN INTERNATIONAL CITY/COUNTY MANAGEMENT
ASSOCIATION (ICMA) PUBLIC LIBRARY INNOVATION
GRANT, IN THE AMOUNT OF $53,770, AND AUTHORIZING
THE CHAIRMAN TO SIGN THE APPLICATION - FOR THE
PURCHASE OF ELECTRONIC DOWNLOAD STATIONS AND
ELECTRONIC READERS IN ALL LIBRARIES
Item #16D39
A GRANT AGREEMENT WITH THE UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE (EDI) FUNDS
IN THE AMOUNT OF $147,000 FOR IMPROVEMENTS TO
SOUTH PARK IN IMMOKALEE - TO REPLACE THE
CURRENT COMMUNITY CENTER BUILDINGS WHICH ARE
AGED AND IN POOR CONDITION
Item#16El
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH ALAN
TUCKER FOR 10 ACRES UNDER THE CONSERVATION
Page 314
December 16, 2008
COLLIER LAND ACQUISITION PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT
TO EXCEED $35,500 - IN THE CAMP KEAIS STRAND AREA,
LOCATED SOUTH OF OIL WELL ROAD
Item #16E2
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH NORMA
DEPESTRE-COBA FOR 4.54 ACRES UNDER THE
CONSERVATION COLLIER LAND ACQUISITION PROGRAM,
AT A COST NOT TO EXCEED $72,800 - WITHIN THE RED
MAPLE SWAMP PRESERVE MULTI-PARCEL PROJECT
Item #16E3
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH ALINA
GONZALEZ FOR 2.50 ACRES UNDER THE CONSERVATION
COLLIER LAND ACQUISITION PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT
TO EXCEED $40,300 - WITHIN THE RED MAPLE SWAMP
PRESERVE MULTI-PARCEL PROJECT
Item #16E4
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH HAROLD
MIR FOR 2.50 ACRES UNDER THE CONSERVATION COLLIER
LAND ACQUISITION PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT TO
EXCEED $40,300 - WITHIN THE RED MAPLE SWAMP
PRESERVE MULTI-PARCEL PROJECT
Item #16E5
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH MANUEL
PALACIOS AND AIDA JAUREGUI FOR 4.93 ACRES UNDER
Page 315
December 16, 2008
THE CONSERVATION COLLIER LAND ACQUISITION
PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT TO EXCEED $79, I 00 - WITHIN
THE RED MAPLE SWAMP PRESERVE MULTI-PARCEL
PROJECT
Item #16E6
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH RICHARD F.
BERMAN, AS TO 50%, AND FRANK J. CELSNAK AND
MARLENE 1. CELSNAK, AS TRUSTEES U/D/T (OR U/A)
DATED DECEMBER 27,1991, AS TO 50%, ALL AS TENANTS
IN COMMON, FOR 1.14 ACRES UNDER THE CONSERVATION
COLLIER LAND ACQUISITION PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT
TO EXCEED $19,300 - WITHIN THE WINCHESTER HEAD
MULTI-PARCEL PROJECT
Item #16E7
AN AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH RONALD
JACK BORTNICK AND SHERRY K. BORTNICK, ALSO
KNOWN AS SHERRIE K. BORTNICK, FOR 5 ACRES UNDER
THE CONSERVATION COLLIER LAND ACQUISITION
PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT TO EXCEED $13,100 - WITHIN
THE CAMP KEAIS STRAND PROJECT, LOCATED SOUTH OF
OIL WELL ROAD
Item # 16E8
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH CHARLES A.
DARBY AND CHARLOTTE T. DARBY, TRUSTEES OF THE
DARBY REVOCABLE TRUST, U/T/DNOVEMBER 7,1997, FOR
5 ACRES UNDER THE CONSER V A TION COLLIER LAND
Page 316
December 16, 2008
ACQUISITION PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT TO EXCEED
$13,100 - WITHIN THE CAMP KEAIS STRAND PROJECT,
LOCATED SOUTH OF OIL WELL ROAD
Item #16E9
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH OLA
PHILLIPS GRIFFIN, ALSO KNOWN AS OLA MAE GRIFFIN
FOR 5 ACRES UNDER THE CONSERVATION COLLIER LAND
ACQUISITION PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT TO EXCEED
$13,100 - WITHIN THE CAMP KEAIS STRAND PROJECT,
LOCATED SOUTH OF OIL WELL ROAD
Item #16EIO
AGREEMENT FOR SALE AND PURCHASE WITH BERNARD
D. SCHAAB FOR 2.5 ACRES UNDER THE CONSERVATION
COLLIER LAND ACQUISITION PROGRAM, AT A COST NOT
TO EXCEED $6,900 - WITHIN THE CAMP KEAIS STRAND
PROJECT, LOCATED SOUTH OF OIL WELL ROAD
Item #16Ell
AN AGREEMENT PROVIDING A MAXIMUM EXPENDITURE
OF $47,115 FROM THE GAC LAND TRUST TO THE GOLDEN
GATE FIRE CONTROL AND RESCUE DISTRICT FOR THE
PURCHASE OF FIRE SHELTERS AND RADIO EQUIPMENT
Item #16E12
A LONG-STANDING STAFF PRACTICE OF SOLICITING
DONATIONS FOR A SEASONAL, CHARITABLE PROGRAM,
Page 317
December 16, 2008
WHICH PRACTICE INCLUDES THE USE OF THE COUNTY'S
E-MAIL SYSTEM AND SOLICITING CASH DONATIONS
FROM FELLOW COUNTY EMPLOYEES. SHOULD THE
BOARD NOT GRANT ITS APPROVAL, THE EMPLOYEES
WOULD BE LEFT TO CONTINUE WHATEVER CHARITABLE
WORK THEY WISH TO ENGAGE IN OUTSIDE OF COUNTY
GOVERNMENT - FOR THE GUARDIAN AD LITEM GIFT TREE
PROGRAM
Item #16E13
CHANGE ORDER NUMBER 1 TO CONTRACT NO. 08-5073
WITH RW A, INC. FOR THE IMMOKALEE MASTER PLAN AND
RELATED SERVICES AND APPROVING A $165,500 BUDGET
AMENDMENT AS SUFFICIENT APPROPRIATION TO FUND A
PUBLIC REALM PLAN IN THE SCOPE OF SERVICES. (THIS
ITEM IS A COMPANION ITEM TO 16Gl)
Item #16E14
RESOLUTION 2008-365: A LEASE AGREEMENT WITH STATE
REPRESENT A TIVE MATT HUDSON FOR USE OF COUNTY-
OWNED OFFICE SPACE FOR AN INITIAL TWO YEAR TERM
A T A TOTAL REVENUE OF $20 - LOCATED IN THE
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING, SUITE 212
Item #16E15
RESOLUTION 2008-366: A LEASE AGREEMENT WITH STATE
REPRESENT A TIVE DAVID RIVERA FOR USE OF COUNTY-
OWNED OFFICE SPACE FOR AN INITIAL TWO YEAR TERM
A T A TOTAL REVENUE OF $20 - LOCATED IN THE
Page 318
December 16, 2008
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING, SUITE 305
Item #16E16
RESOLUTION 2008-367: A LEASE AGREEMENT WITH STATE
REPRESENTATIVE TOM GRADY FOR USE OF COUNTY-
OWNED OFFICE SPACE FOR AN INITIAL TWO YEAR TERM
AT A TOTAL REVENUE OF $20 - LOCATED IN THE
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING, SUITE 304
Item #16E17
RESOLUTION 2008-368: A LEASE AGREEMENT WITH STATE
SENATOR GARRETT RICHTER FOR USE OF COUNTY-
OWNED OFFICE SPACE FOR AN INITIAL FOUR YEAR TERM
AT A TOTAL REVENUE OF $40 - LOCATED IN THE
ADMINISTRATION BUILDING, SUITE 203
Item #16E18
CHANGE ORDERS AND CHANGES TO WORK ORDERS TO
BOARD-APPROVED CONTRACTS - FOR THE PERIOD OF
OCTOBER 24, 2008 THROUGH NOVEMBER 20, 2008
Item #16Fl
BUDGET AMENDMENTS - FOR THE REVISION OF THE
IMMOKALEE REGIONAL AIRPORT (#BA-09-103 AND #BA 09-
104)
Item #16F2
Page 319
December 16, 2008
A CERTIFICATE OF PUBLIC CONVENIENCE AND
NECESSITY FOR THE COLLIER COUNTY EMERGENCY
MEDICAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT-RENEWAL IS
REQUIRED EACH YEAR
Item #16F3
PAYMENT FOR PRINCIPAL BALANCES FOR GROUND AND
AIR EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES CHARGES IN THE
AMOUNT OF $7,054.20 AND WAIVING THE INTEREST DUE
FOR THESE TRANSPORTS IN THE AMOUNT OF $1,607.17-
TO COVER A 2005 AUTO ACCIDENT CASE
Item #16F4
BUDGET AMENDMENTS FOR THE CONSERVATION
COLLIER LAND MAINTENANCE FUND (174) AND DEBT
SERVICE FUND (272) INSURING ADEQUATE CASH
BALANCE FOR THE JANUARY 1,2009 DEBT SERVICE
PAYMENT - PAYMENTS FOR INTEREST ARE MADE
SEMIANNUALL Y ON JANUARY I AND ON JULY I EACH
YEAR
Item #16F5
A MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING AMENDING AND
REVISING THE YEAR 2006-2009 COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
AGREEMENT WITH THE SOUTHWEST FLORIDA
PROFESSIONAL FIREFIGHTERS LOCAL 1826
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIREFIGHTERS, INC-
WAIVING THE 2% ANNUAL MERIT PAY PROVISION FOR
FY09
Page 320
December 16, 2008
Item #16F6
RESOLUTION 2008-369: A RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF THE
TOURISM INDUSTRY POSITION ON DRILLING FOR
NA TURAL GAS AND OIL OFF THE SHORELINE OF FLORIDA
Item #16F7
CHANGE ORDER #2 FOR MILES MEDIA GROUP CONTRACT
#06-4037 IN THE AMOUNT OF $22,878.00 INCLUDING A
STAFF AUTHORIZED EXPENSE OF $7,964.00 FOR THE 2008
VISITOR GUIDE - FOR PRODUCTION OF THE VISITORS'
GUIDE TO BE USED TO FULFILL INFORMATION REQUESTS
AS AND HANDOUTS AT TRADESHOWS WORLDWIDE
Item #16F8 - Moved to Item #10S; Direction to remain on Consent
CONTRACT FOR RFP #08-5081 WITH PUBLIC FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT, INC., FOR FINANCIAL ADVISORY
SERVICES - FOR AN INITIAL TWO YEAR CONTRACT
Item # 16F9
RESOLUTION 2008-370: A SECOND OFFERING OF THE
VOLUNTARY SEPARATION INCENTIVE PROGRAM,
EMPOWER THE COUNTY MANAGER TO IMPLEMENT THIS
PROGRAM, AND AUTHORIZING THE ENABLING
RESOLUTION IN AN EFFORT TO ASSIST THE COUNTY
MANAGERS AGENCY IN MEETING ITS FINANCIAL GOALS
Item #16G I
Page 321
December 16, 2008
CHANGE ORDER NO.1 TO CONTRACT NO. 08-5073 WITH
RWA, INC. FOR THE IMMOKALEE MASTER PLAN AND
RELATED SERVICES AND A $165,500 BUDGET AMENDMENT
SUFFICIENT APPROPRIATION TO FUND A PUBLIC REALM
PLAN IN THE SCOPE OF SERVICES (THIS ITEM IS A
COMPANION ITEM TO 16E13) - AS DETAILED IN THE
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Item # 16G2
ACCEPTING ADDITIONAL FUNDS FROM THE FLORIDA
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION IN THE AMOUNT OF
$3,763 AND PROVIDING FIFTY PERCENT (50%) MATCH IN
THE AMOUNT OF $3,763 FOR A TOTAL BUDGET
AMENDMENT OF $7,526 FOR DESIGN, PERMITTING,
BIDDING AND CONSTRUCTION OVERSIGHT FOR THE
APRON AND PARKING LOT EXPANSION AT THE MARCO
ISLAND EXECUTIVE AIRPORT
Item # 16G3
CRA RESOLUTION 2008-371: ESTABLISHING A
PERFORMANCE EV ALUA TION PROCESS FOR THE CRA
EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS
Item #16Hl
PROCLAMATION RECOGNIZING IRV BERZON FOR HIS
SERVICES TO COLLIER COUNTY - ADOPTED
Item # 16H2
Page 322
. . _...~.-.__.._--~..-.-~---~ ,,-.--. ...._...,_...,._._..~._~-~.._-~-'" -_.......,,_.~.-.._,,_..._.-
December 16, 2008
COMMISSIONER FIALA'S REQUEST FOR REIMBURSEMENT
REGARDING ATTENDANCE AT A FUNCTION SERVING A
VALID PUBLIC PURPOSE. ATTENDED THE ENCA
LUNCHEON ON NOVEMBER 20, 2008 AT CARRABBA'S ON
EAST 41 IN NAPLES, FL. $21.00 TO BE PAID FROM
COMMISSIONER FIALA'S TRAVEL BUDGET
Item #16H3
COMMISSIONER FIALA'S REQUEST FOR REIMBURSEMENT
REGARDING ATTENDANCE AT A FUNCTION SERVING A
VALID PUBLIC PURPOSE. ATTENDED THE ENCA
LUNCHEON ON SEPTEMBER 18,2008 AT CARRABBA'S ON
EAST 41 IN NAPLES, FL. $21.00 TO BE PAID FROM
COMMISSIONER FIALA'S TRAVEL BUDGET
Item #16H4
COMMISSIONER FIALA'S REQUEST FOR REIMBURSEMENT
REGARDING ATTENDANCE AT A FUNCTION SERVING A
VALID PUBLIC PURPOSE. ATTENDED THE FRIENDS OF THE
LIBRARY SOCK HOP DANCE ON DECEMBER 12,2008 AT
SOUTH REGIONAL LIBRARY IN NAPLES, FL. $10.00 TO BE
P AID FROM COMMISSIONER FIALA'S TRAVEL BUDGET
Item # 16H5
COMMISSIONER HENNING'S REQUEST FOR
REIMBURSEMENT TO ATTEND AN EVENT SERVING A
V ALID PUBLIC PURPOSE. ATTENDED THE COLLIER
CITIZEN OF THE YEAR 2008 DINNER ON NOVEMBER 21,
Page 323
December 16, 2008
2008. $35.00 TO BE PAID OUT OF COMMISSIONER
HENNING'S TRAVEL BUDGET - HELD AT THE NAPLES
ELKS LODGE
Item #1611
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS TO FILE FOR RECORD WITH
ACTION AS DIRECTED
The following miscellaneous correspondence, as presented by the
Board of County Commissioners, has been directed to the various
departments as indicated:
Page 324
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
MISCELLANEOUS CORRESPONDENCE
December 16, 2008
1. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS TO FILE FOR RECORD WITH ACTION AS DIRECTED:
A. Minutes:
1) Affordable Housing Commission:
Minutes of October 6,2008.
Voting Conflict Form 8B, dated April 7, 2008, with copy of minutes
of April 7, 2008.
2) Animal Services Advisory Board:
Minutes of October 21,2008.
3) Board of Building Adiustments and Appeals:
Minutes of October 16, 2008.
4) Collier County Coastal Advisory Committee:
Minutes of October 9, 2008.
5) Collier County Planning Commission:
Agenda of November 20,2008.
Minutes of September 26,2008 Special Session; October 2,2008
Regular Session; October 2, 2008 Special Session.
6) Golden Gate Community Center Advisory Committee:
Minutes of September 2,2008.
7) Habitat Conservation Plan Ad Hoc Committee:
Minutes of August 27,2008; September 24, 2008 - unofficial, no
quorum.
8) Hispanic Affairs Advisory Board:
Minutes of September 25, 2008.
9) Immokalee Enterprise Zone Development Agency:
Agenda of November 19, 2008.
Minutes of October 15,2008.
10) Immokalee Local Redevelopment Advisory Board:
Agenda of November 19, 2008.
Minutes of October 15, 2008
11)
12)
13)
14)
Immokalee Master Plan and Visioning Committee:
Agenda of November 19, 2008 joint w/CRA Committee Members.
Minutes of October 15,2008 joint w/CRA Committee Members.
Isles of Capri Fire Control District Advisory Committee:
Agenda of October 2, 2008.
Minutes of October 2, 2008.
Ochopee Fire Control District Advisory Committee:
Minutes of October 13,2008.
Parks and Recreation Advisory Board:
Minutes of October 15,2008.
December 16, 2008
Item # 1611
DESIGNATING THE SHERIFF AND SHERIFF ELECT AS THE
OFFICIAL APPLICANT(S) AND POINTS-OF-CONT ACT,
ACCEPTERS OF THE GRANT WHEN AWARDED, RECEIVE
AND EXPEND GRANT FUNDS, AND APPROVE AND SUBMIT
APPLICABLE BUDGET AND PROGRAM MODIFICATIONS
FORA UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY FISCAL YEAR 2009 OPERATIONS STONEGARDEN
GRANT - AS DETAILED IN THE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Item #16J2
AN AGREEMENT AUTHORIZING THE COLLIER COUNTY
SHERIFF'S OFFICE TO HAVE TRAFFIC CONTROL
JURISDICTION OVER PRIVATE ROADS WITHIN THE
VERONA WALK SUBDIVISION
Item # 1613
CAPITAL ASSET DISPOSITION RECORDS FOR TIME PERIOD
OCTOBER 1, 2007 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 - FOR
ITEMS NO LONGER DEEMED TO SERVE A USEFUL
FUNCTION OR HA VING ANY COMMERCIAL VALUE
Item #16J4
ACCEPTING THE REPORT OF INTEREST FOR THE FISCAL
YEAR ENDING SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 PURSUANT TO THE
FLORIDA STATUTE 218.78 AND PURCHASING POLICY XII.
SECTION E, FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING SEPTEMBER
30, 2008: NO INTEREST WAS PAID
Page 325
December 16, 2008
Item #16J5
DISBURSEMENTS FOR THE PERIOD OF NOVEMBER 22, 2008
THROUGH NOVEMBER 28, 2008 AND FOR SUBMISSION
INTO THE OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE BOARD
Item #16J6
DISBURSEMENTS FOR THE PERIOD OF NOVEMBER 29, 2008
THROUGH DECEMBER 05, 2008 AND FOR SUBMISSION INTO
THE OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE BOARD
Item #16Kl
AN OFFER OF JUDGMENT FOR PARCEL #115FEE BY
COLLIER COUNTY TO PROPERTY OWNER NORMA
F ARMILO, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEE, IN THE
LA WSUIT STYLED CC V. ROBBIE L. RAYBURN, ET AL.,
CASE NO. 07-4268-CA (SANTA BARBARA BOULEVARD
EXTENSION PROJECT NO. 60091) (FISCAL IMPACT: IF
ACCEPTED, $48,038.00) - FOR THE TAKING OF A FEE
SIMPLE INTEREST IN A 3.79 ACRE PARCEL
Item #16K2
A LAWSUIT ON BEHALF OF THE COLLIER COUNTY BOARD
OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, AGAINST JOSEF A DE LA
ROSA IN COUNTY COURT IN AND FOR COLLIER COUNTY,
FLORIDA, TO RECOVER DAMAGES IN THE AMOUNT OF
$6,019.50 - DAMAGED A COUNTY LIGHT POLE AND A PALM
TREE
Page 326
December 16, 2008
Item #16K3
A STIPULATED FINAL JUDGMENT IN THE AMOUNT OF
$26,000.00 FOR PARCEL #164RDUE IN THE LAWSUIT
STYLED COLLIER COUNTY V. JOHN GODDARD, ET AL.,
CASE NO. 07-3111-CA (OIL WELL ROAD PROJECT 60044)
(FISCAL IMPACT $12,870.00) - FOR A .052 ACRE PARCEL
NEEDED FOR A RIGHT-OF-WAY, DRAINAGE AND UTILITIES
EASEMENT
Item #16K4
A STIPULATED FINAL JUDGMENT IN THE AMOUNT OF
$39,000.00 FOR PARCEL #1 84RDUE IN THE LAWSUIT
STYLED COLLIER COUNTY V. HELMUT HITTINGER AND
LYNDA HITTINGER, AS CO-TRUSTEES OF THE HELMUT
HITTINGER REVOCABLE TRUST DATED APRIL 29,1991, ET
AL., CASE NO. 07-3898-CA (OIL WELL ROAD PROJECT NO.
60044) (FISCAL IMPACT $27,800.00) - FOR A .321 ACRE
PARCEL NEEDED FOR A PERPETUAL NON-EXCLUSIVE
ROAD RIGHT-OF-WAY, DRAINAGE AND UTILITY
EASEMENT
Item #17A
RESOLUTION 2008-372: PETITION A VESMT-2007-AR-12316,
1999 GORDON RIVER LANE, DISCLAIMING, RENOUNCING
AND VACATING THE COUNTY'S AND THE PUBLIC'S
INTEREST IN THAT PORTION OF A 25-FOOT WIDE
DRAINAGE EASEMENT ALONG THE REAR OF LOT 1,
NATURE POINT, AS FILED IN PLAT BOOK 20, PAGES 20-22
Page 327
December 16, 2008
OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA,
SITUATED IN SECTION 35, TOWNSHIP 49 SOUTH, RANGE 25
EAST, COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA, THE VACATED
PORTION BEING MORE SPECIFICALLY DEPICTED AND
DESCRIBED IN EXHIBIT A AND ACCEPT THE
REPLACEMENT DRAINAGE EASEMENT ALSO SHOWN ON
EXHIBIT A
Item #17B
RESOLUTION 2008-373: CU-2007-AR-12619, K.O.V.A.C
ENTERPRISES, LLC, REPRESENTED BY TIM HANCOCK,
AICP, OF DAVIDSON ENGINEERING, A CONDITIONAL USE
FOR A REFUSE SYSTEM IN THE INDUSTRIAL (I) ZONING
DISTRICT. THE +/- 3.73-ACRE SUBJECT PROPERTY IS
LOCATED AT 1995 ELSA STREET, SECTION 11, TOWNSHIP
49 SOUTH, RANGE 25 EAST, COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA
Item #17C - Moved to Item #8B
Item #17D
RESOLUTION 2008-374: AMENDMENTS (APPROPRIATING
CARRY FORWARD, TRANSFERS AND SUPPLEMENTAL
REVENUE) TO THE FISCAL YEAR 2008-09 ADOPTED
BUDGET
Item #17E
ORDINANCE 2008-66: AMENDING ORDINANCE NO. 87-55, AS
AMENDED, IMPERIAL GOLF EST A TES, PHASE V
Page 328
RECEIVED
JAN 0 5 2009
December 16, 2008
Board of County Commissioners
*****
There being no further business for the good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 6:44 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARO(S) OF
SPE AL 01 RICTS UNDER ITS CONTROL
~.
aIrman
ATTEST
DWIGHT,pdij~.oCK, CLERK
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I i.
These I}linutes approved by the Board on ~, as presented
V or as corrected .
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF GREGORY
COURT REPORTING SERVICES, INC., BY TERRI LEWIS.
Page 329