BCC Minutes 01/31/1995 W (Legislative Issues)WORKSHOP MEETING OF JANUARY 31, 1995,
OF THE BOARD OF COUNTY COHMISSIONERS
LET IT BE REHEHBERED, that the Board of County Commissioners in
and for the County of Collier, and also acting as the Board of Zoning
Appeals and as the governing board(s) of such special districts as have
been created according to law and having conducted business herein, met
on this date at 9:14 a.m. in the Collier County Museum at the
Government Complex, East Naples, Florida, with the following members
present:
CHAIRPERSON:
Bettye J. Hatthews
Timothy J. Constantine
John C. Norris
Timothy L. Hancock
Pamela S. Hac'Kie
ALSO PRESENT: W. Neil Dorrill, County Hanager
Ken Cuyler, County Attorney
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Let's -- I want to call to order the
workshop for the Board of County Commissioners for Tuesday, January the
31st, 1995. Mr. Dotrill, would you lead us in the invocation?
MR. DORRILL: Heavenly Father, as always, we give thanks this
morning for the wonderful quality of life. We give thanks for the
weather that we've enjoyed the past week or so in our community.
Father, on this fifth Tuesday we give thanks for a time to stop and
reflect on other issues that are of importance to Collier County
outside of our normal meeting process. We'd ask that you bless our
time here together this morning.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: There's no flag, so I guess we won't be
able to say the pledge.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: There's one on -- one on his tie there.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Hey, Hancock, where are the doughnuts?
MR. DORRILL: We have dispatched a staffer to get some doughnuts
from Doughnutland.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. Why don't we move forward. The
first item on the agenda is a report of what's going on with the
legislative process, and Representative Butt Saunders will give us an
update. For the people who don't know yet, he's a new father.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: So if I fall asleep sitting here, it's
because I haven't had much sleep here.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Congratulations.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Thank you. I appreciate the opportunity
to speak before the commission concerning some things that are
happening in Tallahassee. This is really, I guess, a two-way
communication. I'd like to go through a couple of items that I think
are of some significance to the county that will happen during the
legislative session, but I'd also like to see if there are anything --
if there are any items that the commissioners would like to discuss.
The deadline for proposing bills is February 10th. So if there's
any area of special legislation, not -- not special bills, but areas of
-- of general legislation that the commission is interested in, keep
that deadline in mind. We have a very short time clock at this point
in order to get bills submitted.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: I have one.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Yes, sir.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Winter is getting to me here. What -- maybe
-- you may not be able to answer this one right off the top of your
head, but what would be the process for combining some of the state
agencies in the interest of -- of consolidating and making the
government run more efficiently?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: I think -- I think the good news is that
the governor has promulgated a policy of reducing the number of rules
and regulations by 50 percent. The legislature has jumped on that
bandwagon rather quickly.
We've endorsed that, and I think over the next couple of years
what you're going to see is each of the agencies going through a self
evaluation and determining what rules are simply just not necessary or
ineffective in -- in eliminating a lot of that type of regulation.
In terms of combining agencies, there is an effort to streamline
government. There are going to be some of the environmental agencies
that will likely be combined. Matter of fact, one of them I was going
to mention, two of them, involve the Fish and Game Commission and the
Marine Fisheries Commission. Those two state agencies will likely be
combined. It's one of those things where the environmentalists are
supportive of it as well as the industries that are in support of it.
I think you will see more of an effort as time goes on.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Are you saying that those two particular
agencies would be combined into one rather than the proposal that was
-- was bandied about a couple of years back was to roll both of those
into the DEP?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: I think they would be -- a new agency
would be created to include those two as opposed to rolling them into
the DEP. But I guess the point is that what you're saying is well
taken. There will be an effort to streamline state government, reduce
the cost, reduce the number of regulations, reduce the amount of
agencies.
Now, on top of that, though, there's -- one of the other things I
want to talk about is a proposal to create a new agency, so there may
be some -- I guess it's reminiscent of when we tried to reduce the
number of advisory boards.
While we're talking about that, the one agency that may very well
be created is a department of -- of health. There are 37 states that
have separate departments of health. Florida has all of its
health-related issues involved in HRS along with other nonhealth
related matters. And the idea is to carve out of HRS all of those
health-related issues, public health, licensing of physicians,
everything -- certificate of need, everything dealing with public
health, and health will be part of the new agency.
I've asked -- I have a letter going out to Dr. Polkowski to get
her view on that proposal. The Florida Medical Association is
supportive of it. Most people that I've spoken to are supportive of
it. There is likely to be a new agency created. But at the same time
there is an effort to streamline government. The belief is that that
would make the delivery of public health and the regulation of health
care more efficient by creating a separate agency outside of HRS.
Just going through a short list here, the special bill for the
vote on incorporation of Pelican Bay has been filed in the House and in
the Senate. The proponents of the special bill have retained a
lobbyist, and the lobbyist is making his rounds, and it's anticipated
that that bill will be approved. So I think the commission just needs
to be aware that there is likely to be approval of that bill in the
special election in September and make whatever plans or arrangements
you need to do in reference to that. But I would be at this point
surprised if that bill did not pass.
In reference to some of the criminal justice issues, there are
three bills that I think are of critical importance to the citizens of
Collier County. That will be coming out of the corrections committee
and the criminal justice committee. Those are two of the committees
that I sit on.
One of them is a bill that would increase the unlawful occupancy
of our state penitentiary system to 150 percent of stated capacity.
There are some exceptions to that. The medical bill -- beds, the drug
rehab beds would not be increased because it's difficult to put more
people in the same bed. But the occupancy overall will be increased to
150 percent of stated occupancy. That gives the state penitentiary
system several thousands of more beds available to house some people
that we need to get off the street.
In addition to that, there is a policy of significant jail bed
construction that will be kicked off towards the end of this year. And
by 1996 the projections are that we will actually have a surplus for a
very short period of time. We'll actually have a surplus of prison
beds.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: By when? Sorry.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: By 1996. Assuming that the legislature
funds this year and next year that construction.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Excuse me. One question that I was hearing
about and within the last, I guess, 18 months or so is -- is that the
State of Florida wasn't having too terribly much difficulty building
the prison beds but operating --
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: That's obviously --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: -- and operational funds was a real
problem.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Obviously the legislature is going to
have to appropriate significant funds for that facility, but that
commitment is there to do that.
As the capacity -- as the number of prisoners increases, as we
approach 150 percent of -- of capacity and as we get more and more
dangerous people behind bars, we're going to have to recognize the need
to protect the corrections officers and provide funding for them, so
that's part of the solution.
There's a separate other bill that requires that all inmates serve
a minimum of 85 percent of their sentence behind bars. And you recall
the STOP petition, Stop Turning Out Prisoners petition. This is the
equivalent of that. That petition was taken off the ballot by the
supreme court in 1994. This will in effect by state law implement the
STOP program.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Is that taken into effect in the
computation that tells us about 1996; we'll have more beds than we
need?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Good.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: That requires a massive construction
program that is underway and will have to be maintained.
The other part of the solution or puzzle here is we have a bill
that eliminates all types of early release programs. There is no early
release in Florida any longer. You do have the ability for prisoners
to get up to 15 percent of their sentence off in terms of good time.
If they are performing work in the facilities, if they are model
prisoners, they can get up to 15 percent. That's why we have a minimum
of 85 percent served.
If those prisoners aren't doing what they're supposed to do behind
bars, they're going to stay there a hundred percent of their sentence.
They're not going to get that 15 percent off.
Interestingly enough, we had a presentation from the director of
corrections, and he emphasized the importance of having some incentive
for these people behind bars to do -- to cook, to clean, to do the
things that they do, to do the road --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: How about survival? Isn't that enough?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Well, survival is enough to perhaps keep
them there, but it's not enough to get them to stop spitting on the
guards. It's not enough to get them to stop beating each other up.
It's not enough to get them to mop the floors, wash the dishes, to do a
lot of the things that if the prisoners didn't do, the cost of running
the prisons would be significantly more.
So the director of corrections is telling us he needs that 15
percent as an incentive. Host of the prisoners won't get that 15
percent, but he needs to give them something. But still if we have
prisoners serving an average -- a minimum of 85 percent of their
sentence, I think that is -- that's gone a long way when you consider
that just two years ago the average was around 30 percent.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Question. When I was talking with Judge
Brousseau about something similar to this a couple years ago, the --
the judges up until the new sentencing guidelines came -- came along
were looking at what the sentencing guidelines were and sentencing
according to what the judge felt was a reasonable punishment for what
was done. And then suddenly they changed the sentencing guidelines to
something less than what they used to be.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: We have a new bill that re -- recreates
the entire program for sentencing guidelines. And I've sent that off
to our state attorney's office for their review to make sure that these
are reasonable guidelines. But the idea is to -- we need judges to
have some discretion to be able to determine how much time an
individual should serve. But at the same time we have to recognize
that we have to have some consistency in the way prisoners are
sentenced, and this bill attempts to create both some discretion but
at the same time create some consistency. And the way that's done is
that for certain classes of crimes the judge can provide up to 25
percent more of the minimum sentence or up to 25 percent below the
minimum sentence, and that gives them a range there to deal with a
particular inmate, but it sets a floor on how long a prisoner will
stay behind bars.
For crimes above a certain category, more violent offenses, there
is no discretion. Once there is a conviction for discharge of a
firearm in the commission of a felony, there's a minimum sentence that
that person is going to serve once he's convicted.
So I guess the good news is that there is certainly the will to
solve the crime problem in Florida, and that is if there -- I would say
that that is probably the number-one objective of the legislature this
year, the number-one issue in Tallahassee. And I think that -- what I
hope to see over the next two to three years the crime statistics
bearing out that we are getting a handle on it. Part of that is
dealing with making sure these people stay behind bars. Also dealing
with juvenile crime and the boot camp facilities, those programs will
be accelerated over the next couple years.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I have a question dealing with violent
criminals. We're spending basically on the program you've laid out an
awful lot of money to protect us from crime, but many of the criminals
that are in prison are nonviolent, and they really don't need this
maximum security stuff, and is the state going to work at work release
programs and so forth?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: There's a major effort to deal with
other types of incarceration rather than putting people in prisons and
other types of punishment. And so that certainly is -- that's part of
the sentencing guidelines proposal, and I will get you a copy of the
sentencing guidelines bill that has the different categories of crimes.
There -- there is an effort to distinguish between the violent
offender and the one who perhaps is not a violent offender. There's --
there's an attempt to provide different facilities and means of
incarcerations for those.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Commissioner Constantine.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I was in the leadership -- we just had
our meeting. The topic for the weekend was education. And many of the
people, with 50 people in our class, were from all over the state.
Many of the people feel that education should be a priority, a deep
priority. They feel that education should be a priority. I realize
this is not one of your committees, but do you have any idea what's
going on, if there are any big plans out of the ordinary for plans of
education this year?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: I think really the only thing -- I have
not seen any specific proposals coming out of those committees yet. We
have committee meetings next week, and there may very well be something
that's distributed then. The new Secretary of Education is committed
to reducing the strangle hold that Tallahassee bureaucrats put on local
school boards. And I think the emphasis is going to be to try to free
up funds for local school boards, free up the discretion of local
school boards to determine what they're going to teach and how they're
going to teach as opposed to someone in Tallahassee making those
decisions on a statewide basis. So I think you're going to see some
attempts in that regard, but that's going to be a very difficult nut to
crack.
As you can all imagine, a lot of representatives have special
projects, and that's how you get some of these mandates from
Tallahassee. Someone will come up with a good idea that's good for
their district. They'll get it implemented, and it becomes a statewide
mandate for the whole school boards. We're going to eliminate that.
But as I get more information on that, I'll get that to you. But I
have not seen it specifically.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: So so far do you have any definitive plans
for the -- for the state to make a concerted effort to get our student
SAT scores and so forth to a better level than 49th in the nation?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: No, I said that crime is perhaps the big
issue. Education is certainly a close second. It's not tied. And,
you know, everyone wants to get the SAT scores up. Everyone wants to
improve the school system. The question becomes how does that happen.
In my view and the programs that I would support are those that
give back to the local school districts more autonomy because I think
that school districts are better able to determine how to spend dollars
than someone in Tallahassee.
I do think that the legislature needs to establish minimum
standards throughout the state so that each child in the State of
Florida has access to a quality education. But once those standards
are met by multiple school boards, if they want to exceed those
standards, then I think the school boards should be given the ability
to tax and those things to improve their school system, and I think
you're going to see that type of proposal coming out. I hope so.
Partial year ad valorem assessments, there's a move to do that. I
am philosophically supported by it. I think the tax collectors and the
property appraisers are likely to oppose that. I don't know what
position the county commission has on that. That seems to be not a
good revenue source but a reasonable revenue source where a certificate
of occupancy may be ready to be delivered on December 26 or 27th and
the occupant says, well, wait a week, and they get their C.O. on
January 2nd, and they have a free ride for an entire year. And there's
really no logic behind that. So I'm hopeful that we'll see a partial
ad valorem assessment that will pass.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Based on my meetings with the FAC in order
to get the legislative agenda, it's the small things that are really --
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That are opposing it?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yes.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: And we found that it was interesting at the
legislative congress that we found that breakdown to be almost at a
50,000 population of each county. Those below 50,000 population may
not make money the first year. They may even lose money. Those over
50,000 stood a substantial amount to gain. So there was a monetary
break point based on population that conveniently fell at 50,000.
So, you know, you look at the number of small counties under
50,000. I bet those are the voices that you'll hear that say we don't
want this.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: So our consensus was at the meeting it may
be better for the legislative to offer the large counties the ability
to do that as opposed to --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Whether that can or can't be done was
really the question, and the FAC couldn't answer it. It would take the
argument away from the smaller counties if it became optional.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: I can't think of any reason why it
couldn't be optional for counties below a certain population.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: We have a lot of small county legislation
where -- where smaller counties are exempted -- REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Yes.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: -- from certain pieces of state
legislature.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: To me the important thing is not necessarily
that we're going to have increased revenue from that so much as it is
that it's just not fair to have someone getting a free ride on their
taxes when everybody else is having to pay. To me that's the issue.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Sure.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: I don't know how much revenue is
available, but you can use that to reduce your millage rate a little
bit so there is no impact in terms of revenue to the commissions.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Commissioner Hancock and I, we had some
numbers, and the numbers are for Collier County Board of County
Commissioners about five million dollars a year.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Five million dollars?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah, and for the school board, about seven
million, so it is significant for us. It's significant.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I'll defer to your memory. I do remember
the number was significant.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: You can automatically have a five
million dollar tax cut --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Something like that.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: -- the next year.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: That would get a lot of letters generated
to Tallahassee with that statement.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Two others. In reference to the beach
renourishment funding, it is going to be a difficult task. I realize
that the Department of Environmental Protection has moved that up in
their priority, and they're recommending it for funding.
There are two problems. Number one, the governor has not
recommended funding for any beach projects. Now, that's not going to
be the final say on the issue, but it's a hurdle that we have to get
over. The second hurdle is that the position of the projects that have
been funded are those that have received federal funding. It hasn't
been a written regulation, but it's been a policy. And there's really
no logic behind that policy. If the local government is willing to pay
-- spend local funds for beach renourishment projects, that should help
to be more effective than a local government getting federal funds for
the same project.
So I think we can get over that hurdle, but I just want you to
know that it's not a given that we're going to get funding for this
project from the state. Anything that the county commission is willing
to do to -- I guess the right word is to lobby on that issue.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: You're going to have opportunities to
come up to Tallahassee because of the lobbying effort that you're
engaged in. So when you're there, remember to talk up beach
renourishment, and when you talk to Virginia Weatherall or anybody that
might have input under that, let them know how important it is. But
it's going to be a tough hurdle for us to get over.
The other issue that -- issue that's not a -- I guess not of any
great consequence, but it's the implementation of the net ban amendment
is going to be interesting. The big issue is going to be are we going
to be compensating the fishermen that have lost their livelihoods in
some way. And we have a lot of fishermen here in Collier County that
are affected by that. So I'll let you know how that is moving along,
because I'm sure that you're going to be hearing from them as we get
close to the cutoff, which I think is June of this year. CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: June 30th.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: After June 30th there's no net fishing
in the territorial waters of the United States, and that's when I think
you're really going to hear the human cry for people that are out of
work.
Those are the issues that I wanted to just kind of touch on with
you.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: On the net ban thing, when -- when
Commissioner Hancock and I were, again, with the legislative session
with the FSC, there was an effort by, again, the coastal counties to
try to defeat the effect of the net ban or to stave it off for another
year or even get it repealed. And one of the arguments that came up in
opposition to moving in that direction was that there -- there is a
fund of money available to the fishermen. And so you may want to make
-- make note that there is some money available. We just need to make
sure that it's properly applied.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: I think that there is no potential at
all -- I don't think there's any legal mechanism at all for delaying
the limitation of the net ban as part of the Florida constitution. And
to change that would require amendment to the constitution again.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yes.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: So there -- you know, I don't think
anyone should hold out any hope that there's going to be a change in
that. The question is how are we going to implement that. How are we
going to compensate those that are -- that are injured by it.
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Do we know anything about how many people
will be out of jobs as a result of that? Any numbers?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I don't know. I know Everglades City is
going to be hurt by it and probably Goodland hurt by it considerably,
wouldn't you think? But I don't have any definitive numbers.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Uh-huh. Okay.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: These commercial fishermen, there's --
there's a number of them that fish out of those areas that don't
necessarily live in those areas too.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Well, it affects the fish houses and so
forth.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Of course.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: It's going to have an impact on them
certainly. Have you finished?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Yeah, that was my short list of things.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: We made it kind of long. Commission --
excuse me, Representative Saunders, you -- you know that this board
adopted a coalition with two other counties to go to Tallahassee during
the legislative season.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Is that Charlotte and Lee?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Charlotte and Lee, yeah. We have all three
counties signed on to this, and I understand Mr. Dorrill has already
reserved an apartment. He's reserved it for the month of March and
April and potentially May if -- if you go and the clock stops running,
so to speak.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: All right.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: But you were alluding to committee meetings
next week and two weeks --
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: There are committee meetings next week,
and then we skip a week, and then we have another week of committee
meetings. So those are good opportunities to talk to representatives
or the opportunity to attend committees that may need special
legislation that may be of consequence to you. I have all the
schedules, so you can stop by the office and get the schedule of what's
going to be debated at each committee. For example, last week at
criminal justice we proposed nudity ordinances for the State of
Florida.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Barring nudity in whole communities?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I presume that's to ban it?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Yeah. But there is a schedule, and
there will be a list of bills that will be debated. And if you want
information on the bills or copies of the bills, I have all of that
available to you. And it's -- that's one of the benefits of -- and I
also want to thank you. It's one of the benefits of having an office
there. I want to thank you publicly for permitting me to do that
because if there is something coming up, you've got it right there at
your fingertips. Take advantage of it.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Did you say our place with the other
counties isn't until March, because I've got a particular bill -- you
just said February is perhaps going to be the most effective time.
MR. DORRILL: There's a mechanism -- this facility that we've
leased is what I would say is an efficiency apartment-type facility,
and we're guaranteed that during the session. They also offer the same
unit on a weekly basis.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Hot dog.
MR. DORRILL: So if we have an interest upon the part of the
commissioners or the staff, we can rent the same facility on a weekly
basis.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: You can get also when the facility is
not available or is already occupied -- government rate in Tallahassee
typically is like $45 a night, so it's not too costly to come up there
anyway.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Uh-huh.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: You're probably I suspect paying almost
that much in the efficiency that you've rented. MR. DORRILL: About.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Twelve hundred dollars a month or
something so --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I think it's going to run around 50, $55 a
night anyway. Got some room to move away from the four walls that
might come upon you.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: I'm looking forward to seeing you in
Tallahassee, and I'm starting to learn my way around a little bit. I
found the mail room last week, found two stacks of mail there. I can
certainly direct you to where you need to be and look forward to
working with you. And I'd like to -- you know, during the session
there are going to be opportunities when I can come back, and I'll be
talking to each of you on things that are happening in Tallahassee. I,
you know, feel that it would be advisable to come back to another
workshop session during the year, anytime that you want me to be here.
I'd like to have an open dialogue with the county commission. I'm
doing the same thing with the city council, making sure that everyone
knows what's happening and if there's any specific issues you want me
to address.
MR. DORRILL: If the commissioners are done, could you give us a
little insight on what is happening with proposed changes to HRS and
things we read in the paper about 25 percent budget cuts and that type
of thing?
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Yeah. The -- first of all, in terms of
the 25 percent budget cut, that was really perhaps the -- not a very
well worded request from the Senate Ways and Means Committee. There
was not an effort to cut programs. It was just a request of all state
agencies across the board to find ways to cut, and they used the 25
percent number as sort of a goal.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: A headline grabber.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Yeah, headline grabber. But the senate
committee has publicly stated that there is not an effort to cut HRS
programs. And it looks like the cut that HRS may experience may be in
the nature of 5 percent, somewhere in that balipark.
The other big issue for HRS is the creation of a Department of
Health which will take a substantial part of HRS away from HRS and put
it in a new department. Those are really the two issues.
But in terms of their mental health programs and their lunch
programs and all of their social programs, if they can justify the need
for those programs, and I'm sure they can, then there won't be cuts in
those programs. But there will be an effort to cut some of their
administrative costs, and it might be as much as 5 percent. That's
almost a 5 million dollar agency, so a 5 percent cut is a big number.
MR. DORRILL: As that issue comes forward, we've had one recent
problem with HRS that I want to share with you just because they're --
they're telling us that they're going to be seeking broadened
authority, and it's in the environmental health side. And this is an
area where I think HRS needs to just butt out and redirect its mission.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Well, environmental health will go to
that new department.
MR. DORRILL: As part of that they have begun inspecting county
community park sites and trying to apply the same requirements for
childcare facilities, and the reason is because we're now offering
an after-school program for children that don't have anywhere to go at
community park sites. And we hold the children there anywhere from
two to three and a half hours until their parents get home from work.
We're not a childcare provider or a childcare facility, but they're
trying to apply the same rules to us.
We're getting inspectors showing up, and they're writing us up all
kinds of rules. And we're told that they're getting ready to make
another round of inspections as it relates to on-site concession
stands. And we're told that they're going to apply restaurant level
environmental health requirements for concession stands. And as silly
as it sounds, they're telling us that unless the county provides direct
assistance with concession stands, you're not going to be able to buy a
hot dog at a little league ballgame unless they're prepared somewhere
else and brought back in. And that's just an example of the idiocy I
think that comes to force in terms of people well intentioned get so
far off their (inaudible).
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: That's part of the reason why the senate
committee was talking in terms of a 25 percent cut because there are a
lot of things like that that just don't make any sense. I'd appreciate
it if you could get me some information on that.
MR. DORRILL: Those two instances in the last 60 days or so, we're
told this is their interpretation. They're going to be seeking
legislative authority to go beyond that.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: If you can get that to me there's an
effort to eliminate or to stop unfunded mandates from the legislature
down to the local governments. I'm fully supportive of that. There's
an effort to do that at the national level, and that's a -- an example
of a mandate that is perhaps created out of thin air that will have
significant costs to local governments and with no benefit, and that's
why HRS is in trouble right now. They're going to need to get more
realistic about what they do, so I'd appreciate getting some
information from you. That would be helpful. MR. DORRILL: Okay. Thank you.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: In addition to that I received a fax
yesterday from the FAC. Each commissioner received it as well, but I
was going to forward it on to Margaret Skinner to fill out the form
attached. But it has to do with the health care costs, and the FAC is
looking roughly what our costs are so that they know what -- where
we're spending money and in what direction. So when the HRS comes back
with its cuts, that we're going to be able to in the end fund the
programs that are important to us and not fund the programs that are
not important to us.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Uh-huh.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: So anyway, this form does exist.
So if there's nothing else, then I want to thank you for coming.
REPRESENTATIVE SAUNDERS: Thank you.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: And I'm sure we'll see you in Tallahassee.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: And again congratulations, Butt.
(Applause)
Item #2A
PRESENTATION OF THE COUNTY HANAGER'S 1995 WORK PLAN
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: As we -- we move on to -- the next item on
the agenda is the presentation of the county manager's work plan.
MR. DORRILL: Miss Matthews and Commissioners, this was an effort
to try and bring a little more focus to what your staff was intending
to accomplish this year but -- but also get the board to give us some
input in terms of the priorities or omissions that -- that you may see.
And a good example of that, we were changing our proposed work plan as
late as the day that we sent it to you on the 20th to include and plug
in dates for alternative landfill site selection and criteria, and
we've plugged those into the summer.
But this is an effort, I think, to do two things; one, to bring
some objective goal setting at the staff level as a result of your
strategic planning efforts over the past year, but to do so in a
measurable way with specific milestone dates so that we can show
performance, but also show the division in the five major areas that
we've selected.
And in looking at the work plan, we wanted it to be more than just
capital project driven, and I think in the past in terms of the staff's
activity it sort of was all capital project driven. And I think during
the early stages of growth management that was fine. I think as a
result of the creation of the office of capital project management
we've got a much better handle on capital projects.
So we wanted to broaden the staff's proposed work plan beyond just
the one management of assets area because, frankly, I think that all
the staff areas are more important than just getting things built on
time and under budget.
With that in mind, we've got -- the categories include management
of the organization and things specifically that we're doing to improve
on administrative procedures, our total quality management program.
Things like that you'll find in that category, improving on and doing
things a little smarter from a staff perspective.
The next area has to do with program development and
follow-through, and that is perhaps one of the items that will be most
important to you as commissioners because that's where we tell you when
it is we're going to do what you've asked us to do. A good example on
something that I've highlighted in my plan -- the things I considered
perhaps the most important by month -- appears in February, which is a
follow-up to board direction on what has been very controversial in our
P.A. issue is part of your environmental element in the comp. plan.
And our proposed presentation of the first NRPA as it pertains to Clam
Pass at Pelican Bay. That's a program follow-up as a result of
specific board direction to accomplish something.
Community relations and communications is admittedly a first-step
area for us, but I think that's something that we have not necessarily
done a good job at in terms of organizing. But then, frankly,
marketing, because throughout the year we provide a wide variety of
public opportunities and services in order to improve on the relations
of county government.
Specifically, though, we have formalized something that we started
last year with Commissioner Constantine when he was chairman was
setting standard meetings with the editorial board at the newspaper.
We broadened on that this year to have what we're calling the County's
Corner on Carl Loveday's radio talk show every month. We will have our
own specific show to highlight or promote a particular department or
division that's outside of any request that you might have to appear on
that show or that he might request me to appear on that show. That's a
new program area as it pertains to community relations.
Fiscal management, of all the things that I chose, is perhaps the
one that I enjoy the most which is perhaps a business side of
government. And so we have identified those separate issues that
relate to budgeting fiscal cash management policies for the county and
highlighted those.
And then finally is management of assets because, frankly, it's so
important that we deliver to you those capital projects on schedule and
within the budget that you have originally approved. And even though
we're three or four years now into the growth management plan, you'll
recall that the peak year actually begins the end of this year and will
carry forward into next year as being the most capital construction
intensive period of the county, probably the next ten years or so.
I thought, just in summary, I wanted to at least put on the record
some of the areas that I felt were most important for the months that
we've chosen, and I'll move very quickly on these. The issue of 800
megahertz financing and landfill privatization resolution from my
perspective were very important in January.
February we need to make a final decision on the selection of the
information technology, our data processing director. I think the Clam
Bay NRPA is important because of the level of -- of discussion that the
board has had and the amount of controversy associated with that.
Under fiscal management I've shared with you earlier that we're
going to present a three-year analysis of operating budgets and the
impact that that's going to have in particular on the general fund, and
my concern about getting the board to acknowledge necessary ad valorem
millage increases in the event we don't make some changes. And we need
to look out, especially the year that the number of you are going to be
running for reelection.
In March we have proposed to complete the selection of our
utilities division administrator. We want to present the staff's
proposed landfill alternatives to the county commission.
And it's shown as kind of a small area in community relations but
increasingly an important one is we cosponsor and host an annual
recognition luncheon for the RSVP program in town which is the largest
volunteer agency short of the hospital's program for retired community
service volunteers. And we employ or utilize more of those individuals
now than any other agency in the county. And this year we're
cosponsoring their annual awards luncheon. It's sort of small in the
total scope of things, but it's important because of the commitment
that we've made to use more volunteers in county government.
April will have another area which is controversial which is the
proposed backflow ordinance and it's from the land development code.
From a personnel perspective we're going to complete an evaluation and
analysis of various leaves, annual leaves, sick leave, comp. leave, and
propose some improvements to that area.
We need to complete the expansion in the county emergency
operations center in the month of April because I've directed the staff
to get that finished and all the technological in place before the
start of the hurricane season before May 19st.
In the month of May the area that I highlighted under program
development was to present to the board an access management plan
ordinance that will deal specifically with the technical aspects of
your secondary road system and how we're going to allow people to make
curb cuts, median openings, review the policy that pertains to how we
will signalize intersections and how we will allow signals, turn lanes,
and decel lanes to be built. Traffic patterns and flow will
increasingly become important towards the end of the year, and a review
of that policy in May I think is very prudent.
June will -- will see an evaluation of privatization
opportunities, and the staff response coming out of board -- the
board's privatization task force, and I think that's a very important
area for us, not only from an efficiency standpoint but, frankly, from
a political and community relations standpoint that the community see
that we're exploring further opportunities for privatization. Also to
finalize the route alignment for the Gordon River bridge will occur in
June.
July sees the completion of a sidewalk and bicycle path
improvement and perpetual maintenance plan. Again, this was something
that was discussed late last year. We also have the completion of the
utility rate study for your water, sewer, and refuge program.
August will unveil the completion of the urban area build-out
study as part of your long-range planning initiatives.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: What month is that?
MR. DORRILL: That's in August.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: August?
MR. DORRILL: September will show a proposed preliminary design
and development of a combined fleet maintenance facility, and as part
of that, alternatives for the sheriff's department which was something
that this board dealt with, I think, the first Tuesday that this board
began its new operations.
October shows the preliminary completion and the analysis on the
part of the Council of Economic Advisors for the very important
economic development plan for the community.
November is the programmed start of construction for the beach
renourishment project and will in part hinge on some of the financing
issues and the availability of state funding in the final receipted
permits associated with that.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I have a question on that one, Mr. Dotrill.
MR. DORRILL: Okay.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: The last discussion that we had on the --
on the beach project was about a year ago, and I believe we were
entering into the phase two portion. And at that time the Clerk of
Courts, Mr. Brock, gave us warning that we were having some contractual
problems in meeting a state statute for the CCNA. And I -- I believe
at that time Mr. Stevens -- Dr. Stevens (phonetic) said that he was
agreeable to RFP for the third phase, which is the construction phase.
I don't see anything in here up to the start of the construction phase
about the RFP and qualifications, selection, and so forth.
MR. DORRILL: That's a good point. I would need to check with Mr.
Conrecode to see. Your recollection is the same as mine, though, that
to resolve that issue that we would -- decided that we would go back
out and solicit proposals before we went into construction document
level engineering.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: It seems to me we're already ten months
away from construction, and historically we're going to have to commit
six of that ten months to an RFP process. MR. DORRILL: I'll verify that.
The final month in December I show the -- again, what I think
could be very important from my perspective is the preliminary report
on the future land use element and proposed changes in the comp. plan
as shown under program follow-through. That in anticipation of the
build-out study will have pretty far-reaching impacts on your growth
management plan from a land use perspective.
And then the only other one again, that these are things that are
important to me, is the successful undertaking of your annual snowfest
program if for no other reason than good work upon the part of the park
staff. That's now your number one community outreach of anything that
you do and I would say also the most successful, the most positive
county government outreach that you undertake through the whole year.
We probably have over a hundred specific major projects, but I
wanted to give you a little snapshot of the ones that I think are
important from a month-to-month basis. But as we move forward on this
I'm, frankly, more interested in comments like Ms. MAtthews where you
think that we may have overlooked something or we may need to broaden
on a particular area or, frankly, you're not happy with the schedule we
proposed.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Other comments?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: My comments, it's a great idea for this to
be incorporated into the evaluation process.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I like the concept too because now we have
some benchmarks now we're keeping. And whether we're in agreement with
the schedule and the way it's going to come forward or not, that's
something I guess we each need to talk to you individually, see if
there's any -- Commissioner Hancock.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Since Commissioner Hac'Kie brought up the
issue of evaluation, and this is something Mr. Dotrill was concerned
about, we seem to have a different evaluation every year we have a
different chairman. They kind of take their own twist on the
evaluation, and you get a moving target every year.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I -- I -- let me answer that because I
happen to be married to a guy who does these forms for a living, and I
was going to have him prepare it this year.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I would just like to see this board
consider adopting a standard review form for the county manager so that
we all know what's expected, we know the performance data, and we have
some level of consistency from year to year for the simple reason that,
you know, I know Warren, and I trust him, but I --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's fine. We can -- what we can ask him
to do is -- is if this board wants to do that is to -- I can ask him to
prepare a draft form, and then we'll -- we'll circulate it around and
come up with a final form.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I'll address the rest of the board whether
they think that's a good idea, but I think it provides some
consistency, not that past reviews weren't sufficient, but it could be
a little bit different.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: It has been a little different, but in
fairness we didn't have anything up until about three years ago. So I
think we took a giant step forward having a form.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Excuse me. The one suggestion I'd like to
make if we adopt a form that we're going to use continually is that
each year I'd like to change the numerical rating system on it so that
we can continue to drive Carl Loveday crazy.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's a good point.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: The last year we had to multiply by a point
eight to compare it to the year before and, you know, it became --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah, because last year we were graded on a
scale of five and the year before on a scale of four.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'd like to see -- I'd like -- support what
Commissioner Hancock was saying. I'd like to see that we tell the
people who respond directly to us or these two guys what we expect of
them at the beginning of the year, and that's where we could --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Good start.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: -- but not wait until the end of the year,
we didn't tell them at the beginning of the year.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Oh, by the way, I didn't mention --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Does that mean the sledgehammer now is
going to start at the beginning of the year?
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It's the carrot and stick.
MR. DORRILL: We have the same obligation, and in conclusion what
I -- what I would add is if there is an area or a project that you
think has been omitted, please let me know so that I can incorporate it
in here. You're going to receive a monthly status report in writing at
the end of every month telling you where we're at in terms of where we
propose to be, and it's my intent to give you a quarterly oral
presentation at a board meeting. So four times throughout the year
you'll actually see me give you a quarterly analysis of the staff work
plan and let you know we're on schedule, if we've developed problems,
what our response and recovery schedule to that is -- is going to be.
Again, if you think that some of the -- I happen to think that this is
an overly aggressive effort in our first year. It's going to be very
difficult for us to maintain the schedule that we have proposed, but I
think staff is equal to the task, and in turn, the evaluations for the
division administrators are going to be based primarily in part to --
to what they have proposed to me that they will be able to accomplish
on your behalf.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: So your approach -- you're telling us then
that the benchmarks that you have addressed in your work plan --
MR. DORRILL: -- will be reflected in what we call key result
areas for the division administrators in each of the five categories
that I've alluded.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. And with respect to the evaluation
forms, if this board would like me to do so, I'd like to take the three
years of forms and consolidate them and come up with what seems to be a
trend of the questions that we want to work on and then circulate a
form.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And circulate it?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Uh-huh. Okay. We'll do that. Is that all
from you today?
MR. DORRILL: That's all that I had intended to share with you.
Item #2B
PRESENTATION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE IMPLEMENTATION PLAN
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: As we move on, item 2-B presentation of the
Department of Revenue implementation plan.
MR. DORRILL: Towards the end of -- of last year we had proposed a
reorganization of certain departments in the county manager's agency
under the board that deals with revenue issues. As part of that the
board approved the recommendations but asked us to come back with the
implementation plan and a time schedule for those transitional elements
that involved not only those departments within our watch but also the
policies and programs that may also affect other agency managers and
constitutional officers in particular. This is the presentation of
that this morning.
There is this side issue as it pertains to the Board of County
Commissioners' investment policy and activities and desires on my part
to make that a little more open and in the sunshine and at some point
contemplate some proposed amendments to your investment policy and the
management of the investment policy. That, frankly, to me is a
separate issue. At some point it may become part of the implementation
plan of the Department of Revenue.
The Department of Revenue is primarily intended to be a single
point of billing and collection activity for those departments that are
under your responsibility. They are primarily utilities, but
increasingly they will also become community development and parks and
recreation and EHS and other fee related accounts receivable functions
of county government. Over the longer term they will also at some
point include as part of the transition solid waste and mandatory
billing and the proposal that we have to run a dual bill beginning
this summer but to continue under our contractual arrangement with the
tax collector until 1996.
COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: I just have a general question. I obviously
missed the decision, wasn't here when the decision was made to create
the Department of Revenue, but -- and I have some questions about that
decision and the efficacy of it, but to what extent, if any, are we
duplicating service -- are we duplicating software, computers, efforts
of the clerk and/or the tax collector and even with a Department of
Revenue since that decision is made already, is there some way to merge
the efforts so that we're not doing the same thing twice?
MR. DORRILL: Good question. I'm going to let John help answer
some of the specifics associated with that.
The original desire on my part was to consolidate those
departments that we're responsible for and to undertake budget savings
as part of the county manager's budget. We projected annual savings of
$300,000 by consolidating our departments that are already involved in
revenue collection activities. As part of that, though, we are
proposing to undertake in particular some special assessment
responsibilities for old outstanding utility assessments, water and
sewer assessments in particular. And over time also we're proposing to
undertake special assessments that manifest themselves in garbage,
solid waste collection programs. That would occur in 1996. Those are
changes to what other arrangements and/or agreements are already there.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: You need to help me a little bit. One
of the selling points for us was the saving of money. You mentioned
saving $300 thousand as we go through here; that's not happening from
payroll anyway. We're actually spending a little more on payroll.
What's -- where -- where are we coming up with that 300,000?
MR. DORRILL: I'm going to let John come up and sit across from
me. John, it might help, rather than just jumping into the
implementation plan, to go back and maybe take five minutes because
we've got two commissioners who weren't here during the original
proposal of this. You need to outline specifically where the dollar
reductions were within the current department structure that we had,
where the actual savings occurred.
MR. YONKOSKY: Good morning, Commissioners. The original
conceptual plan that was presented to the board at that time from the
Department of Revenue identified at a point in time because, as you all
know that sometimes conceptual plans seem to be a moving target that's
very hard and embarrassing at any point in time unless you take into
consideration the entire range of changes that's being proposed. The
Department of Revenue presentation, the conceptual plans that were
presented to you included a comparison between the method that was
being used for mandatory solid waste special assessment, utility
billing, and EHS billing. And at that time the EHS billing was being
performed on a dual process that was being used through the clerk's
office.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Solid waste, utilities, and EHS?
MR. YONKOSKY: Those were the three areas that were being
compared, and those three areas was where the projected $300,000
savings would come from. The largest one of those three areas was
utility billing. There's a separate software for utility billing that
had been acquired by the Board of County Commissioners a year or so
before.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: John, can I ask you questions as you're
going along?
MR. YONKOSKY: Yes.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: The tax collector has some separate
software for some -- it's not for utility collections also? Are we
buying the same thing also? MR. YONKOSKY: No.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: What is his new system?
MR. YONKOSKY: I'm not familiar with what his system is. He
projected at -- when they were looking for that software, I think he'd
actually proposed on that software also. The -- as did the clerk's
operations proposed on that software.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: What do you mean by proposed on?
MR. YONKOSKY: When they were looking for a change to wire a new
utility billing software, and this was -- I believe it was probably two
or three years ago. The hardware itself was -- the Board of County
Commissioners had acquired. It runs not only utility billing, but it
runs several other types of billing. The -- I don't recall the exact
amounts of the proposed bids, but I do believe that the tax collector
recommended -- made a proposal for that also. But, nevertheless, the
Board of County Commissioners ended up buying a separate utility
billing software system that would accommodate the utility billing
needs of the county for a period of years.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And presently utility bills are collected
by whom?
MR. YONKOSKY: By utility --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: By the utility department as are solid
waste and EMS?
MR. YONKOSKY: Of the three areas -- you know, probably we should
look at each one of them separately -- the EMS billing was being
performed on a system that -- through the clerk's office, and the
hospital -- the problem with that system -- there wasn't really a major
problem with it. One of the areas that created a problem was the
inputting of demographic data for the billing.
If you take someone that's being picked up by an ambulance and
carry him to the hospital, quite often he does not have the time to
load the demographical information; the insurance, the name, social
security number. The hospital would end up receiving this individual,
and within a matter of days they would have the demographical
information necessary to bill in a timely manner.
We recognized that there was sometimes as much as a two- or
three-month period before a bill could actually be processed and sent
to an individual. With the hospital that's down to within seven days.
Therefore, the demographic information, you having access to it was a
tremendous change in the billing process for EMS.
In conjunction with Physician's billing, which is a billing
organization for the hospital and for the emergency room and several
other areas at the hospital, we were able to for a very small,
insignificant amount of money piggyback onto their system for $20,000
a year. The demographic information is, therefore, in the hospital
system already, and we could provide a timely billing.
And then in addition to that, we could actually speed the process
up somewhat, the cash flow, by going to a lock-box concept, and
eventually what we hope to do is that the insurance providers will
actually provide the money electronically and the account information
electronically. For example, let's just say for the sake of discussion
that there was a bill going out to Prudential, and it had 15 different
individuals on it. It would go electronically through the hospital's
system. You could transmit it to them electronically rather than going
through the mail. They would have the information, and they turn it
around very quickly.
When the information comes back, they will be able to pass the
cash back directly into the board's operating account -- COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: I try to get my clients to do that.
MR. YONKOSKY: -- and at the same time they would provide a string
of electronic information that would come over the telephone and go
right into the -- the computer system and update the account ledgers
for the individuals. So there is a very significant savings there.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Commissioner Hac'Kie, could I interrupt and
ask that the rest of us seem --
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I was just going to say that same thing.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: It would seem to behoove this workshop, and
we would move along faster if you and Mr. Yonkosky would have this
discussion in your office one day before we finalize so we can move
forward.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Sure. I just realized the same thing.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: If -- if you don't mind, I would appreciate
that.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I don't mind. I was about to make the same
comment.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: It's a lot of detail that has sort of -- I
appreciate it. It's -- it's educational. Could you --
MR. YONKOSKY: Well, that's basically the EHS system.
The second system is that we needed to look at special
assessments, and special assessments from mandatory solid waste.
There's a tremendous amount of savings in the system that we're
proposing, and we will be bringing that back to the board shortly.
It's a system that was specifically designed to handle mandatory trash
collections. And, yes, it is being billed right now by the tax
collector. The tax collector's system will not tolerate the ability
to handle complaints. The complaint tracking is approximately 600 or
so a month, and that's one of the major benefits.
And another major benefit is providing bills cumulatively. For
example, if a person hasn't paid their mandatory solid waste bill for
two or three years the billing system brings that together in one bill
that -- with the tax collector's bill, it only has the current year's
bill on it.
And the clerk's system has been maintained in the prior years.
And that system is proposed to be expanded further in phase two of the
special assessment system wherein all of the special assessments that
the Board of County Commissioners is responsible for will be included
on that system and -- and if I could just take a minute to explain one
of the significant savings that deals with that is the fact that a lot
of bills are actually going on the tax roll right now, and the
conceptual plan is to take as many of them off the tax bill as can be
taken off because if they're on the tax bill, the tax collector is
required to take his fee from it. And, therefore, the annual
assessments are increased to accommodate his fee and the administration
charge.
Now, when you say 2 percent, that may not be a significant amount
of money. Some of those assessments that this board levied on the Pine
Ridge Industrial Park and the Naples Production Park, hundreds of
thousands of dollars. And what you do, because of state law, is that
you -- principal has to be evenly paid over the life of the assessment.
Every year the interest is paid on the unpaid balance. So on a hundred
thousand dollar assessment -- if the rate on that assessment is 6
percent and then the administrative charges and the discount that is
required for -- for ad valorem taxes, all of this is taken into
consideration, the people in the Pine Ridge Industrial Park and the
Naples Production Park, their annual rate is not 6 percent which is the
bonded rate, but it's 12 percent. And on an assessment that has
several hundred thousand dollars, it's a significant amount of money.
On some of the smaller assessments -- when I say small, they're
really not small in the east and south -- those assessments are on the
tax bill also may be bond so they're required to be on the tax bill.
Those assessments have been -- and they were a large amount. The bond
issue was about nineteen million, but the assessments covered not only
bonds, it covered the loan from the state. It covered some money that
the county put into it. So those assessments are out there for 19
years, or I guess about 17 years from now they're still out there. And
those are the people in the east and south area of the county. They --
those assessments -- there's only a little bit over three million
dollars left on the bond issue. Those three million dollars can be
paid off or escrowed, and those savings then can be passed on to those
people who are in that economic sector of the county and are paying
that. That can be done this year and come off the tax bill and be
billed through the Department of Revenue for approximately one-half of
a percent as opposed to the amount of money that you're paying right
now. You can pass those savings on immediately. That's not the part
of the savings, the $300,000 savings, but those are real savings that
you can pass on immediately and annually to all those people.
And the third one just real quick is Pelican Bay. Their
assessments -- their operating costs on an annual basis are billed to
the individuals through the tax roll through assessments for operations
that are on the tax roll. These assessments can come off, and for a
half a percent or even smaller the administration cost of that -- those
assessments can be passed on immediately to the individuals. So there
are -- all I'm saying is that there's -- that there's some savings
above and beyond the $300,000 that we've projected that are significant
savings.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. Well, I -- I think we're kind of
interested in moving on to the structuring of the budget, and the
question Commissioner Constantine asked is dealing with the $300,000
savings, and it's -- I am not sure -- the savings that you're talking
about are probably real because the tax collector, while he charges 2
percent, if he has money at the end of the year in excess of his
budget, it comes back to the general fund. Now, I -- I can see where
you're converting assessment money into general fund money, and that's
an argument that's valid, but I'm not sure that we have any real large
savings here.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It seems to me that it's a question of
whose budget it's in.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Uh-huh.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But as far as the taxpayer, it's not -- it
would still come out of their pocket.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Well, there -- there may be a problem say
of converting assessments via the tax collector and the money that he
gives back to the general fund that we're converting at -- you know,
assessments for utilities and such into general fund money, and that's
-- that's a whole different argument, but -- but anyway, why don't we
move on and look at the structure and -- and the budget.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Just one last thing on that whole different
argument that's the one that is on my mind. CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Uh-huh.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Has the time passed? Is it too late to
talk about those? Did I miss that because I wasn't on the board at the
right time?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I wouldn't think that you missed it, no.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: So there will be an opportunity to bring
those issues back up perhaps if I wanted to?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Why don't you -- I -- I would think the
best thing to do would be to discuss that with Mr. Yonkosky and let him
explain it to you and discuss it with Mr. Carlton and let him explain
it. If you have questions, you can bring it before the board.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay, thanks.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay? Start with that structure.
MR. YONKOSKY: Shall we start with the organization chart?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: (Nodded head.)
MR. YONKOSKY: The organization chart was part of the package that
was given to you is a vertical as opposed to horizontal structure, and
utilities is the major section of that. Therefore, one of the groups
that will be performing specific functions of work is utilities. And
under the utilities side that's broken down into three categories;
customer service, utility billing, and meter reading. And under meter
reading is a utility technician two. That individual will be able to
respond -- is put in here so that that individual can respond very
rapidly to broken meters, meters that are reported as having a problem
by the meter reader itself.
And then under the utility billing there is not a significant
amount of change that's being recommended under the utility billing.
As we move through this process, and I'll discuss with you in a minute
the changes in the software, you will see that there is no need to have
any additional implementation of personnel inutility billing. Matter
of fact, once those changes are made -- you're currently getting
approximately 30,000 customers. We anticipate that this will be able
to move up considerably before any new staff is required.
Now, I do want to go back under the meter reading. We have just
undergone a review in the meter reading area by a firm called HRB,
which is a subsidiary of Florida Power and Light. They approached us a
couple months ago about the possibility of performing meter reading at
a price that would be less expensive than what we actually charge.
That particular study is being completed and reported back to us.
Happily for us and not so happily for their process that the charge for
meters read by county staff is 58 cents, and that's what the -- as of
today that's probably going to go down just slightly. The national
norm has a range of 50 cents to $2.50. This is according to them, so I
think that says something, that the meter reading is very, very
efficient.
The City of Naples right now is going out to see if they can
competitively bid meter readers. They asked us to -- if we were
willing to participate with them after this review. There's just --
and part of that is 6 thousand of those meters that we read every month
are under a contractual process with the City of Naples where we read
their meters for them too, and their neighbor -- and their meters are
in the backyard, so the actual cost is driven up by the fact that we're
-- all of the county's meters are in the front yard easily accessible.
The meters for the City of Naples they have to climb a fence, fight
dogs, being accused of --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I had a long discussion with a meter reader
who reads that section of the city, and they're not real excited about
the dogs either.
MR. YONKOSKY: But then on the customer service side under the
contemplated change that we're recommending, you can see that there's
two spots down there that are now vacant. We need -- because of the
collapse of the cashiering section that's contemplated in this plan
from the clerk's office at Horseshoe, we're looking at going back to
that one-stop concept. I don't know whether any of you had the
opportunity to go up there or not, but you go first to a utility window
and talk to the people there, and you talk to the people about your
problems and concerns and what needs to take place, and then you go out
of that and go into another line. And that's the qua lane for the
cashiers. And this -- it's not often, but quite often people get very
frustrated when they're being required to write checks for money, and
then they have to get the information about the check in one line and a
another line to actually write the check.
What we're contemplating doing is making the people that are
customer service representatives also cashiers so when a person goes
into the qua and comes up and talks to the individual about what needs
to be done, they can write the check right there. We are also
planning, as you will see in a little while, in the PERT charts that I
want to give you is that we've addressed several other major complaints
that -- coming out of community development, and one of those is that
you can't use a credit card; you can't use a debit card.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: We get different numbers on the impact fee
assessments.
MR. YONKOSKY: Yes, that's one of the other -- that's -- that's
another area altogether, but we -- we planned, and it's part of the
savings to take advantage of modern techniques. These people that are
sitting up there aren't going to be scanning for hours bills that come
in; that's where we're contracting under the lockbox. CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Commissioner Hancock.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: In looking at governmental services side, I
see something that reminds me of my coast guard days where you had two
seamen supervised by a third-class petty officer who was supervised by
a second-class petty officer. You know, you had two people doing work
and two supervising.
Looking under the impact fee and the assessment area, we have a
place for a billing supervisor over two fiscal clerks. Under
assessment billing supervisor we have a supervisor over three fiscal
clerks. Is there something in the structure that justifies that to
me, because a supervisor over two clerks doesn't make a lot of sense
to me? I'm wondering if -- I'm wondering if there is some
consolidation in those two areas that could realize a personnel
savings, or is there something about the function of those supervisors
that I clearly don't understand that makes sense?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: To add to that, my question is related --
is under utilities where we expect there will be insignificant changes.
It says, like, we're overstaffed now. If we can do with the number of
rate payers right now, we can be expected that can quadruple before we
get to hire another person. What's wrong with that picture?
MR. YONKOSKY: Well, let me address that one first. The -- they
are not overstaffed in utility billing at all, but they are busy. They
are completely busy. The -- there's 30,000 customers that are billed
every month. They also put all of the data input into the system for
customers and for customers that are making changes.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Do you think we can service a great many
more customers with the same number of people? What am I missing, and
what's wrong --
MR. YONKOSKY: What we're going to do is shift some of their work
load through the -- through the change in the system. We're taking
some of the responsibilities that they're currently performing and
moving them over to the customer service area.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: So once we do that, now won't there be too
many employees if those same number of employees can service 100,000
rate payers?
MR. YONKOSKY: Some of the individuals that work there are going
to move laterally to take care of peak periods which do not hit at the
same time. That's one of the major benefits in the savings. Under the
current system the way that it works, you have peaks and valleys and
work loads, especially in billing. As you know in October, special
assessment billing, the activity is way up because it's all billed in
October.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Uh-huh.
MR. YONKOSKY: And with EMS billing it's a six-month cycle, and
then it's down, then another six-month cycle. With utility billing
there is the least amount of changes. It's like this every month.
The -- one of the major components of the savings is the ability
to move staff laterally from one section to another. So I guess if you
were to look at the utility billing supervisor or -- and the fiscal
clerks from a isolated perspective and look at them individually and
not take into consideration the ability to move laterally, it could
very well be that there's -- over a period of time that there may be
too much in the way of staff there. We don't think that there is.
However, we'd like to come back and revisit that with you at a later
date.
As to the -- question from Commissioner Hancock on the impact fee
billing supervisor, impact fee billing is one of the areas in the
county that -- that from my perspective from what I've been able to
learn in going through this process is that that -- there's a lot of
concern, and there's a lot of questions. I don't know whether you've
seen any of the -- the traffic impact statements come back to you where
when they were calculated -- and this is not something that is very
easy to do, the traffic impact fees when -- or transportation fees when
they're calculated, they're very sophisticated, have many levels in
them, and requires a particular kind of expertise. The individual that
we're looking at here has a background in transportation planning. The
-- and from our review of it, even though he's only going to be
supervising two people under the contemplated plan, it needs to be a
highly concentrated area just because we're looking at the collection
of not only six or seven impact fees; we're looking at collecting the
radon gas fees for the state. We're looking to collect several other
fees that we're required to collect for the state and pass that money
on to the state.
But as it's currently structured, impact fees are calculated with
a different individual who is assigned a permanent task, and as a
secondary task that individual is calculating impact fees and passing
it around. There's several different people involved.
We want to concentrate the calculation of all impact fees under
one small group of people, and that people's primary mission will be
the calculation of impact fees. As part of that process, they need to
be able to interact with people in the various divisions. For example,
we're recommending that a key individual be established in each
division so that the impact fee calculations, specifically the -- the
more sophisticated ones, are actually passed by that individual in the
division.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: In a nutshell you're telling me the reason
we have a supervisor over two people is because his duties are going to
be, I would assume, to -- first of all, you're saying to calculate the
impact fees. But what you're telling me now is we're going to have a
person in each division to calculate the impact fees and forward them
to this department?
MR. DORRILL: No.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: This person is actually going to be
calculating all the impact fees themself?
MR. YONKOSKY: That person is going to do all the calculations.
Bill.
MR. HARGETT: The discussions that I had with John on the impact
fees is this position that Jack Wampler will be in. Someone needed to
be in charge of the impact fees, and it's not a one-on-one or
one-on-two reporting relationship that one certainly can come to the
conclusion from looking at the chart. Jack is a working supervisor,
and he has two people who perhaps crunch the numbers. He will also be
doing the impact fee work, and this designation is somebody's in
charge.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. And you will know about --
MR. HARGETT: If you want to know of impact fees and who's in
charge and those calculations, then Jack, the supervisor, will be the
One '-
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. I understand. My understanding and
past experience with impact fees -- I'm going to just spend another
minute on this and get off because I don't want to eat up everyone's
time and continue the workshop on one question, but impact fee were
based on either square footage or acreage or transportation. I mean,
you know, 90 percent of the calculations are pretty straightforward.
You're -- your fire impact fees, I mean there's a formula that was
presented. And when I calculated impact fees for a client, I got what
the county said these are what your impact fees are per X. I took -- I
plugged X in, whether it's acreage or square footage, and told them
what their impact fees are.
Now, you know, are you telling me these formulas are going to
change or they're going to be extremely variable from now on, they're
different than we have been doing them? I mean is there any change
that's going on in impact fee calculations that I don't understand?
MR. HARGETT: There is -- the board asked that the staff review
and update all the impact fees.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Uh-huh.
MR. HARGETT: That's currently in progress and you'll note from
the county manager's work plan that something should be delivered to
you next month, at least partially. Three of them have been completed,
three of the different impact fees. I think the methodology you will
see will be basically the same, but the fees and the methods of
calculation do change. We -- we have not reinvented the wheel, as you
directed, but there are some changes.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. I'll -- for the sake of time, I'll
kind of get off of it. I'm running out on a tangent here, but we'll
have an opportunity to discuss that particular --
MR. HARGETT: As you look at this real quickly -- Mr. Wampler --
if you look at the salary sheet, this is a lateral move for him.
COHHISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah. I'm not trying to insert Mr. Wampler
personally at all. I'm just looking at the organizational chart and
had some questions. And again, we can discuss -- I understand this is
a presentation for workshop purposes and know the opportunity --
MR. DORRILL: As I understand your primary interest is to evaluate
whether or not that individual who admittedly is a working supervisor,
whether his span of control could be increased theoretically to also
include being responsible for the three fiscal clerks under special
assessment.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Basically. It looks like it would make
sense. If the job duties don't allow for it, then I would just like to
know that. It's just an appearance to me.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I'm kind of agreeing with what you're
saying, Commissioner Hancock, because it seems to me that these impact
fee calculations -- we ought to be able to put a formula in the
computer, and, as you say, plug in whatever the variable is, and the
computer does the calculation.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: And they have to be updated annually. I
understand that, and we change now and then. Once that figure is
known, we have a formula to work with until we decide to figure it
again. So I understand the time intensiveness of refiguring the
formulas. However, once they're in place, the operation becomes a
mathematical one.
MR. HARGETT: Well --
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: We're getting back on something I said I
would get off of.
MR. HARGETT: The particular land use, what your facility is,
there's a whole list of them. There must be 10 to 15 different EMS
impact fees based on the category of your land use and -- so it's not a
matter of saying EMS is $20 a square foot or $40 a resident; it's
significantly more complicated than that.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: I know. I used to figure them. That's
what I did.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Commissioner Constantine.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: It seems fairly simple to me. We have
15 fiscal clerks and two billing technicians. I'm not quite sure what
the difference between a billing technician and a fiscal clerk is, but
-- and we have five people overseeing that --
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's 19.
COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: That's 17.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: 17, excuse me.
COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And I don't understand -- I don't know
perhaps why -- plain and simple, I don't understand why you have that
many people supervising regardless of whether I'm billing for --
whether I'm utilities billing, fiscal clerk, or a customer service
billing fiscal clerk, my duties -- I may be billing from -- within a
different area or a different service, but my basic duties are the
same.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And my comment on that too -- and, again,
this is back to my original one, so just make it short -- it seems like
-- it seems like not only are we duplicating from one agency of
government to another service in making it more complicated than it has
to be than even in the department that we're creating. It's all
inefficient it appears to me.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: One of the appealing things of this --
was we're going to save money. I raise the question today whether we
really are or not. And we were going to streamline, and this would cut
back on because we had duplication in various departments. This would
cut back to have essentially the same number of people. It almost
looks like -- I hate the thought of laying off anybody as much as you
do, but the fact is it looks like we've just taken them from somewhere
else and plugged them into here.
MR. YONKOSKY: And I hear what -- what the commissioners are
saying. As you will notice, a few of those positions are -- are
vacant, so the type of consolidation that you're talking about can be
revisited, and we'll certainly do that. I'll bring you another plan
taking your comments and considerations --
MR. DORRILL: That's why I said I agree with Commissioner
Hancock's observations. I could not disagree more with the concept,
though, that because a constitutional officer might give us our money
back at the end of the year that there's no savings there.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Neil, I don't get that. I mean he's
required to give us the money back at the end --
MR. DORRILL: But you don't have any earthly idea, Commissioner,
what he spends that money on through the balance of the year. And if I
understood you -- if I misunderstood you, please tell me. What you
were saying was it would be okay for us to budget -- to overbudget on
the county commissioners' side of the ledger because ultimately a
constitutional officer is going to give us the money back at the end of
the year. You don't have any control over how constitutional officers
spend their money. And in -- and in particular as it relates to the
tax collector. He charges a fee for everything that he does. And he's
not obligated to even get his budget approved by the county commission.
As long as the Florida Department of Revenue says that he is charging
fees associated with activities that he's performing either statutorial
obligations or other contractual obligations, I just -- I don't agree
that somehow if we overbudget and we get some of it or all of it back
from a constitutional officer, that it's all the same.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Okay. If you -- if you heard me say that
we overbudgeted and cross our fingers that we're getting our money back
from a constitutional officer, that's not what I was saying. What I
was saying was I think it's important for us, instead of looking at the
separate agencies and whose budget a particular dollar goes into and
through and out of, that our obligation is to look at -- after it comes
out of the pocket of the taxpayer where is it ultimately spent, and I
know that this is -- the concept has already been decided by the board,
the Department of Revenue where it's going to go, but I'm troubled by
it, and it doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
MR. DORRILL: Keep in mind the first thing that I said was that
aside from the political appearances of us taking things away from
constitutional officers, the first goal of this was to consolidate our
departments under the board and under the county manager that are
involved in billing related activity and --
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: What was wrong with contracting with them
instead of creating a new agency?
MR. DORRILL: Well, I'm not creating a new agency. I'm
consolidating one of four different agencies that are already out
there.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And my point was not one of -- I didn't
want to get off into the -- whether we were saving dollars via the tax
collector or not. My point is you've got 5 people supervising over 17
people which seems pretty goofy.
MR. DORRILL: That's why I said 15 minutes ago I understood
exactly what Commissioner Hancock was suggesting and whether or not we
could combine some supervisory responsibilities over fiscal clerks or
billing technicians even if they're engaged in different line related
functions.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Cross training.
MR. DORRILL: I think that's something --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: You know, those types of things --
MR. DORRILL: Easier said than done. But I think we need to show
you where it can be done, and if it can be done, then can we do it with
one supervisor as opposed to two or three. And I think that's what
both you and Commissioner Constantine were saying. CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Commissioner Norris.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Yeah. I see that there's some question
about whether we're going to save the $300,000 that was originally
spoken about, and we perhaps need you to give us a better explanation
than we've heard today about whether we are or are not going to save
$300,000. But I think we also need to keep in mind what you were
talking about earlier when you said that because of the deficiencies in
the billing and the fees related thereto, that we would be saving in a
number of instances, particularly in the special assessment area. We
would be saving taxpayers, our assessment payers, a significant amount
of money. And if -- whether or not we save $300,000 through
efficiencies of the general operation, it certainly would be worthwhile
to go forward if we're going to save the assessment payers a
significant amount of money.
MR. YONKOSKY: And that's true. And that $300,000, the money --
the savings will be passed on to the individual assessment payers is
not part of that because that's not -- doesn't drop through to the
bottom line to the Board of County Commissioners.
What the commissioners -- one of the things that we need to look
at is where the savings are actually involved in. The tax collector
has provided a letter to the county attorney's office. We're told
right now in special assessments that it showed that it actually cost
him more money to produce the special assessments for that year than he
received.
So one of the things that I anticipate happening in this process
is that the amount of excess fees that are returned to the Board of
County Commissioners will increase if that's a characteristic that
follows on through. When you look at the money that's being returned
to you, how about breaking that down and looking at how much of it was
returned to the Board of County Commissioners and to the taxpayers from
each of the component areas? The majority of that money that's
returned to the Board of County Commissioners, substantial, significant
majority is because the commissions that the tax collector is required
statutorily to charge are too high. That's something that you may want
to take up with your legislative delegation and have those fees and
commissions that are charged statutorily reduced. And the taxpayers --
that's a direct savings to the taxpayers too. Instead of 2 percent of
the 15 billion dollars worth of assessed value that's taxed when we're
looking at the tax collector being able to return to you in excess of 2
billion dollars a year, the reason for that is because the fees are too
high.
So if you reduce the fees -- anyway, that's -- that's part of
that. I think that we have looked at individually what the excess fees
are. As far as part of the savings itself we talked about in the
$300,000. Briefly we'll --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I think before we get into that we're going
to take a short break. Why don't we just take a ten-minute break, and
we'll try to finish up.
(A short break was held.)
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Can we come back to order?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah. I don't have a gavel, so let's go.
MR. DORRILL: Miss Matthews, I understood that you had one more
area that you all wanted us to research. I think what we need to do is
go back and respond to a couple of these two or three major areas as
part of the proposal and -- and I don't think we need to try and do
that as part of a workshop session. CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah.
MR. DORRILL: You just told me during the break that you had one
additional question.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I had one additional question that came up
in response to Mr. Yonkosky's information, and that was your talking
about the possibility of using debit and credit cards for the payment
of monthly bills and/or assessments. And early -- early on in the
discussion you were expressing concern about the tax collector
assessing a 2 percent fee for what he collects, and at the same time
debit and credit cards have -- have a fee attached to them of somewhere
between 2 and 7 percent. And I would like you to include in your next
overview of this how you anticipate the use or -- of paying for using a
credit card. I don't think the taxpayers at large in Collier County
should be underwriting that fee.
MR. YONKOSKY: I agree, and it's not intended for the taxpayers at
large to do that. You have many people in the development community,
and that's exactly where that's going to go that would like to have
that available to them, and it's not the taxpayer at large or the
people in the special section. That would be only an incidental.
That's specifically geared for the building community and community
development where the developers come in, and they want to do several
things. Part of them want to provide deposit accounts. They just
don't want the hassle of coming in and writing a check or writing two
or three checks. We'll give you a deposit account. But if you have
the ability to do debit or credit or pay for it with a credit card, and
that's what that's designed for, and I will include that in --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I think deposit accounts are a good idea,
but I'm -- I'm concerned that if -- if John Doe comes in with his
MAstercard to pay his water bill and it costs the county 4 or 5 percent
a month to address that bill, we should be talking about adding a fee
on.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Like a credit card rate and the noncredit
card rate?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah, exactly. So I'd like you to handle
that.
MR. YONKOSKY: I'll address that. All right.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: With -- with that I think Mr. Dorrill's
rates -- raised the issue that he realizes that he's got some homework
to do on this yet before it comes back for a final digestion. And most
of us have read through this. If we have additional concerns that we
haven't covered this morning, I'd trust that each of us will talk to
Mr. Dotrill.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Do we have a time frame in which we can
expect this to come back to us?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's probably a good idea.
MR. DORRILL: We had proposed for it to come back on February the
7th. I think we probably need to continue that for probably two weeks,
a week or two. I don't think we'll be ready to go on the 7th.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Are you looking at the 14th or the 21st
then?
MR. DORRILL: One of the two. Let me go back and sort of rethink
my three areas here. If we can do it on the 14th, we will. If not,
we'll do it on the 21st.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Can I suggest that when it comes back, that
the 21st is a nonuse -- non-landuse day and that we may want to look at
it when we have more time.
MR. DORRILL: That's fine.
Item #3A
DISCUSSION REGARDING THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS' ADVISORY
BOARDS
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. Thank you. Why don't we -- why
don't we move on. I know that Miss Filson is here to give us some
information on the advisory boards, and then after that I have handed
out a worksheet -- workshop prioritization sheet that we need to
discuss and a couple of other minor things.
So, Miss Filson, are you going to tell us about the advisory
boards, which ones are active?
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Will Miss Filson be telling us which
ones to get rid of?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I hope so.
MS. FILSON: I'm just here simply to answer questions.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Be done by a vote of one.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I believe what she's done is gathered for
us information on the advisory boards, which ones are meeting on a
regular basis, which ones are meeting the requirements, so forth, so we
can take a better look at what's happening.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Madam Chairman, might I suggest that --
Miss Filson has compiled a good amount of information. I appreciate
it. I don't know if the balance of the board has had an opportunity to
go through each one, and we may have questions and so forth on
particular ones and other ones it may be best to continue. Would it be
appropriate that we just go down the list, and if anyone has a question
on a particular committee, that we discuss it, determine whether or not
we want to take a further look it, if not, move on to the next one?
Would that be appropriate?
MR. DORRILL: Excuse me just one second. The staff's going --
Bill, keep the noise down. The reporter's having a hard time hearing
today, and it's just distracting when you all make noise back there.
I'm sorry, Commissioner Hancock.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Commissioner Hancock, I think if the rest
of the board agrees to that, I don't see any problems with it at all.
It will help us move along faster. So I guess that's what we'll do is
go down each one as we go along. The first one --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Oh, I did have one overall question. How
do these committees come to have such long terms, three and four years
for an appointment? It would be difficult for me in my private citizen
days to have accepted a four-year term. Is four sort of standard? Do
you know?
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I think for some of them it is -- you
take the code enforcement board or the planning commission, some of
those should have some continuity.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That makes sense.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: At least you can maintain some
continuity.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It's not some requirement that just happens
to be -- okay.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's what the resolutions say and --
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Some are less than that.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah. I think also, Commissioner Mac'Kie,
what you're alluding to is probably some of the reasons why we're
always appointing people to unfilled terms.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yeah, they burn out.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: They burn out, bog down, and situations
change.
MR. CUYLER: Madam Chairman, when I say there's no requirement,
the ordinance sets requirement, but that's your legislation.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Just one final thought before we start
looking at whether or what to cut, obviously if some board or committee
hasn't been active along the way, then there's question of need there.
But many of these have quite a few citizens who have good input along
the way, and I don't want us to minimize -- I certainly don't want them
to think that we are minimizing the input they have in the process.
Two things I'd like to see us do with any boards that we still
have, we're concerned about the amount of money we spend on the staff
and the attorney's time. We've already talked some with Mr. Cuyler
about reviewing which boards his staff attends because right now you
spent close to a hundred thousand this year?
MR. CUYLER: Yeah. I've got most of that information together.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: And I think perhaps we can look at ways
to trim that down so we could spend a little less money there, staff
time there. But also I'd like to see us set up a formal mechanism with
most of these boards, a more formal mechanism than we currently have,
to take advantage of the input. It's too often we get a brief written
paragraph of recommendation from them, and that's all we have. I'd
like to open that line. We have slacked off now on our quarterly
meetings. We had two for the productivity last year but have not had
one since. I think in order to fully take advantage of these we need
to make sure we have an open line of communication with them.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's absolutely true. These boards serve
to supplement the information to the Board of County Commissioners, and
I know -- my attending on this board I have asked EPTAB on innumberable
occasions to give me a white paper report on the environmental issue
that's coming forward. And to my knowledge, that has happened once or
twice on any environmental issues that we discuss.
Yeah, I would like to see our boards participate more in issues
that -- that come forward and give us some idea of what the citizenry
is saying about what we're doing. But with that in mind, we'll move
forward.
The first one is affordable housing. Commissioner Hancock.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I noted that they met six times last year
out of only -- all but one of those meetings they had a quorum. I
really don't have any desire to change their operation, but it would
appear that they do have some consistent absences, and I wonder what
the board's past policy is on that. If you notice that there's a
committee with somebody that's consistently absent, what's the policy?
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Mr. Cuyler, you just issued a memo to
me on that. Perhaps you could give us a brief verbal.
MR. CUYLER: That one didn't really address what you have in
place. Most of the ordinances have -- a couple years ago the
commission put in place an attendance policy of some findings about we
want to promote full attendance at these boards, and it gives you the
ability to declare a seat vacant or the chairman of that committee to
declare a seat vacant under certain circumstances if they fail to meet
-- if they fail to attend half the meetings or if they miss two
meetings in a row without an excuse from the chairman of that
committee.
I'll take a look. Now, that language is in some of the ordinances
and not in the others. When we redraft them or redo them, we'll
include it in that. But it's in the master ordinance. I can provide
that language to you.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Somebody track that down.
MS. FILSON: Yeah, it's ordinances 86-41 as amended.
MR. CUYLER: Right.
MS. FILSON: And I'll provide copies of that for you.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I'm not sure anybody tracked any monthly,
quarterly, what -- you know, if we're having multiple absences or not.
MR. CUYLER: I think that some of the cases may be the member
calls up to the chairman, says, I have a family engagement, and that's
an excused absence.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Leave it to them.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Again, just asking what past board policy
is. I just want to be consistent with that.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Generally the chairman of a committee will
either write a memo or make a phone call saying we have somebody that's
not attending and declare it vacant.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I don't have any problem with affordable
housing commission.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Airport authority?
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: None.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's a newly created one. I wouldn't
think we'd have any problem.
Black affairs advisory board?
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: We do -- my -- I looked at it, and they
have nine members. Last year, although they met twice a month for the
better part of the year, they only had three meetings with a quorum.
My concern is not that -- that there's a problem with their
performance, but it's twofold. One is apparently we have a lot of
absences on that committee. It may be one in which instead of having
nine members, maybe reducing the total number of members, or changing
the format of the committee would allow them to have a quorum on a more
consistent basis. And I'm, again, just throwing that out.
The second is that after the human rights commission argument
dwindled away, that I don't know if the board has given any further
direction to this particular committee as to a work scope, if you will.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: No, we haven't.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: So that may be part of an absence problem.
I'll just put that on the table for discussion.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Well, I don't think lowering the number
so they can have a quorum because just fewer people are showing up --
at the risk of raising a hubbub after our activity a week ago, if only
on average three people are showing up, my question is how much of a
demand or how much of a need there is.
We talked two years ago, close to two years ago, about having a
minority affairs board in lieu of having two or three separate, black,
Hispanic, so on. Perhaps the time has come again for that one, main
project that each of them have worked on has been the human rights
commission which failed. However, they did work together on that;
that's one -- the greatest turnout, the greatest participation was. So
maybe it would be appropriate to urge the black affairs -- I mean
Hispanic affairs advisory boards, and we have any others, and create a
minority affairs advisory board.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: My comment about that would be that -- that
I would -- I think that the lack of participation in some of these
boards might not be so much tied to the need for the -- for the service
or the need for the -- the committee but the responsiveness or the
access to the county commissioners.
It seems to me at the most we would ask them if they're interested
in merging, that we wouldn't do it, and that a more global comment that
I have is what -- what extent, Neil, are there -- or who's the staff
liaison, or is there such a person?
MR. DORRILL: There's one each. On the Hispanic affairs it's
Ramiro Hanalich, and for the black affairs it's Tom Whitecotton who is
the county human resource director.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: So it seems like that it should be part of
the responsibility -- in my mind it seems like the staff liaison's
responsibility should be to -- to create these lines of communication
between that committee and the board and to help them know how to
access and get information to and from the board and then maybe, Tim,
they might feel like showing up for a meeting if they feel they're
accomplishing anything.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I do note that the Hispanic affairs
advisory board, although they've had a greater attendance, they did
have meetings without a quorum also. So there's obviously a problem
either that they're -- that we have not given sufficient direction for
programs to work on or that there's a lack of interest, and I don't
know which.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I don't think it's a lack of interest.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: No. And I'm not -- I'm not saying it's one
or the other. I'm just saying that there's obviously a problem there
that they don't have a quorum there half the time of the year, and what
is it that we can do --
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Well, again, realizing I'm probably not
being politically correct, but these boards were created at the request
of the black community and of the Hispanic community, and so I don't
know that we need to or that it's our place or that it was our original
intent to give them direction on what to do. This was created at their
request for them to deal with the issues that are unique within their
community and bring those to the attention of the board.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But do they have enough duty to do that,
Tim?
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: They certainly do. I think if there
was some discouragement after the human rights commission -- there are
other groups, other boards that obviously bring things to us that still
get turned down, but they still go to their meetings, and they start
again on projects. You know, they don't throw in the towel.
Just -- you know, we can sit and try to come up with reasons or
excuses or try to blame ourselves or whatever, but that does not appear
to be the case with other boards which have suffered similar results
when they have brought things to us that have not passed. And so I
don't want to pretend -- if -- I mean it says an awful lot. The
purpose of us going through this exercise is to see what the attendance
is, what the interest is, and then when we come across a board that has
limited attendance, we immediately start making excuses or trying to
come up with reasons why.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I got to say -- I'm sorry.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: What might be appropriate is for us to
contact them and ask what their thoughts are just -- and any -- and any
of these boards what their thoughts are as to why attendance is down,
why participation is down, and on -- particularly on any of these
boards where we've had either a low turnout or few meetings, we may
want to get a complete analysis of what they've done in the past 12
months or 24 months.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I agree. I think that's the way we want to
go is today to identify those in which we find there is a problem and
find out where the problem lies.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Ask them to talk to us about it.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah. I was going to suggest that maybe
what we should do with these boards that we identify are not as active
as we would like to see them is that we get a memo off to the chairman
of the board and ask them in their next upcoming board meeting to call
within 30 days of when one is scheduled, that they investigate
restructuring the committee and to give us some plans and ideas of what
it is they intend to do. And if -- if they feel the board is too --
too large and they want to make it smaller because they're not able to
-- to get the work done that they need to, let them tell us so. And
then we can address that as well as them giving us a list of the
pertinent issues that they feel are -- need to be addressed, and at the
same time if we see shortages on that list, we can tell them also on --
in feedback what we would like them to do.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Well, what I don't want it to turn
into, though, is EPTAB, for example, has nine members. If they can't
gather up nine people out of a county of 185,000 every now and again to
discuss the issues that are important in the environmental areas, I
don't want to scale that down to fit five people because the same five
people can show up, because it turns them into those five people's
special agenda board instead of a true representative board of the
community. So I don't want to start making things fit to those
individual people.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I understand what you're saying. I'm just
saying some of these boards have been in existence for some time, and
if their needs they have changed in such a way too that -- that they
need to restructure, maybe they need to expand membership in order to
create subcommittees. We don't have that.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'd like to suggest the following as
part of it. I'd like any of these boards that we identify today -- I'd
like to see us ask reasons why attendance -- their thoughts why reasons
-- the reasons for attendance being down, their thoughts if any of
these boards have had very few meetings, their reasons why, and then
kind of a synopsis of where they've been, what they have been doing for
the last 12 months in a nutshell. We read the monthly --
month-to-month minutes when it comes to us, but we can get that in a
nutshell. And then from there what are the steps that they think may
be necessary, and maybe the board can -- this board can discuss it at
that time.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I agree.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's what we're all saying.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think we're in full agreement there.
There are two differences. You pointed out something that is of
importance to me. Some of these committees were requested by sectors
of our community, you know, whether it be the Golden Gate
beautification or, in other words, someone came forward and asked for
an advisory committee, and there are others that we as a board said,
hey, we need to create a committee. And I think there is two different
approaches, and I agree with what you are saying is completely
appropriate for the group that came forward and said we'd like to be an
advisory committee.
As we come into those that we formed, I think we could make a
harder look at whether we need the input or lack of input that's
occurred from that group. And so I think there are two approaches.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I agree.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Do we have a consensus there?
COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Yeah.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: I think we do. I would like to -- since
we're going in alphabetical order, the first one falls in that group
appears to be the black affairs advisory board. Since they only had 3
meetings of 14 or 15 that had a quorums --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: They did?
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: They had a quorum in only 3 meetings of 15
so -- so maybe start the list with them. Is that agreeable?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: That's agreeable. I -- I -- I want to say,
though, and I agree with everything that Tim said. I want to be sure
that the tenor that comes out of this board is one that says we want to
encourage your participation, and we see that there hasn't -- you know,
there have been problems. Is there something we have done; is there
something we can do to make your job more effective instead of --
frankly, from the minority issues and from EPTAB, those are two that
would be at the top of my list of -- of committees that probably don't
do much because they don't see much response to their efforts so --
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think we're all seeking a valuable level
of input, and I am confident that if an advisory committee feels that
this board has done something that has deterred its efforts, we'll hear
about it.
MR. KELLER: You'll hear about it.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: I'm confident in that. I just want to put
some -- some on the table to say, look, you know, we form committees to
have input, to move ahead. It doesn't seem to be happening. What are
we going to do to make it happen and go from there?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Well, I -- I agree, but I would like to see
the tenor of the memorandum going out to be one that is constructive
and encouraging to the future existence of the committee.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. Based on Commissioner Constantine's
input, is it appropriate that Chairman MAtthews author that letter? Is
that acceptable to everyone?
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. We'll go from there.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Can you copy me with that letter?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yes.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Next.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Next one is the board of building
adjustments and appeals.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: This one seems to be inactive. Do we need
this anymore?
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: No meetings in 1994.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Just a moment. Mr. Cuyler is shaking his
head yes. I think it's --
MR. CUYLER: You need it as an appeal mechanism under your
building code --
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay.
MR. CUYLER: -- in case there -- it only comes up when somebody
who wants to construct something has another mechanism.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, that takes care of that one.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: The good one is there have been no
meetings.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: The citizens' advisory task force.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: This was one that I had some communication
on. They met one time last year. I had a constituent that called and
applied for a member of that board, called some people. They didn't
even know who their chairman was. This was something that was formed
under a certain staff members' request, is that correct, Mr. Dotrill,
and that staff member is no longer with us?
MR. DORRILL: That's correct. It had to do originally with the
creation of a block grant.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: This is one that I definitely think is
eating up Hiss Filson's time unnecessarily.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Hiss Filson, do you ever have anything to
do with this committee other than the membership, maintaining the
membership?
MS. FILSON: I have to keep track of when the terms expire, send
out letters. Send out --
MR. DORRILL: This is not an area, though, where there is a
requirement here because you, as you're aware, certainly sponsor a TVP
rehab at Copeland, and we did not use this mechanism. We responded to
a petition from that community in that case. So, you know, you can go
either way on this one. You need to have staff people who can be a
liaison to the Copeland -- or certain segments of Immokalee, and there
are other -- there's a staff role there. Whether you think there is a
citizen advisory board is up to you.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Commissioner Hac'Kie.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I was just going to say on this one we
write and say it does appear that we need for you to continue to be --
exist. Do you know something we don't know?
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think we just propose to sunset it. We
had no activity from the committee.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: I agree.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: And it's nothing personal.
MS. FILSON: Who do I write to? They don't have a chairman.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think it needs to be put in -- if it's
the consensus of this board, we need to put it on an agenda that we
sunset this committee or terminate it, whichever the board's direction
is.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Mr. Cuyler, this is a resolution 90-60 that
established this, or is that an ordinance?
MR. CUYLER: It appears to be an ordinance.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: We need to repeal it then.
MS. FILSON: Was it an ordinance -- if it's a resolution, it would
have an R in front of it.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. Oh, gosh it may cost us more money
to repeal the thing because we've got to go through advertisements and
all of that.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Well, it will be a one-time cost as opposed
to leaving it on the books for Hiss Filson to spend taxpayer dollars on
the stamps.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Agree.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Agreed.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I would say on any of these that we repeal
that we send letters to the members encouraging them to apply for other
vacancies and cite those vacancies.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Mr. Cuyler, can I ask you a question? On
these ordinances that we conduct today to reappeal, can we do them all
at one time and do the advertising all at one time and --
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: -- put it on the consent agenda?
MR. CUYLER: No to that question. Yeah, we probably could -- we
could probably do that.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That would keep the advertising cost to a
minimum.
Okay. Fine, let's move forward. The City/County beach
renourishment advisory committee.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Keep it.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Keep it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Keep it.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Is that a subcommittee to the CBC?
COMHISSIONER NORRIS: No.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: The next item, the Collier County Code
Enforcement Board, I think --
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
Committee.
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE:
Keep it.
Collier County Planning Commission.
Keep it.
Yeah, we'll hang on to them.
Collier County Public Health Unit Advisory
Keep it.
This is the one that was just established.
Yes. Keep that one.
The contractors' licensing board.
Keep it.
Council of economic advisors.
Keep it.
Keep it.
Oh, I got -- this is probably an
inappropriate time, but, hey --
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: We're getting used to it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It has come to my attention that Greg
Mihalic has mega qualifications to consult with this committee. How's
-- Greg Mihalic is with economic advisors. He's got a degree in
economics. He is an economist. It seems like he would be -- I don't
know what John does, but it seems like he would be a great staff
liaison with the council meeting on the advisory committee. I just
thought I would tell you.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: The only difference with that is that if
John is to head up the Department of Revenue for the county, and John
certainly has a fiscal background, that it may be more relevant to his
job description to be a liaison to the economic advisory, just as a
observation.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I think the Department of Revenue is going
to be collecting money, and Mihalic has the ability to do economic
forecasting and --
MR. DORRILL: The only opposition I would have is a historical
one. The only reason that we have a department of housing is because
of prior board action and huge uproar within the community that the
county commission was doing nothing within the housing area. And
between the two, frankly, economic development is the sexier issue, and
it would be difficult for me to keep Greg in his department focused on
housing issues if he's out going to this CBC meeting and he's doing
this for the movie liaison thing. And it's a struggle to keep them
focused on housing as their primary activity.
I'm not opposed, you know, to considering that, but that whole
department, I think, consists of like two or three people, and so I --
I am a little judicious in terms of sending him to economic development
activities when he's otherwise supposed to be --
COMHISSIONER NORRIS: Moving right along.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes, moving right along.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. Productivity committee.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Keep it.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Keep it. I went to the last meeting just
to attend it and see what's going on. We do have at least one member
running amuck with his own interpretation of the sunshine law which
I've requested a clarification from the county attorney's office. MR. CUYLER: It's already gone down.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I figured. This is a committee that can be
vitally useful if we can avoid a couple of their members from being
renegades, so let's -- let's focus on that and do get something set up
with them. They're going to request it also.
MR. DORRILL: Only for what it's worth, you're -- you're on the
verge. I don't interfere. In fact, I only go to one of their meetings
a year, but you're on the verge of having four or five of the people on
this committee resign because of this individual, and that's something
that you may need to look into.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah, let's -- let's -- I'll -- maybe I'll
discuss this with you later, but I would like to know the mechanism for
removing someone from a committee for the simple reason -- CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: We've done that once.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: -- for the simple reason that this person
is counterproductive to this committee, and he's chased off a few
people.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: There are seven vacancies.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah. To be honest with you, I just about
pulled my hair out at the meeting. So I'd like to review that.
COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Tim, perhaps you should put that on the
agenda, upcoming agenda.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: I certainly will, and I won't even mention
who appointed him.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Let's move on. Okay. So you'll -- you
will meet with Mr. Dotrill and get that -- get an executive summary.
MR. DORRILL: We'll handle that.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK:
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
Yes.
Development services advisory committee.
Keep it.
Keep it.
Keep it.
Disaster recovery task force.
Keep it. I hope we don't use it.
Yeah.
MS. FILSON: They need to put new members on that because a lot of
the members that are currently on there are no longer with the county.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: They are no longer with the county?
MS. FILSON: No.
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Shouldn't it run with the job instead of
the individual?
MR. CUYLER: I think it was -- I don't know. I thought it was
voluntary, but there are certain people in the county --
MR. DORRILL: There is a requirement, so I'll make a note to
follow up with Mr. Pino (phonetic) on that.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I was going to say, should we look at --
should we relook at the ordinance and have that run with particular
jobs, so whoever fills it --
MR. CUYLER: Neil and I will --
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
council.
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
At least those that are under our control.
The emergency medical services advisory
Keep it.
Think they're doing some good work.
Environmental advisory board.
COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I just wonder if we may not want to
combine EAB and EPTAB.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: We've had that discussion before.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: We've had that discussion before, and I was
in favor of it the last time we had this discussion because the --
really the main impetus of establishing the EPTAB board was to
integrate environmental concerns into the growth management plan. The
bulk of that work's been done, although there is some ongoing work from
time to time.
But to have them as a stand-alone committee doesn't make as much
sense as it used to. The discussions, of course, centered around on
whether they couldn't function just as well as a subcommittee of EAB
and then, therefore, cutting down Miss Filson's work a little bit.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I think that part of -- part of the
difficulty in doing that is the makeup of the committee members for
these two boards. The EAB appears to be and, based on what -- based on
what my understanding of what was told me, is that the EAB has a
greater tendency to review the site plans and so forth from a
construction, development, contractual point of view where EPTAB does
the same thing from a policy point of view to whether adjust our
policy. They -- they serve two distinct functions.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: Well, they -- they're supposed to, but at
times they're -- they seem to cross their missions.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: It seems to me if we combine the two,
we have the authority certainly to give that single entity both tasks
to do instead of saying, well, gosh, there are two different tasks
here, let's put them all under one umbrella.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: But they are two tasks that are --
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: My vote is to combine.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: As I read the membership here, there's
amazing similarities. Matter of fact, it's word for word except for
seven members and eleven members. Everything else is --
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think that the difference in -- it has
been mentioned. If they can be combined -- yet the EPTAB mission,
which I'm referring specifically to Wiggins Pass -- I've been reading
the minutes of their meetings -- it's been of help to me to see that
their committee has brought forth ideas on that particular plan. I
don't want to lose that. I don't want to lose that. If we can combine
them and not lose their ability to go after those types of pertinent
environmental issues in the community, I would favor combining them,
but, again, not at the risk of losing --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I think you'll lose it if you combine them
because you have people with different interests.
COMHISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I don't think we will. I think we can
-- I mean the makeup -- as I said, the requirement for membership is
exactly the same when we say, well, we have people with different
interests, and that may be the way it's panned out from when it was
appointed, but the requirements are identical. So I think we can
combine this and come up with a membership that serves the needs of
both.
COHHISSIONER HAC'KIE: I need to understand. EAB is a part of the
review process for land development, but EPTAB is more a policy
advisory board is what I thought. They seem to be separate. We need a
policy advisory board, and we need -- and maybe -- maybe the EAB ought
to be reviewing petitions from a different perspective. Maybe they
ought to be reviewing them from the perspective of environmental policy
instead of construction or whatever it is that you were saying.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Wouldn't it make sense to have in the
spirit of consolidation and less government to have one board doing
both. You could even increase the size of the one board if you want.
EAB is seven members.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I think we're going to see -- I'm in favor
of keeping them separate for the simple reason that I've come before
the EAB, and coming before the EAB with a petition is very different
than then reviewing it in the management plan and giving a
recommendation to the board. The two are not the same. So if, you
know, the duties of the EAB were to change where they would be parallel
that would make sense. But the duties right now are vastly different
from the two, and I can't see combining them and getting the same
result. And there has been some value to EPTAB, and I would like to
keep them separate. I'm going to say that we keep them separate for
now, and, you know, let's -- let's see if -- if a year from we feel the
same.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Before we move on, let me try one last
__
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Mutation of idea.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: When we say, gosh, the duties are
different, yet we have the ability to make any board perform any duties
we want. So if we combine the boards, we can pick and choose those
duties from each that we want them to --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I would be concerned about the time
consideration there because the EAB from a similar review standpoint
there's --
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: You're the one that wanted to
consolidate boards.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I -- myself I agree with Commissioner
Hancock and Commissioner Hac'Kie. The advise -- the EAB to me works
more as a sub -- subadvisory board to the planning commission, not
necessarily to the county commission, even though their purpose is
almost identical. But EPTAB works or should work more with the BCC as
__
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: You know, I'd like to make a suggestion that
we don't spend any more time on this sort of thing. We've gone through
this advisory board consolidation exercise a few times. It's a fairly
simple and reasonable request to combine the very similar duties of
these two boards and make them into one board, one a subcommittee of
the other. If we're not going to do that, why -- why are we wasting
time even thinking of this issue at all?
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Tim, is there anything else in here
that you think we should be dumping?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Well, I think there are other matters that
may have put aside Mr. Hancock's --
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Okay. Let's go through the 30-minute
exercise.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: You know, I don't want to send the wrong
message to anyone here. If -- if we can combine the two and one is a
subcommittee of the other and the duties -- you know, they continue to
work as they are and it saves Miss Filson time and it saves taxpayer
dollars to combine them, yes. But I -- again, I have to be assured
that EPTAB will continue to function in the past as they have. If it
can be done by combining them making one a subcommittee of the other,
fine. And if you can show me how that will work, I'll take a look at
it.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I agree with that.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I agree with that, but I -- let's move on
down instead of getting hung up on these two.
The next one is the fire district consolidation advisory
committee.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: We don't need that one.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: We don't need that one.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Thank you.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: What do we do with this, Mr. Cuyler? Do we
have to appeal the resolution?
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: This is a resolution.
MR. DORRILL: This is a resolution, and they are inactive and have
been for some time.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
advisory committee.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
us.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
Okay. Forest Lakes roadway and drainage
Keep it. It's part of an MSTU that advises
Golden Gate Community Center.
I'm going to defer on Commissioner
Constantine on this. There's a couple of Golden Gate committees out
there. The community center advisory committee is different than the
estates citizen advisory committee, but is there a combination of the
two?
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: No. The community center advisory
committee is a taxing district that pays for the community center as
they exist now, and they've just been overseeing --
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: No room for accommodation there?
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: None whatsoever.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: The Golden Gate estates citizens advisory
committee is the -- that name has now been changed to the Golden Gate
estates land trust committee.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Right.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That one came out of the settlement
agreements with GAC.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: My concern, the Community Center advisory
committee, four meetings last year, no quorum. Two meetings had no
people at them at all.
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: Which one, Tim?
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'm not sure that's true because I was
actually at a couple where they did have quorums.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Really? Because I'm just looking at what
we have here. We have four -- I'm sorry. There are only September
through December, and there was one person at one, two at another, and
zero at the last two.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah, that's not accurate. I've been
at some of those since September so --
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay. Good enough.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Huh. Okay.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Can we ask them to keep better records?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. The citizens advisory committee for
Golden Gate estates, we've noted that the name change on it, and I
presume that we will be keeping that one.
Golden Gate Parkway beautification advisory committee, that
answers to you, doesn't it?
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Yeah.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Hispanic affairs advisory board, we've
already discussed that one. It seems to have similar problems --
problems as the black affairs.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I would suggest correspondence.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Letter?
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah. I would suggest correspondence.
They had half of the meetings that did not reach quorum.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Historical/archaeological preservation
board.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: They have good attendance.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Very interested people.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Actually they're fairly active with any
number of things to us this past year I think all of which have been
approved.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah, they've asked us to make the post
office down in Ochopee a historical --
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: All right.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: The homeless advisory committee.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: I know they only had three meetings they
were short just one. John, did they play any part in helping with the
homeless camp issue and that kind of thing? Was there any assistance
in that?
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: They -- at one meeting we went to their
meeting and discussed in concept what -- what we were going to do, and
they agreed with it and sent us a letter. That was about a year ago I
think. Beyond that they have not been directly involved. And we don't
seem to get the reports from them.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: -- that we used to.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: They meet a lot, and they have people
attending the meetings, but we don't seem to get their reports. I
think we need to send them a letter and tell them we'd like to see a
little more about what they're doing.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
more timely, I think.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
on.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS:
We want -- we want their minutes a little
Yeah.
And reports of their tasks they're working
Maybe have them -- ask them if they wouldn't
mind keeping us a little better informed on what's going on from their
perspective, but they meet a lot.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: They do.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: And they manage to have a quorum every
time.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Uh-huh.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: The Immokalee lighting beautification
advisory committee, again, that's --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Keep it. I will point out that we do have
a problem there that we have five meetings with nobody at, so my point,
find out --
MR. DORRILL: We may want to reevaluate their meeting schedule.
Their meeting schedule gets very intensive as we go on to the budget
process because they're the ones that have recommended a lot of the
median and lighting budget improvements for that district. But they
don't need to be meeting monthly or even quarterly, frankly, through
the rest of the year unless they want to evaluate the progress of
construction. But they usually get busy in the summer and they
recommend budget improvements in accordance with what the millage rate
is.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah. It looks like they chose not to meet
in July, August, September, and October.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: So this may be merely a function that the
ordinance is requiring meetings more often than needed.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: Once a month -- yeah, why don't we ask them
for a revised meeting schedule they feel would be more appropriate to
meet the needs of the committee so at least we can evaluate it fairly.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. The Isles of Capri fire control
district advisory committee, I don't understand this one. COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE: I don't either.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: It's a volunteer fire district, and they
have some citizen input on that.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: It's a little different than any of our
other districts.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: They don't have a fire commission?
MR. DORRILL: No. Nor does --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Ochopee.
MR. DORRILL: -- Ochopee, for that -- for that matter. They are a
dependent county fire district. They're not an independent district.
They're dependent, but their taxing district's similar to the Immokalee
beautification district advisory board.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK:
I say continue.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
beautification.
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
committee.
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
active.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
They had a quorum 10 out of 12 meetings, so
They seem to be active. Lely golf estates
That's an active board.
Yeah.
MSTU.
Library advisory board.
Keep it.
MArco Island beach renourishment advisory
All three of those MArco boards are very
In light of their last letter --
Ochopee fire control district, that seems
to fall in the same area as the past two.
Parks and recreation advisory board.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
committee.
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
that one out.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
COMHISSIONER NORRIS:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
Young -- I'm just kidding.
That's a very active board.
Very active. Pelican Bay MSTU advisory
Is Bernie here? I think he wanted us to cut
Bernie? Bernie left. He's out of here.
He's already gone? Bernie left?
I wanted to show for the record that Mr.
MR. DORRILL: Can I say something there because you may be hearing
from them with respect to the incorporation and annexation issue. The
two ongoing interests within that community are law enforcement, and
they're a private beach access. And you may need to develop a strategy
to help respond to that to at least show a willingness to consider
alternatives short of incorporation or annexation, because I'm just
giving you a little heads up, and I'll be talking to Mr. Hancock about
that.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: I want to commend Mr. Dotrill for the work
he did at the forum that was held at the Ritz on Pelican Bay. Neil
represented the county very well, and I think the key element here is
not to try and push. I think we see the City of Naples making a little
bit of a mistake in pushing for annexation. As a county we will and
can do -- and I'll continue to meet with them and -- and advise them of
that, but I don't see any reason for us to make a concentrated effort.
I mean -- but we can pay more attention to these issues and let them
know when you're done with what you want to do, we'll still be here.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's in keeping with the position this
board has taken on the city in various areas of the county.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Okay.
MR. DORRILL: I might add that the sheriff has shown a willingness
to reconsider the concept of providing increased law enforcement for
those planning communities or districts that are -- that are inclined
to want to do that. The sheriff has shared some of that with me
recently as well.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: Thank you, Neil.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Public vehicle advisory committee.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: What does it do?
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: What is it?
MR. DORRILL: They are a committee that reviews your taxicab and
vehicles for hire ordinance, as I recall.
COMMISSIONER NORRIS: They meet more or less on demand.
MR. DORRILL: I know they met recently. I saw them meeting. But
you have an ordinance that controls and regulates to a certain extent
vehicles for hire, airport shuttles, limousines, taxicabs, and this is
an industry association to review those activities.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: They seem to have a quorum every meeting
that they've had.
MR. DORRILL: They do a fairly good job at self-policing
themselves as an industry. There have been times here in the past
where the commission received lots and lots of complaints about taxi
and airport shuttles, and I bet we don't get two complaints a year.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK:
that particular committee?
MS. FILSON: No.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
district citizens ad hoc --
COMHISSIONER MAC'KIE:
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
Any problem in your area, Miss Filson, with
Fair enough.
Tourist development council.
Keep it.
Ad hoc committee, the architectural overlay
Huh?
-- advisory committee.
MR. DORRILL: I'd love to see their letterhead.
MS. FILSON: That one was created by ordinance as an ad hoc
committee for one year. They've extended it twice. This was an ad hoc
committee which was created for one year. They've extended the one
year by resolution like two times, and it needs to be extended again if
they want to stay in existence.
COMMISSIONER HANCOCK: The -- I'm sorry. It appears to me the
goal is to have an overlay district on Golden Gate Parkway for a
professional office. I thought some of those had been incorporated
into our code already.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: They have -- they've met, and they're
not meeting with any regularity now. I think their only purpose at
this point is as people begin to build on the parkway, property that is
zoned commercial, they want to make sure they're meeting with those
codes or the architectural information to input into our general code.
But it is in there and I don't think from a legal standpoint, I mean --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Yeah. I -- it seems to me that it's in the
code, and they have to comply with the code. That's our staff's job.
MS. FILSON: They haven't extended the resolution since 1993.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: If they have not met at this point -- I
don't want to offend anybody.
MS. FILSON: I called them, and they said that they had completed
the work, but I don't have an updated resolution.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: So technically it's expired.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Get it off the list.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Huh?
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: If they've already expired, then allow the
sunset.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: If they may expire.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I'm not talking about the individual
members of the committee. But, anyway, so bottom line is it's expired?
Is that '-
MS. FILSON: Does that have to be done by resolution?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: It's an ad hoc.
MR. CUYLER: Let me check. Is that what you want to do?
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: That's fine. I'll talk with them. But
I know I've spoken with -- two of the members on there are friends of
mine. They were under the impression the work is done so --
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Okay. Let it expire then.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Let it expire.
The privatization plus task force is alive and well.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS:
got to go --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COHMISSIONER NORRIS:
meeting at six o'clock.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS:
COHMISSIONER NORRIS:
Okay. I have a -- before we leave -- I've
Yeah.
-- but I've got a comment on Tuesday night's
Uh-huh.
I had previously accepted a speaking
engagement at around seven, so I'm -- I expect probably we'll have
another six- or -- eight hour -- meeting Tuesday night. CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: I hope not.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: Oh. In any case, I -- I will not be in
attendance from about seven till probably a quarter till eight so --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. It will be noted.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: So if we come into a vote at that point, I
just want to alert you to that so that you might want to take a
15-minute recess while I get back or something like that.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I have one comment on this workshop
sheet.
COHMISSIONER NORRIS: And with that, I've got to go.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Thank you.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: The water issues I think we talked
about having a workshop on anyway. As I look down the list, beach
renourishment, we usually have a workshop -- I mean a joint meeting
with the city anyway. We've had Dr. Stevens come a couple of
occasions. I think that would probably be the appropriate forum -- MS. FILSON: Commissioner Constantine, that meeting has been
canceled.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: We're not going to have any meetings
with the city?
MR. DORRILL: We are.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I'm talking in general. We don't need
to have a special workshop on that. Solid waste seems like it's a
little after the fact, but we can still do that. Buildout, we have
done that regularly and they have gone through their buildout study
with us, which we can do that again. But the land development code and
it's criteria, growth management, it seems like when we have our
regular LDC hearings would be the appropriate time for that as an
add-on at another meeting. Traffic patterns, particularly public
transportation, we go through -- I would think the HPO would be the
appropriate time for that. When we have other things that are already
scheduled we can handle some of these. PVC handles the tourism. I
think that would be the appropriate place to send that through.
Economics strategies, we've appointed our council of economic advisors.
I think what might be good is to have a joint meeting with them.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: Yeah.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: But I think we want to be sure and take
advantage. A couple areas we don't have anything going on right now,
agriculture. And I think that is important that each of us realize
what's going on, you're familiar with that. I assume the others have
or are scheduled for the ag tour I think each of us got when we
started.
Also affordable housing, we've talked about our priority this year
for changing and trying to get very low income in there. So I see
those two as a couple of priorities and water issues at the top as
priorities. It seems as though many of these others we have other
formats or other meetings scheduled anyway, which would be appropriate.
So I just throw that out as my priorities of the ag and affordable
housing as number one or two.
COHMISSIONER HAC'KIE: In my ranking, I didn't rank a lot of those
that you mentioned to buildout or LDC or growth management. We're
going to get to do that. I don't want to be meeting with tourism and
economic strategies. I think a joint meeting with economic advisory
committee is a great idea. So what I did is just rank those as zero
and with that will be taken into account when the --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Well, this is put together here for the
perusal of all of us. Many -- many times when we've had our LDC
hearings we're very caught up in the changes suggested by staff and not
necessarily in what our LDC is going to take us to in another 10 or 15
years.
That's the idea here, is not -- not to educate us on what we're
doing right now, our staff is doing that, but to take a look at is it
going to take us to where we want to go. And as for the buildout
study, we've all been hearing words of like 550,000 people in the next
20 or 30 years. I've recently done some calculations, and that's
coming up with something like twenty -- 2,700 people -- is that what
Bill Hargett came up with -- per square mile?
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Neil, you don't have that on the tip of
your tongue? I'm shocked.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Well, we -- Bill Hargett and I have been
conferring back and forth. It's a large number per square mile. We're
looking for --
MR. KELLER: What about the alligators?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: No, this is the, quote, unquote, 17 percent
of Collier County that will be left after the federal and state level.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Oh.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: It's a C-shaped thing that we --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: The part that hasn't vanished.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: It does not include everything that -- so
we're -- we're looking at something that's a little over 2,000 people
per square mile, and I'm -- we're searching for another city that's got
that kind of density. And I think the place we're coming up with is
St. Petersburg, so that's why buildout is on this list. Do -- do we
have a land development code that's going to make us look like that,
and do we want it? Okay, that's -- that's the reason.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I do want -- I do want to add to that. I
agree with you, the specifics are -- there's a more appropriate time
for specifics. However, apparently Commissioner Matthews and I run
parallel courses. I'm doing studies of cities all over the U.S., what
their per capita entry for developable area is, what -- which are
models, which aren't. I think there's a lot of discussion that we
could -- we could have that basically says where do you want to go, and
how we get there. And the visioning that's currently going on is going
to be a part of that. So we may fold into that, what we're talking
about here.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's the idea of being --
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: Right. It may be a little premature to
have a workshop, you know, in the next six months. But I think it is
important, not to mention -- and it's kind of an area I'm a little
interested in. And I think I can have some valuable input if I can get
my ducks in a row, so I wouldn't want to rule it out.
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: I don't want to get into a debate on it
today. Obviously it's not the time, but to only count certain parts of
the county and then say, gosh, that density is going to be equal to --
to get into a scenario of a city where it is not desirable is in my
mind misleading at best, because we --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Per square mile is --
COHMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: -- we've set it aside or what have you,
it is still part of Collier County. So the true density is still
considerably smaller than virtually --
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Let's not workshop it right now.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Yeah. The idea behind this is to give us
some idea of the -- of the priority of workshops that we -- that we as
a board feel we need to address first, and that's what this is for.
if you complete those and get them back in to me or Mr. Dotrill, then
we can begin scheduling the workshops that we are going to be needing.
COHMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Messy but complete.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay.
COHMISSIONER HANCOCK: I'll give you mine later.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay.
MR. DORRILL: And just to help me, the next month that has five
Tuesdays in it is -- does anybody know off --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That's not until late, is it?
MR. DORRILL: It's either going to be April or Hay it looks like.
So our next meeting at which we will workshop these issues would --
would -- looks like Hay to me.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: Okay. If we can take what -- it's probably
5 more seconds. I have a letter from Florida Gulf Coast University.
They're seeking some grant funds and have asked us to issue a letter in
support of their grant funds. I have two letters here. One's a letter
from the board, and one's a letter from me. I'm just asking the board
if you want to support or --
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: What grant funds are they pursuing?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: They're grant funds for what's called
direct education -- distant education, I'm sorry.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Is that a federal grant?
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: They are -- yeah, Department of Commerce.
Uh-huh. If you want --
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: MAkes sense to me if you've looked at it,
and I trust your judgment on it.
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: The U.S. Department of Commerce, and it's a
grant, you know, distant education.
COMMISSIONER CONSTANTINE: Why don't you send a letter out on our
behalf and copy us, and we'll probably all send individual letters in
support.
COMHISSIONER HANCOCK: I was going to ask --
CHAIRPERSON MATTHEWS: That sounds good. I'll get this out today
and then get you the information that was faxed to me.
We're adjourned.
There being no further business for the Good of the County, the
meeting was adjourned by Order of the Chair at 12:04 p.m.
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF DONOVAN COURT REPORTING
BY: Barbara A. Donovan